Premium Content:

Indiana school officials deny there are students identifying as cats

School officials in Evansville, Indiana have declared there is no truth to persistent rumours that there are students who identify as cats at their schools.

- Advertisement -

The declaration comes after a retired schoolteacher named Ruth Baize appeared at a recent school board meeting making the claim.

Baize appeared alongside friend Theresa Finn, who was dressed as a cat and held on a leash, claiming that the Evansville Vanderburgh School Corporation Board was allowing students to self-identify as felines and supplying kitty litter boxes for students.

The interaction was reported by local media outlet Courier & Press who noted that Baize had previously unsuccessfully run for the school board and has a history of making inflammatory remarks on social media.

They are the latest in a long list of schools who have had to deny the urban legend. In recent years the claim has arisen in schools in Ohio, Utah, Michigan, Arkansas and Texas.

There have also been similar reports in Australia. Brisbane’s Courier Mail, Sky News and Melbourne’s Herald Sun have all shared Australian based stories of a similar nature.

Researchers in the USA say the tale of students identifying as cats can be traced back to various occurrences over the last 20 years.

The basic story is students are identifying as cats, and some part of the school world is being adjusted for their special needs. Often the claim is that kitty litter boxes are being put in unisex bathrooms, or tables in the cafeteria are being lowered so students can eat like animals.

There’s clearly a connection between opposition to people who are transgender accessing bathrooms or changerooms, and the outlandish tales of cat-identifying students.

OIP Staff


You can support our work by subscribing to our Patreon
or contributing to our GoFundMe campaign.

 

 

Latest

HIV advocate Mark Reid honoured in King’s Birthday list

Western Australian HIV advocate Mark Reid has been made a member of the Order of Australia in today's King Birthday honours.

On This Gay Day | Author Marguerite Yourcenar was born in 1903

Yourcenar wrote the modern classic 'Memories of Hadrian'

To Adapt is to Endure: An Unfinished History of WAAC

WAAC CEO Daniel Vujcich and Chairperson Conrad Liveris provide an update following the organisation's recent Special General Meeting.

Employment Minister Amanda Rishworth may intervene in Fair Work Commission stoush

Employment Minister Amanda Rishworth has refused to rule out intervening in a dispute at the highest levels of Australia’s Fair Work Commission.

Newsletter

Don't miss

HIV advocate Mark Reid honoured in King’s Birthday list

Western Australian HIV advocate Mark Reid has been made a member of the Order of Australia in today's King Birthday honours.

On This Gay Day | Author Marguerite Yourcenar was born in 1903

Yourcenar wrote the modern classic 'Memories of Hadrian'

To Adapt is to Endure: An Unfinished History of WAAC

WAAC CEO Daniel Vujcich and Chairperson Conrad Liveris provide an update following the organisation's recent Special General Meeting.

Employment Minister Amanda Rishworth may intervene in Fair Work Commission stoush

Employment Minister Amanda Rishworth has refused to rule out intervening in a dispute at the highest levels of Australia’s Fair Work Commission.

‘Dirty Talk’ is coming to The Blue Room to explore romance and audio-erotica

Coming up at The Blue Room is Dirty Talk, a queer, new age, fantastical rom-com that joyfully explores the audio-erotica genre through an immersive soundscape and the discovery of an unexpected connection.

HIV advocate Mark Reid honoured in King’s Birthday list

Western Australian HIV advocate Mark Reid has been made a member of the Order of Australia in today's King Birthday honours.

On This Gay Day | Author Marguerite Yourcenar was born in 1903

Yourcenar wrote the modern classic 'Memories of Hadrian'

To Adapt is to Endure: An Unfinished History of WAAC

WAAC CEO Daniel Vujcich and Chairperson Conrad Liveris provide an update following the organisation's recent Special General Meeting.