We’ve officially reached the part of the timeline where a school principal — the person literally paid to keep children safe — looked a group of girls in the eye and told them that if they’re uncomfortable with biological males walking into their bathroom, they should just… leave. Go find somewhere else. YOUR discomfort is YOUR problem. The boy in the girls’ room? He’s fine. He stays. You’re the one who needs to adjust.
Let that marinate for a second. A grown adult, entrusted with the safety of other people’s children, essentially told teenage girls that their right to privacy, dignity, and basic physical safety ranks below a boy’s right to use whatever restroom makes him feel validated. If you wrote this into a dystopian novel five years ago, your editor would’ve told you to dial it back because nobody would believe it. And yet here we are, folks. Here we are.
The story comes out of a school where female students did exactly what we teach kids to do — they spoke up. They went to the person in charge. They said, “Hey, we’re not comfortable with this.” And the principal’s response wasn’t to investigate. Wasn’t to find a reasonable accommodation. Wasn’t to even pretend to care about the girls’ concerns. It was five words that tell you everything you need to know about where this ideology leads: “Go somewhere else if you’re uncomfortable.”
Go somewhere else.
Think about what that means. The girls — the ones whose bathroom it actually is — are being told to vacate. To wander the halls. To hold it. To figure it out on their own. Because in 2026 America, the hierarchy of who matters in a public school has been completely inverted, and the girls are at the bottom.
We spent decades building Title IX protections. We fought to make sure girls had equal access to facilities, to sports, to opportunities. Feminists marched for this stuff. And now? Now the same ideological machine that claims to champion women has decided that women’s spaces aren’t actually women’s spaces anymore. They’re everybody’s spaces. Unless you’re a girl who objects — then you don’t get a space at all.
This principal didn’t go rogue. That’s the part that should really keep you up at night. This isn’t some wacky outlier who went off-script at a school board meeting. This is the policy. This is what happens when school districts adopt “gender-inclusive” bathroom rules with zero safeguards, zero parental notification, and zero concern for the 99% of students who just want to use the restroom without it becoming a political statement.
The adults in the building made a choice. They chose ideology over the girls they’re supposed to protect. And when those girls had the courage to push back, they got the back of the hand. “Go somewhere else.” Translation: shut up and comply.
Now here’s what really grinds my gears. If a male student told a female student she didn’t belong somewhere, every alarm in that school would go off. There’d be assemblies. Counselors. Sensitivity training. A strongly worded letter to parents about “creating inclusive environments.” But when the principal tells a group of girls that THEY need to leave THEIR OWN bathroom? Silence. Crickets. Move along, nothing to see here.
The hypocrisy isn’t even subtle anymore. It’s a neon sign the size of a highway billboard, and the people running our schools just drive right past it every single day.
And let’s talk about the parents, because you know there are moms and dads out there who sent their daughters to school that morning thinking, “At least the school will keep her safe.” That’s the basic social contract of public education. You hand your kid over for seven hours a day, and in exchange, the school provides a safe learning environment. But apparently that contract now has an asterisk: Safety does not apply if it conflicts with gender ideology. Please see your principal for alternative bathroom arrangements.
What are those parents supposed to do? Pull their kids out? Homeschool? Not everyone has that option. Not every family can afford private school or has a parent who can stay home. So millions of families are trapped in a system that has decided their daughters’ comfort and safety is negotiable. A bargaining chip on the altar of progressive virtue signaling.
This is what we’ve been warning about for years. Every time someone raised concerns about biological males in female spaces, we were told we were bigots. Fearmongers. Transphobes. “It’ll never happen,” they said. “Nobody’s going to abuse this,” they promised. And now a principal is telling girls to hit the road if they don’t like sharing a bathroom with boys, and somehow WE’RE still the bad guys for pointing it out.
Here’s the thing the ideologues will never admit: you can treat every student with kindness and respect without throwing girls under the bus. You can accommodate everyone without telling half the student body that their boundaries don’t matter. But that would require nuance, and nuance doesn’t get you points in the oppression Olympics.
So the principal chose the easy path. Side with the loudest voices. Punish the girls for having the audacity to feel uncomfortable. And sleep just fine at night knowing that the school district’s diversity statement is fully intact, even if the girls’ sense of safety isn’t.
We used to protect children. That was the one thing — the ONE thing — we all agreed on across every political line. Kids come first. But now? Now kids come first only if they’re the right kind of kid, saying the right kind of thing, supporting the right kind of agenda.
And if your daughter doesn’t? Well, she can go somewhere else.