For centuries, "straight women" in the United States have been asking:

And I am pleased to report that, on Thursday, June 5, 2025, the U.S. Supreme Court finally answered:
Supreme Court sides with straight woman in decision that makes it easier to file βreverse discrimination' suits
It truly is a momentous day for women who aren't part of the LGBT sex cult:
The Supreme Court on Thursday sided with a straight woman in Ohio who filed a 'reverse discrimination' lawsuit against her employer when her gay boss declined to promote her. The ruling will make it easier to file such suits in some parts of the country.
CNN was so mad that they even quoted Justice Jackson, who famously said she isn't a biologist and doesn't know what a woman is:
[A] unanimous coalition of conservative and liberal justices were in the majority. Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson wrote the opinion for the court.
'Our case law thus makes clear that the standard for proving disparate treatment under Title VII does not vary based on whether or not the plaintiff is a member of a majority group,' Jackson wrote.
CNN as they wrote this article:

Meanwhile, I'm over here thinking I live in a weird time of history, where it takes the Supreme Court to settle the question: "Can you discriminate against non-gay women?"
The case arose after plaintiff Marlean Ames, an Ohio government worker, "started reporting to a gay boss and was passed over for a promotion that was offered to another gay woman."
She was frustrated by lower court rulings that held that non-minority Americans who raise discrimination claims "must demonstrate 'background circumstances' in order to pursue their suit":
A plaintiff might meet that requirement, for instance, by providing statistical evidence documenting a pattern of discrimination against members of a majority. Ames couldn't do that and so she lost in the lower courts.
A minority employee "does not face that same initial hurdle." Thankfully, a bipartisan Supreme Court ruling saw through that obviously discriminatory framework and knocked it down.
Congratulations, normal ladies, you had your day in court β and you won!

P.S. Now check out our latest video π