Well, I guess we'll see.
(I wonder if you can get fired from your job for tweeting something like "Homosexuals are unnatural and against God".......?)
Do you think that's a fact?
Well, I guess we'll see.
(I wonder if you can get fired from your job for tweeting something like "Homosexuals are unnatural and against God".......?)
This will go to higher courts without doubt.
It’s ridiculous to be fired for stating a fact and this ruling won’t stand.
Speaking personally: I think that those challenges and concerns feature some that are real and valid, others that are invalid, and others that are potentially feasible but cannot yet be measured. I also believe that yes, female cis women (and yes, male cis men also) will have to make some concessions and give up a small section of their rights, in order to accommodate the greater good. But I say that with the belief that females in particular will need to be assured of maximum reasonable efforts being made to safeguard their physical safety*.
And to go back to my good ol' analogy (though everyone PLEASE note - again - that I am not drawing a direct-mapping comparison between race civil rights and transgender civil rights, but instead I'm ilustrating a principle only...), I can imagine a white man speaking in Alabama in around 1955:
* For example, to use the well-worn chestnut of the gym changing rooms example, I would expect local and national laws to enforce things like the installation of multiple panic buttons in the women's changing rooms, and maybe even also the installation of CCTV in women-only spaces, to be viewable by accredited female members of staff.
Well, I guess we'll see.
(I wonder if you can get fired from your job for tweeting something like "Homosexuals are unnatural and against God".......?)
there is no perfect solution that satisfies everyone 100% of the time in 100% of all situations.
Boils down to something that a lot of people in this thread don't seem to understand - the real world is a messy place, rights are always a balancing act, there is no perfect solution that satisfies everyone 100% of the time in 100% of all situations.
And thus was the entire field of phallometric testing overturned. Very impressive.Not just bunk, but dangerous bunk.
This sounds so clear cut in the abstract, but you aren't addressing specific cases. Is there indeed a novel civil right which allows trans women to displace cis women in women's sport, regardless of transition status? In some states, yes. In others, no. At the federal level, not yet. At the IOC, not really.Sure, and the question becomes, when push comes to shove, do the civil rights of unpopular minorities matter, or do we throw them away in the name of comfort and privilege of the larger majority.
This sounds so clear cut in the abstract, but you aren't addressing specific cases. Is there indeed a novel civil right which allows trans women to displace cis women in women's sport, regardless of transition status? In some states, yes. In others, no. At the federal level, not yet. At the IOC, not really.
Well, I guess pick anything else. Is there a civil right to enjoy sex-segregated toilets? In some states, yes. In other states, no. Is there a civil right to enjoy gender-segregated toilets? In some states, yes. In other states, no. Will either regime make some people fairly unhappy? Of course. Would it help move things along if we consigned those on the wrong side of history to die on ice floes? Perhaps.It seems that sports are deemed irrelevant in this thread.
Sure, and the question becomes, when push comes to shove, do the civil rights of unpopular minorities matter, or do we throw them away in the name of comfort and privilege of the larger majority.
Unless those spaces require people to show their ID cards to enter, self-ID laws have absolutely nothing to do with them. Sex/gender segregated spaces such as public restrooms and changing rooms essentially are run on self-identification already. What the movement for self-identification for changes in civil gender is about is just the M or F on one's birth certificate and ID cards. I find it hard to believe there many people would fake their gender identity just for the privilege of having customs officers ask them "why is there a M/F on your passport when you are clearly a F/M ?"
Bigotry couched in terms of safety is a common tactic indeed. I trust we all remember the smears against gays as all being pedophiles who could not be allowed acceptance into our society, and certainly not allowed in roles involving children!
It is just a few women like you who don't view us as women and delude yourselves into thinking we are taking away your rights and much like Trump supporters, have convinced yourselves that you are a "silent majority" of sorts.
Enh. Like The Force Awakens, it starts out with some interesting potential, and then hares off into boring stuff. I'd be interested in more detail on what rights exactly are being pushed for.
But he’s registered as a man on his medical records, and this meant his doctors used the male eGFR level. He wasn’t put on the list until he reached it – a decision that ultimately delayed the surgery by over a year, and very nearly cost him his life.
“It was really cute and awesome that I was treated as male, but in being this way, they didn’t necessarily take into account the body,” says Whitley, who points out that, though he has been taking testosterone for around 15 years, it’s a relatively small dose. “I was born female and I identify as male – they should have probably have set my limit as somewhere in the middle.”
...
The first incident occurred when Whitley went for an ultrasound scan to investigate his kidney failure, and the technicians who were assessing him abruptly walked out. “All of a sudden, everyone in the room set their stuff down and just left,” he says. “I was like, ‘what's happening?’ No one said anything.” He was left alone for 20 minutes – and then told that he could go, and that they would call him.
Later, he listened in amazement as a doctor gravely informed him that he had a uterus – a fact that Whitley was, naturally, already aware of. “They said, ‘I think we understand the problem – you have a uterus and so that may be contributing to your kidney failure.’ I was like, ‘what are you talking about?’”
Eventually Whitley’s doctor convinced him to stop his testosterone therapy, though Whitley feels there was no valid medical justification for this and describes it as a distressing and unnecessary step.
Is there any way for the young woman in question to tell situations #2 & #3 apart without striking up a conversation?Consider a young woman ("young woman" including teenagers) in a locker room. She is changing clothes, so will be in some state of undress which would not be normal in public, which is why she's in a locker room. She is white. She observes the person next to her, and complains to management. She does not want to share a locker room with that person.
Now consider three possibilities.
1) The person is a black cis-woman.
2) The person is a trans-woman (regardless of race).
3) The person is a cis-man (regardless of race).
Would you be sympathetic to her complaint, and believe that the person she objects to ought not be allowed to share a locker room with her?
Is there any way for the young woman in question to tell situations #2 & #3 apart without striking up a conversation?
That doesn't answer my question.Presumably this exercise is predicated upon which of the three the young woman perceives as either a) the most offensive to her, or b) potentially the most dangerous to her....