Supreme Court Rules: No More ‘X’ on Passports

If you’re tired of feeling like you need a Ph.D. in gender studies just to understand liberals 47 genders nonsense, you’re not alone—and now, the Supreme Court has finally put its foot down.

In a major win for common sense, the Court just ruled that the U.S. government does have the power to require people to list their biological sex—male or female—on passports. That’s it. No “X,” no “choose-your-own-adventure” gender identity. Just the plain facts. The decision came down 6-3, with the conservative majority backing the Trump administration’s policy to keep passports rooted in reality, not ideology.

Let’s break this down. A passport is not your personal blog. It’s a legal document used for international travel, border security, and identification. It needs to be accurate. But under a lower court ruling from last year, people were allowed to list “X” as their gender, as if gender is a mystery quiz or some kind of algebra equation.

The radical left cheered that chaos, of course—they always do. But President Trump’s administration saw the danger in it and took action. And now, the highest court in the land has his back.

The Court’s opinion nailed it: “Displaying passport holders’ sex at birth no more offends equal protection principles than displaying their country of birth.” Translation? Saying someone is biologically male or female isn’t discrimination—it’s a fact.

Of course, the liberal trio—Kagan, Jackson, and Sotomayor—dissented. These are the same justices who treat biology like it’s up for negotiation. But the adults in the room—Trump’s justices—said enough is enough.

This isn’t just a legal win. It’s a cultural signal: truth still matters. The Trump administration is putting reality back on paper, and the Court backed them up.

Watch the video to see exactly why this story is going viral.


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