Emily's Cat
Rarely prone to hissy-fits
My observation of today's society is that the real world doesn't live in the real world anymore.
I can't argue with that...
My observation of today's society is that the real world doesn't live in the real world anymore.
In the real world we have uncontroversial one-word shorthand for female mammals such as deer and cattle and pigs and horses, but not humans.I think most people on this forum don't actually live in the real world.
I spent most of my life declaring that I wasn't a feminist because that war had been won. Because no rich person says "I'm as good as you" to the pauper. No beauty queen says "I'm as good as you" to the ugly duckling. No genius says "I'm as good as you" to the moron. So I never felt the need to says "I'm as good as you" to any man.
Isn't the first time I've seen a cat too far out on a limb.I'm going to go out on a limb and suggest that Rolfe (along with myself) are neither of those, and probably lean slightly more toward the latter than the former.
Wait, so in your head women are the rich, the beautiful, the geniuses; and men are the paupers, the ugly, the morons?
Your brand of feminism seems ridiculously toxic, sexist, and generally hateful. Is that the battle feminists have been fighting this whole time? I always considered myself a feminist, but if that's what winning is supposed to look like I'm gonna have to join the counter-insurgency or whatever.
I think you should read Rolfe's post again. She said "no rich person..." , not "no rich man..."
No, you need to read it again. Here's the comparisons her post set up:
rich person > poor person
beauty queen > ugly duckling
genius > moron
Rolfe > men
Yes, she didn't say "rich man", but that's not relevant. It's better to be rich than poor. It's better to be beautiful than to be ugly. It's better to be a genius than a moron. And apparently, it's better to be Rolfe than a man.
That you take this from Rolfe’s post is very telling.
Theprestige completely misinterpreted Rolfe’s post and so do you.
Theprestige completely misinterpreted Rolfe’s post and so do you.
Out of how many trans prisoners? What's the offense rate compared to cis-men and compared to cis-women?
Okay, color me dull. How does a male-bodied person pass as a woman, if not through 1) hormone therapy and potentially surgical alteration or 2) dressing like, behaving like, or presenting as their identified gender?
I'm not sure what you're looking for here. We don't exactly have a lot of information on this topic at all, given that it hasn't been an option until quite recently.
As it stands, there HAS been an uptick.
That you take this from Rolfe’s post is very telling.
Theprestige completely misinterpreted Rolfe’s post and so do you.
Before the GRA, 'living as a woman' meant being alive, and being female.
After the GRA it was redefined as a performance of sexist stereotypes by a man.
If performed successfully, a panel of judges would approve the way men 'lived as women'.
Before the GRA, women and girls were recognised as female people.
We were legally afforded the right to distinguish ourselves truthfully from male people.
All male people.
After the GRA, we were open to legal punishment & sanctions for distinguishing ourselves from male people.
Before the GRA, the law had considered & already REJECTED the idea that what makes us female is our ladybrains.
(Corbett v Corbett)
The GRA not only successfully reintroduced the false idea of ladybrains, it enshrined it such that ladybrain OUTRANKS sex.
Penis+ladybrain = female
People who think the GRA should be left alone now aren't considering what this law does to the recognition of my sex.
There are 33 million girls and women in the UK.
This law redefines ALL OF US.
Into something we're not.
So that some men can say they AND WE are the same thing.
To disregard the legal recognition of an entire sex, to blitz our right to distinguish ourselves from men honestly, to threaten punishment upon us for non compliance?
This is the cost of the GRA remaining.
Men are not women.
We are not what this law says we are.
It's only a danger to a small number of natal women, it's not a big deal.
In England and Wales trans women constitute not more than 1% of the female prison populationn[...]
How many transgender prisoners?
It's difficult to know exactly how many transgender prisoners there are. We asked the agencies responsible across the UK.
In April 2017, 17 of Scotland's 7,436 prisoners were transgender, according to the Scottish Prison Service.
Northern Ireland's prison service chose not to tell us whether it counts trans prisoners, but according to Parliamentary research, it is not aware of any.
In England and Wales, the Ministry of Justice (MoJ) now conducts an annual count of prisoners.
Between March and April 2017, it counted 125 transgender inmates in England and Wales, in a prison population of 85,513. It counted 70 over the same period in 2016.
These are the best available figures, but they're far from perfect.
The MoJ points out the numbers may change as prisoners constantly enter and leave the system.
It says the figures "are not yet a reliable reflection of the numbers and location of trans prisoners in the prison estate".
The MoJ can't count inmates who have not told prison staff they are transgender.
Nor does it count prisoners who have already been given a Gender Recognition Certificate (GRC).
About 250-350 GRCs are issued each year across the UK - 4,910 since 2005.
The survey only counts prisoners who have already had a case conference - a meeting of senior managers and other officials - to decide how to manage the trans person within the prison estate.
These are likely to be prisoners serving longer sentences.
The Ministry of Justice told us "prisoners on longer sentences are more likely to be managed as a transgender prisoner than those on shorter sentences".
That's because there's little point having a case conference if the inmate won't be in prison long enough to benefit from it.
This makes some sense to me, given the fraught and heated debates between those (typically second wave) feminists who want to liberate women from male oppression rooted in the patriarchal imperative to control the means of reproduction and the newer, more fashionable feminists who feel that ciswomen should stand in solidarity with transwomen, even if their lived experience of oppression may be significantly different. I've little doubt that Rolfe, for example, considers herself a feminist in the former camp.
That you take this from Rolfe’s post is very telling.
Theprestige completely misinterpreted Rolfe’s post and so do you.