In response to questions about why A&M discontinued the medical care, a university spokesperson said its growing student population and the resulting strain on the A.P. Beutel Health Center require officials to continuously review the services they offer and how they use the center’s resources. The spokesperson noted that the university has invested more in mental health care following a national rise in college students seeking it out.

Transgender and queer students are skeptical of that explanation and believe the university acted in response to pressure from conservative groups. They say the move shows the university is not willing to support them equally.

“It just seems that they don’t take the same level of care to address concerns of the queer community as they would other communities,” Klatt said.

Students saw the move as part of a political environment that has become increasingly hostile against LGBTQ+ people in Texas. And it comes as the state’s public universities face top-down pressure to appease Republican leaders — or risk incurring their wrath during next year’s legislative session.

Don’t you just love that “small government?” FFS, y’all. Please vote like people’s futures depend upon it.

  • Telorand@reddthat.comOP
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    2 months ago

    Also, so much for being “the 12th man,” and standing up for people. I guess that slogan was all lip service.

    • WHYAREWEALLCAPS@fedia.io
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      2 months ago

      They’ve shown they only stand up for the “right kind of people.” A&M is a hive of conservative scum and villany.

      • ComradeSharkfucker@lemmy.ml
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        2 months ago

        The student body is a lot less conservative and a lot more queer than it used to be. I have even seen pro palestinian flags and booths. Most of the students in my degree program are queer or strong allies and I am in STEM. Even the heavily religous groups that show up on campus with booths get hardcore ignored.

        The administration is shit though and always will be I’m sure

      • wjrii@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        If you choose to fight the good fight and stay in Texas (or just need in-state tuition), UT in Austin is definitely the easier choice out of the two big public flagships. You can usually count on their admin to do the bare minimum to keep the worst of the statewide officeholders off their back, and the institution generally wants to be seen as keeping up with the best of the academic establishment in the country. A&M is almost custom-made to culturally go the other way, right down to a fixation on tradition and militarized conformity (without actually sending a huge number of students into the military anymore), and a culture of grievance and reflexively trying to differentiate themselves from UT.

        The actual faculty and staff probably only skews slightly right of the average university, but the students (including their shitty parents, hell maybe it’s mostly the parents), the alumni, and especially the donor class pressure A&M in ways that you don’t usually see in public higher education.

  • fluxion@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    But think of all the people who were offended by these transgender people getting medical care? What about their suffering?

  • PoopDelivery@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    And the spokesperson didn’t answer the question and redirected, no attempt to explain the reasoning around the decision. Was there a decision? It’s so vague who fucking knows. Pressure these paid lairs into answering the questions being asked.

    I can’t imagine being betrayed by my school like that. I feel bad for these students. Seeking medical care as a queer person in Texas sounds scary as fuck.

    • Telorand@reddthat.comOP
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      The hard part is that even if they wanted to be open about the reasoning, they ultimately cowered before the authoritarians in the State government, who hold them hostage by the purse strings.

      Until they are brave enough to defy the weirdos obsessed with people’s sex lives and genitals, we’ll never know if this decision was intentional or made under duress.