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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

BBC 100 - once again

109 replies

FeministDonkey · 03/12/2024 07:34

Long time poster but changed name as I couldn't find a thread already and wanted to rant.

BBC News - www.bbc.co.uk/news/resources/idt-4f79d09b-655a-42f8-82b4-9b2ecebab611
BBC 100 Women 2024: Who is on the list this year? - BBC News

Here we go, once again BBC couldn't find 100 women... Ahrgh!
Come on! Do we all just look at these lists now and find the intruder?

OP posts:
Thread gallery
6
YourAmplePlumPoster · 04/12/2024 13:09

I just knew without even looking there was going to be a bloke on the list.

MarieDeGournay · 04/12/2024 16:48

Did the BBC know about those gross photos before including this person in the list?

Sometimes a picture is worth a thousand words. Like this one, from 2022, which says a thousand words about transwomen in women's sport - well actually it just says one word, NO, a thousand times. The player on the right is 'Giulia' Valentino, for the record.

I think photos like this need to be seen as widely as possible - look at the effect the Isla-Bryson-in tights one had on public opinion.

BBC 100 - once again
lcakethereforeIam · 04/12/2024 20:18

A Telegraph article criticises the list's inclusions and omissions

https://archive.ph/mZigf

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/12/04/women-of-the-year-list-shows-bbc-bias/

It reminded me that 'list' also means 'to lean over to one side'.

DuesToTheDirt · 04/12/2024 20:28

@lcakethereforeIam that's for that, great article. It actually made me laugh! "Sadly for photographers, the BBC does not explain what a queer lens is, or reveal where we can buy this remarkable piece of technology." Grin

viques · 04/12/2024 22:56

@ArabellaScott That bottom right picture looks disturbingly like the character in Silence of the Lambs who was making himself a “woman suit”. ………Looks like Brigitte almost managed it, shame it doesn’t fit.

(sorry about the spoiler)

tedgran · 04/12/2024 23:08

senua · 03/12/2024 08:23

Where's willy, you mean?

😅😅

annejumps · 04/12/2024 23:34

an organism known to switch its gender from male to female across its lifetime

Oh yes, now suddenly biological sex IS real after all when we want you to conflate it with "gender" and assume that humans can change sex at will.

Ereshkigalangcleg · 05/12/2024 00:15

I just knew without even looking there was going to be a bloke on the list.

And what an example of the genre.

Enough4me · 05/12/2024 00:20

I ran my eye down the photos and yup, there was an obvious man. Only serious filters would completely blur him into being unrecognisable. Funny how inclusion means a woman was not included.

Igneococcus · 05/12/2024 08:11

Janice Turner is talking about this in her Thursdays Times column today:
Brigitte too far
Every year the BBC trolls women by sticking a token biological male in its “100 women” list. It just can’t help itself. Somewhere in the BBC charter must be a clause that women can’t have anything. Certainly not Woman’s Hour, on which Bethany Hutchinson, a Darlington NHS nurse campaigning for female-only showers, was recently grilled by Nuala McGovern like a war criminal. Nor a best woman footballer award, given to Barbra Banda, banned from the Africa Cup of Nations for having male levels of testosterone and who refuses to take a sex test.
But the BBC 100 women 2024 list is a doozy. Among Gisèle Pelicot, a Nobel laureate and brave campaigners against violent suppression in Iran and Afghanistan is a 61-year-old who lived most of their life as a man, fathered two children, took the name Brigitte Baptiste (after the sex symbol Brigitte Bardot) and dresses as a grotesque parody of womanhood, slathered in make-up and wearing low-cut microscopic dresses. But then a “scientist” whose claim to fame is “looking at nature through a queer lens” and deciding Colombia’s national tree has a gender identity would never be fêted if they were a woman.
Meanwhile Baroness Cass, whose report on child gender medicine has changed global policy, was omitted. The BBC putting Baptiste on its list is like Al Jolson winning a Mobo award.

The very first comment I saw beneath the article was by D. Barker one of Tol's most active TRA commentator:

"You columns are getting closer and closer to parodies of Glenda Sl*g.

Natal men not dressing up as men, how dare they not wear your prescribed uniform?"

It seems even fervent TRAs don't see Brigitte Baptiste as anything else than a natal man.

Pelicot rape trial: prosecutors demand 16-year jail terms

Forty-nine men at French criminal court charged with rape and sexual assault of Gisèle Pelicot

https://www.thetimes.com/article/pelicot-trial-france-rape-men-jail-wvzs60kh8

SquirrelSoShiny · 05/12/2024 15:03

Toseland · 03/12/2024 07:54

I no longer want to hear anything about women from the BBC and their twisted world.

This.

The sad thing is I miss out on reading about fabulous women because I won't be gaslit into reading about BBC's idea of 'women'.

trainedopossum · 05/12/2024 17:20

BBC if twaw surely there are more to be celebrated than the token one in a hundred? Otherwise it looks like you 1) are just making a point and 2) can't even commit fully to your own bullshit.

Whatthewhatnowreally · 05/12/2024 17:25

senua · 03/12/2024 08:23

Where's willy, you mean?

Genius! 😂😂😂 you should be on the list !

Ovalframes · 05/12/2024 17:33

That reminds me. Does anyone know what stunning and brave things Munro Bergdorf has been doing as representative for the UN Women's charity? I haven't seen anything...

lcakethereforeIam · 07/12/2024 15:47

This journalist from the Telegraph gas his own thoughts on who should be on the list

https://archive.ph/ULyRk

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/12/07/ignore-bbc-woke-drivel-the-real-women-of-the-year-list/

Someone should remind the Beeb if it lists too much it will fall over.

ArabellaScott · 07/12/2024 16:08

lcakethereforeIam · 07/12/2024 15:47

This journalist from the Telegraph gas his own thoughts on who should be on the list

https://archive.ph/ULyRk

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/12/07/ignore-bbc-woke-drivel-the-real-women-of-the-year-list/

Someone should remind the Beeb if it lists too much it will fall over.

Good article.

This bit is especially interesting:

'Martine Croxall, Kasia Madera, Annita McVeigh and Karin Giannone
This year, these four female journalists took legal action against their employer – a well-known broadcasting corporation funded by a licence fee – because they claimed they’d been paid significantly less than male colleagues performing equivalent roles. At an employment tribunal, they were told they wouldn’t be able to bring a claim for equal pay. It’s not over, though – because they recently filed an appeal.'

SquirrelSoShiny · 07/12/2024 18:36

lcakethereforeIam · 07/12/2024 15:47

This journalist from the Telegraph gas his own thoughts on who should be on the list

https://archive.ph/ULyRk

https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2024/12/07/ignore-bbc-woke-drivel-the-real-women-of-the-year-list/

Someone should remind the Beeb if it lists too much it will fall over.

Excellent list thanks for sharing.

It is a travesty that Hilary Cass isn't on the BBC list.

MissScarletInTheBallroom · 07/12/2024 19:03

Fucking fuck's sake. Literally the first woman on the list is a man.

They're just trolling everyone.

Catiette · 07/12/2024 20:30

SquirrelSoShiny · 05/12/2024 15:03

This.

The sad thing is I miss out on reading about fabulous women because I won't be gaslit into reading about BBC's idea of 'women'.

That's the impact it's had on me. It's not bitter, or petty, or pointed. It's a really deep-seated sense of loss.

For as long as I can remember, I gravitated towards BBC reports of women's achievements: firsts, awards, records. I felt such a sense of pride and hope - We're getting there - bit by bit, we're getting there!

But now, I can't even bring myself to read them. I balk each time - and not just because there's a small but statistically telling chance it may be a male, but because the inclusion of males has changed the whole meaning of these articles for me.

Every single one has become a distressing reminder that women are still subject to males' construction of reality and identity - that we're secondary to males. This award-winning woman may not actually be a woman - that word that we used to measure our progress has been taken from us. And if she is a woman, her achievement could be superceded by a male who says he's a woman at any point in any case - that hopeful ladder of achievements I was watching us slowly ascend no longer even belongs to us. This record-breaking woman is no longer deemed remarkable because she's overcome the limitations that biology and society place on the female sex. The only raison d'être ever of these prizes and achievements has been negated. Women's ability to celebrate these wonderful, remarkable firsts entirely on their own terms - on our own terms - after hundreds upon hundreds of years of enforced invisibility, has been taken away.

And with that comes the sinking recognition of my own status as fundamentally, terrifyingly secondary. That first "woman" to do something that just 25 years ago would have been unthinkable/impossible? Reading it used to come with a surge of joy and RELIEF - a tangible sense of increased security. It now comes with genuine distress as a humiliating reminder of the vulnerability of my rights: if a male says he is a woman, he could be feted in her place. His simple self-perception could instantly displace her astonishing capacity to have done this thing with all the limitations that being female brings after centuries of oppression. 25 years ago, this female achievement wasn't possible because of male perceptions of women. Now, this female achievement is once again vulnerable to the male perceptions of women. It could be denied us any time.

If our right to have a word of our own can be taken, in the context of our astonishing, absolute oppression - the terrifying recentness of our rights - then anything can.

We've had what we do for so little time!

So now, awards like this by the BBC - Banda, its 100 "women" - that I used to LOVE instead tell me, every time, that I'm vulnerable. That national institutions may tell me I am what I man says I am, because this is Good and Righteous, and I'm Wrong to oppose it with what I say I am. A few decades after marital rape was outlawed and I was allowed my own bank account, the BBC, of all things, repeatedly, callously, reminds me that I am subject to men's perception of me.

The BBC's betrayal has, to me, been the greatest of all. My loss of trust and respect has been absolute, and that frightens me, too.

I no longer see them as democratic.

They have made me feel, in a very concrete sense, less safe.

SquirrelSoShiny · 07/12/2024 20:35

Catiette · 07/12/2024 20:30

That's the impact it's had on me. It's not bitter, or petty, or pointed. It's a really deep-seated sense of loss.

For as long as I can remember, I gravitated towards BBC reports of women's achievements: firsts, awards, records. I felt such a sense of pride and hope - We're getting there - bit by bit, we're getting there!

But now, I can't even bring myself to read them. I balk each time - and not just because there's a small but statistically telling chance it may be a male, but because the inclusion of males has changed the whole meaning of these articles for me.

Every single one has become a distressing reminder that women are still subject to males' construction of reality and identity - that we're secondary to males. This award-winning woman may not actually be a woman - that word that we used to measure our progress has been taken from us. And if she is a woman, her achievement could be superceded by a male who says he's a woman at any point in any case - that hopeful ladder of achievements I was watching us slowly ascend no longer even belongs to us. This record-breaking woman is no longer deemed remarkable because she's overcome the limitations that biology and society place on the female sex. The only raison d'être ever of these prizes and achievements has been negated. Women's ability to celebrate these wonderful, remarkable firsts entirely on their own terms - on our own terms - after hundreds upon hundreds of years of enforced invisibility, has been taken away.

And with that comes the sinking recognition of my own status as fundamentally, terrifyingly secondary. That first "woman" to do something that just 25 years ago would have been unthinkable/impossible? Reading it used to come with a surge of joy and RELIEF - a tangible sense of increased security. It now comes with genuine distress as a humiliating reminder of the vulnerability of my rights: if a male says he is a woman, he could be feted in her place. His simple self-perception could instantly displace her astonishing capacity to have done this thing with all the limitations that being female brings after centuries of oppression. 25 years ago, this female achievement wasn't possible because of male perceptions of women. Now, this female achievement is once again vulnerable to the male perceptions of women. It could be denied us any time.

If our right to have a word of our own can be taken, in the context of our astonishing, absolute oppression - the terrifying recentness of our rights - then anything can.

We've had what we do for so little time!

So now, awards like this by the BBC - Banda, its 100 "women" - that I used to LOVE instead tell me, every time, that I'm vulnerable. That national institutions may tell me I am what I man says I am, because this is Good and Righteous, and I'm Wrong to oppose it with what I say I am. A few decades after marital rape was outlawed and I was allowed my own bank account, the BBC, of all things, repeatedly, callously, reminds me that I am subject to men's perception of me.

The BBC's betrayal has, to me, been the greatest of all. My loss of trust and respect has been absolute, and that frightens me, too.

I no longer see them as democratic.

They have made me feel, in a very concrete sense, less safe.

Edited

I really resonate with this ❤️

DuesToTheDirt · 07/12/2024 20:37

The Telegraph article linked above (https://archive.ph/mZigf) discussing the top 100 list is very interesting, because it shows the BBC bias in several areas, for instance Palestine/Israel. It's not just a case of one man pushed into an otherwise reasonable list of to women.

Catiette · 07/12/2024 20:41

SquirrelSoShiny · 07/12/2024 20:35

I really resonate with this ❤️

Thank you. That's both reassuring and distressing to hear.

ArabellaScott · 07/12/2024 21:47

I know it may seem pointless, but it would.be great to send that post to the BBc, Catiette.

lcakethereforeIam · 07/12/2024 21:55

I'll second that. That post was very eloquent.

ScrollingLeaves · 07/12/2024 23:08

lcakethereforeIam · 07/12/2024 21:55

I'll second that. That post was very eloquent.

Yes, it was. Thank you, Catiette.

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