Smileless2012
What about the other spaces which are single sex Glorianny? This is about so much more than public toilets.
This is about so much more than public toilets.
It is, indeed. In fact, it is about more than those other single-sex spaces.
What it is about is the insistence of TRAs that one sex can become another - on the basis of feelings, identity, or even a whim; and mangling the language to accommodate those emotions - to the point that the very word "women" (not "men") ceases to have any legitimacy as it has done for centuries. Even to the ridiculous point that those female biological functions peculiar to our sex are disapproved and invalidated in order to accommodate this absurd notion that a man can change himself into a woman.
It is also about the depressing fact that organisations and companies have bought into this conviction to the extent that the leader of the Opposition once stated that "trans women are women, and that is not just my view - that is actually the law" later back pedaling to 99.9% of women don't have a penis. To the extent that anyone recorded as publicly challenging the notion that a man can become a woman risked losing their position (and did in a couple of instances). To the extent that high profile individuals like JKR received death and rape threats for refusing to accept the TRA creed.
Men as transwomen are challenging the legal provision because they want to completely commandeer those spaces, institutions, organisations, etc, that have been set up to support women.
Just how many transwomen have hormone-induced lactation and are breastfeeding babies? Are their problems in anyway related to the human biology of breastfeeding or the problems that women experience emotionally and physically? Why is the charity demanding that they are now included - on what realistic basis? And why are the charity commissioners now talking about putting a "roadblock" on the word mother?
I've posed questions - here's another. Many of the problems that transwomen experience are specifically related to the fact of their being transwomen, which are physiologically, psychologically and emotionally quite different to those experienced by women. Why don't transwomen set up their own institutions and organisations to deal with their issues and problems? Is it that their real intention is not about inclusiveness but is to eradicate women as a biological entity because they cannot, as men, be a part of that demographic, and that biological women are too powerful a force to overcome, so must be obliterated?