Across a number of discussions I have seen the rise of women's safety raised, an issue that I feel very strongly about (as in providing safe spaces). However, as with everything else, this does of course have caveats and limitations. I am no absolutist.
A recent news article told of a US woman who was shocked to find a transgender woman in the female changing rooms. "It was obviously a man", she said. "I didn't feel safe".
Adria Richards, the IT twitterer, said that the puerile 'dongle' joke made by the delegates behind her made her feel unsafe.
A feminist comedian was no-platformed by students at Goldsmith because she was likely to contravene the safe-space.
OK, so I'm up for being flamed for this. But something doesn't feel quite right. I'm unsure of what it is - and I'm entirely open to my 'feeling' turning out to be something that I should intellectually dismiss. But, if pressed to describe my reservation, I'd say that there's an assumption of female weakness prior to the fact (does that make sense?). As if we're victims of what might happen even if it's highly unlikely that it will. I'm just starting to feel that maybe we're painting feminism as a collective of women that are likely to get the vapours at any moment and aren't remotely robust.