Loudoun County Public Schools has done it again. The district already infamous for cover-ups, parental stonewalling, and woke overreach has now decided that the real threat inside a boys’ locker room isn’t a girl being there — it’s the boys daring to ask why.
At Stone Bridge High School, two boys have been slapped with 10-day suspensions, a no-contact order, mandatory meetings with administrators, and the kind of permanent “sex-based discrimination” smear on their records that can haunt college applications.
Their crime? Asking, on video, the question every parent in America would want their son to ask: Why is there a girl in the boys’ locker room?
But here’s the kicker: the boys didn’t even make the video. The student in question — a biological female identifying as male — recorded it, violating LCPS policy. Instead of disciplining the policy violator, the school district launched a full-blown Title IX investigation against the boys, twisted the situation into “sexual harassment,” and branded them guilty.
Oh yeah? https://t.co/mTv0m0q6io
— AAGHarmeetDhillon (@AAGDhillon) August 19, 2025
Parents are outraged, and rightly so. One mother, Renae Smith, pulled her son out of the district and even moved out of state. “We’re talking about scarring him for life by a biased process that’s supposed to protect fairness, but it’s shocking. It’s wrong, and it should terrify every single parent,” she told 7News. Another parent, Seth Wolfe, called the decision-making process nothing short of disturbing.
The broader context makes the story even darker. Loudoun County is one of five Virginia districts that the Department of Education found in violation of Title IX — not for trampling parental rights or ignoring student privacy, but for not going far enough in accommodating transgender policies.
Governor Glenn Youngkin has blasted the schools for “deliberately neglecting their responsibility to protect students’ safety, privacy, and dignity,” and Attorney General Jason Miyares has been tasked with investigating.
Still, the school systems remain openly defiant. Fairfax County’s superintendent mocked federal guidance, declaring proudly that her district would “continue to be the school district that welcomes and includes all students” regardless of what parents or even federal authorities say. Translation: parents’ concerns don’t matter, and biological sex distinctions are to be erased.







