CNSNews.com reacted to the Supreme Court decision finding that gays and transgenders are protected from job discrimination pretty much the way you’d expect, given its largely anti-LGBT history.
Susan Jones started things out with a surprisingly balanced article on the ruling; she excerpted from both the majority and minority opinions on the ruling, though she let her bias slip at the end by stating that “While a homosexual advocacy group called the ruling a “landmark victory for LGBTQ equality,” conservative groups disagree” and then quoting only conservative groups opposing the ruling.
From there, it was a descent into the usual bias. Editor in chief Terry Jeffrey devoted an entire article to the losing minority opinion under the headline “Alito and Thomas Smack Gorsuch.” Jeffrey followed that with a bizarre column headlined “Will Joe Biden Become Our First Female President?”
Some Americans were hopeful in 2016 that Hillary Clinton would become our first female president. She did not.
But now Joe Biden may do it.
Excuse me, you might ask, isn’t Biden a man?
Well, he is for now — under the Biden gender rules. But he need not be next year.
“Transgender equality is the civil rights issue of our time,” Biden tweeted on Jan. 25.
[…]So, presumably, under Biden’s sex identification policy that holds that “every transgender or non-binary person should have the option of changing their gender marker to ‘M,’ ‘F,’ or ‘X’ on government identifications,” a biological male who identifies as a woman one year can get government documentation — including a passport — that indicates he is a woman.
The next year, when he identifies as a man again, he can change his documentation to say he is a man.
Six months after that, when he decides he is neither a man nor a woman, he can get government documentation that says he is “X.”
If he has only a singular transgender transformation — and is not a non-binary person — all he or she needs to do is change the indication of his or her sex on his or her government documentation once.
This aggressively deliberate misunderstanding of what it means to be transgender led up to Jeffrey’s claim that the Supreme Court ruling “just goes to show that Gorsuch and Roberts share Biden’s view of what makes a man a woman,” adding, “The entire argument here might have been considered a reductio ad absurdum had the original proposition — that a man can become a woman or vice versa — not been absurd in the first place.”
The right-wing views opposing the ruling piled up after that:
A “news” article by John Jakubisin featured “Dr. Jennifer Roback Morse, Ph.D., president of the pro-family Ruth Institute” hyperbolically attacking the ruling as “erasing womanhood” while relegating a view supporting the ruling by “the pro-LGBT Human Rights Campaign” to the final two paragraphs of the article.
Hans von Spakovsky and Ryan Anderson — the latter an anti-LGBT activist CNS has previously promoted — bashed the ruling as “an act of judicial activism” and an “extreme policy.”
Mary Beth Waddell and Peter Sprigg of the right-wing, anti-LGBT Family Research Council, ranted that “Sexual orientation and gender identity nondiscrimination laws are unjustified in principle, because these characteristics are not inborn, involuntary, immutable, innocuous, or in the U.S. Constitution—unlike race and sex.”
CNS’ favorite dishonest Catholic, Bill Donohue, fretted that the ruling might mean an anti-LGBT church or religious organization might have to “employ a teacher who is in a homosexual relationship, or no longer identifies with the sex he or she was assigned at birth.” In another column, he attacked the “flawed anthropology upon which the ruling rests” and dismissed homosexuality as a “behavioral attribute.”