d4m10n
Penultimate Amazing
Have a look at California Penal Code Section 314.You think Merager was arrested simply for being nude?
Have a look at California Penal Code Section 314.You think Merager was arrested simply for being nude?
Have a look at California Penal Code Section 314.
Isn't this the whole complaint about the Wi Spa thing or the Canada women's shelter?
There are places where it's legal for trans women to use women's restrooms or other women's facilities. This is not a controversial statement for ****'s sake, why are you being so obtuse about this?
Group showers, even sex segregated ones, aren't exactly the most comfortable thing either. Last time around I pointed out numerous local news articles discussing how students, in the absence of any authority figure demanding it, would simply opt not to shower after gym class rather than use the gang type showers. You may as well not build these showers if you're not going to put in private stalls.
Increasing personal privacy is probably worth the cost because it directly provides people with what they actually want, which is individual bodily autonomy.
Historically speaking, there was no policy of self ID. There's plenty of evidence that predators are now taking advantage of self ID, some of which other posters here have provided. If you can't see why self ID would lead to predators exploiting it, you don't understand human nature. There's no mystery here.
1) Transgender people are still the sex they developed as in utero. Transgender identified males are still males. There's no need to "discount" them when discussing SEX separated spaces.The reasoning for separate facilities are rooted in desires for modesty. People generally don't want to be leered at with lusty eyes while in states of undress or other position of vulnerability. Sex segregation makes sense if you discount the existence of trans people or of homosexuality, but us modern people have to grapple with the existence of both. Personal privacy seems a decent solution that attacks the root of the issue without having to make sweeping assumptions about heteronormativity.
It's completely related. All of the objections that you so casually dismiss as bigoted are rooted in sexual dimorphism, the material reality of our sex, the differences in physicality and aggression and strength, AND the risk that males present to females on the whole.Separation of sporting is more about the athletic ability differences of the sexes, an entirely different concern. There are legitimate concerns about fairness in competition (but these are not the only concerns, especially in educational contexts), which is why certain restrictions for trans people are often seen as reasonable.
Sports is a special case and is not actually that closely linked to the other concerns, despite efforts by transphobes who try to use it as a wedge issue to justify sweeping trans exclusion.
What I understand is that some people posting here have no regard for women’s sports.
2) Females who are same-sex attracted don't tend to leer at other females with lustful gazes while in female-only spaces... because they are females and they understand the discomfort it causes. It's exceedingly rare. Additionally, even if a fellow female WERE to leer at a female, the subject of their lustful gaze is highly unlikely to feel physically intimidated by them or to have a fear of sexual assault and rape from another female. The odds are vanishingly small.
Tip: Don't ask someone why they think an arrest happened if you're not into discussing the elements of the crime.I really have no interest in discussing this until more information about the case is available. Speculating about how exactly what law was broken is a level of tediousness even I'm not willing to entertain.
It's a strange view of this situation that these segregated spaces only exist to protect women's interests.
You may not care about trans men, but I would not be so comfortable assuming your blase attitude about them is universally shared. Even among the broader group of transphobes, the narrow focus on women only seems to mostly be a preoccupation of TERFs.
The two issues are inextricably linked whether TERFs care to admit it or not.
Well yeah, it's not a mystery. My point is that TERFism is just one of many voices on this issue, and in the US they aren't an especially important one. Their laser focus on only women's issues should not constrain the broader conversation on this topic.
So far as I can tell, there are basically two camps in opposition to the trans activist project (i.e. deprecation of biological sex in favor of gender identity) when it comes to sorting people out on those rare occasions when we do not generally prefer a fully co-ed environment: radfems and tradcons. These two groups agree that males and females are genuinely different and deserve their own spaces, leagues, record books, etc. but they disagree fairly strongly on why this is should be so. In the U.S. the radical feminists have almost no influence, presumably because American feminists are losing a rear-guard action for basic bodily autonomy against traditionalist conservatives who would force them to bear children against their will, among other indignities.
As to the broader conversation, most people just don't care that much. Men are not generally threatened by trans men (or non-binary females) in their leagues or locker rooms, for reasons which should be fairly obvious.
Probably worth mentioning that not all women share the TERF doom-and-gloom perspective on transwomen either.
TERF itself was coined as a term to distinguish this particular niche of women and feminists from those that aren't obsessed with excluding trans women.
Source: I made it up
BECAUSE TRANSGENDER IDENTIFIED FEMALES ARE STILL FEMALES!
FFS, the entire basis of this is not exclusion of transgender identified people as a whole. It's exclusion of MALES REGARDLESS OF HOW THEY IDENTIFY.
Absolutely. There's a major class component to this as well. In particular, upper class women are at much less risk from male sexual predators than lower class women. They don't face the same potential consequences from the adoption of self ID. As a rather obvious example, they see no personal risk in allowing trans women in women's prisons, because they're never going to end up in prison. So it's no surprise that many upper class women in particular are on board with the trans activist agenda. But that doesn't really prove anything about the merits of anyone's position.
I trust you have very compelling data to show this is true. Surely it is easy to demonstrate this considering that trans inclusion has been policy/law in places for years now.
I've seen anecdotes. What that's phrase skeptics say about anecdotes again?
This might shock you, but sex crimes existed before the recent controversy about trans people. Sharing anecdotes about predators attacking women in toilets or whatever isn't showing a cause-effect relationship between trans inclusive policy and women's safety.