A NEW KANSAS LAW HAS EFFECTIVELY INVALIDATED THE DRIVER’S LICENSES AND OTHER GOVERNMENT-ISSUED DOCUMENTS OF TRANSGENDER RESIDENTS, LEAVING MANY IN LEGAL AND PERSONAL LIMBO.(PHOTO).

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Kansas driver’s license law puts some transgender residents in ID limbo A new Kansas law has effectively invalidated the driver’s licenses and other government-issued documents of transgender residents, leaving many in legal and personal limbo. Senate Bill 244, which went into effect immediately after the legislature overrode Gov. Laura Kelly’s veto, requires that the gender listed on a driver’s license align with the state’s binary definition of male and female. The law also directs the state registrar to “correct” birth certificates that do not match these definitions. Unlike similar restrictions in other states, Kansas’ law retroactively invalidates previously issued documents. Legal advocates warn that the law threatens the privacy and safety of transgender residents, forcing them to disclose their gender identity in situations ranging from employment applications to renting property or opening bank accounts. The law also restricts bathroom use to the sex assigned at birth and amen...

LOST TOMB OF PHARAOH THUTMOSE II DISCOVERED IN EGYPT AFTER 3,500 YEARS. (PHOTOS).


 Lost Tomb of Pharaoh Thutmose II Discovered in Egypt After 3,500 Years


British Egyptologists have uncovered the long-lost tomb of Pharaoh Thutmose II, a ruler of Egypt’s 18th Dynasty, nearly 3,500 years after his reign. The tomb, identified as C4, was found 2.4 km west of the Valley of the Kings in Luxor, in an area previously associated with royal women’s burials.


Led by Professor Piers Litherland of the University of Cambridge, the excavation revealed a grand staircase, a blue ceiling with yellow stars, and religious inscriptions confirming the pharaoh’s identity. However, unlike Tutankhamun’s tomb, no treasures or mummified remains were found. Experts believe Thutmose II’s body was relocated due to flooding, and a mummy discovered in the 19th century may not actually belong to him.


Thutmose II, who ruled for an estimated three to thirteen years (1493–1479 BCE), was part of the 18th Dynasty, a golden era of Ancient Egypt that included rulers like Hatshepsut, Amenhotep I, and Tutankhamun.

More photos below. 








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