and said, "I can do this.
If they see me, they'll understand
why I'm no threat in the ladies' room,
but I can be threatened
in the men's room."
And then they finally got it.
So where do we go from here?
Well, we still have a ways to go
in terms of anti-discrimination.
There are only 17 states
that have an anti-discrimination law
against discrimination in housing,
employment, public accommodation --
only 17 states, and five of them
are in New England.
We need less expensive drugs.
They cost a fortune.
And we need to get
this condition out of the DSM.
It is as much a psychiatric disease
as being gay and lesbian,
and that went out the window in 1973,
and the whole world changed.
And this isn't going to break
anybody's budget.
This is not that common.
But the risks of not
doing anything for them
not only puts all of them at risk
of losing their lives to suicide,