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Misguided Millennials Say Misgendering Should Be a Crime

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ANALYSIS

Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat has always been a favorite at our house.  
 
Like fans worldwide, I applaud the creative way that Tim Rice and Andrew Lloyd Webber brought to life the biblical tale of Joseph and his multi-colored coat (c.f., Genesis 37-45).  But in the prologue, there is a lyric that still makes me cringe though I've heard it hundreds of times:

                                    "We all dream a lot — some are lucky, some are not
                                    But if you think it, want it, dream it, then it's real,
                                    You are what you feel. . ."

That last line may as well be the summa fides for Millennials and younger. The belief that "what I feel" constitutes reality and is therefore "my truth" is now being coupled with the assumption that you must believe it, too.

Is it true that "we are what we feel?" Of course not. A child may pretend that a bedsheet is an invisibility cloak or that their cousin is Barbie. But somewhere along the journey through childhood, the stages of adolescence, and then into adulthood, rational people come to terms with their actual identity.  
 
Today, people well beyond the protean years of childhood may now identify as any number of "selves," and with growing momentum are insisting that everyone else affirm and agree.  But must the public necessarily acquiesce, or be compelled to affirm things they know aren't true?  Is the law on the side of those who insist others agree with their subjective "gender identification"? Surprisingly — and dangerously — this question is up for debate.

Before having a discussion of what "rights" our Constitution actually protects, let me say this as emphatically as ink on paper can convey: People may do or think whatever they wish (within the bounds of civil law). Those who desire to engage in homosexual acts may do so and those who believe that fidelity to their "true self" mandates cross-dressing may do so. No atheist should be "forced" to acknowledge God, and no woman who wishes to remain childless should be forced to become impregnated.
 
Our unique Constitution was framed on the assumption that humans exist as an objective category of being. "Male" and "female" are not arbitrary social constructs, and knowledge of moral truth is embossed in the psyche of all rational people. Our "rights," therefore, are not unlimited. "Liberty" does not mean (at least it did not originally mean) "militant autonomy."

Every American was blessed to live in an America that made a promise something virtually no other country did:  The government would recognize the penumbra (grouping) of rights imparted to you by . . . God.  The list of "natural rights" guaranteed protection by law is wonderfully broad (life, liberty, the pursuit of happiness) but not unlimited.

You may identify as a furry in your off time, but your employer does not have to make concessions for such role playing in the workplace. To try and shoehorn recently codified, "manufactured" rights into a frame work that assumed timeless, universal rights jeopardizes the future of our once-stable Republic.  

While it is troubling that nearly half of young adults support whatever "special rights" advocacy groups dream up, it is (sadly) understandable that they do. So many people have not been taught much about America, except that it is (allegedly) "bad, bad, bad!" The time to defend out natural rights-based government is now. 

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Despite what hundreds of professors and thousands of students insist, America is not purely a democracy (but a representative republic based on natural law). Nevertheless, Churchill's famous quote is helpful to this discussion: "Democracy is the worst form of government — except for all the others that have been tried."

Is America perfect? Certainly not. Will our Constitution affirm (and the culture at large celebrate) every kink and whim insisted upon by narcissistic sinners? No, and thank God for it.

But if you want liberty, stability, and prosperity unlike anything humans have experienced previously over thousands of years of recorded history… our natural law Republic has got you covered! Let's not lose it.  
 
Enforced acquiescence to the increasingly militant demands of LGBTQ+ ideologues can only come about if the U.S. Constitution (and its philosophical foundations) are erased from the public consciousness. And to think that we may replace our Constitution and not have it supplanted by a totalitarian form of government… well, that is simply make believe.
 
Dr. Alex McFarland is a youth, religion and culture expert, a national talk show host and speaker, educator, and is author of 20 books. McFarland directs Biblical Worldview and apologetics for Charis Bible College in Woodland Park, CO. Via the American Family Radio Network, Alex is heard live on Exploring the Word, airing daily on nearly 200 radio stations across the U.S.

 

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About The Author

Alex
McFarland

Dr. Alex McFarland is a religion and culture expert, national talk show host, speaker and author of 18 books, including his newest book, Abandoned Faith: Why Millennials Are Walking Away and How You Can Lead Them Home. He also serves as Director for Christian Worldview and Apologetics at the Christian Worldview Center of North Greenville University in Greenville, S.C., and spent 20-plus years training teens and adults in the biblical worldview, including his role as Teen Apologetics Director at Focus on the Family.