Transwomen are not Women - Part 15

I think we should look to data rather than lived experience, whether that lived experience is IRL or WWW.

I don't expect the data to be different from my lived experience, partly because you say you have looked at it and it agrees with my lived experience.
 
That's how I see it. Sexual harassment can easily start out in some kind of consensual environment.

What I don't recall about this story is whether it was already law for open trans access? If so, no cry of foul can be accepted at all. Cards were on the table, and it's up to the patrons to decide in advance what they would be willing to get an eyeful of. "I forgot to think about that" falls pretty flat.

IIRC they did some lewd things in addition to just being there. If they had stayed in the hot tub and not drawn attention to themselves, they probably would have gone unnoticed.
 
Didn't say he was.

If ya don't like the colors, don't wear them on ya sleeve.
It is TRAs who act more like Nazis in their response to gender critical speakers.
- Cancelling
- Social Media rage mobs
- Blackmailing host venues with threats of violence and vandalism
- Letter-writing campaigns to employers and peers
- Threats of legal action
- Threats of violence
- Death threats against persons and their families

These are the 'nice, cuddly, harmless' people that you and Mycroft are supporting, whether you realize it or not.
 
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If you have a right to be nude in a place, you cannot be criminally indecent just by being nude in that place.
I don't know about that states rights. I was briefly acquainted with mine, when I was charged with simple assault for merely standing on a property, not saying a word except to politely answer a question put to me, and I was on that property with the owners permission. My literal presence was found meritorious enough to allow the charge (which ultimately failed).

Yes, Virginia, you can be threatening even when you are doing everything within your "rights".
 
IIRC nope.

I may not remember correctly, but in looking for answers I found it may be a hoax.


 
If men are harassing and beating men in the men's room, that is for men to sort out. It's not our problem. Although this seems to be so rare as to be virtually nonexistent, certainly compared to the well documented cases of trans identifying men attacking women in the women's room, but we're told that these are mere anecdotes and should never be used as justification for keeping men out of the women's room.

Double standards, much?

I think your perception of incidents of trans-women attacking women in woman’s bathrooms is exaggerated due to your haunting of anti-trans websites where those incidents are cherry-picked and presented to you.
 
You have a really insufferably high opinion of yourself. Why should your unsupported anecdotes be given any credibility at all?

You are free not to believe my anecdotes.

At the same time, I present them for what they are. My personal lived experience where I gather the opinions of others.

If you want to tell me women see this as a woman's rights issue, I'm going to talk to some women about it. If I can't find some women who see it that way or if an overwhelming majority are not bothered by transwomen in a woman's room, them that will make me very skeptical of claims to the contrary.

I suggest you ask some women of your own. I've been avoiding women from my social circle and have been asking women I meet but don't know. I also suggest you avoid using the internet for this.
 
It is TRAs who act more like Nazis in their response to gender critical speakers.
- Cancelling
- Social Media rage mobs
- Blackmailing host venues with threats of violence and vandalism
- Letter-writing campaigns to employers and peers
- Threats of legal action
- Threats of violence
- Death threats against persons and their families

These are the 'nice, cuddly, harmless' people that you and Mycroft are supporting, whether you realize it or not.

Poor behavior on one side or another doesn't change the fundamentals. Try to concentrate on those.
 
Just so you don't feel singled out, perhaps have a bit of discussion with damion about them having been run through the wringer when they were arguing out of both sides of their mouth. Granted, most of damion's argument was devil's advocate... but at the end of the day, you're essentially taking a position that is internally inconsistent and self-contradictory.
OK, getting super bored with the repetition on this point, so I'm going to belabor it a bit:

You know my basic position. Sex segregated spaces are unfortunately necessary. We can't all just get along, because rapists and assaulters are in fact overwhelmingly male, and exploiting this opportunity is inevitable, yada yada yada, My 'what' we have to do has been pretty firmly established.

And despite this thread having the reputation of being the forum cesspool, I engaged in the discussion, because as always, I'm interested in the 'why' as much as the 'what' to do. So I'm poking around in the grayer areas of the rationalizations. And you know what? The argumentation here is so godawful horrific that you guys are literally turning my opinion around.

So if my position seems 'internally inconsistent and self contradictory", it's because all y'all are forcing me to rethink why I was confident in my assumptions. I'm still trying to balance it out, but you guys have collectively convinced me that your base assumptions are powerfully wrong.

I get that you don't see it that way, I get that you're trying to be nice and make everyone happy... but making everyone happy isn't possible.
One of my favorite quotes, attributed to Winston Churchhill: Never, never never give up.

And it doesn't need to make everyone happy. We've got therapy for that. It needs to *work*, and do the best we can with treating everyone fairly.
 
Also, if making everyone happy isn't possible, it may not be you who is made happy.
 
How valid are the fears of females who see a strange male in a dark alley? How valid are the fears of a female who doesn't want to leave their drink unattended in a bar? How valid are the fears of a female who gets uncomfortable when a male won't take no for an answer at a nightclub, and follows them when they head for the door? How valid are the fears of a female who checks for hidden cameras in the toilet? How valid are the fears of a female who never goes to a party without a friend?

How valid are the fears that females hold toward males that they don't know very well?
Fears? Not at all valid. Concerns? Very much so. Being defensive and alert =/= being whacked out paranoid about boogeymen between your ears.

Way back in the pay phone days, I walked up to a row of them to make a call. There was a lone young woman using another phone. Dark, deserted, the works. She screamed "DON"T TOUCH ME" as I got near her, and I calmly said I just needed to make a call on one of those unused phones next to her.

By your reasoning, she had every reason to be afraid. But you are wrong. She had nothing to fear, and as long as I was around, she was far safer than she could imagine. Her fear was 100% between her ears. There was never a threat, even though she imagined one mightily. She could probably have cooked up scenarios where there could have been something to be afraid of. But that doesn't change the fact that her cardiac arrest was wholly imaginary. And that's basically what the argumentation here has been.
 
I may not remember correctly, but in looking for answers I found it may be a hoax.


That's really interesting. The spa was LGBTQ friendly, and actually had a client list of trans clients, none of whom were there that day (it's a members only place). So a trans person there was not out of the ordinary at all? The offender apparently just walked in under false pretenses and exposed himself, like his previous arrest record indicates. That's why the judge threw out the 'transphobe' defense- the guy wasn't actually trans.
 
If you don't want me making assumptions about your position, it would be helpful if you answered simple T/F questions about your position.
Your question keeps asking about rights, which are not determined, and at this time don't interest me much. To keep it mo meaningless, you ask not to make a distinction between moral and legal rights. So nah, it wouldn't be helpful at all to reanswer.

If you have a right to be nude in a place, you cannot be criminally indecent just by being nude in that place.
You sure? Can I be nude in my home, alone, on my private property? I think we could agree on that.

Now can I pull the window blinds open and throw the lights on at night in front of a busy sidewalk?
 
That's really interesting. The spa was LGBTQ friendly, and actually had a client list of trans clients, none of whom were there that day (it's a members only place). So a trans person there was not out of the ordinary at all? The offender apparently just walked in under false pretenses and exposed himself, like his previous arrest record indicates. That's why the judge threw out the 'transphobe' defense- the guy wasn't actually trans.
What decision allowed his entry to the spa?
 

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