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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Government response to the petition...

255 replies

LazyTuesdayAfternoon · 05/06/2018 16:30

I don't know if there's a thread about this already, sorry if I've missed it.

What do people make of the response?

It seems quite proportionate to me but, as always, I guess the devil will be in the detail...

OP posts:
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11
MandSBrokeTheLaw · 05/06/2018 19:08

Harried Harman didn't help matters, wasn't it her who was one of the people that wrote the EA2010?

R0wantrees · 05/06/2018 19:12

"Much of their campaigning remained on the quiet. The passage of the 2004 law to give trans people legal status was "remarkable," says [Christine] Burns, because "the government was able to pass an entire act in parliament without anyone throwing a fit in the press".

www.theguardian.com/society/2013/jan/22/voices-from-trans-community-prejudice

Terfulike · 05/06/2018 19:12

That doesnt surprise me, she was all for the DWP changes too a few years back, that are being so damaging to women and children now eg two child limit

Ereshkigal · 05/06/2018 19:12

The two laws co exist as a really shitty patchwork. What is unworkable is the "you can't possibly ask if someone has a GRC in any circumstances ever." That has to go. When the consultation happens this is a point which needs to be raised. Women's refuges etc need to be able to ask.

Terfulike · 05/06/2018 19:15

This reply has been deleted

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spontaneousgiventime · 05/06/2018 19:15

I suspect that this is going to be our next fight. Woman as in natal, biological, born woman is going to have to be strengthened in law. This mish mash of legislation is going to implode soon and guess who will be at the forefront?

IndominusRex · 05/06/2018 19:19

This is a very well written statement and I'm glad that it is giving due credit to the concerns stated in the petition. It's an encouraging move.

Wanderabout · 05/06/2018 19:23

What Barracker said. That is what needs to be explained and sorted in the upcoming conversation. The significant shift is that it now is a conversation, not Mara Miller telling women to STFU.

Terfulike · 05/06/2018 19:29

Yes it's made the elephant in the room that is the contradiction somewhat pink and sparkly, hard to ignore and it has got to be clarified

Italiangreyhound · 05/06/2018 19:29

@GibbertyFlibbert are you now worried toilets will be unisex? What about girl guide camping trips? They are now potentially unisex, I'd say we should all be pretty angry about that and we certainly can't blame 'feminists' for that one.

@BarrackerBarmer do you blog, do you get on the telly? You should.

You are so clear, concise and wise, we need more of you and people like you; speaking out, making sense, you sum it up brilliantly (tragically so) Flowers Flowers Flowers

R0wantrees · 05/06/2018 19:32

The significant shift is that it now is a conversation, not Mara Miller telling women to STFU.
relevent thread:
www.mumsnet.com/Talk/womens_rights/2993425-Maria-Miller-interviewed-by-Janice-Turner-full-text

Ereshkigal · 05/06/2018 19:40

The significant shift is that it now is a conversation, not Mara Miller telling women to STFU.

I'll drink to that. It's something. Feminist action accomplished thatWine

thebewilderness · 05/06/2018 20:04

This business of asking for a TIM to show a Gender Recognition Certificate is a red herring when all it takes is a deed poll to get a DL with a new name, picture, and sex designation.
That is what people ask for as ID.
The irony is that what we call proof of ID will no longer be proof of ID because the UK government has adopted the 8th rule of misogyny.

LangCleg · 05/06/2018 20:04

Harried Harman didn't help matters, wasn't it her who was one of the people that wrote the EA2010?

Basically, I think New Labour knew they were about to lose an election so rushed through EA2010. It's got all sorts of problems and is really - as women are finding out - rather toothless.

misscockerspaniel · 05/06/2018 20:07

So far, the only media reporting on this seems to be:

www.pinknews.co.uk/2018/06/05/government-response-petition-anti-transgender-feminist-campaigners

R0wantrees · 05/06/2018 20:13

Pink News:
(extract)
"‘Man Friday’ campaigner Amy Desir, who recently staged a topless protest at a men-only swimming session to protest the inclusion of transgender women in women’s spaces, was behind the petition ahead of a government consultation on reforms to the Gender Recognition Act.
The government is set to consult on plans to streamline the gender recognition process to allow transgender people to more easily gain legal recognition – but the petition claimed it could “impact on women-only services and spaces” and challenge “the principle of single-sex spaces.”

The petition gained more than 10,000 signatures after heavy promotion on internet forum Mumsnet, which has become a “hotbed” of anti-transgender campaigning in recent months."

spontaneousgiventime · 05/06/2018 20:16

Women with an opinion, who'd have thunk it. Poor Prick news will be apoplectic.

OlennasWimple · 05/06/2018 20:58

That response is 1000 times better than I feared it would be, even if there are still concerns about how it would operate in practice

Lifesavingorange · 05/06/2018 21:02

Agree that the response could have been so much worse. They could have gone down the ‘transwomen are women #nodebate’ route and they haven’t. They’ve acknowledged that women’s rights definitely are affected by all of this.

It’s progress. We are being heard.

thebewilderness · 05/06/2018 21:05

How differently I read it.
To me it is another delaying tactic saying essentially that change is happening without any amendment to existing contradictory laws so after there are no more sex segregated spaces (except for men's) we will maybe get around to having a chat with the public about whether or not women still have too many rights.

Ereshkigal · 05/06/2018 21:13

I agree, but also agree with others that it could have been worse. Oh the scraps!

thebewilderness · 05/06/2018 21:23

Given that the EA says there are sex exceptions even though they are useless it seems to me they had to pretend to be in compliance with that existing law.
It just seems like pretense to me.
Maybe it's just me being cynical. They know by now people don't want it but they are doing nothing and say they will get around to it eventually.

TheGoalIsToStayOutOfTheHole · 05/06/2018 21:35

'Providers may exclude trans people from facilities of the sex they identify with, provided it is a proportionate means of meeting a legitimate aim' needs to be publicised to schools.

Surely sex segregation in general is a proportionate means of meeting a legitimate aim? The aim being the sexes having sace away from each other for various reasons when sex is actually relevant, and womens safety. Obviously sex segregating a chess class is very different to sex segregating an open plan changing room or a refuge.

The exemptions really are not publicized enough at all. Then you have trans pressure groups actively decieving companies and schools and such about this and making out that its illegal to have girls and boys changing areas and the only way to sort this is to have boy in with girls and shift girls (however many of them are uncomfortable) into the small staff changing rooms Hmm Along with companbies crapping thir pants at the first sign of a narcisistic male demanding entry to female changing rooms (possibly for fear of the numerous negative reviews that would flood in from many other narcisistic males once the twitter shitstorm was started), ala Travis Alabanza.

Ereshkigal · 05/06/2018 21:38

Surely sex segregation in general is a proportionate means of meeting a legitimate aim?

Yes. I think it will take a shift in perception of what is being asked for as an attack on sex segregation. Then it will be clear that the public in general think it is.

bd67th · 05/06/2018 22:20

@Theinconstantgardener How will legitimate aim be justified. Who will decide? I can see that being challenged by TIMs detirmined to enter these spaces.

An organisation would decide their policy and if a TIM challenged it, a tribunal or a court would decide whether the complaint was valid. So a small org might not be able to afford to defend themselves.

As soon as ASN don't need to fund abortions, I'm taking the £30/month I give to them and putting it in an instant access savings account, to be donated to any female-only organisation that needs to defend itself against a TIM trying to get in.