Tag: person

  • State takes on ‘woke’ language, introduces bill to ban terms such as “pregnant person” and “chestfeeding”

    State takes on ‘woke’ language, introduces bill to ban terms such as “pregnant person” and “chestfeeding”

    West Virginia lawmakers on Monday introduced a bill that bans “woke words” and agendas from state government content, citing concerns about the terms being “sexist” and “exclusionary.”

    The changes, which center around “accurate, female-affirming alternatives,” would restrict wording used in state government documents, websites, literature and in-person, according to legislators.

    Specific terms included in the bill include using “pregnant women” instead of “pregnant people,” using “woman” instead of “womxn or womyn,” and using “woman” instead of “birth-giver.”

    Wording changes would affect typically female-related topics. (iStock)

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    The phrases were designed for gender inclusivity, as some people do not identify with their biological anatomy.

    Other wording changes noted in the bill relate to breastfeeding and other pregnancy-related topics.

    Legislators suggested using “breastfeeding” as opposed to “chestfeeding,” “breast fed” as opposed to “body fed” or “person fed,” and “breast milk” instead of “human milk.”

    Welcome to West Virginia sign

    (Joe Sohm/Visions of America/Universal Images Group via Getty Images)

    While supporters claim the gender-neutral terminology can “streamline” communication about various topics, critics allege the wording is “made up” and can lead to confusion.

    The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) in 2023 posted advice on its website for transgender and non-binary people wishing to “chestfeed” their children.

    Portions of the guidance detailed instructions for those who had breasts removed in gender-reassignment surgery or for biological men taking hormones to grow breasts on how to feed their newborns.

    Several doctors criticized the information, claiming the CDC failed to gauge the risks posed to children drinking milk produced by chemicals used in gender-reassignment medical operations.

    FEDS SPENT MILLIONS STUDYING TRANS MENSTRUATION, STRENGTHENING GAY RIGHTS IN THE BALKANS, DATABASE REVEALS

    House Bill 2406, which is sponsored by 11 delegates, would take effect on June 1.

    On Feb. 7, CDC researchers were told to remove words frequently associated with gender ideology from research manuscripts that they intend to publish.

    A screenshot of a leaked internal email sent out to CDC staff, obtained by the newsletter Inside Medicine, showed a list of terms and phrases that must be removed from scientific manuscripts produced by the agency’s researchers and intended for publication. 

    Those terms included: “gender,” “transgender,” “pregnant person,” “pregnant people,” “LGBT,” “transsexual,” “non-binary,” “nonbinary,” “assigned male at birth,” “assigned female at birth,” “biologically male” and “biologically female.” According to the Washington Post, the list includes about 20 terms. They indicated that the directive also ordered the removal of any use of “they/them.”

    pregnant woman

    The bill will affect language relating to pregnancy and women. (iStock)

    West Virginia University is the latest education institution to curb its diversity, equity and inclusion office due to reverse-discrimination claims.

    The delegates did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.

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    Fox News Digital’s Gabriel Hays and Charles Creitz contributed to this report.

  • Delving into murky origins of Valentine’s Day: How it became the day of love, was St Valentine a real person, and more

    Delving into murky origins of Valentine’s Day: How it became the day of love, was St Valentine a real person, and more

    Bearing cards, flowers, chocolates and poetry, lovers have always swooned on Valentine’s Day as cherubs circled overhead. Right? Or is the history darker, marked by Roman bacchanalia, martyrs and lies?

    Valentine’s Day balloons are displayed at a grocery store. (AP)

    Also Read | Happy Valentine’s Day 2025: Top 30 wishes, images, GIFs, messages and WhatsApp status to share with your love on Feb 14

    Innumerable legends claim to explain the origins of Valentine’s Day, but as is the case with legends, they leave many questions unanswered. Here are a few:

    Where did Valentine’s Day originate?

    For years, the consensus among historians was that the holiday had something to do with an ancient Roman festival called Lupercalia that fell in mid-February. Noel Lenski, a Yale University historian, pointed to the seasonal and thematic connections between Lupercalia and modern Valentine’s Day.

    Both are erotic festivals, in a sense, but the ancient one — which included pairing off women and men by lottery — also involved religious purification and atonement.

    “Naked young men, drunk, would go running around Palatine Hill swatting virginal women with strips of dog fur and goat fur to make them fertile,” Lenski said.

    According to one legend, Pope Gelasius wanted to put an end to the debauchery in the late fifth century. He declared Feb. 14 as the feast day of a St. Valentine, who had been martyred about 200 years before.

    But that theory emerged in an 1807 book without any evidence to support the connection, said Elizabeth White Nelson, a University of Nevada Las Vegas history professor.

    “People who think that’s the story haven’t read the letter that he actually wrote about Lupercalia,” she said, referring to the pope. “Is he pissed off about Lupercalia? Yeah. But does it have anything to do with St. Valentine? It’s very, very hard to find any actual writing that says that.”

    Was St Valentine a real person?

    The most cited legend is about a priest named Valentine who was executed in third-century Rome for marrying couples against the will of the pagan Emperor Claudius II. (He also is said to have cured the blindness of his jailer’s daughter.) Another St Valentine, the bishop of Terni, was martyred around the same time, but little is known about him.

    A couple of centuries later, a prominent family named Valentine may have promoted themselves by exaggerating an ancestor’s story after Christianity had become the prevailing religion, Lenski said.

    “They say, ‘Oh, by the way, we have this famous ancestor who was a bishop, and he had been persecuted by the emperor for sanctifying marriages,’” he said.

    The story prevailed, but the lack of evidence prompted the Catholic Church in 1969 to remove St Valentine as the primary saint celebrated on Feb. 14. Now, it’s officially the feast of Saints Cyril and Methodius, the missionary brothers who spread the Cyrillic alphabet to Eastern Europe.

    What’s love got to do with it?

    To further confuse things, there were many St. Valentines. As many as 50 saints with some variation of the spelling have been recognized by the Catholic Church, said Henry Kelly, a research professor at the University of California Los Angeles.

    According to Kelly, author of “Chaucer and the Cult of Saint Valentine,” the English writer was the first to make the connection to love — but he was talking about another St. Valentine whose feast day was May 3. To commemorate King Richard II’s engagement on that day in 1381, Geoffrey Chaucer wrote a love poem.

    “He had Italian friends who told him that it was the feast of St. Valentine, the first bishop of Genoa,” Kelly said. “And so he picked that day as the day on which all the birds returned to choose their mates for the year.”

    Chaucer continued writing poems every May that associated love, the rites of spring and St. Valentine. Shakespeare and other poets followed suit. Because the Roman Valentine was the most famous one, people conflated the feast days and now celebrated it in February, Kelly said.

    “It was the middle of winter, so there weren’t any birds around, there weren’t any flowers around, and so they started making up things about Valentine,” he said.

    When did it become the Valentine’s Day we recognize today?

    By the late 18th century, the tradition had solidified in England and spread to the United States, with people writing poetry and hand-making cards, White Nelson said. Around the 1830s, companies began manufacturing Valentine kits that were assembled from lace paper and cutouts of birds and cupids.

    Heart-shaped boxes of chocolates would come a few decades later, as would the accusations that the holiday was created to sell cards, flowers and candy, White Nelson said. People were complaining in women’s magazines in the late 19th century that Valentine’s Day was too commercial.

    “Everybody’s always expecting Valentine’s Day to die out, and it never does,” she said. “It’s sort of like saying, ‘Coney Island’s too crowded. Nobody goes there anymore.’”

    To be fair, none of the myth-busting historians interviewed for this article resented that a day celebrating love ended up in February. In fact, they said the opposite.

    “Winter is endless,” Kelly said. “The cold is never ending, and we’re grateful for something to rejoice over.”

    Kelly just gives his wife another Valentine on May 3.

  • Super Bowl LIX security tackles person with flag supporting Palestinians, Sudanese during halftime show

    Super Bowl LIX security tackles person with flag supporting Palestinians, Sudanese during halftime show

    A man appeared to sneak into Kendrick Lamar’s performance at halftime of Super Bowl LIX.

    Lamar performed several of his hits, including “Not Like Us,” “Be Humble” and “DNA,” and he was surrounded by numerous performers.

    However, the person was able to get onto the field and hold up a Palestinian flag during the show at the Caesars Superdome in New Orleans.

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    Security grabs a man holding a Palestinian flag with the words “Gaza” and “Sudan” as rapper Kendrick Lamar performs during Super Bowl LIX. (CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images)

    During Lamar’s performance of his new hit “tv off,” the man held the flag on top of a prop car, and then ran onto the field with the flag. 

    The person wandered back and forth on the field before members of security arrived. The man was dragged off of the field.

    The protest took place with Trump in attendance at the game, marking the first time a sitting president has ever attended the Super Bowl.

    Sudan/Palestine flag protest

    A man holds a Palestinian flag with the words “Gaza” and “Sudan” as rapper Kendrick Lamar performs during Super Bowl LIX. (CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images)

    TRUMP GREETS CHIEFS STAR ON FIELD AT SUPER BOWL LIX AFTER PICKING THEM TO WIN LOMBARDI TROPHY

    Last week, Trump floated the idea of the U.S. “taking over” the Gaza Strip.

    “I do see a long-term ownership position, and I see it bringing great stability to that part of the Middle East and maybe the entire Middle East,” Trump said, adding it’s a decision he didn’t make lightly.

    Protester arrested

    Security escorts out a man holding a Palestinian flag with the words “Gaza” and “Sudan” as rapper Kendrick Lamar performs during Super Bowl LIX. (CHANDAN KHANNA/AFP via Getty Images)

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    “Everybody I’ve spoken to loves the idea of the United States owning that piece of land, developing and creating thousands of jobs with something that will be magnificent — in a really magnificent area that nobody would know. Nobody could look, because all they see is death and destruction and rubble and demolished buildings falling all over. It’s just a terrible, terrible sight.”

    Fox News’ Ashley Carnahan contributed to this report.

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  • Maxx Crosby excited for Raiders’ future with Pete Carroll, whose impact is being felt: ‘My type of person’

    Maxx Crosby excited for Raiders’ future with Pete Carroll, whose impact is being felt: ‘My type of person’

    Maxx Crosby is an optimist, and with Pete Carroll on board as the Las Vegas Raiders’ new head coach, the defensive end couldn’t be more excited about the future. 

    The star edge rusher spoke to Fox News Digital on Radio Row in New Orleans ahead of Super Bowl LIX, and while he enjoys his time among his peers, he also wants to be playing in the “Big Game” one day. 

    Carroll has lifted the Lombardi Trophy once as a head coach in the NFL, while with the Seattle Seahawks, and also won two national championships during his time coaching in college. 

    SIGN UP FOR TUBI AND STREAM SUPER BOWL LIX FOR FREE

    Las Vegas Raiders defensive end Maxx Crosby reacts during the game against the Pittsburgh Steelers at Allegiant Stadium in Las Vegas on Oct. 13, 2024. (AP Photo/David Becker)

    That championship pedigree is what Crosby believes the Raiders need right now.

    “I think it’s pretty straightforward: He’s done it. He’s done it many times at both levels, college and the NFL,” Crosby said when asked why Carroll was the right man for the Raiders’ head coaching gig, while also promoting his partnership with SAXX Underwear on Radio Row.

    “For me, I’m an optimistic person. I want to be a winner, I want a chance to win. From everything I’ve seen so far, it’s been encouraging. So — taking it one step at a time and we’ll see how everything plays out. But I’m excited for the future, for sure.”

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    Carroll’s impact within the Raiders organization has already been felt by Crosby, too, and it’s that patented energy he brings every day that’s “infectious.”

    “Every conversation I’ve had with him has been awesome,” Crosby said. “All energy all the time, my type of person. At the end of the day, you’ve got to have fun with what we do, you know what I mean? We’re modern-day gladiators. We’re going out there — car crashes every single Sunday. That’s the reality. So, you have to have fun with it. The work comes first, but at the same time, you’ve got to enjoy your job. You’ve got to be excited to come into the building every morning and go to work. 

    Pete Carroll looks on

    Seattle Seahawks head coach Pete Carroll looks on prior to the game against the Arizona Cardinals at State Farm Stadium in Glendale, Arizona, on Jan. 7, 2024. (Joe Camporeale-USA TODAY Sports)

    “I think he does an incredible job doing that. I’ve yet to experience that yet, but just being around him for a couple weeks now, the dude doesn’t stop.”

    Crosby offered an example of how much fun Carroll is having being back inside an NFL building. 

    “It’s about team, it’s about culture, it’s about competing,” he began. “That’s what he preaches and lives by. I’ve been able to see it at a short glimpse so far, but it’s just funny. You hear guys, I’m talking to one of the front office guys, and he’s like, ‘Yeah, I have this JBL speaker — [Carroll] gave everyone a speaker. I go upstairs and it sounds like a frat house is going on.’ There’s music bumping all the time and stuff. I love that. That’s how I am. 

    “I think it’s necessary. Energy’s got to be right and correct, and I feel like that leads to success when the work is behind it. He’s proven it his whole life that he can win and knows how to win. It’s exciting.”

    MAXX AND SAXX MADE PERFECT SENSE

    When Saxx Underwear wanted to partner with Crosby, he found it a no-brainer, considering the name. But it’s what they’ve done together, impacting the next generation of athletes with NIL (name, image and likeness) deals, that has him excited to talk about it during Super Bowl Week. 

    Tubi promo

    Super Bowl LIX will be streamed on Tubi. (Tubi)

    “Just the alignment from top to bottom, how much they poured into what I believe in,” he said of the partnership. “Helping out with NIL deals for guys at Eastern Michigan, UNLV. Helping out and giving back to places I care about. And best underwear in the game, period. 

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    “I wear it every single day, and we aligned in many ways. They’ve been incredible.”

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