Judge suspends Order of Trump that prohibited transgender people in the Armed Forces
Prohibition is soaked with animosity, the judge classified. “His language is blatantly humiliating, his policy stigmatizes transgender people as inappropriately disagreed, and their conclusions are unrelated to the facts,” criticized Reyes.
Treatment for trans people in the Armed Forces will be closed. The suspension of the order happens a day after the Trump government announced that it would close the help to military in the gender transition process. “If veterans want to try to change sex, they can do it with their own money,” said Doug Collins, secretary of the assistance department.
Jennifer Levi, one of the main lawyers in the case, celebrated the judge’s determination. “The unquestioning factual conclusions of the Court expose how this prohibition is specifically aimed at and weakens our brave service members who have pledged to defend our nation. Given the clear assessment of the court, we are confident that this decision will remain strong in the appeal,” he said.
Desolate with Order of Trump
Colonel Bree Fram served in the US Army for 22 years. She never imagined she could end her career like this: by an order from President Donald Trump who prohibits transgender people in the Armed Forces.
During the campaign last year, Trump criticized the trans population and, when assuming in January, signed an order declaring these people as unfit for military service. The Pentagon announced that it would remove the trans military and avoid further recruitments.
