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Two teenage transgender the athletes who sue President Donald Trump’s administration told the Associated Press about their motivation for a lawsuit.
Two New Hampshire teenagers, 16-year-old Parker Tirrell and 15-year-old Iris Turmelle, are biological males playing on sports teams for girls for their high schools. They and their families originally filed a lawsuit last year To challenge the Law in New Hampshire, who forbids transgender athletes to participate in girls’ sports.
In February, after Trump signed an executive order that banned transcending athletes from girls from girls across the country, the federal judge approved a request to add Trump administration to the indicators list.
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Tirrell played football for girls in the Plymouth high school in the fall.
“I just feel like the legislators and Trump are currently singing out to me and only the whole legislative system for something I can’t control,” Tirrell said. “He just doesn’t feel great. She’s not great. I feel like they just don’t want to exist. But I won’t stop existence just because they don’t want me not to want it.”
Turmelle, who is attending the Pembroke Academy, is interested in joining the tennis and trails of the girls for girls, according to court subfers.
“We’re not going to sleep in the day and go out at night and drink the blood of people. We do not hate sunlight. We are people, just like you,” Turmelle said.
Turmelle spoke about not making a school softball team.
“To the argument if it wasn’t fair, I just would like to mention that I didn’t arrive in the Softball team,” Turmelle said. “If that wasn’t fair, then I don’t know what you want from me.”
Federal Judge at New Hampshire Landya McCafferty, appointed by former President Barack Obama in 2013, approved preliminary ban September 10, allowing Tirrell to play for regional Plymouth and bypass the state law to keep transcending athletes outside the sport of girls.
New Hampshire was already one of 25 countries with a law that was established to implement similar prohibitions of transition before Trump’s executive order came into force.
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Tirrell and Turmelle’s lawyers say Trump’s executive order, along with parts a January 20 This forbids that federal money is used to “promote gender ideology”, undergo teenagers and all transgender persons to discriminate against federal guarantees of equal protection and their rights from the IX titles.
“The systematic aiming of transgender people from American institutions is cold, but targeting young people in schools, denying them support and essential opportunities during their most vulnerable years, is especially cruel,” said Chris Erchull, a valuable lawyer.
The situation involving two trances of athletes also encouraged the second lawsuit after the parents carried bracelets in which “XX” was said to the biological female chromosomes and were allegedly banned from school terrain for their wearing.
Prosecutors Kyle Fellers and Anthony Foothe sued the school district of Bow after he was banned from school fields for wearing bracelets at their daughters in September.
IN a lawsuit He was tolerated by Fellers and Foots, they say that school officers told them to remove the straps or have to leave the game.
They both say that the intention of the strap was not to protest against Tirrell, but to support her own daughter in a game where he was a biological male.
Associated Press contributed to this report.
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