Transwomen are not Women - Part 15

I prefer the status quo ante, where you could be ejected if you were a dude. What's your argument for changing that policy?
That isn't the status quo where I live, and wasn't before, so I don't particularly need one.

The radical departure from how we've done things in the past would be criminalizing maleness in women's bathrooms (and vice versa), with only apparent maleness or femaleness to go on. Usually with no clear means of enforcement.

If you want to know the problems I see with that, you can read the post I already made about it.
 
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Not 'legal', as the foreman said, but not sufficiently proven. So found the jury of Californians and not the State, yes.
You're dancing around the fact that males can still legally expose themselves to females in California. They have to do it without sexually arousing themselves, but as long as they pull that off (which isn't impossible), yes, it very much is legal in California. So even if you conclude that Merager committed a crime that he got away with, other people could do basically the same thing legally.
{eta: the difference between 'innocent, what you did was legal' and 'guilt was not sufficiently proven' is rather large. OJ Simpson (in the same State) was found not guilty (not sufficiently proven by the State), not found innocent and 'what he did was legal"}
Not at all equivalent. OJ's claim to innocence is that he didn't do the act at all. Motive could only shift which exact crime he was convicted of. No possible motive could make those killings legal, and his defense did not rest upon a disputed motive. Whereas for Merager, motive was an intrinsic part of the crime itself, without which there is no crime at all.
 
The radical departure from how we've done things in the past would be criminalizing maleness in women's bathrooms (and vice versa),
You don't have to criminalize their mere presence, and I don't think anyone here has even advocated that. All you have to do is allow the relevant authorities to kick people out when their sex doesn't match the space they're in. And they don't even need to actually do that unless there's a complaint.
 
You don't have to criminalize their mere presence, and I don't think anyone here has even advocated that. All you have to do is allow the relevant authorities to kick people out when their sex doesn't match the space they're in.
I'd hope so, but that is in fact what many of the anti-trans bathroom bills have done.

And they don't even need to actually do that unless there's a complaint.
And they didn't have to do that even if there is a complaint. But in many states, this decision has been taken out of the hands of owners/administrators/property managers.
 
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I'd hope so, but that is in fact what many of the anti-trans bathroom bills have done.
Have they? Which ones? I just read through the Arkansas bathroom bill, and there's no mention of any criminal penalties to anyone. Even the civil penalties mentioned don't apply to a person who enters the wrong bathroom. Can you identify one which actually makes mere presence a crime?
 
Have they? Which ones? I just read through the Arkansas bathroom bill, and there's no mention of any criminal penalties to anyone. Even the civil penalties mentioned don't apply to a person who enters the wrong bathroom. Can you identify one which actually makes mere presence a crime?
Utah's and Florida's are the two I know of. The crime will be the same as always--trespassing. The difference is that they empower agents of the state to arrest without the request of owners/administrators/property owners.

Many of these bills are effectively toothless, a mess of unenforceable demands, or are just redundant with existing law.
 
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But it was a real question. If I see a guy who's a foot taller than me and built like a linebacker doing something that suggests criminal intent, I'm not going to confront him directly. I'd look for somebody who deals with that on a professional basis, like a security guard or a property manager, and if I can't find them I'd call the cops.
What to you suggests criminal intent?

Trespassing, or does it need something further?
 
There is a subset of males not expressly permitted to use the ladies' room.
How would you characterize this subset?
"Trans" will do.
Trans people who were observed to be male at birth are expressly permitted to use the ladies' room, per relevant antidiscrimination laws.
You will still need to opt out.
All it takes to opt out is a statement to the effect that the bathroom or locker room in which you found yourself was the one which comported with your gender identity as you were experiencing it at the time. Under self-i.d. there is no mechanism to call any such declaration insincere, even known sex criminals (such as Merager) are given full faith and credit in reporting their identity.
noticing a historical trend of hostility against difference for a given characteristic
The historical characteristic which formerly kept some people out of the women's spaces was being male rather than being transgender.

Had Merager been a female who identified as non-binary, no one would have complained about their presence in the women's area on grounds of transgender identity, even if they'd announced it continuously with "THEY" tattooed on one breast and "THEM" on the next.
 
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What to you suggests criminal intent?
The usual things. A man who buys a sackful of spy cameras and removes identifying information and then enters the ladies' room with them probably isn't up to any good.

Trespassing, or does it need something further?
If they were trespassing, there would be no need to show criminal intent.
 
The usual things. A man who buys a sackful of spy cameras and removes identifying information and then enters the ladies' room with them probably isn't up to any good.
The question was about who would you challenge.

And, of course, you don't know what is in the backpack before you decide to challenge.
 
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Trans people who were observed to be male at birth are expressly permitted to use the ladies' room, per relevant antidiscrimination laws.
I suppose I was confused about which subset you were asking me about. Cis, then.

All it takes to opt out is a statement to the effect that the bathroom or locker room in which you found yourself was the one which comported with your gender identity as you were experiencing it at the time. Under self-i.d. there is no mechanism to call any such declaration insincere, even known sex criminals (such as Merager) are given full faith and credit in reporting their identity.
I'm aware of the complaint. If you have a problem with self-id, just say you have a problem with self-id. There's no need for this tortured argument at all. "Gender-segregated restrooms are technically unisex restrooms, even though they obvious aren't, and also they technically aren't" is what this boils down to.

And "full faith and credit"? Why do Americans always end up trying to sound like the Founding Fathers when they're trying to punch above their weight?

The historical characteristic which formerly kept some people out of the women's spaces was being male rather than being transgender.
You've just totally misunderstood the point here. It's the history of discrimination against trans people that makes gender identity a protected class. That's what motivates anti-discrimination law. It follow from that that discrimination on the basis of gender identity constitutes impermissible discrimination.

There is no need at all to show that there is a history of discrimination in bathroom access.
 
You keep saying this, and it's simply not true. A cop, for instance, can at any time refuse to accept what he considers a deceptive excuse , for literally anything. For his reasoning, a NJ driver's license indicates gender, as does their other available public records the officer might have access to (arrest records, Firearm card, etc). From this alone, the cop can easily say that the has probable cause to believe the suspect is giving him false information. The prison system does this quite openly; they can say they don't believe (or don't even care) that a prisoner is trans.

The 'magic words' you guys rely on are imaginary. Police (and anyone else) can respond with the customary NJ response of '◊◊◊◊ off' , and treat you like exactly what they perceive you as, by the reasonable person standard.
Wrong!

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If gender expression (actual or perceived) does not clearly indicate a transgender person's identity, officers may politely and respectfully ask how the person wishes to be addressed. For example, officers may ask a transgender person which name and pronoun the person prefers.
1. When a person self-identifies as a transgender person, officers should not question this identity or ask about the person's transition status. Officers shall not engage in any argument, disagreement, or debate regarding a person's self-identification as a transgender person.

So, if a biological male self-ID's as a women, the cop is NOT allowed to argue about it

2. If officers do question such self-identification or ask about a person's transgender status, officers should have compelling, professional, articulable reason for having done so. These reason(s) shall be thoroughly documented in the corresponding CAD/RMS record or law incident report.

What cop is going to question self-ID, knowing that it involves doing a crap load of extra paperwork, and a ticking-off if they get anything, even slightly, wrong

3. Officers shall not ask questions or make statements about a transgender person's genitalia, anatomy, breasts, sexual practices, or transition status. If an officer does ask such questions or make such statements, it shall be necessary to do so because of the ongoing criminal investigation or if the individual raises the issue, without prompting by the officer and the officer’s inquiries are tailored to ensure the individual’s safety and dignity. That officer shall have a compelling, professional, and articulable reason for having done so. The reason(s) shall be thoroughly documented in the corresponding report.
 
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If you have a problem with self-id, just say you have a problem with self-id.
I think it's much better to painfully tease out the problem bit by bit.
"Gender-segregated restrooms are technically unisex restrooms, even though they obvious aren't, and also they technically aren't"
I've no idea why you would say that a space which is legally required to be inclusive of both sexes is not technically unisex.

What aspect of "unisex" is technically missing in such cases?
It's the history of discrimination against trans people that makes gender identity a protected class.
Seems to me that you—among many others—may well have mistaken a history of sex segregation for a history of discrimination against trans people. When women and girls complain about seeing a penis at the spa, they aren't complaining about the bepenised individual's subjective sense of self.
 
The question was about who would you challenge.
Again, I'm not going to challenge anyone directly.

If I saw someone who looked very much like a man waiting around outside a women's restroom, watching the door, and entering only after another woman does, that's more than enough for me to let someone know my suspicions.
 
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