
Transgender and nonbinary-identifiable individuals who want to travel to the United States are advised to do so in Denmark and Finland.
The Swedish foreign government updated its website on Thursday regarding a traveling advisory for transgender people to contact the U.S. embassy in Copenhagen before making plans to travel there.  ,
This advice is in line with the Trump administration’s current policy changes, which merely allow people to be identified by their biological sex rather than gender identity.  ,
On January 20, President Donald Trump signed an executive order stating that only the male and female women of the United States were recognized.
The State Department stopped a legislation that allowed transgender, intersex, and transgender people to change the sexual designations on their passports in response to Trump’s professional order. Under the Biden administration, the Department gave U.S. card recipients the option to select their sexual names, including an “unspecified” sex symbol emblazoned with the text X. Transgender tourists have been sparked by this policy change because it raises questions and concerns about whether it’s healthy for them to travel.
It is advised to call the U.S. embassy before traveling for advice on how to proceed if your card has the sex designation X or you have changed your gender, according to the Swedish foreign ministry’s expert.
Finland issued an expert to its trans people seeking U.S. permits a year earlier.  ,
DIRECTORS TARGETING TRUMP’S Senior ORDERS ARE POSTED HERE.
According to the Finnish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, according to Trump’s executive order,” The US authorities may reject the application for a vacation force or visa if the sex listed on the individual’s card does not suit the gender assigned at birth.” ” Please examine the entrance requirements with the US government in improve.”
In response to reports of the United States detaining members, another European nations, including the United Kingdom, France, and Germany, have also issued go recommendations to their people, indicating a change in how recruitment policies are being implemented by the U.S. state.