News

The La Center School District, which has approximately 1,800 students throughout Clark County, has been embroiled in a conflict over its preferred pronoun policy between the state of Washington ...
Some parents opt to conceal their child’s sex, choose gender-neutral names and use they/them pronouns from birth. Others simply encourage them to ignore gender stereotypes – like having boys ...
CHATTANOOGA, Tenn. — One Chattanooga advocate says everyone is entitled to their preferred pronouns. But a bill introduced in the Tennessee General Assembly would remove legal consequences for ...
Audience members stand to show their support for testimony defending the La Center School District Board of Directors Tuesday, April 22, 2025, during a La Center School District board meeting at ...
Danny uses they/them pronouns, however they have opened up about using other terms instead. During an episode of their podcast The Gossip Gays, Danny said in 2024: "In lockdown, we had so much ...
When deciding custody cases, one provision of the law would allow courts to discriminate against a parent who uses his or her child’s given name and biologically correct corresponding pronoun if ...
In a subsequent interview with British Vogue, Ramsey said they are comfortable with the use of any pronouns, but stipulated that “being called ‘they’ is the most truthful thing for me”.
The Mesa Public Schools Governing Board is considering a policy requiring parental permission for teachers to use students' preferred names and pronouns. The proposed policy sparked significant ...
Earlier this month, a Brevard County teacher made headlines after she lost her job over using a student’s preferred pronouns without parental permission. The Southern Poverty Law Center has an ...
A wannabe-GI Jane’s dream of becoming the first female Navy SEAL ended because military recruiters delayed her application so long that she aged out, she claimed in a lawsuit. US Navy officials ...
So guess what? Someone does, punctuation really matters, and as you’ll see in “Pronoun Trouble” by John McWhorter, so do other parts of our language. Conversation is an odd thing.