Dwayne Wade opened up about his 12-year-old child’s transgender journey during a recent interview with Good Morning America — and evidently Boosie Badazz couldn’t help himself from weighing in.
The retired NBA star sat down with GMA‘s Robin Roberts on Tuesday (February 18) and explained, “She Zaya] is our leader. I think when the conversation we had — the one thing about it, for parents, is have conversations with your kids. Zaya, early on, knew two things. She knew straight and she knew gay. But Zaya started doing more research.
“She is the one who sat down with us as a family and said, ‘Hey, I don’t think I’m gay.’ And she went down the list. ‘This is how I identify myself, this is my gender identity, I identify myself as a young lady. I think I’m a straight trans because I like boys.’ So it was a process for us to sit down with our daughter and find out who she is and what she likes, and not put something on her.”
Boosie quickly headed to Instagram to express his apparent disgust, making it abundantly clear where he stands on the issue.
“I gotta say something about this shit,” he begins in the video. “Dwayne Wade, you’ve gone too fucking far, bro. That is a male. A 12-year-old. At 12, they don’t even know what they next meal gonna be. They don’t have shit figured out yet. He might meet a woman at 16 and fall in love with her, but his dick be gone.
“How you gonna … like, bro, you going to too far, dawg. Don’t cut his dick f, bro. Like, bro, for real. If he gonna be gay, let him be gay, but don’t cut his dick f, bro. Don’t address him as a woman, dawg. He’s 12 years old. He’s not up there yet. He hasn’t made his final decisions yet. Don’t cut his fucking dick f Dwayne Wade. You fuckin’ trippin, dawg.”
On the contrary, Wade said Zaya (born Zion) has questioned her gender identity for a long time.
“She’s known it for nine years,” Wade told Roberts. “She’s known since she was 3 years old. Along this way we’ve asked questions and we’ve learned. But she’s known. I knew early on that I had to check myself. That’s what I knew. I knew early on that I had to ask myself questions.
“I’ve been a person in a locker room that has been a part the conversation that has said the wrong phrases and the wrong words myself. As I got older and I watched my daughter grow, I had to go and look at myself in the mirror and say, ‘Who are you? What are you going to do if your child comes home and says, ‘Dad, I’m not a boy … I’m a trans girl.’ What are you going to do?’ That was my moment real.”