Two points I was mulling over - a bearded man with bulging biceps, shaved head and all the signifiers of a very "brutish" style of masculinity could "now" enter a women's toilet and loiter around and if challenged say "I'm a trans man". How are the women users of that toilet going to know if that is the case or not? Considering that one of the objections to trans women using the women's toilet was that it allowed male predators to simply say "I'm a trans woman" and enter, now they can still lie and say "I'm a trans man".
The second point is that the new ruling may mean that more establishments will have to switch over to unisex toilets, such as many small businesses already have so that they are not discriminating based on gender reassignment. It will be interesting to see the court cases over the next few years as this all again has to get legislated.
Actually a third point just came to me seeing some media comments - this is a narrow judgment, it only refers to the wording in the Equality act, this doesn't settle how courts determine what a woman or man is in other legislation, that would still be up to legal challenges.
The second point is that the new ruling may mean that more establishments will have to switch over to unisex toilets, such as many small businesses already have so that they are not discriminating based on gender reassignment. It will be interesting to see the court cases over the next few years as this all again has to get legislated.
Actually a third point just came to me seeing some media comments - this is a narrow judgment, it only refers to the wording in the Equality act, this doesn't settle how courts determine what a woman or man is in other legislation, that would still be up to legal challenges.

