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Five transgender members of the United States military testified in front of Congress on Wednesday, the first to do so publicly.Army Capt. Alivia Stehlik, Navy Lt. Cmdr. Blake Dremann, Army Capt. Jennifer Peace, Army Staff Sgt. Patricia King and Navy Petty Officer 3rd Class Akira Wyatt all testified in front of the House Armed Services Committee, according to the Washington Post.All five testified that they were able to do their jobs effectively after transitioning. Some testified that their fellow soldiers were comfortable with their transition, and their transition even allowed others to open up to them.“They talked to me and told me things they never would have before,” Stehlik said. “Things they said they’ve never told other people. I asked them why, and the consistent answer is that they valued my authenticity — my courage in being myself. It allowed them to do the same thing.”The Obama administration repealed a ban on transgender persons in the military in 2016, allowing active military members to serve openly as transgender for the first time in decades. But in 2017, President Trump abruptly changed the policy in a series of tweets. While a number of lawsuits have been filed and are ongoing, the Supreme Court recently ruled to lift an injunction in some cases, keeping the ban in place. The five military members testified that they all sought medical treatments as part of their transition that prevented them from deploying, but all said they were able to do so by taking personal leave in between deployments.Rep. Jackie Speier (D-California), who called the meeting, was among the representatives to file a bill that would allow transgender service members to serve openly earlier this month. That bill has been referred to committee. Even if it were to be passed by the House and Senate, it would likely face a veto from the president.Alex Hider is a writer for the E.W. Scripps National Desk. Follow him on Twitter @alexhider. 2002
HIGHLANDS RANCH, Colorado — An armed private security guard who was assigned to the Highlands Ranch Colorado STEM school campus may have mistakenly fired at Douglas County deputies responding to the scene and injured a student, according to ABC News.A top law enforcement official told ABC News that detectives are trying to determine if a round from the security officer’s firearm struck and wounded an innocent student. The source said the investigation is in its early stages and authorities are speaking with the security guard to learn more. The student’s condition is not clear. Authorities responded to the school just before 2 p.m. on Tuesday after 669

Fear of an economic slowdown is rocking Wall Street and the oil markets.The Dow plunged 600 points and broke below 23,000 on Thursday, while the Nasdaq is flirting with a bear market. US oil prices plummeted more than 4% to the lowest level since August 2017.The latest wave of selling shows how worried investors have become about the eventual demise of the economic expansion. Those jitters were exacerbated by concerns that the Federal Reserve is making a mistake by 482
Hurricane Dorian's impact off Florida's coast is turning the strong wind and surf into tourist attractions for people in Cocoa Beach."I mean it's beyond crazy,” describes Sheane Lamar, who came to the beach to see the kite surfers taking advantage of the strong winds. “I came to see the craziness, and it's definitely crazy.”Brevard County's mandatory evacuation went into effect on Monday. Forecasters are telling people in Florida to continue taking the storm's threat seriously. However, the Floridians here say they’ve experienced these weather threats before and are confident they will be OK. "Been there, done that," says Shalay Hubbard.Hubbard brought her son to Cocoa Beach to see the weather move in. "This is not all that scary for us," she says. "If you live in Florida, you better deal with hurricanes. If you live in Massachusetts, you better deal with blizzards."The storm is expected to bring rain, wind and storm surge to Florida's space coast Tuesday night into Wednesday. 1004
Freshman Republican Sen. Martha McSally of Arizona revealed Wednesday that she was raped while she served in the military."I am also a military sexually assault survivor," McSally said during a Senate Armed Services subcommittee hearing on sexual assault in the military.McSally said that in one case she was preyed upon and raped by a superior office and that the system in place "raped" her as well."I too felt like the system raped me over again," McSally said.An aide to the senator told CNN that she has spent the past several days working on the testimony. McSally felt the need to come forward because she wanted to speak honestly with witnesses.McSally rose to the rank of colonel in the US Air Force before retiring. She was the first American woman to fly in combat after a ban on women was lifted.Read McSally's full prepared remarks in the tweet below. 876
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