It's common sense, if you have a willy you use the men's restroom, if you don't you use the women's restroom. Parents don't want mental midgets with willies dressed in drag trying to get at their children
And the number of incidents of transgendered individuals "getting at children" in a restroom are how many? (Spoiler Alert...it's zero)
You monitor all the restrooms in the country? I doubt it, your name on the wall doesn't count.
But it's funny that anything that isn't forcing society to accept gender neutrality is labeled anti-gay. That's anti-thought and anti-tolerance to people that don't agree with them.
Come on...Transgendered women are allegedly this horrific problem that requires the legislature of NC to hold a special session (costing their taxpayers thousands of dollars) and pass a bill in the dark of night...so please, by all means, list the incidents of transgendered individuals doing anything other than using the facility for it's designed purpose of bodily fluid evacuation or hand washing.
If by transgendered you mean a dick in a skirt then they are right to pass the law. Just because an individual is confused doesn't mean the rest of society should be forced to embrace their insanity.
BOROWITZ Says
North Carolina Governor Swears in Historic First Class of Bathroom-Enforcement Cadets
By Andy Borowitz, The New Yorker
27 March 16
The article below is satire. Andy Borowitz is an American comedian and New York Times-bestselling author who satirizes the news for his column, "The Borowitz Report."
n a historic ceremony at the state capitol, on Friday, North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory swore in a thousand officers charged with enforcing the state’s new public-bathroom regulations.
Speaking to the newly graduated bathroom-enforcement cadets, McCrory impressed upon them the gravity of their responsibility. “You are the thin blue line charged with protecting the gender sanctity of North Carolina’s bathrooms,” he said. “Be careful out there.”
McCrory told reporters that the thousand officers are only “the first wave” of a bathroom-patrol force that will eventually swell to over fifty thousand. “This is job creation at its finest,” he said.
In addition to “making North Carolina proud of its bathrooms again,” McCrory said, the state’s new law should boost tourism, as visitors from around the world clamor to watch North Carolina’s unique bathroom-enforcement program in action.
“Ever since we passed this law, my phone has been ringing off the hook,” the governor said. “People can’t believe what we’re doing in North Carolina.”