Jennifer Rubin is a regular columnist at the Washington Post. She was hired by the Post to be its “right” voice, but the Trump years flipped her politics. (I think she is my doppelgänger.) Before she became a columnist at WAPO, she wrote for The Weekly Standard, National Review, Commentary, and Human Events, among other conservative publications. Trump turned her into a Democrat. She has a BA and law degree from Berkeley.
She wrote here about a decision by a federal judge in Tennessee, overturning the state’s law banning drag shows. Drag is a performance. Drag queens, whether male or female, wear costumes to entertain audiences. If you don’t approve, don’t go to a drag show. If you think children should not see men pretending to be women (like “Mrs. Doubtfire” or “Tootsie,” don’t let them watch).
I have never been to a live drag show, though I enjoy seeing Tyler Perry play “Medea” in the movies and have enjoyed films like “Some Like It Hot” and “The Birdcage.” To me, drag is an age-old theatrical device, a performance intended to be humorous. If you believe in parental rights, trust parents to decide whether their children should go to a drag story hour at the local library. Once a legislature begins declaring what can be alllowed onstage, we are on a very dangerous path.
Rubin wrote:
Republicans, right-wing judges and MAGA activists have set out to trample on free speech and individual rights in the name of battling “wokeism.” If they don’t like what teachers say about history, gag them. If they don’t like certain books, ban them. If they don’t like a corporation defending LGBTQ rights, retaliate against it. Their crusade has become an expression of not only white Christian nationalism but of contempt for the Constitution and the First Amendment.
But last week, U.S. District Judge Thomas L. Parker, appointed by President Donald Trump, stood up to the thought police and the MAGA bullies in striking down the so-called drag queen ban (the Adult Entertainment Act) in Tennessee.
Parker began with an ode to the First Amendment: “Freedom of speech is not just about speech. It is also about the right to debate with fellow citizens on self-government, to discover the truth in the marketplace of ideas, to express one’s identity, and to realize self-fulfillment in a free society.” He continued, “That freedom is of first importance to many Americans such that the United States Supreme Court has relaxed procedural requirements for citizens to vindicate their right to freedom of speech, while making it harder for the government to regulate it.” And the Tennessee statute impermissibly tried to regulate free speech, he found.
Parker ruled that the law was “both unconstitutionally vague and substantially overbroad” because of the prohibition on displays “harmful to minors,” whatever that means. The law “fails to provide fair notice of what is prohibited, and it encourages discriminatory enforcement,” especially because the ban applies wherever a minor could be present.
Parker noted that the Supreme Court does not protect obscenity but certainly does protect speech that is unpopular. “Simply put, no majority of the Supreme Court has held that sexually explicit — but not obscene — speech receives less protection than political, artistic, or scientific speech. … The AEA’s regulation of ‘adult-oriented performances that are harmful to minors under § 39-17-901′ does target protected speech, despite Defendant claims to the contrary.” In a retort to Republicans seeking to rid libraries, classrooms and performance venues of anything they find offensive, Parker wrote, “Whether some of us may like it or not, the Supreme Court has interpreted the First Amenmentas protecting speech that is indecent but not obscene.”
And Parker also found the law “targets the viewpoint of gender identity — particularly those who wish to impersonate a gender that is different from the one with which they are born.” This is prohibited “content-based, viewpoint-based regulation on speech.” Republicans insist there is no such thing as gender identity other than gender determined at birth. That’s not a fact, as the MAGA censors insist; that’s a viewpoint. And it is impermissible to ban other viewpoints. That, Parker underscores, is what a free society is all about.
Simply because MAGA politicians want to write trans Americans out of existence does not make it constitutionally permissible. “The Court finds that the AEA’s text discriminates against a certain viewpoint, imposes criminal sanctions, and spans a virtually unlimited geographical area,” Parker wrote. “The AEA can criminalize — or at a minimum chill — the expressive conduct of those who wish to impersonate a gender that is different from the one with which they were born in Shelby County. Such speech is protected by the First Amendment.” He concluded, “This statute — which is barely two pages long — reeks with constitutional maladies of vagueness and overbreadth fatal to statutes that regulate First Amendment rights. The virulence of the AEA’s overbreadth chills a large amount of speech, and calls for this strong medicine.”
I hope you can open the link and read the rest of this excellent article.

I have been to a few local charity drag shows. They can be raunchy and fun and very entertaining. No one expects children to be present. A drag Queen reading a book to children in a library is a different matter. Nothing to worry about. To ban drag shows seems as unAmerican as banning books…oh wait
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My feller Christian educators. Please make shore thet the followin’ peeces of filth SHOT THROUGH WITH PORNOGRAPHY is removed imediately frum yore curriculums and liberries, as per Governur and presidenshul candydate Ron Ron DeSalubrious:
1984, Anna Karenina, Animal Farm, As I Lay Dying, The Awakening, Beloved, The Bible, Brave New World, Candide, Catch-22, The Canterbury Tales, Diary of a Young Girl, A Farewell to Arms, For Whom the Bell Tolls, Go Tell It on the Mountain, Gone with the Wind, The Grapes of Wrath, The Great Gatsby, Gulliver’s Travels, Hamlet, The Iliad, Invisible Man, Leaves of Grass, Native Son, The Odyssey, Of Mice and Men, One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest, Paradise Lost, Romeo and Juliet, The Scarlet Letter, Separate Peace, Sister Carrie, Slaughterhouse-Five, Song of Solomon, Sons and Lovers, Sophie’s Choice, The Spoon River Anthology, The Sun Also Rises, Their Eyes Were Watching God, “To His Coy Mistress,” To Kill a Mockingbird, War and Peace, and Wuthering Heights.
A sugestion: Make uh copie uv this here list en distribute it to all yore parints and studundts wuth a warnin’ not under eny circumstances to reed or alow to be red any of this nasty stuff.
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Another tour de force!
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My list uv books ta pro-tect yore kids frum is in moderashun, but I jist thot uv uhnother won. Whuts the name uv thet book whar all them boys is runnin’ around in the woods on sum island gettin’ all hot in sweaty and killin’ pigs, the ladder of which is purfectly normul but perhaps sum readers might be led to unnaturul thots reeding it? No whut I mean?
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NB: Lord of the Flies has been banned for various reasons, including violence and having a homoerotic subtext. The note above is meant to be a satire of the “methinks he doth protest too much” character of reich-wing criticism of drag shows, drag queens, LGBTQX lit, and so on.
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Oh, and no Wallace Stevens:
https://www.poemhunter.com/poem/the-plot-against-the-giant/
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More filth by Stevens:
https://www.lieder.net/lieder/get_text.html?TextId=73006
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And all that filth from Edna St. Vincent Millay:
https://poets.org/poem/i-being-born-woman-and-distressed-sonnet-xli
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And that Bob Shepherd:
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Not to mention this, which was dedicated to Diane Ravich:
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Bob,
I never saw that! I am deeply moved and honored.
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That is exactly what the MAGA fascist politicians, supporters, and censors want to do to everyone that does not think like them.
That why MAGA wants to take away a parents’ rights to raise their children as they see fit, if those parents don’t think like MAGA.
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In the name of parents’ rights! lol
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I think we need to stop using terms like MAGA fascist politicians and call them what they are: republicans. The MFP are not aberrations or extremists within their cult, they are the cult and the cult is the party.
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It’s true. This is the party as it stands today.
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I call them Rethuglicans. They aren’t what the old Republicans were, just as they are not conservative, they are regressive xtian theofascists.
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Mentioning all those movies works, I think. Hard to argue against Jack Lemmon in Some Like It Hot.
I heard, a few minutes ago on the radio, LAUSD Board President Jackie Goldberg give an impassioned impromptu speech today about this: https://ktla.com/news/local-news/l-a-school-board-approves-resolution-in-support-of-lqbtq-community/. I couldn’t find her speech online for you, but I hope you can get and hear it, Diane. She was rightly and personally upset. She spoke truth powerfully. Maybe consider reaching out to her.
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