If you were to seek out the most selfless people in America, y’know, the ones actually doing the work, not the ones tweeting about “equity” from a Brooklyn coffee shop, you’d probably end up at a place called Rosary Hill Home in Westchester County.

It’s run by the Dominican Sisters of Hawthorne. For 125 years, these nuns have cared for patients with incurable cancer. They don’t charge a dime. They don’t ask your political affiliation. They just provide a clean bed, a warm meal, and a dignity that the modern world has largely forgotten. It is, by any definition, a miracle of human kindness.

So, naturally, the State of New York wants to shut them down. Or at the very least, make them pay.

Why? Did they mistreat a patient? Did they steal funds? No. It’s much more serious than that, according to the bureaucrats in Albany. The sisters are guilty of “biological reality.”

Under the “LGBTQ Long-Term Care Facility Residents’ Bill of Rights” (because apparently, even when you’re dying of terminal cancer, the most important thing is your pronoun) the state is demanding that these nuns lie. They are being told, under threat of massive fines, that if a biological man enters their facility and says he’s a woman, the sisters must call him “she.” They must put him in a room with a woman. They must let him use the women’s bathroom.

Think about that. You’ve spent your entire life in service to God and the dying. You’ve taken a vow of poverty. You’re cleaning bedpans for free. And Kathy Hochul’s government sends you a letter saying, “If you don’t pretend that men can become women, we’re going to fine you into oblivion.”

How did we get here? When did “tolerance” become “compelled speech”?

It’s not enough that the sisters provide world-class care for free. That’s irrelevant. What matters to the people running New York is that everyone, everywhere, at all times, agrees with their latest delusions. Even the nuns. Especially the nuns.

They want to break them. They want to force a group of women who have dedicated their lives to the Truth to stand at a bedside and tell a lie. And if a female patient, who, let’s remember, is dying, objects to a biological man being placed in her room? Too bad. The state says her privacy doesn’t matter as much as the ideology of the person in the next bed.

It’s cruel. It’s insane. And most of all, it’s a power trip. The state of New York can’t fix its subways, it can’t stop the crime, and it certainly can’t care for the dying as well as these sisters do. But it can sure as hell tell a nun what words she’s allowed to say.

And they wonder why people are leaving New York.