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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

feeling scared

80 replies

BadgerVersa · 14/10/2020 15:26

Hi. Writing this feels bloody pathetic when there are women out there facing actual physical threats for putting their heads above the parapet, but I've just questioned my company's introduction of pronouns in email signatures, and I'm feeling scared. I couldn't not say something - I'm not having them disadvantage women in the workplace like this. Just awaiting all my colleagues hating on me now though.

OP posts:
McDuffy · 14/10/2020 19:59

OP if you advance search me, I had a thread on this that went to over 300 replies because someone was out of order to me and the vipers weren't having it Grin

MuthaFunka61 · 14/10/2020 20:41

Well done @BadgerVersa,you rock! Flowers

BadgerVersa · 14/10/2020 20:50

Thank you :)

And thanks McDuffy - good on you!

OP posts:
thinkingaboutLangCleg · 14/10/2020 21:30

Well done, Badger. Every drop adds to the wave that's going to wash this rubbish away.

Chocalatecappuccino · 14/10/2020 21:32

Good for you OP. Well done! I think it's really important to speak out if you feel able to. The more of us that do, the more this ideology crumbles. The house of cards is already starting to fall.

I recently lost my job as a teacher because I raised anonymous safeguarding concerns about mixed-sex toilets and the teaching of gender identity as fact. I was really worried about it but felt I couldn't NOT say something because it concerns safeguarding children. I think the headteacher somehow found out it was me and pushed me out. I wonder how they all feel about the new RSE guidance now. A lot of my ex-colleagues are very woke.

BadgerVersa · 14/10/2020 21:40

Oh god, Chocolate, that is awful! I really hope karma brings you something fantastic to compensate - it really should!

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VortexofBloggery · 14/10/2020 22:04

Well done Badger! Wine

HollowTalk · 14/10/2020 22:19

I think I'd say that it's unfair to out people. That people's sexuality is their own business and that it's intrusive to ask people to tell complete strangers as well as colleagues how they identify. Some might not be ready to reveal this.

I think the pronoun thing is virtue-signalling to an extreme and completely mad level, but if I were trans or struggling with my identity I wouldn't have wanted anyone in my workplace to know a thing about it.

dumpling23 · 14/10/2020 22:19

Well done OP - making these challenges can be extremely stressful and in some circumstances, very brave indeed!!

I have objected today to the creation of some kind of purity pledge workplace statement on a similar matter to you. In the process I have connected with a colleague who also objects (to, as he puts it, purity politics and biology-denying genderwoowoo) and it's been quite glorious! I guarantee you there are others in your workplace who feel the same way as you do. Not only are you doing a great deed for them, but you may also be able to connect with them through what you've done.

BadgerVersa · 14/10/2020 23:16

Thank you all you wonderful people!

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howard97A · 15/10/2020 00:38

Well done, Badger!

Wish there were more like you at Westminster.

Cocothefirst · 15/10/2020 09:34

Well done OP.

I challenged my workplace for omitting sex and gender reassignment as protected characteristics in a survey, and replacing them with gender. I was terrified.

When I have the energy I'll do the 'diversity' training (which was prepared by Stonewall...) and do the same.

DeliciouslyFemale · 15/10/2020 10:09

What was the outcome, Cocothefirst? Well done btw.

Cocothefirst · 15/10/2020 10:16

Thanks Deliciously. Apparently the survey was copied from the NHS and they'll feed back.

I've got form for making complaints on training - I challenged sexist pages on an online leadership course and got them changed.

DeliciouslyFemale · 15/10/2020 10:22

You are bloody awesome. Have you had any muttering from the woke?

QuentinWinters · 15/10/2020 10:53

I think I'd say that it's unfair to out people. That people's sexuality is their own business and that it's intrusive to ask people to tell complete strangers as well as colleagues how they identify.
Yes this. Plus even if people don't add pronouns, if there is pressure to do so they are revealing they struggle with gender identity.
I HATE pronoun sign offs. I'm not she/her cos I want to be. I'm she/her because of how others see me and the way the English language works

MissMarplesGlove · 15/10/2020 11:15

I'm not she/her cos I want to be

I'm she/her (not that I sign off with pronouns!) because I was born female, and I am a woman. Basic biological fact.

andyoldlabour · 15/10/2020 11:31

Well done OP, that took a lot of courage.

BadgerVersa · 15/10/2020 13:45

Good on you Cocothefirst!

It amazes me that people can get the law wrong - the actual written down in black and white law!

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Cocothefirst · 15/10/2020 14:02

Courage calls to courage Badger.

PrawnofthePatriarchy · 16/10/2020 09:51

Three cheers for you, Badger! As so many PPs have said, courage calls to courage.

MarieIVanArkleStinks · 16/10/2020 16:31

Star Star Star

I hear you OP. I'm a one-time victim of rape who endured months of sexual harassment in my workplace. It ended up triggering cPTSD and making me very ill for a while.

The hell am I going to call attention to my sex, 'gender' or pronouns in my workplace even if I hadn't been through that (and it's coming, I can see it from a mile away). It was that workplace, up to its nuts in allies, that exposed me to this treatment in the first place.

I choose my battles carefully but this is a hill I will die on. My response won't be as open as the one I've written here; it will simply be 'no, because I don't choose to'. If pressed further I might say that it's triggering for me, but no more than that.

Can't you just predict the response? I'd be told what women hear ad nauseum: our feelings don't matter and we should sacrifice our own discomfort for the sake of others. If I gave a reason that's as honest as the one posted above - and why the hell should I? - I'd be 'weaponising my trauma'.

Because words are 'literal violence' and rape apparently isn't. Fuck that noise. I'll resist this shit to the hilt and I applaud others for doing so as I know just how hard this is. Kudos, OP. And thank you.

Sportsnight · 16/10/2020 16:35

We don’t have a policy on this but I’ve noticed the youngest women at work doing it voluntarily. I think it’s madness to underline your sex in work situations when there is already so much sex discrimination.

BadgerVersa · 17/10/2020 22:03

Hugs Mariel.

An update for all you lovely people who have given me such courage. I've had a response - it's been clarified that the pronoun thing is voluntary, which I'm going to view as a win (at least right now - clearly an actual win would be that no one suggests this sort of thing in the first place). Hopefully the points I raised about how this disadvantages women will have sunk in a little bit.

Thank you all again!

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NRatched · 17/10/2020 22:16

Good on you. Also glad to hear its voluntary instead of forced. How it should be really, if someone wants to make a fuss of pronouns, thats up to them/zir/him/her.

My dads workplace tried this a few months back. Not particularly 'woke', so no idea why, also my dad was mystified by why his boss didn't just bring it up in conversation if he felt it was important, instead of sending an email round stating everyne must now use pronouns to sign off. What they ended up with was a load of internal emails (apparently noone added these to external ones, so the company was not ridiculed, was an inside thing) ending in 'his majesty/majestic', 'banana/bananaself' 'God/His holiness' and such which I am sure was not the intended response. It was quietly ditched apparently. I genuinely laughed when he told me about this, with a really confused face on and asked if I knew anything about the subject Grin I think they might have just been follwing the 'trend', but yeah, didn't go as planned at all. Wasn't even mentioned on the company newsletter either, so I am guessing the boss just wishes it totally swept under the rug. And no, I won't out them, as the boss is actually one of my dads mate and apparently the whole lot of them are basically friends so 'going public' with this could affect the business, in todays climate, which is a sad situation in itself really. Having such 'pronounphobic'/'people left with a sense of humour in the workplace' people working there could attract TRAs, which noone bloody wants!

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