*So lets get this straight there may be people who need very clear information and advice, because of language difficulties, learning disabilities, cultural differences or some other specific circumstance but none of these people will be transmen because transmen don't lose their linguistic abilities (what if they were low to begin with?) and will pick it up as they mature (what if the cancer is by then untreatable?).
Isn't this the very essence of discrimination? We are aware you exist but we refuse to change anything to accommodate your needs. As I said previously not someone to be accounted for- the wrong sort of woman!*
Nice try, but again, you are responding to what you think I think, but not what I posted (which is what I actually think).
You are moving the goalposts all the time - we started with transpeople being invited for smears, then moved to transmen needing refuges, and now we are considering transmen with learning difficulties who don't speak English well.
I didn't say that none of the people who are of low educational ability, have English as a SOL, or are already mature would be trans. Why do you think I did?
My point is that transpeople should be on the same playing field as women. The information given to women to invite them for smear tests is applicable to transmen every bit as much as to women. Both have cervixes or they wouldn't have been invited. If the information is not clear, it should be clarified for both groups, but not to the extent that it is no longer applicable to women, who make up the vast majority of the people who will attend. AFAIK, the NHS send out information in different languages, and anyone with special educational needs would have things explained to them. I assume that this applies regardless of how people 'choose to identify'? If not, then it should be.
You really are looking to pick up on something tiny in my posts to pounce and shout 'discrimination!!' You'll struggle, as I am not remotely discriminatory about this.
For avoidance of doubt, I believe that transmen should be invited for smears, and that any and all accommodations for communication difficulties should apply to them as well as to women. I do not, however, feel that women should be assumed to have been assigned a gender at birth, as this does not happen - sex is observed at birth, or earlier if the expectant mother has an ultrasound scan in pregnancy.