One common point among supporters of anti-transgender laws is that they are concerned about the privacy and safety of women and children in public restrooms. The people who are making this point, however, have yet to name specific cases where transgender women were behaving inappropriately in public restrooms. These supporters need to have a food for thought: Why would someone go through the trouble of dressing up as a woman - for long periods of time - just to violate someone else in restrooms? Anybody can already walk into any restroom they choose at anytime since most restrooms do not have locks on the outside. If anything, this should be their concern. Violating someone else’s right through violence or sexual assault is already against the law, whether it occurs in the restroom or elsewhere. Although there is great opposition against transgenders, there is still great support for them. One such supporter is Cathryn Oakley with the Human Rights Campaign, who says anti-transgender laws target transgender people under the guise of improvised safety and privacy. “It singles out one group of people for no reason than sheer dislike of them,” Oakley said. “This is not about bathrooms. It’s never been about bathrooms." Just as Martin Luther King Jr. fought for the equal rights of African Americans and minorities, it was never about water