Shoppers for truth are tuning in: Woodhull Freedom Foundation is hosting a free, virtual Pride edition of its Fact Checked series that tackles harmful myths about transgender and gender nonconforming people, with activists and journalists sharing research, lived experience, and practical rebuttals.
Essential Takeaways
- Event details: Livestream takes place Tuesday, June 30 at 3:30 p.m. EDT; registration is free and open online.
- Panel line-up: Speakers include activist Harrison Browne, journalist Tre’Vell Anderson, and critic Laura Jacobs.
- Focus: The episode debunks policy-driven and cultural myths that affect TGNC rights, healthcare access, and public participation.
- Tone: Evidence-led, combining research, data and personal testimony for a fact-first counter to disinformation.
Why this Pride edition matters now
Woodhull has timed this instalment for Pride Month to push back against a wave of false narratives that lawmakers and commentators are using to justify restrictions. The event feels urgent , the kind of focused, evidence-led conversation that can cut through the noise. Expect clear, researched rebuttals rather than slogan-heavy soundbites, with contributions from people who live the issues they’ll discuss.
Who’s speaking and what they bring
Harrison Browne, Tre’Vell Anderson and Laura Jacobs each bring a different perspective: lived experience, journalistic reporting and cultural criticism. That mix makes the panel more than just a lecture; it’s a conversation that stitches research to everyday impact. Panelists will draw on studies, policy examples and personal stories to show how myths translate into real-world harm.
What "fact-checked" looks like here
According to Woodhull’s project approach, the series pairs claims with primary sources, data and plain-language analysis so viewers can see how conclusions were reached. That method helps when debunking ideas tied to legislation or healthcare policy, because it’s not just one voice saying “that’s wrong” , it’s evidence saying why. For anyone weary of heated online debate, this format offers a calmer, more verifiable way to catch up.
How viewers can use the event practically
If you plan to watch, have a notepad ready: the panel will surface sources and angles you can use in conversations or local advocacy. Activists and allies can borrow the data points to brief local officials, while journalists and educators may find useful framing and citations. Registration is free, so it’s an easy, low-commitment way to arm yourself with facts.
The bigger picture: defending dignity with facts
Woodhull’s organisers say confronting misinformation is essential to protecting civil and healthcare rights, and this episode carries that ethos into Pride Month. It’s a reminder that advocacy often starts with clear information and respectful storytelling. Even small shifts in public understanding can affect policy debates and everyday treatment of TGNC people.
It's a small, practical way to make Pride about protection as well as celebration.
Source Reference Map
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