The ruling, in a case brought by a Hamburger Mary’s restaurant, pauses enforcement of the state’s new “Protection of Children” law, which prohibits admitting children to an “adult live performance.”

  • Fneec@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Or, very unorthodox idea I know, but how about parents check what kind of show they’re attending with their children?

    • HotDogFingies@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      This is exactly it. It’s about parental responsibility. You wouldn’t play a movie for a child without checking the rating. And, if you do, it’s not the director’s fault that little Timmy saw The Virgin Suicides.

      • EvilColeslaw@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        The movie thing is also quite an apt example. It is totally legal for a child to see an R-rated movie with their parent. R rated movies are allowed to have nudity, simulated sex scenes, etc etc etc. Much more inappropriate for a child than being read an age-approriate story by a drag queen or seeing someone in drag dancing and singing on stage. But this law about drag performance makes no exceptions for parental responsibility. A parent could conceivably be convicted of a misdemeanor for taking their child to a family friendly drag show.

    • Snapz@beehaw.org
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      1 year ago

      And they do, parents who actually take their kids to story tone or shows aren’t the ones that are upset.

      The people who are upset (terrified) are grandma death and uncle Karl. They live in kansas, they’ve never seen or spoken to an actual trans person, yet they open their trash can lids slowly because they think one is inevitably “gonna jump out and bite 'em!”. Ignorance is a plague.

      Trans people are people.