The TERF Report

The TERF Report

Quick paid subscriber appreciation post

And a sneak peek at some new content

Kara Dansky's avatar
Kara Dansky
Apr 02, 2026
∙ Paid

April 2, 2026

This post is to express appreciation to paid subscribers and to share with them a sneak peek at some new content that will be appearing in the upcoming weeks.

But first …

At no point in my life did I expect to be recognized by the Republican National Lawyers Association, but that happened for the first time ever today.

The recognition came because of an article I published in The Hill on Tuesday titled “The court case where ‘gender identity’ made women’s rights unspeakable.” The article concluded: “Let the era of “swinging d—s” litigation come to an end.” Indeed.

On Monday, I published a paid-only post about Idaho HB 752, which makes it a misdemeanor to knowingly and willfully enter an opposite-sex bathroom in a government building or place of public accommodation (restaurants, bars, movie theaters, etc.). At the time of posting, the bill had passed in both chambers of the state legislature. I’m pleased to report that Idaho Governor Bradley Little has now signed the bill into law (Little is the same governor who signed the nation’s first law to protect female-only sports in 2020). Hooray!

I recently came across an essay written by Tremaine Carroll, a man who called himself a woman and by doing so, earned his spot in the Central California Women’s Facility (CCWF, the larger of two women’s prisons in California) under California’s SB 132. Carroll is accused of raping two female inmates in the women’s facility. His criminal case is pending, and he has since been returned to a men’s prison. Diana Alastair, a police officer, writer, lesbian, and radical feminist says you should read the essay if you want to see how a predator’s mind works. I did read the essay, and I can see exactly what she means.

I recently activated my long-dormant Instagram account. Feel free to give me a follow if you’d like.

The purpose of this post is to express appreciation for paid subscribers, on whom I rely to pay the bills. I’ll provide a sneak peek into some snazzy new content, which (if all goes as planned) will appear above the paywall in a post to be published tomorrow at 3 p.m. ET.

Paid-only content follows. A paid subscription gets you regular access to much more content and the ability to comment and engage in conversation with other thoughtful people.

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