smartcooky
Penultimate Amazing
"When people get used to preferential treatment, equal treatment seems like discrimination"Pretty much correct. But we would be sexist and discriminatory. So nah, thanks. Hard pass.
- Thomas Sowell
"When people get used to preferential treatment, equal treatment seems like discrimination"Pretty much correct. But we would be sexist and discriminatory. So nah, thanks. Hard pass.
Not in the UK, that’s been settled by the recent SC decision. It would require new legislation to change that. (There will be cases brought about what constitutes discrimination under the gender reassignment class in the EA.)
All the TERFs I know wear that badge proudly!
What takeaway - that the SC has settled the meaning of women in the Equality act to mean biological women? I think you’ll find I’m not alone with that “takeaway”.You are the only person I have seen who has this takeway….snip…
The post I was referring to was clearly a follow up to your earlier post in which you claimed the SCOTUK ruling meant you now have Self ID. That is a unique takeaway.What takeaway - that the SC has settled the meaning of women in the Equality act to mean biological women? I think you’ll find I’m not alone with that “takeaway”.
It's effectively said that a GRC doesn't add much to self-ID regarding being trans. Being recognised as trans is important regarding allegations of discrimination on the grounds of gender ID; exactly what might count as discrimination on that basis may have to be established in future court cases. What has been clarified is that being recognised as trans does not mean you are then legally of the opposite sex to your biological sex.The post I was referring to was clearly a follow up to your earlier post in which you claimed the SCOTUK ruling meant you now have Self ID. That is a unique takeaway.
While I have similar feelings about marginalized people, ultimately the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.Because I deeply, sincerely, want to be inclusive to trans people. I detest the little guy getting marginalized and told they don't belong. It is viscerally repulsive to me.
That's not the greatest basis for public policy, though, which is why I'm on a discussion thread about the topic, to weigh out whose wants and rights should reaaonably prevail.
Not if they are accommodated accordingly, with their own wing, and where the GPP have no access to them.
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Prison bosses buy a £10,000 games wall - and inmates don't even use it
The specialist unit at Downview women's jail in Sutton, Surrey was opened in 2019 after Karen White sexually assaulted two female inmates at HMP New Hall.www.dailymail.co.uk
I make no guarantee about how they will treat each other though.


While I have similar feelings about marginalized people, ultimately the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.
It's effectively said that a GRC doesn't add much to self-ID regarding being trans. Being recognised as trans is important regarding allegations of discrimination on the grounds of gender ID; exactly what might count as discrimination on that basis may have to be established in future court cases. What has been clarified is that being recognised as trans does not mean you are then legally of the opposite sex to your biological sex.
That has always been the argument for taking rights away from a minority.While I have similar feelings about marginalized people, ultimately the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.
This doesn't align with reality.Not only that, the idea that the "trans community" is marginalised is absolutely ludicrous.
Transgender people are over four times more likely than cisgender people to experience violent victimization, including rape, sexual assault, and aggravated or simple assault, according to a new study by the Williams Institute at UCLA School of Law.
I have neve heard it so much as one time.That has always been the argument for taking rights away from a minority.
Jim Crow, Not giving women the right to vote. Americans stole land from native Americans and put them on reservations.I have neve heard it so much as one time.
The trick is determining who actually needs what, and who is just being unpleasant and unreasonable. Since the extremes of both sides represent themselves that way, it's a hard balancing act.While I have similar feelings about marginalized people, ultimately the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.
The trick is determining who actually needs what, and who is just being unpleasant and unreasonable. Since the extremes of both sides represent themselves that way, it's a hard balancing act.
Do women actually need to kick the rare transwoman out? Not really. Does a biologically intact transwoman need to be in a restroom that doesn't have urinals? Not really. If they are okay with their body as-is, there should be no issue with being around others with similar bodies.
It's still not clear how it will play out. The people doing this are so marinated in gender gufferywoo I think it's going to take them a while to wake up and smell the coffee. We're still in the denial stage, and a lot of them are writing guidelines that continue to misrepresent the law and more of them are pointing to these guidelines as justification for carrying on as before. (The state of the Girl Guides is a sight to behold.)
Bad advice is everywhere. Opponents of last week’s Supreme Court judgment — which deemed that “sex” in the 2010 Equality Act refers to biological sex — are outraged and doing their best to undermine it. The responses range from the deranged, such as an “open letter” to MPs from a group of people signing themselves “The Aggrieved”, to misstatements of the law.
Among the latter is a blog post by Dr Helen Webberley, founder of GenderGP, an online clinic based in Singapore which offers “personalised, gender-affirming medications in just 2-3 weeks”. In a briefing on the GenderGP website, Webberley claims that nothing much has changed following the court’s decision. She asserts that it does not override the Gender Recognition Act 2004 (GRA), which “allows trans people to legally change their sex on their birth certificate and be legally recognised in that gender for all legal purposes”.
The judgment says precisely the opposite, confirming that “sex” in the Equality Act means biological sex. Indeed, the ruling has rendered a gender recognition certificate (GRC) all but useless, calling into question the purpose of a document that doesn’t — and never did — change someone’s sex...