Fairfax County, Va., to Punish Students Who “Deadname” and “Misgender” Others

The triumph of Tranny Madness is complete in Fairfax County (Va.) public schools. The system has reaffirmed a policy to punish students who “misgender” others who believe they are “transgender.”

That policy: “Deadname” or “misgender” a boy who says he’s a girl, or a girl who says she’s a boy, and you might just be suspended for five days.

Given the grooming at public schools, suspension or even expulsion might not be the worst thing. But that truth aside, the school system’s 70-page “Students Rights and Responsibilities” manual lays out the crimes and the punishment.

Infractions a bit more serious than “deadnaming” or “misgendering” — nonsense words concocted by leftist crackpots — are rape and murder, as Fox News reported.

Level 4 Infraction

Among the heinous crimes students had better beware not to commit is “using slurs based upon the actual or perceived gender identity (which includes, but is not limited to, malicious deadnaming or malicious misgendering),” the manual says.

As well, the crimes include “using slurs based upon the actual or perceived gender expression,” whatever that means, and “using slurs based upon the actual or perceived sexual orientation.”

In other words, a student in Fairfax had better not call the tranny at the next desk “Cupcake.” And he better not shout “Sugar Britches” at a poofter as he consumes his soy burger and almond milk under the Pride Banner in the cafeteria.

Otherwise, it could be curtains.

For those unschooled in the argot of the LGBTQIA+-YES-WE-ARE-NUTS community, “deadnaming” means using the old name of a tranny who’s decided that he — or she — is a member of the opposite “gender.” You can’t call a Priscilla Pete after Pete has decided he’s a Priscilla.

“Misgendering” is purposely calling a boy a boy despite his misguided fantasy that he’s a girl, and purposely calling a girl a girl despite her flights of fancy.

“Misgendering” is, of course, not real, and neither is “deadnaming.” “Transgenders,” too, are another fiction.

That truth aside, “if frequency and intensity [of the infraction] are present,” a student might be suspended for five days. The manual continues:

[It] also allows for a referral to the Division Superintendent; however, if a referral is made, the misconduct must meet one or more of the following criteria: 1) substantially disrupted the instructional program, 2) endangered the well-being of others, 3) follow school-based interventions initiated in response to prior violations.

Happily, a Level 4 infraction “rarely results in expulsion.” Likewise with Level 5 infractions. But they involve such minor crimes as homicide, malicious wounding, sexual assault, and “use of a bomb.”

Maybe the bomb would have to explode and take out the teachers lounge and coffee station before a student is expelled.

“This was introduced last year and is not new for this year’s SR&R,” a school spokesthing fumed at Fox News. “This is about the purposeful and deliberate misgendering of a student aimed at causing harm.” 

Right.

Enforceable

Whether the school can punish such an “infraction” is open to question.

Last year, Virginia’s Supreme Court ordered the reinstatement of a teacher in Loudoun County who refused to participate in the tranny charade.

Tanner Cross would not, he said, psychologically abuse students who wrongly believe they are the opposite “gender,” as The New American reported.

“I’m speaking out of love for those who suffer with gender dysphoria,” Cross told the school board:

I love all of my students, but I will never lie to them regardless of the consequences. I’m a teacher, but I serve God first, and I will not affirm that a biological boy can be a girl, and vice versa because it’s against my religion, it’s lying to a child, it’s abuse to a child and it’s sinning against our God.

Cross sued the school system, and prevailed when the state supreme court ordered him reinstated.

Cross and the schools settled the case in November.

Tranny Madness struck tiny Kiel, Wisconsin, last week when a school charged three middle schoolers with sexual harassment for using the wrong pronouns about a “transgender” student.

H/T: New York Post