Rolfe
Adult human female
The spectacle of a bunch of men self-righteously agreeing that women have no right to protected spaces free of any male presence, and that any objection is equivalent to colour prejudice, is pretty nauseating.
The spectacle of a bunch of men self-righteously agreeing that women have no right to protected spaces free of any male presence, and that any objection is equivalent to colour prejudice, is pretty nauseating.
... the idea that we base one groups rights on the comfort level of another group is patently false.
It happens all the time. Try blasting out AC/DC at high volume through an open window at 2 a.m. in a residential street and you might soon find out that the rights of the majority to get some sleep override your right to listen to loud music in the early hours.
If that's too 'physical' for you and doesn't compare with the subject here then paint your conservation area house dayglo pink and wait for the response. Or just walk down a busy high street naked.
And yet another who cant actually address the question. The argument made is a nonsense. the idea that we base one groups rights on the comfort level of another group is patently false.
No idea]
Being a heterosexual male while surrounded by potential homo/bisexual males must be utterly mortifying. This is truly a hellish existence.
Whoosh . . .The argument made is a nonsense. the idea that we base one groups rights on the comfort level of another group is patently false.
And my scenario was such an obvious extreme exaggeration that there's no way anything even remotely close to that is considered acceptable behavior anywhere.
It's not "rights theory". At least not in the UK. It is a legislated rightWhat theory of rights are we talking about here?
Obviously yes, since trans vs. cis. is a fixed-sum game. It's a simple mathematical fact that if trends affect trans rates, they also affect cis rates. It's not a blind spot in by reasoning, it's not a bias I have, I'm not in denial about that. I didn't bother mentioning it because it's blindingly obvious, and it's not the focus of what we're talking about.
The spectacle of a bunch of men self-righteously agreeing that women have no right to protected spaces free of any male presence, and that any objection is equivalent to colour prejudice, is pretty nauseating.
No it isn't. Not in the case of services and spaces provided for a single sex. The onus is on someone who does not fit the criterion (is not that sex) to remove themself. Or be removed.If you find someones presence so objectionable that you can't endure it then the onus is generally upon you to remove yourself from the area.
It happens all the time. Try blasting out AC/DC at high volume through an open window at 2 a.m. in a residential street and you might soon find out that the rights of the majority to get some sleep override your right to listen to loud music in the early hours.
If that's too 'physical' for you and doesn't compare with the subject here then paint your conservation area house dayglo pink and wait for the response. Or just walk down a busy high street naked.
Well, that's not the argument, so perhaps you should read it again.
Whoosh . . .
You are in the wrong thread. #NotAClue
Well of course it is, which is why your post was really nothing but trolling. It had nothing to do with reality. It had no real worth. It was a mere distraction.
Sadly, it was not nearly as exaggerated as you might have thought. It really is possible these days for men to go into locker rooms, watch women and girls undress, and walk around naked in front of women and girls, and if the women and girls complain, they will be informed that it is his right to do so, because he is really a woman since he says so. I usually cite the case of Colleen Brenna at this point, but that one is several years old by now. I could look up another one, but I'm disinterested at the moment. I know there have been others. Rolfe linked to a bunch.
It occurred to me that I hadn't read about a bunch of high school locker room incidents lately. Had the problem gone away? Off to google news. No. The problem hadn't gone away. It just wasn't considered newsworthy by the media companies who get front page coverage. It was more of a local story now. Searching for it, I found lots of cases where girls were protesting that they had to take off their clothes in front of a guy. Oh...and, I say guy, but that's really just a convenience because that's what the teenagers might say. You know those crazy teenage girls. They see a penis and they just automatically assume there's a guy attached to it. Darned kids these days.
So, how about we stick to what's really happening? In my opinion, what's really happening is pretty bad. We don't need to make up stuff about things that are not happening.
Now there may welĺ be legitimate arguments on the topic but not being comfortable sharing a space with people of a certain designation isn't one of them.
Inappropriate or illegal behaviour in any space remains inappropriate or illegal regardless of the gender of the people involved.
This simple fact appears to get forgotten.
That's what normal people do.
Can we have an argument about whether other liberal democratic nations ought to adopt similar legislation?It's not "rights theory". At least not in the UK. It is a legislated right