Gosh people accepted TWAW 50-100 years ago.
www.telegraph.co.uk/women/life/1918-vs-2018-13-things-women-couldnt-do-100-years-ago/amp/
I have a few questions about how that worked in practice.
Single women still couldn't apply for a loan or credit card in their own name without a signature from their father, even if they earned more, as recently as the mid-Seventies.
Working women were also refused mortgages in their own right in the Seventies, unless they could secure the signature of a male guarantor.
If the TW had a mortgage or a loan, was it allowed. If they came out as trans after they had a loan, was it revoked? Could they be their own male guarantor?
The Sex Discrimination Removal Act 1919 changed the law on women being disqualified from certain professions on the grounds of sex.
It gave women access to the legal profession and accountancy for the first time and meant they could also hold any civil or judicial office or post.
What if the TW were already an accountant or lawyer? Were they stripped of the post?
So many questions. If it were not bollocks.