As a result of the rapid takeover of mainstream academic and medical institutions by radical ideologues who deny the basic scientific realities of biological sex, we can hardly even agree on what a woman is in this country.
Contrary to what these radicals say, womanhood is not a subjective state unrelated to biological sex. That concept presents a grave and present threat to women and girls in many situations that cannot be allowed to continue.
The Georgia Fundamental Definitions Act amends various sections of the Official Code of Georgia to establish consistent, biologically-based definitions of sex. This legislation reinforces the importance of biological distinctions in legal contexts, ensuring that state laws align with fundamental truths about human nature.
Key Points of the Bill:
Biological Distinction: The bill formally recognizes the immutable biological differences between males and females that are evident from birth and become more pronounced through puberty.
Definition of Sex: It defines ‘sex’ explicitly as a person’s biological status as either male or female at birth, based on observable characteristics.
Clarification of Terms: Women and girls are defined as human females, aligning legal terminology with biological reality. Similarly, ‘female’ is defined specifically as the sex that produces ova.
Legal Framework: Codifies existing case law that prevents unfair discrimination while allowing for the recognition of sex differences in areas where it is relevant for policy and safety.
Data Collection: Mandates that all government agencies collecting vital statistics must identify individuals in their records as either male or female, based on their sex at birth, to ensure accuracy and clarity in public records
FACT: Activists are attempting to redefine words used in law so that biological males can access private women’s spaces without the public’s knowledge and without the consent of the women who rely on those spaces. The Women’s Bill of Rights reaffirms the relevance of biological sex and requires that government-funded facilities be honest and transparent with the public. Women have a right to know if allegedly single-sex spaces admit biological men.
FACT: Georgians and Americans, when polled, strongly agree with this law. When polling a scientific and representative sample of Americans:
FACT: This is incorrect. Although a very small percentage of people are born with congenital conditions associated with atypical development of internal and external genital structures, these individuals are still either male or female. Now usually referred to as differences in sexual development, or simply DSD conditions, these individuals are not part of some third biological category. They are males and females whose bodies developed atypically.
FACT: The Women’s Bill of Rights does not deny the existence of anyone. It does not create any new restrictions on those who identify as transgender, nor does it prevent agencies from collecting data on gender identity in addition to data on biological sex.