Home Actress Miranda Rae Mayo HD Instagram Photos and Wallpapers May 2021 Miranda Rae Mayo Instagram - @brian_tee Thank you for sharing your experience. I know I can do better and feel urged to do so after reading. 🙏🏽 #stopasianhate

Miranda Rae Mayo Instagram – @brian_tee Thank you for sharing your experience. I know I can do better and feel urged to do so after reading. 🙏🏽 #stopasianhate

Miranda Rae Mayo Instagram - @brian_tee Thank you for sharing your experience. I know I can do better and feel urged to do so after reading. 🙏🏽 #stopasianhate

Miranda Rae Mayo Instagram – @brian_tee
Thank you for sharing your experience. I know I can do better and feel urged to do so after reading. 🙏🏽
#stopasianhate | Posted on 18/Mar/2021 22:25:06

Miranda Rae Mayo Instagram – @brian_tee 
Thank you for sharing your experience. I know I can do better and feel urged to do so after reading. 🙏🏽
#stopasianhate
Miranda Rae Mayo Instagram – It is Trans Visibility Day!!

I’ve reposted instructions from a personal hero of mine @alokvmenon on how to help our trans community at this crucial time. 

I’ve also posted @vicenews coverage on the harmful bills in Alabama and Arkansas.

 Repost from @alokvmenon
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via @chasestrangio @aclu_nationwide @raquel_willis 

It is day 6 of #TransWeekofAction and in addition to continuing our efforts to stop Arkansas’s HB1570, we continue to target Alabama today. 

Alabama could pass the most sweeping attack on trans youth in history. HB1/SB10 would make it a felony to treat trans youth up to age 19 and forcibly out trans and gender expansive youth to their parents.

Please share this info, contact Gov. Ivey and donate to @tko_alabama. Link in bio to access graphics and scripts! 

Script:

Dear Governor Ivey:

I am writing because I oppose HB1/SB10 and HB391. These bills needlessly and cruelly target transgender youth in Alabama who are just trying to live their lives and access the care recommended by their doctors and supported by their parents. Trans youth just want to go to school and play sports alongside their friends. 

I oppose HB1 and SB10, which interfere with trans youth and their families from being able to seek and access the healthcare they need. Parents, patients, and medical professionals – not politicians – should decide what medical care is in the best interest of any young person. Transgender young people thrive when they are supported by their family, school, and community; however, these bills would take away their personal treatment options, undermining the prevailing recommendations of every major medical association. 

I oppose HB391 because it needlessly targets trans women and intersex people in sports when lawmakers cannot even point to a single trans woman currently competing in Alabama. It sends a harmful to trans youth that they don’t belong and will invite costly litigation from private parties and the federal government. 

All of these bills will cost the state hundreds of millions of dollars in lost tourism and business revenue.

And most significantly, I am worried for my trans loved ones should these bills become law.

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