Cassidy Carlel She said in the seventh grade, when she had to change in the cabinet room itself as a transgender student.
During the separation of the Brezk Iil Sports School in the north of Maine, six years ago, I entered into Treasury room To find a biological male that changes with it and other girls. She claims that she told officials that if she tried to avoid change with a transient student, she would risk late in the class.
“This was my first experience in knowing that something is not true, but I don't know what to do with that,” Carliel told Fox News Digital in an exclusive interview. Fox News Digital has arrived at Presque Isle Middle for comment.
Sexual identity was first included in the Human Rights Law in Maine as part of the definition of sexual inclination in 2005. In 2021, the law was amended to add sexual identity as its own protected class, joining other protected groups such as sex, sexual intercourse, disability, race, color and religion. The law specifically says that depriving a person of equal opportunities in sports programs is educational discrimination.
He was a transgender student in the girls ’cabinet room only for about a week, as Carlal claims, before he disappeared in mysterious circumstances. But the memory of the experience is stuck with it.

Maine Secondary School Cassidy Carlal Ski (With the permission of Cassidy Carlel)
The memory was stuck with it in its first year of high school, when it discovered that it would compete with a converted athlete on the north ski team.
It was a sporting. She had already lost to the crossing athlete in the country's competitions in previous years.
When her father told her that she would have to confront the athlete again in skiing, Carlal did not think he was happening.
Cassidy recalls, “I was like, oh, this is something I just hear about the news … it will not happen to me.”

Maine high school, Casidi Carlel, student runs at a track event (With the permission of Cassidy Carlel)
But she happened to her.
“The defeat that comes with that at that moment is surprising,” said Carlel. “I am just shocking somehow. I couldn't believe it … I didn't think that was happening to me.”
When she was a child, Carliel left the joint hockey team specifically because she felt “she could not keep up” with the children. Then, even after adhering to only girls, she could not escape from the physical defect that came with the biological males confronting.
In addition to the anxiety of the situation, Carliel felt that she could not talk about it.
“I remained silent for a while,” said Carlal. “It is very difficult to speak if you don't have a platform to do so … … The violent reaction is a huge. I am a high school student. High school student does not want to get hurt or shout on middle comments by people. The truth of that, with the country in which I live, this can happen a lot.”
What you can do is vote in the November elections. As a voter for the first time, she made her voting with the issue of athletes converting to sports girls in the foreground.
A National exit poll The Legislative Labor Committee for Women for America found that 70 % of moderate voters saw the case of “Donald Trump's opposition to children and transgender men who play girls, women's sports, boys and transgender men who use girls and women” importance to them.
6 % said it was the most important issue ever, while 44 % said it was “very important.”
When the Republic of Maine is a delegate. Laurel Libby I spoke earlier this year against another athlete through the competition in the pole cellar in February, Carlisle suddenly gained an opportunity to influence this issue.
The social media publication in a Libyan determines that the transient athlete pushes the entire state to a continuous cultural war. It has become zero for a national battle over the issue launched by the Trump administration against many Democratic countries such as Maine after Trump signed an executive order to address the case on February 5.
Suddenly, thousands of people in the state of Mine were speaking publicly against the laws of the state that enables transient inclusion in sports girls and tank rooms, all with the support of the president.
So Carlal joined.
On February 27, Carlal made a trip to the White House with many current and previous sports that were affected by transit, including Payetton McKenab and Selena Sol. There, they met with the Public Prosecutor Pam Bondi and many other state lawyers and shared their stories.
Carlisle could only notice an absence in the White House on that day,
“There was no AGS from our state,” Carlal said.
Therefore, when Carlal returned to her mandate, things took her hands.
At the end of last week, she delivered a speech in front of Min Capitol, and spoke to hundreds of other residents there to protest against Guanta Mills for enabling her athletes crossing in girls' sports.
This was the second protest against Mills outside the Capitol in a month after a march in the Mills Rally on March 1.
The Trump administration takes aggressive measures to make the state adhere to the desires of Carlal and other residents who want to protect females from transient inclusion.
On March 17, the Office of Health and Humanitarian Services of Civil Services (OCR) I announced that if you exist The Ministry of Education in the state of Mine, and the Directors of Mine Directors and Al -Khader Secondary School in violation of the ninth championship to continue to enable the inclusion in girls' sports.
In this announcement, the administration said Maine has 10 days to correct its policies through a signature agreement or refer the risks to the US Department of Justice for the appropriate procedure.
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Trump has already shown ready to reduce federal financing to impose these policies. He temporarily stopped at $ 175 million of financing for the University of Pennsylvania and temporarily stopped funding to the Maine University system last week until the review found that the system was In full compliance With Trump's orders.
The deadline for the rest of Maine is to appear during the week.
“I really hope Maine will agree because our schools need federal funding, and we cannot risk the loss of this,” Carliel said. “It is really possible to hurt our state to lose this federal financing. Therefore, I hope that our government can collect it together.”
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