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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Sally Hines on Twitter re Woman's Hour

140 replies

Silentlyobserving · 19/11/2018 21:27

This tweet is not going as well as she perhaps expected: twitter.com/sally_hines/status/1064473613049442304

OP posts:
Thread gallery
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frazzled1 · 19/11/2018 23:46

Thanks for the link Silently. So many lush comments.

Has anyone tried to change species yet??
Horse? chicken?

Grin
PipGoesPop · 20/11/2018 00:18

It's a logical step frazzled. Anyone remember the American lion guy who had all that dental work/surgery/tats to make his face more like a lions as that's what he felt at home as.

Don't think he thought he WAS a lion though or was asking anyone to address him as Simba.

uglyandlovingit · 20/11/2018 03:43

The fact that she has a famous dad says it all. She's educated far beyond her intelligence.

Vegilante · 20/11/2018 06:05

Obviously the thread contained too much "realness" for Sally Hines to countenance.

pachyderm · 20/11/2018 06:07

It's scary how hollow these academics are. We have them here too, purveyors of absolutely opaque Butleresque bollocks they call feminism.

BlytheSpiritsSpirit · 20/11/2018 06:28

I had a conversation recently and someone said that if your argument can't be distilled and simplified so anyone can understand it, it's probably complete rubbish and you are bad at explaining.

To have that happen to you on national radio must be rather ego-deflating but no doubt SH will console herself with the large paycheque she receives for peddling such nonsense.

The juggernaut rolls on, losing traction a bit more each day....

Beerincomechampagnetastes · 20/11/2018 06:48

Omg I thought I was prepared after reading this thread. But I really wasn’t. Sally is rather unfortunately for her thick as pig shit.
I’m particularly offended by the great professor explaining that cis women are women who haven’t transitioned as if we are a subset. Angry

Thank god for prof Stock putting the handmaiden in her place.

Biologifemini · 20/11/2018 06:58

I expect Leeds uni will be struggling with that interview.
Her colleagues in the biology and medicine dept will be horrified.
And in the sociology dept: she has completely undermined her discipline.

Bowlofbabelfish · 20/11/2018 07:26

I’m still gobsmacked at the funding. A million quid. A MILLION quid.

I’m not saying that humanities doesn’t deserve funding by way. I’m asking what on earth could justify a grant of that size. For context, the lab I used to work in had huge running costs - housing and caring for our lab mice and flies cost about 30k a month. A millilitre of some specific reagents cost a thousand pounds. We had machinery that cost tens of thousands each to sequence DNA, amplify it, paint chromosomes. Laser microscopes. Expensive stuff - because running a lab is expensive.

Can someone with experience of the field tell me if million pound grants are normal here? How big is the team? What is that being spent on? Over how many years?

Having actually juggled finances for labs and projects - both academic and clinical, I’m staggered that a million quid for that kind of research.

Beerincomechampagnetastes · 20/11/2018 07:31

At best sally is a mediocre academic. As is usual with the trans ideology mediocre people are elevated to a much higher status by their involvement in the movement.
I suspect if the good prof wasn’t such an ally she wouldn’t be in the position she is now.

TheCountessofFitzdotterel · 20/11/2018 07:35

Who is her famous father?

ChattyLion · 20/11/2018 07:39

Oh dear Sally Hines just had dogmatic mantras and catchphrases to bring to the party ‘TWAW’, and then tried to deny statistics. Her articles of faith aren’t going to appeal to anyone who doesn’t already believe so she’s going to need to explain why all women should roll over, chuck away safeguarding (also known as: common sense based on experience) and welcome men into women’s spaces.

Interesting (and great, I think) that Woman’s Hour will be doing more on this over the next fortnight. Flowers

LordProfFekkoThePenguinPhD · 20/11/2018 07:57

A sociologist 🙄

Sorry, but as someone with a degree not a kick on the arse off sociology - nah. Ask a scientist or philosopher for some real critical thinking.

TimeLady · 20/11/2018 07:57

The 'Future of Legal Gender' project got £724k funding, also from the ESRC. Another project that doesn't seem to understand sex and gender either

www.mumsnet.com/Talk/womens_rights/3419517-The-future-of-legal-gender-survey

LordProfFekkoThePenguinPhD · 20/11/2018 07:58

Countess- her dad wrote ‘kestrel for a knave’ (because the film Kes).

Bittermints · 20/11/2018 08:05

He also wrote 'Threads', the terrifying nuclear war drama set in Sheffield in the early 80s. He was a PE teacher from a mining village. I wonder what he made of his daughter's research interests.

R0wantrees · 20/11/2018 08:09

Thanks to @OrchidInTheSun there is now a transcript of the Woman's Hour segment with Professor Kathleen Stock and Professor Sally Hines:

from thread:
www.mumsnet.com/Talk/womens_rights/3427931-Prof-Stock-on-Womans-Hour-today?pg=9

"J - Over the next couple of weeks, we’re going to be looking at the current debate about sex and gender, terms which have been used interchangeably by many of us. Some feminists say that sex is simple biological fact and that gender roles is a social construct imposing restrictions and demands on women and girls. Increasingly, there are more voices – including transgender voices – that say it’s more complicated and more nuanced than that.
This is the start of the whole series of conversations.
What are sex and gender?
S – Sex I would argue is a very complex mix of chromosomes, hormones and genitals. So we are talking about biological factors, but we’re not talking about anything at all which is straightforward. We’re talking about a complex mix of factors which is specially in the West have often been seen through a binary framework so sex …
J – Hang on: binary?
S – so sex is believed to divide people into two categories of male and female. And gender is the way in which people understand or experience these sex differences. Again in the west, sex has largely been understood in terms of a binary framework – so male and female.
J – so these understandings are less understood, or more widely challenged? How would you define it?
S – I think when it comes to sex that many scientists are arguing that the binary framework is a very simplistic and quite a reductive way of understanding quite a complex procedure. Similarly, the way gender has been understood in contemporary society has broadened out and young people especially are experiencing and understanding their gender as more diverse than a binary male-female framework allows for.
J – when a baby is born, the first thing that happens is that you find out is its biological sex
S – yep, I think the term ‘assigned female or male at birth’ rather than male or female at birth is a really useful way of looking at the ways in which sex is something social. So what that’s doing is arguing that someone is making a decision – a presumption – about what sex that baby is. And as we’ve seen with intersex, that’s clearly not always the case.
J – [big sigh]. Okay, well I suspect that some people will take issue, including I suspect, Kathryn.
K – Well I agree that we’re increasingly good at understanding intersex variations and a very, very small number of those are atypical chromosomally, so you might get an XY male with a feminised genitalia or you might get an XX female with virilised genitalia. But that’s not the 1.7 we’re always being told about. That’s a very, very small number something like 1 in 20,000 I think for CAH. But I think that’s the wrong way to look at it – that a doctor looks at a neonate and says ‘I’m going to assign a sex’. What they do is that they carry out genetic testing and blood testing and work out .. there’s a standard. The vast majority of intersex children, there’s an absolutely standard route ..
J – but as you say, this isn’t a common problem is it?
K – no it’s not but in the rhetoric of sex as a spectrum and the assigning of sex as a social decision on the part of the doctor is to gloss over the medical procedures that are pretty well understood now and result in predictable outcomes, whether the child is male or female.
S – (with a laugh) Okay, well neither I nor Kathleen are scientists and there are many scientists however who are pointing to the rather simplistic understanding of sex in the way that Kathleen has just talked about. And this has also been long understood in many non-western cultures who have understood that people are not simply male or female. And just to say that it doesn’t affect many people or it’s a minority problem or disorder, that’s ignoring the way that lots of young people are now experiencing their lives and their sense of gender as something that is non-binary, that is something that is neither female nor male.
J – Okay well I can see you’re struggling with that Kathleen.
K – (laughs) Well Sally’s moved there from talking about a medical issue to a social issue and if you’re non-binary or not, that’s got nothing to do with intersex – those two things are completely distinct.
S – I’m not talking particularly about intersex …
K – well you were originally
S – well I used it as an example of how sex itself can be diverse.
J – yes, well I appreciate you both feel very strongly about this but I worry we’re getting up a cul de sac up which our audience travel down in their real lives. What we do know is that the lives of women on the whole are more restricted and women can feel more vulnerable than their born male counterparts. That is simple fact isn’t it?
S – [pause, deep breath] it depends who you’re including in the category of women. Are you saying that transwomen are not women? Women? Cis women, okay?
J – cis women – a lot of people won’t know what you mean by that, can you explain?
S – so cis women are women who were assigned female at birth, women who haven’t transitioned, okay. Arguing for trans rights and arguing that transwomen are women doesn’t take away that we live in a patriarchal society.
K – I’m very happy to agree that we live in a patriarchal society and since we do I think we need to retain categories and sub-categories that do important explanatory work and one of those is women; natal females. You can call them what you like. But if cis is taken to mean happy with the gender stereotypes as soon as they are born then most women don’t feel cis. If you mean some really strong feeling of being a woman, then most women don’t feel like that. They just are. So it’s really, really difficult in these discussions to find some commonality that all transwomen and all natal women share and can explain that they are members of the same group. And more radically, as claimed by you Sally, that there’s no underlying difference between the two groups in terms of social treatment. It’s my view that being female, being viewed as a woman, imposes a significant causal predictor on you to be the subject of all sorts of discrimination. We see this in the sexual violence statistics, we see this in the pay gap – it’s not a gender pay gap, it’s a sex pay gap – it’s to do with reproduction.
S – I fundamentally disagree. I think transwomen also, if not more so, suffer harassment, suffer violence, suffer sexual disadvantage in society. And for me, regulating the category of woman, arguing around who can and who can’t belong to that category based on an idea of gendered authenticity or realness is not the way forward.
J – yes well again, we’ve got to make this conversation relevant to our listeners and many of our listeners have had tough lives for one reason or another and that they may now – still – be facilitating the lives of others. Possibly they’ve done nothing but that for the last 50 years. And it’s hardly surprising that some of those women are feeling that their hard won rights are somewhat vulnerable at the moment Sally to the progress of some other – for example – transwomen.
S – (scoffing) I completely disagree. Gender and progressive politics can’t be based on a hierarchy of difference in this way and we’ve seen this before and it’s very, very dangerous. We’ve seen this before in relation to the position of black women, we’ve seen it before in relation to the position of working class women. As feminists we’ve got to move away from a politics which is based around perceptions of realness. And that white cis women – such as myself, such as Kathleen – have got to give up some privilege here.
K – I am exactly here to fight for the interests of black and working class women. It is them that bear disproportionately the brunt of society and if we lose the ability to name those people as such and talk about the causal factors that lead to their predicament then we won’t be able to fight for them and so it’s dangerous the kind of rhetoric that’s coming out of gender politics.
J – sally can I just ask that if it were why do we not hear as much from transmen as we do from transwomen?
S – [deep breath. Looooong pause] I think trans men are often ignored. They are not seen to be such a threat by feminism as trans women are. There has been a critique by second wave feminists such as Sheila Jeffreys who have argued that they are women who are trying to get male privilege. So they have been attacked by feminism. But in the culture we’re living in at the moment, in contemporary times, it is transwomen who have become the bodies of fear to some feminists.
J – okay. Last word to you Kathleen.
K – transwomen are not inherently dangerous and no one on my side of the debate thinks that. But we recognise that they are male biologically and socialised as males and that makes it more likely – statistically – that some of them will be violent, more violent to females.
S – I completely disagree.
K – I know you do but the stats bear it out
S – transwomen are women
K – well you can keep saying that but I’m not talking about that. But I’m talking about how this is practically resolved within society.

J = Jane Garvey (interviewer)
S = Sally Hines
K = Kathleen Stock"

LordProfFekkoThePenguinPhD · 20/11/2018 08:19

Threads too? That show scared me shitless as a kid - and Kestrel bored me shitless in school.

Thanks a bunch. The family who keeps giving until it hurts!

hackmum · 20/11/2018 08:21

I love the comments. Two favourites:
"Sally Hines couldn't make a cogent argument if she had the knitting pattern"

"Do young people really get into huge piles of debt to listen to this bumwash at Leeds Uni?"

I must admit I previously thought Leeds was a pretty prestigious institution. Some particularly bright kids of friends ended up there. I imagine the VC is holding his head in his hands in despair after that performance.

LordProfFekkoThePenguinPhD · 20/11/2018 08:26

Maybe the students will get their heads out if their own backsides and think huh? Why the hell am I paying my fees for this idiot? And do what students do - boycot, stamp feet, hold their breath, whatever.

Dragon3 · 20/11/2018 08:31

What did her original tweet say?

My favourite comment:
'sex doesn't get discussed much in astrophysics, but no confusion here either' Smile

I thought that Leeds was a well-respected university. Bit surprised to see this.

SophoclesTheFox · 20/11/2018 08:32

I'm not sure if I found Threads more terrifying or Sally's lack of critical thinking skills. Close run thing.

If anyone wants to see the thread, I didn't close the chrome browser window I had it open in before I went to bed last night, and it's still there, in all its glory so tell me how to archive it and it's all yours Grin

hackmum · 20/11/2018 08:32

Have just read the transcript. Am absolutely hooting at this: "As feminists we’ve got to move away from a politics which is based around perceptions of realness."

Yes, because a politics focused on perceptions of realness has served us so badly up to now, hasn't it?

Datun · 20/11/2018 08:34

And gender is the way in which people understand or experience these sex differences.

Eh? What like pregnancy, menstruation? What rot.

As feminists we’ve got to move away from a politics which is based around perceptions of realness.

Perceptions of realness? Does she mean reality?

Dear god.

Datun · 20/11/2018 08:35

Thanks for that OrchidInTheSun - brilliant.