
āWe hear a lot of talk in the political debate about colonisation, but the worst colonising practice in our society are attempts by social engineers, many of them in the education system, to take over the role of parents,ā One Nation MLC Mark Latham told the New South Wales parliament on August 5.
In one foul breath, the state leader of Pauline Hansonās party belittled the plight of First Nations peoples, before insisting that unknown powers are manipulating teachers and counsellors to promote the so-called sinister aim of understanding gender in its diversity.
Latham makes this claim in the on his .
This highly paranoid piece of legislation seeks to ban school staff from helping students navigate gender fluidity, by threatening them with the sack.
Latham essentially wants to stop transgender and gender diverse children from understanding their identity.
While this bill is unlikely to succeed, it is necessary to speak out about it because it represents a vicious attack on a small group of vulnerable kids. It also provides cover for Prime Minister Scott Morrisonās religious freedom crusade, making it appear less extreme.
Civil rights
āIf this bill were to pass, it would be the single greatest blow to civil rights for LGBTIQ people at least since the specific ban on marriage equality,ā warned .
āSome people have argued that as this bill wonāt pass, why give Latham the airtimeā, sheĀ said.
āBecause the rhetoric is really extreme, so it needs to be confronted ā¦ We need to send a message out there to trans kids that theyāre supported.ā
CARR organised the .
Holcombe made it clear that the prohibition on any mention of gender fluidity in schools would be damaging to trans and gender diverse children, or teens struggling with their sense of self or sexuality.
The trans activist also underscored that āthe rights of parents shouldnāt trump the rights of children to a safe and accepting educationā and that āthis bill only empowers conservative parents to have a regressive impact upon the content of educationā.
What the bill seeks to do
The bill seeks to in a number of ways. It : āgender fluidityā ā that there is a differenceĀ between human biologyĀ and human gender, with the latter being a "social construct" or, as Latham puts it, a "post-modern cancer";Ā and āmatters of parental primacyā ā by which Latham meansĀ āmatters of personal wellbeing and identity including gender and sexualityā which, he insists, only parents are responsible for.Ā It also rolls out multiple prohibitions related toĀ "teaching"Ā aboutĀ gender fluidity, which includes any instruction, counseling or advice on the matter.
The ban does not only apply to teachers, but extends to school executives, counsellors, staff, contractors, advisors, consultants and volunteers.
The bill also seeks to amend the Teacher Accreditation Act 2004, so that courses recognise āmatters of parental primacyā as the sole responsibility of parents; that curriculum does not include āgender fluidityā content; and that accreditation can be revoked from those who breach these stipulations.
Attacks onĀ educators
Coupled with Lathamās ,Ā this anti-trans bill reads like an assault on the education system as well as an ideological attack on LGBTIQ rights in line with Morrisonās religious discrimination bill.
The dual attack recalls in the NSW parliament in which he said: āWe shouldnāt be changing the purpose of our education system: transforming schools from places of skill and academic attainment into gender fluidity factories.ā
However, the NSW Teachers Federation sees it very differently. said teachers strive to create āenvironments where young people can develop and test their knowledgeā and that the bill threatens to undermine this by pitting parents against the school system, which ultimately affects studentsā wellbeing.
The Ā is supporting the campaign against the discriminatory bill.
āUnfortunately, research has shown that LGBITQ students are at higher risk from lack of connection with their school environment, which leads to lower outcomes and therefore students not reaching their potential,ā Smith told Ā鶹“«Ć½.
Further, Smith said, schools āhave an obligation to ensure that students are educated in an environment thatās safe and free from violence, harassment and bullyingā. Teaching acceptance and appreciation of diversity and difference is a prime way of achieving that, she said.
Destructive ideology
According to , about 1.2% of school students identify as transgender. While gender variance and gender non-conformity wasĀ recorded in Sumerian texts from 4500 years ago, trans peopleĀ continue to be shunned, bullied and subjected to high levels of violence.
Itās this sort of marginalisation that leads transgender people to be ,Ā according to the National LGBTI Health Alliance.
Holcombe maintains that school counsellors āare often one of the few places that a young person dealing with questions about their gender identity can goā.
LGBT committee co-chair Georgia Burke said Lathamās legislation āpurports to remedy an alleged issue in NSW that teachers in schools āteach gender fluidityā.ā But, she said, no such issue exists, and thereās no data to support his claim.
Rather than follow some hidden agenda, teachers are obliged by law to āhonour the identities of children as they identifyā, which then creates space for diversity, Burke said.
āThis is a dangerous bill, driven by fear and drafted with contempt for evidence-based best practice with respect to pedagogy and childrenās psychological development,ā Burke concluded.
[“”ĢżĀ is being organised on September 10 at 1pm at Taylor Square in Sydney. Paul Gregoire is a Sydney-based journalist who writes for .]