I am proud to call Minnesota home. We have robust communities, diverse cultures and wonderful resources. We have a can-do spirit that will not be squashed, and people who are not afraid to stand up for what we believe in.
The Trump administration and those who follow him are threatening the lives, livelihood, health, wellness and freedoms of citizens that they should be bound to protect. The most recent "memo" to define gender as binary and immutable is harmful to those members of our community whose gender identity does not correlate with the body that they were given ("White House eyes narrow gender test," Oct. 22). It dishonors men and women with ambiguous genitalia or for whom their life experience is at odds with their physical makeup.
Minnesota just embraced the third pronoun signifier "X" for driver's licenses, joining "M" and "F," and it was such a progressive step forward in helping recognize, validate and heal those members of our community who experience dysphoria and identify as gender nonbinary.
Gov. Mark Dayton must help make sure these people are not erased from our community and our culture. He must protect those who are targeted, ostracized, ridiculed and all too often attacked in their daily lives — help them remain humans, help them keep their identity and their human rights under the law. As an ally, the governor must speak against this.
Megan Peterson, Brooklyn Park
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I recently saw "I Come from Arizona" at the Children's Theatre Company, then participated in a "talkback" discussion. I was surprised by how many stayed for the postproduction discussion. Immigration is a hot topic these days. However, if I have one piece of constructive criticism to offer, it is that the script is too Minnesota Nice.
The cast does a wonderful job of showing the fear, risk and uncertainty of any immigrant coming to a foreign country, much less if they are in that country without legal documentation. Many people in the audience (such as me) described themselves as recent immigrants and identified heavily with and strongly supported the cast's portrayal of the script. What I did not hear was one person describing how their family came from Mexico legally and that every illegal alien here today should be sent back and wait their turn like everyone else. I also did not hear anyone question why the family was living in Chicago, stealing jobs and living off welfare.
I challenge the scriptwriters to put that character and those sentiments in this production. I also challenge those believing and espousing these sentiments to attend "I Come from Arizona" and stay for the talkback session. Civil discourse on such a hot topic is critical these days. And how does one have a discussion on immigration with children without teaching fear and hatred? "I Come from Arizona" at the Children's Theatre Company's Cargill Stage offers just the opportunity to have that valuable discussion. Go!