Easter Sunday? It is Saturday is it not?
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Trans women and single-sex spaces
(955 Posts)Is this common sense at last?
From ‘The Times’ this morning
Organisations will be told that they can no longer call a space single-sex if they admit transgender people who do not have a gender recognition certificate.
Updated guidance from the equality watchdog will say that services described as being single-sex will not be able to make the claim if they also allow transgender women to use them on the basis of self-identification
Last week the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) sent ministers its updated code of practice, which guides organisations on how to apply the Equality Act. It is expected to be presented to parliament before the summer. The Times understands the recommendations include an overhaul of how single-sex spaces are defined.
A source said of the guidelines: “The upshot [of the guidance] means it's not lawful to have a self-ID service. The fact is that if you let a man in, it's no longer a single-sex service, and that includes trans people without GRCs [gender recognition certificates] .”
The change would prevent those who rely on self-ID from being able to access women-only care homes or domestic abuse refuges without an exceptional reason
My question is just why has this taken complicated legislation - and so long?
Luminance
I think I wrote the wrong word once Doodledog that doesn't equate to "a lot". Everything else that rather concerns me is here in black and white. Is it a problem that I have those concerns or is it a problem that you don't agree I should have them?
I have no idea which word you wrote wrongly, but that is not the point. I am asking whether you see the rights to safe spaces for TW as more or less important than the same rights for women.
I didn't think I'd get an answer. This is all so familiar.
Luminance
Easter Sunday? It is Saturday is it not?
It is. I have been thinking it's Sunday all day though. A BH Friday has thrown me, I think 
Doodledog I do not understand why you would ask me such a question to be quite honest with you. More or less are both options I wouldn't choose. I feel every one has a right to be safe and feel safe. Neither must take anything from the other to achieve that. Existing organisations such as Refuge feel that is achievable and rightly so. I believe on the whole the NHS is working to achieve that. On the topic of Easter Sunday, I do have an egg I am looking forward to so I will have to exercise patience.
The NHS is working to achieve that? Hmm, given NHS Fife's recent behaviour, I won't be holding my breath on that score.
Luminance posted"I think the comments on current threads I have visited that state that the actions of a few make "all" trans people look bad in some way or that all trans people should be standing up to condemn the actions of others are an issue. That type of thinking is rather what led us to the equality act in the first place."^ but I would say rather that "the actions of a few" are the issue which made us need the equality act in the first place. They turned a quiet bloodless change from a scene where most people were aware of the presence amongst them of people who preferred to live as the opposite sex, but didn't see them as a threat, into one where there were agressively posturing exhibitionists treating it as all-out war between trans and non-trans.
As for the transwomen who "pass" safely - no-one says they have to come up from behind the parapets with all guns blazing and fight a very public campaign, but more that they could keep communicating with their friends and colleagues, could mention who and what has been helpful to them in integrating into the neighbourhood and/or workforce, while contributing practical details which could make life easier for all. After all, their own comfort and happiness is at stake, and others will be more ready to be helpful to people they know and like to those who rant against them
A slight correction in last sentence to "more ready to be helpful to people they know and like than to those who rant against them"
Neither must take anything from the other to achieve that.
How do you do that?
Certainly women haven’t tried to take anything away from trans that women had and trans didn’t, so what aren’t trans going to take away from women?
Could you explain for example, what women were taking from TW in order to have male free safe spaces?
Mollygo
Glasweegran
Don't you think it was the lack of thoughtfulness towards women and non-harmful trans which caused the problems in the first place?
It’s fine talking about too much reaction, especially if you include the reaction by TRA to people speaking the truth and defending women’s rights-reactions like death threats and cancelling aimed at innocent people.
Luminance mentioned somewhere about the need for mutual respect.
Where is the respect for women from those TW/TRA who are still stamping their feet and shouting that they won’t take any notice of the ruling.
No-one should be abusing others, but let me give you an examples.
I put a comment on Mumsnet a while back that was supportive of transpeople. I made no threats, no personal attacks, though I did say that there was a lot of anti-trans content there (because there was, people organising co-ordinated attacks on trans supportive people and organisations) I received 400, yes really 400 replies attacking me for it. Some went so far as to suggest I should "take a long walk off a short pier" for daring to express my views, or some trying to research who I was so that they could trash my opinion. I never saw the worst comments because the admin had removed them by the time I looked. I got abusive personal messages too, and just one from a transmum saying thank you for being a lone supportive voice. I never went back to Mumsnet. Effectively "cancelled"
That's just one example.
People make it sound like it's all one way nastiness, and when you stand on the other side you find it's really not.
As for those currently saying they won't abide by the ruling..... remember that these are people who have just been told their right to be in their safe spaces has just been removed, and many people are taking this as removing their right to exist as who they are at all. (even though the ruling doesn't say that at all).
I have a trans woman friend who was too scared to go out with workmates last night because she had no idea what was going to be the reaction in public and simply because she had there was not going to be any toilet she could use without getting abused for being a woman in the gents or a transperson in the ladies, or even an able bodied person in a disabled toilet. That's happened to her overnight.
I know lots of the coverage says that the judgement is "clear and concise" but in practice, her birth certificate says female, and so does her passport, which is all still legal, but now after many years, she's supposed to be using the gents? She is very distressed by this.
It's wildly impractical too. No-one at a changing room door has any facility to check who is trans and who isn't, so women that look less than girly are going to get challenged and abused too. We are right back to judging womanhood on appearance something we have tried to get away from for decades.
There are so many issues with what this ruling has done.
So it's now a situation where big bearded bad men can walk in the ladies announcing they are transwomen, way easier than having to go through years of public transition to do that. So it actually makes the changing room and toilet problem worse.
Perhaps you can see why some people might be upset about this. If I were a trans person, I might use some swear words about it too.
Elegran the Equality Act as whole protects many marginalised groups, including women. I would not want any group as whole to feel the way I have felt as a woman. Anyone who agrees with me on my rights is not my enemy and does not "look bad" because someone else of the same marginalised group does not respect my rights. Does that make sense?
Mollygo
^Neither must take anything from the other to achieve that.^
How do you do that?
Certainly women haven’t tried to take anything away from trans that women had and trans didn’t, so what aren’t trans going to take away from women?
Could you explain for example, what women were taking from TW in order to have male free safe spaces?
Why should I explain this? I am not saying it isn't a valid question but how does it apply to me?
They haven't lost any rights, the existing law has been clarified. Those who told men that they could be women have caused this situation.
Perhaps we can stop all that nonsense like “ people who menstruate “ in health literature- there’s a perfectly good word for such people - women.
Also perhaps we can stop the hysteria amongst some teens “finding their gender identity” being supported by schools in changing names/ pronouns/ damaging their perfectly healthy bodies even without parents knowledge.
Glasweegran
As for those currently saying they won't abide by the ruling..... remember that these are people who have just been told their right to be in their safe spaces has just been removed.
Just as they took away the right for women to be in safe spaces which they had previously had.
Galaxy
They haven't lost any rights, the existing law has been clarified. Those who told men that they could be women have caused this situation.
Quite right.
Luminance,
You don’t have to explain it. In fact I didn’t think you would be able to do so.
Why should I answer? is a familiar response.
A bit like Stonewall’s no debate stance.
However gender dysphoria is a real condition. And while biological sex dictates many aspects of a trans persons life, this is a condition that is happening for a biological reason and therefore requires a level of medical care and a level of social acceptance in order for trans people to function in society safely. Society itself must work towards being a "safe space".
No Glasweegran their right to be in women's safe spaces has just been removed. Those safe spaces were never theirs, they were and are for women.
vegansrock
Perhaps we can stop all that nonsense like “ people who menstruate “ in health literature- there’s a perfectly good word for such people - women.
Also perhaps we can stop the hysteria amongst some teens “finding their gender identity” being supported by schools in changing names/ pronouns/ damaging their perfectly healthy bodies even without parents knowledge.
100% agree. Especially on language when we're constantly told its less than 1% of the population that are trans, and yet language pertaining to women (not men usually) has been butchered in the name of inclusivity.
Mollygo
Luminance,
You don’t have to explain it. In fact I didn’t think you would be able to do so.
Why should I answer? is a familiar response.
A bit like Stonewall’s no debate stance.
I cannot answer a question that is not pertinent, it is impossible. The small passage you quoted retained the same meaning with or without the context.
That’s OK Liminance. I didn’t expect you would answer.
Mollygo
That’s OK Liminance. I didn’t expect you would answer.
Would you like to ask me a question that does apply to something I do think instead? Or would you like to re-word the question to ask me if I do think what you asked me to explain?
The situation now glasweegran is that a vulnerable woman in a women only space, can now ask that the threatening "big, bearded, bad man" be removed as the law protecting his possible dangerous agenda is no longer applicable.
Luminance
Doodledog I do not understand why you would ask me such a question to be quite honest with you. More or less are both options I wouldn't choose. I feel every one has a right to be safe and feel safe. Neither must take anything from the other to achieve that. Existing organisations such as Refuge feel that is achievable and rightly so. I believe on the whole the NHS is working to achieve that. On the topic of Easter Sunday, I do have an egg I am looking forward to so I will have to exercise patience.
I asked you the question as you do not appear to understand the reality of the situation.
Women had separate spaces for the limited occasions when we are vulnerable. Men decided they wanted access to them, so our rights to those safe spaces was removed at a stroke, leaving nowhere for us to go without the presence of men. It became very difficult to object to having males in changing rooms, wards, prison cells and public toilets.
Now the law has been clarified and we have the right to those spaces back, and we are told that this is damaging because the men who took those spaces from us are having their rights taken away - the right to impose themselves into our safe spaces. They can still use the spaces designated to their own sex - they are not losing that right, but they took that right from women. It is simply not possible for women to have safe spaces and simultaneously for men to be legally allowed to access those spaces, however much you insist that it should be.
I do understand your points, Glasweegran. It must be difficult for people in the position you describe. But no more so than it was for women who had our rights removed to accommodate them in the first place. The difference is that when women complained about that we were called TERFs, Nazis and transphobes, but the TW who are losing the right to take our rights are assumed to be victims.
Does anyone still using Twitter/X know what India Willoughby has had to say about any of this? I don't use it, so I don't know, but I would be interested to hear. India was the one who deliberately refused to use so-called 'gender-neutral' toilets to prove that there was a right to use the Ladies'. Eddie Izzard has done likewise - because he could. I do feel for those who have passed themselves off as women for a long time. I really do. But on the whole, if they continue to be unobtrusive and non-confrontational I don't think there will be many issues. If they start behaving like Eddie and India, however, women will have a right to call security, who will have a right to remove them.
Here’s s couple of examples of that bloke India says on X.
Obviously trying to encourage mutual support.
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