Texas wants to say farewell to the furries. A bill introduced in the Texas House of Representatives backed by Gov. Greg ...
A Texas lawmaker introduced a bill to ban "non-human behavior" in public schools, such as barking, meowing and other ...
Texas lawmakers first came for vaguely suspicious anime. Now they’re coming after the “furries.” In a newly proposed house ...
A bill in Texas would ban “furry subculture“ from Texas public schools.
A new Texas bill, known as the FURRIES Act, would ban non-human behaviors in public schools, including the use of litter ...
T exas legislator Rep. Stan Gerdes (R) has introduced The FURRIES Act, legislation to punish students who act like non-human animals in schools and penalize schools who allow this ...
The bill is based on debunked claims that public schools were encouraging so-called furries. Lawmakers have used the claims to funnel public funds to private schools.
The Forbidding Unlawful Representation of Roleplaying in Education, or FURRIES, Act, filed by Austin-area Republican State Rep. Stan Gerdes, would "prohibit any non-human behavior by a student, ...
Texas DOGE Chair Giovanni Capriglione insists that his committee will eliminate government waste, fraud and abuse. There's just one problem.
A Texas Republican bill would prohibit students from cosplaying as "furries" and using litter boxes in classrooms.
A bill filed by state Rep. Stan Gerdes that would ban kids from behaving like animals in schools is a distraction from Gov. Abbott's bad arguments for vouchers.
Texas lawmakers propose banning furry-related behavior in public schools, igniting discussions on student expression.