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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

JK on Emma Watson

1000 replies

Lowarnes · 29/09/2025 13:08

A stunningly perfect response to Watson’s recent comments. Haven’t seen a thread on this so thought I’d post below:

”I'm seeing quite a bit of comment about this, so I want to make a couple of points.

I'm not owed eternal agreement from any actor who once played a character I created. The idea is as ludicrous as me checking with the boss I had when I was twenty-one for what opinions I should hold these days.

Emma Watson and her co-stars have every right to embrace gender identity ideology. Such beliefs are legally protected, and I wouldn't want to see any of them threatened with loss of work, or violence, or death, because of them.

However, Emma and Dan in particular have both made it clear over the last few years that they think our former professional association gives them a particular right - nay, obligation - to critique me and my views in public. Years after they finished acting in Potter, they continue to assume the role of de facto spokespeople for the world I created.

When you've known people since they were ten years old it's hard to shake a certain protectiveness. Until quite recently, I hadn't managed to throw off the memory of children who needed to be gently coaxed through their dialogue in a big scary film studio. For the past few years, I've repeatedly declined invitations from journalists to comment on Emma specifically, most notably on the Witch Trials of JK Rowling. Ironically, I told the producers that I didn't want her to be hounded as the result of anything I said.

The television presenter in the attached clip highlights Emma's 'all witches' speech, and in truth, that was a turning point for me, but it had a postscript that hurt far more than the speech itself. Emma asked someone to pass on a handwritten note from her to me, which contained the single sentence 'I'm so sorry for what you're going through' (she has my phone number). This was back when the death, rape and torture threats against me were at their peak, at a time when my personal security measures had had to be tightened considerably and I was constantly worried for my family's safety. Emma had just publicly poured more petrol on the flames, yet thought a one line expression of concern from her would reassure me of her fundamental sympathy and kindness.

Like other people who've never experienced adult life uncushioned by wealth and fame, Emma has so little experience of real life she's ignorant of how ignorant she is. She'll never need a homeless shelter. She's never going to be placed on a mixed sex public hospital ward. I'd be astounded if she's been in a high street changing room since childhood. Her 'public bathroom' is single occupancy and comes with a security man standing guard outside the door. Has she had to strip off in a newly mixed-sex changing room at a council-run swimming pool? Is she ever likely to need a state-run rape crisis centre that refuses to guarantee an all-female service? To find herself sharing a prison cell with a male rapist who's identified into the women's prison?

I wasn't a multimillionaire at fourteen. I lived in poverty while writing the book that made Emma famous. I therefore understand from my own life experience what the trashing of women's rights in which Emma has so enthusiastically participated means to women and girls without her privileges.

The greatest irony here is that, had Emma not decided in her most recent interview to declare that she loves and treasures me - a change of tack I suspect she's adopted because she's noticed full-throated condemnation of me is no longer quite as fashionable as it was - I might never have been this honest.

Adults can't expect to cosy up to an activist movement that regularly calls for a friend's assassination, then assert their right to the former friend's love, as though the friend was in fact their mother. Emma is rightly free to disagree with me and indeed to discuss her feelings about me in public - but I have the same right, and I've finally decided to exercise it.”

OP posts:
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DontCallMeLenYouLittleBollix · 30/09/2025 09:20

FKAT · 30/09/2025 08:46

I just want to pick up the comments like this which say that EW is constantly pestered by interviewers to give her JKR views.

empathised what it was like for EW to be constantly asked about something in relation to comments another person has made that she disagreed with.

I worked in film & TV publicity for 2 decades. This does not happen. Actors of a much lower paygrade than EW agree terms and acceptable subject matter contractually before being interviewed. If they are tripped up by an off the cuff question or on the red carpet then the PR ends the interview and moves the actor along. EW has made the choice to enter the conversation. She could be silent. As many similar (and more talented) interview subjects are on past relationships (see Jennifer Aniston for a good role model here).

Exactly this.

Emma Watson has made the active choice to speak about this issue, on multiple issues over a period of several years. She has the money and clout to only do interviews with people who'll accept the list of no go areas. This includes her decision to speak on her feelings about JK last week, without JKs consent, in a way that was inevitably going to bring significant public attention.

urbanbuddha · 30/09/2025 09:22

Even the Guardian has reported on this fairly, and it was their most read story yesterday evening.

Most read doesn’t mean most agreed with JK. I read it in the Guardian and was surprised, and saddened, at how contemptuous she was.

2021x · 30/09/2025 09:27

AnSolas · 30/09/2025 08:23

Or EW at 35 could have chosen to take the very grown up option when asked about JKR and said she is a not going to make any public comment at all?

That at 35 if EW wants to mend a relationship the starting point is not a PR based interview with a third party?

Do you think that by 35 EW should have learned that speaking at someone is very different to speaking with someone?

She could have done, and there will be reasons why she didn’t. JKR could have picked up the phone after EW made the donation to mermaids to find out more about her position rather than take cheap shots on at her on twitter.

We can to a fro all the time, but this is wasting time, both have behaved a bit childishly at times, and I can give them both grace for that considering the toxic environment they both find themselves in.

But….JKR is still human and this particular response demonstrates that. In my opinion it was dismissive of EW experience and opinions which is exactly what she has been accused of all along.

She fell into the trap, and we are all talking about this rather than about the actual
issue.

Datun · 30/09/2025 09:28

All three actors enthusiastically supported an ideology that sterilises and mutilates children, and targets vulnerable adults.

Watson and Radcliffe went out of their way to position themselves as counter to J. K. Rowling's stance.

To send a sympathetic note to Rowling whilst doing so, is breathtaking in its hypocrisy.

The notable aspect of what Rowling has just said is how she has taken the time to write a considerable amount, in order to not be misunderstood. People picking apart your every fricken word to misrepresent you must be very irritating.

And she's gone out of her way to be unequivocal.

Yes it's a burn, but those actors practically begged for it. And she's never done it until now.

I bet Ratcliffe keeps his mouth shut!

2021x · 30/09/2025 09:33

BernardBlacksMolluscs · 30/09/2025 08:28

Cor, I see the American shift came on line overnight

Not all English speaking countries other than Britain are the US.

nicepotoftea · 30/09/2025 09:33

2021x · 30/09/2025 02:39

I am going against the grain here, I was very disappointed by the response. As a reminder all of the HP were kids and young when they entered in to this, JKR was an adult with her own agency and fully formed ideas and support networks.

I feel that JKR has behaved rather judgementally here, and has made her critique about EW about her wealth rather than about her words. JKR is expecting EW to be empathetic to the needs of women that she might not associate with, but hasn't behaved in that way towards EW herself. JKR was the one who brought the HP kids into this discussion (unintentionally) and has forgotten what it is like to be young and caught up in a movement.

EW and JKR are very similar people, and I think it would hugely benefit the feminist discourse if JKR took a breath and empathised what it was like for EW to be constantly asked about something in relation to comments another person has made that she disagreed with. Also for JKR to reflect that if she was in EW position (wealthy, intellegent and had huge social cache) when she was in her 20s whether she would have behaved in the same way or even held the same beliefs. Also if she had behaved in the same way as EW how would she like to be treated when she knew better.

I feel that she could have responded in a more mature way by reaching out to EW personally and put a holding statement out. I think now EW has reached 35 and is starting to rethink things, it is brave of her to even admit publically any indication that she is seeing things differently. The backlash for her will be intense and coming from both directions.

It would be valuable for all of us if there was some type conversation, in person with a mediator so both sides could be heard fairly. They don't have to agree but can come away with an appreciation that they have both behaved immaturely at times, and rather than trying to tear strips off in other, focus the fight on the people trying to cause disruption.

and has made her critique about EW about her wealth rather than about her words.

Watson herself explained the she was unable to avoid speeding tickets because she had not had the opportunity to practice driving because she was driven everywhere. It is true that people with less wealth and privilege are forced to rely more not just on civil rights, but on their practical implementation.

This is Emma Watson on women who feel uncomfortable sharing a public toilet with men:

https://www.facebook.com/BritishVogue/videos/emma-watson-and-paris-lees-discuss-trans-rights-british-vogue/552715582996715/

Additional safety advice, not included in the clip:

"But go ... go learn, go speak ... go look into the whites of someone’s eyes that’s had this experience and tell me after you’ve done that … there’s any part of you that feels it’s OK to make that person not feel included"

In the circumstances, Watson should perhaps be grateful that Rowling did not dwell on her words.

To conclude that Watson lacks life experience is the only sympathetic response.

JKR was the one who brought the HP kids into this discussion (unintentionally) and has forgotten what it is like to be young and caught up in a movement.

Watson was 30 when she was so caught up in the moment that she recommended that people donate to Mermaids, rather than seek to understand JK Rowlings (completely vindicated) concerns about gender medicine.

what it was like for EW to be constantly asked about something in relation to comments another person has made that she disagreed with.

Many actors have worked on the Harry Potter movies (and Strike TV shows) and have managed to successfully dodge these questions.

Also for JKR to reflect that if she was in EW position (wealthy, intellegent and had huge social cache) when she was in her 20s whether she would have behaved in the same way or even held the same beliefs.

She has reflected on this. She wrote an essay which discussed this in 2020, which apparently Watson (by then 30) couldn't be bothered to read.

I think now EW has reached 35 and is starting to rethink things, it is brave of her to even admit publically any indication that she is seeing things differently.

Is it brave - really?

It would be valuable for all of us if there was some type conversation, in person with a mediator so both sides could be heard fairly.

JKR attempted that back in 2020, but it's not really clear what the other side would be arguing - that sex doesn't exist? that puberty is an optional extra? that women don't need rights?

13K views · 73 reactions | As the UK celebrates trans pride today, revisit Emma Watson's candid conversation about trans rights with activist Paris Lees from her December 2019 British Vogue cover shoot. - - > https://trib.al/ivYJPK5 | British Vogue

As the UK celebrates trans pride today, revisit Emma Watson's candid conversation about trans rights with activist Paris Lees from her December 2019 British Vogue cover shoot. - - >...

https://www.facebook.com/BritishVogue/videos/emma-watson-and-paris-lees-discuss-trans-rights-british-vogue/552715582996715

ThatCyanCat · 30/09/2025 09:34

A lot of the HP actors who retained JKR's goodwill and their own integrity didn't even take a stance on the issue, did they? I seem to recall that they just stated that she had a right to her views and shouldn't be abused and threatened for them.

pontefractals · 30/09/2025 09:36

Horsie · 30/09/2025 01:39

I'm confused...JK Rowling was indeed campaigning against tp being allowed into single-sex spaces, wasn't she? How does that turn on its head what she's actually campaigned for? That would mean she's actually campaigned for tp to be in single-sex spaces, wouldn't it? Which is obviously not correct.

JK Rowling is against transwomen (not transpeople) being allowed in women's single sex spaces, because transwomen are men. I'm not sure if she (or many people) are as bothered about where transmen go, largely because they're not generally an actual threat to the men already there, unlike tw and women. Personally I do think men are also entitled to single sex spaces, but I also know that a lot of men are spectacularly unobservant and not very good at recognising sex so it's not the same visceral thing for them.

MoltenLasagne · 30/09/2025 09:37

I think that JK's message was very well worded while also being a bit unrestrained. However she addresses this very issue in what she says - that she has deliberately kept her counsel for years, but that it was EW's choice to bring her up AGAIN that finally led her to break her silence.

Honestly, I can understand her response - it must be galling to keep going high, and see people interpret that as giving them the right to continuously denigrate you and make snide asides.

Frankly I think what Radcliffe said about Harry Potter belonging to the fans was far worse, but I presume he's been let off because he hasn't just done an interview deliberately dredging it all up again. Although possibly there might have been a behind the scenes word about the wisdom of trying to publically remove JK's intellectual copyright of her own work.

ThatCyanCat · 30/09/2025 09:42

2021x · 30/09/2025 09:27

She could have done, and there will be reasons why she didn’t. JKR could have picked up the phone after EW made the donation to mermaids to find out more about her position rather than take cheap shots on at her on twitter.

We can to a fro all the time, but this is wasting time, both have behaved a bit childishly at times, and I can give them both grace for that considering the toxic environment they both find themselves in.

But….JKR is still human and this particular response demonstrates that. In my opinion it was dismissive of EW experience and opinions which is exactly what she has been accused of all along.

She fell into the trap, and we are all talking about this rather than about the actual
issue.

Edited

What trap? What actual issue?

BlueandWhitePorcelain · 30/09/2025 09:43

2021x · 30/09/2025 09:27

She could have done, and there will be reasons why she didn’t. JKR could have picked up the phone after EW made the donation to mermaids to find out more about her position rather than take cheap shots on at her on twitter.

We can to a fro all the time, but this is wasting time, both have behaved a bit childishly at times, and I can give them both grace for that considering the toxic environment they both find themselves in.

But….JKR is still human and this particular response demonstrates that. In my opinion it was dismissive of EW experience and opinions which is exactly what she has been accused of all along.

She fell into the trap, and we are all talking about this rather than about the actual
issue.

Edited

As JKR says - what experience of not feeling safe in women’s previously safe places, has EW had?

As a woman, EW could have stood up for women - whose need for safety was sacrificed at the behest of the wants of a few members of the male patriarchy, yet again!

If men claim they are women, trapped in men’s bodies, they’d have behaved like women, respected women’s genuine fears (just how many sexual assaults and rapes have there been by men on women in NHS hospitals for instance); but no - they knew women were afraid and put their own wants first. IMO, it’s a mental illness in some men, and mutilating their bodies does not make them women, any more than shaving a cat’s fur off would make it a dog!

Instead EW jumped on the woke brigade, along with Daniel Radcliffe - and imo, they attempted to boost their own woke credentials at the expense of JKR, standing up for women; and without whom EW and DP would never had their career and wealth. For me, this stance of ingratitude and holier than thou attitude by EW and DR tainted the HP films in retrospect!

I thought JKR was very measured in what she wrote! Full admiration for her.

DontCallMeLenYouLittleBollix · 30/09/2025 09:43

MoltenLasagne · 30/09/2025 09:37

I think that JK's message was very well worded while also being a bit unrestrained. However she addresses this very issue in what she says - that she has deliberately kept her counsel for years, but that it was EW's choice to bring her up AGAIN that finally led her to break her silence.

Honestly, I can understand her response - it must be galling to keep going high, and see people interpret that as giving them the right to continuously denigrate you and make snide asides.

Frankly I think what Radcliffe said about Harry Potter belonging to the fans was far worse, but I presume he's been let off because he hasn't just done an interview deliberately dredging it all up again. Although possibly there might have been a behind the scenes word about the wisdom of trying to publically remove JK's intellectual copyright of her own work.

Yes, I think that's the distinction re DR and EW. He's come in for more criticism over the last few days than he does in an average week, but he hasn't actually done anything new.

I wonder if he ever sent her any notes?

AnSolas · 30/09/2025 09:44

hholiday · 30/09/2025 04:51

The girl who murdered Brianna Ghey was questioning her own gender identity, according to her evidence: https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2023/dec/08/brianna-ghey-trial-accused-denies-anti-transgender-views

And this was someone who pretended to be a friend and poisoned and then stabbed that young man to death in a planned ambush and lied through out the trial. His differences due to his trans identity made him welcome and trust the friendship imo she never seen him as anything other than a target to kill.

He had been stabbed 28 times and she planned it in detail and the attack stopped as they were disturbed. In her evidence she lied about what happened and blamed the other person involved in the murder.

She picked him as an easier target when another "traget" was not reacting the way she expected.

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2024/feb/02/brianna-ghey-murderers-named-sentenced-to-life-in-prison

She lacks credibility.
But under the Stonewall "NoDebate" BS rules this would be a "transperson killing a transperson"

[(Edit) Dear Readers sorry for the derail 🚩 and going off topic.]

Teenagers jailed for ‘exceptionally brutal’ murder of Brianna Ghey

Scarlett Jenkinson and Eddie Ratcliffe were partly motivated by 16-year-old victim’s transgender identity, judge says

https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2024/feb/02/brianna-ghey-murderers-named-sentenced-to-life-in-prison

nicepotoftea · 30/09/2025 09:45

2021x · 30/09/2025 09:27

She could have done, and there will be reasons why she didn’t. JKR could have picked up the phone after EW made the donation to mermaids to find out more about her position rather than take cheap shots on at her on twitter.

We can to a fro all the time, but this is wasting time, both have behaved a bit childishly at times, and I can give them both grace for that considering the toxic environment they both find themselves in.

But….JKR is still human and this particular response demonstrates that. In my opinion it was dismissive of EW experience and opinions which is exactly what she has been accused of all along.

She fell into the trap, and we are all talking about this rather than about the actual
issue.

Edited

In my opinion it was dismissive of EW experience and opinions which is exactly what she has been accused of all along.

I don't disagree with the fact that JKR is dismissive of EW's opinions - but that is because she hasn't expressed an opinion that is backed up by evidence or coherent argument.

both have behaved a bit childishly at times

I think the death and rape threats have been coming from one side.

TheKeatingFive · 30/09/2025 09:45

urbanbuddha · 30/09/2025 09:22

Even the Guardian has reported on this fairly, and it was their most read story yesterday evening.

Most read doesn’t mean most agreed with JK. I read it in the Guardian and was surprised, and saddened, at how contemptuous she was.

Given the Guardian has been gaslighting its readers for years on the impact of 'trans rights' on women's rights, I'd be surprised if readers agreed with JKR robust defence of vulnerable women's need for single sex spaces.

TheKeatingFive · 30/09/2025 09:47

In my opinion it was dismissive of EW experience and opinions which is exactly what she has been accused of all along.

But EW has shown zero understanding of vulnerable women's need for single sex spaces. And zero understanding of what JKR was going through at the time.

What experience and opinions are we supposed to be respecting, specifically?

2021x · 30/09/2025 09:47

nicepotoftea · 30/09/2025 09:33

and has made her critique about EW about her wealth rather than about her words.

Watson herself explained the she was unable to avoid speeding tickets because she had not had the opportunity to practice driving because she was driven everywhere. It is true that people with less wealth and privilege are forced to rely more not just on civil rights, but on their practical implementation.

This is Emma Watson on women who feel uncomfortable sharing a public toilet with men:

https://www.facebook.com/BritishVogue/videos/emma-watson-and-paris-lees-discuss-trans-rights-british-vogue/552715582996715/

Additional safety advice, not included in the clip:

"But go ... go learn, go speak ... go look into the whites of someone’s eyes that’s had this experience and tell me after you’ve done that … there’s any part of you that feels it’s OK to make that person not feel included"

In the circumstances, Watson should perhaps be grateful that Rowling did not dwell on her words.

To conclude that Watson lacks life experience is the only sympathetic response.

JKR was the one who brought the HP kids into this discussion (unintentionally) and has forgotten what it is like to be young and caught up in a movement.

Watson was 30 when she was so caught up in the moment that she recommended that people donate to Mermaids, rather than seek to understand JK Rowlings (completely vindicated) concerns about gender medicine.

what it was like for EW to be constantly asked about something in relation to comments another person has made that she disagreed with.

Many actors have worked on the Harry Potter movies (and Strike TV shows) and have managed to successfully dodge these questions.

Also for JKR to reflect that if she was in EW position (wealthy, intellegent and had huge social cache) when she was in her 20s whether she would have behaved in the same way or even held the same beliefs.

She has reflected on this. She wrote an essay which discussed this in 2020, which apparently Watson (by then 30) couldn't be bothered to read.

I think now EW has reached 35 and is starting to rethink things, it is brave of her to even admit publically any indication that she is seeing things differently.

Is it brave - really?

It would be valuable for all of us if there was some type conversation, in person with a mediator so both sides could be heard fairly.

JKR attempted that back in 2020, but it's not really clear what the other side would be arguing - that sex doesn't exist? that puberty is an optional extra? that women don't need rights?

I agree with all your points, but don’t you think you are going a bit hard? She could have said Emma has a lot of trust to build back up before I believe that she actually does care in the way she said.

JKR response has blamed EW wealth for her stance when she actually has no idea why she came to that conclusions she did. She is projecting her own issues with wealth and class, as well as devaluing another woman’s take on the issue.

In my opinion JKR response looked to create further division rather than build understanding. As reasonable as that may be in the circumstances I still find it disappointing and hoped for a little more maturity.

SmudgeHughes · 30/09/2025 09:48

Greyskybluesky · 29/09/2025 13:12

Thank you OP.

"a change of tack I suspect she's adopted because she's noticed full-throated condemnation of me is no longer quite as fashionable as it was"

And it’s not as though Emma Watson is a dumb actor. She’s a clever young woman, with an impressive academic pedigree. But this shows us that being clever is no defence against the ideas of gender identity theory. Indeed, some might argue that it’s a prerequisite.

She didn’t just go along with the prevailing ideological fashion, she understood the thinking, yet still embraced it.

Tom Felton, who played Malfoy, didn’t support the JKR pile-on, however, and continued to make positive statements about her whenever he was asked.

ThatCyanCat · 30/09/2025 09:50

She is projecting her own issues with wealth and class, as well as devaluing another woman’s take on the issue.

There's absolutely no projection. It's a fact that leading a life that means you never need certain protections makes you less likely to understand why they're necessary. Genderism is overrepresented among privileged people because it's a luxury belief.

And if disagreeing with another woman and explaining why is "devaluing her take", are women even allowed to disagree?

2021x · 30/09/2025 09:51

nicepotoftea · 30/09/2025 09:45

In my opinion it was dismissive of EW experience and opinions which is exactly what she has been accused of all along.

I don't disagree with the fact that JKR is dismissive of EW's opinions - but that is because she hasn't expressed an opinion that is backed up by evidence or coherent argument.

both have behaved a bit childishly at times

I think the death and rape threats have been coming from one side.

JKR is devaluing EWs experience. She could listen instead of using over the top verbiage to kick her while everyone else cheers on.

What have death and rape threats got to do with childish jabs on twitter and award shows? Also how do you know that EW didn’t get death and rape threats over her decision, she is a woman in the public eye having an opinion after all,

nicepotoftea · 30/09/2025 09:55

2021x · 30/09/2025 09:47

I agree with all your points, but don’t you think you are going a bit hard? She could have said Emma has a lot of trust to build back up before I believe that she actually does care in the way she said.

JKR response has blamed EW wealth for her stance when she actually has no idea why she came to that conclusions she did. She is projecting her own issues with wealth and class, as well as devaluing another woman’s take on the issue.

In my opinion JKR response looked to create further division rather than build understanding. As reasonable as that may be in the circumstances I still find it disappointing and hoped for a little more maturity.

I think this explains her reaction:

Adults can't expect to cosy up to an activist movement that regularly calls for a friend's assassination, then assert their right to the former friend's love, as though the friend was in fact their mother.

JKR response has blamed EW wealth for her stance when she actually has no idea why she came to that conclusions she did.

As I said, this is the only charitable interpretation of EW's views.

In my opinion JKR response looked to create further division rather than build understanding.

Understanding of what? How many times can you say that humans are a species that reproduces sexually and that this has consequences?

TheKeatingFive · 30/09/2025 09:55

2021x · 30/09/2025 09:47

I agree with all your points, but don’t you think you are going a bit hard? She could have said Emma has a lot of trust to build back up before I believe that she actually does care in the way she said.

JKR response has blamed EW wealth for her stance when she actually has no idea why she came to that conclusions she did. She is projecting her own issues with wealth and class, as well as devaluing another woman’s take on the issue.

In my opinion JKR response looked to create further division rather than build understanding. As reasonable as that may be in the circumstances I still find it disappointing and hoped for a little more maturity.

No, this is a very disingenuous take.

She's saying that someone like Emma, wealthy and privileged for all of her life, has not made any effort to understand what single sex spaces mean to women who don't have her advantages.

Emma will never find herself in public changing rooms with predatory men. She'll never end up in a domestic violence refuge that she has to share with a man. She'll never have to accept intimate care from a man on an nhs ward. She has no clue what other women go through and that's what makes her stance so hard to take.

2021x · 30/09/2025 09:56

ThatCyanCat · 30/09/2025 09:50

She is projecting her own issues with wealth and class, as well as devaluing another woman’s take on the issue.

There's absolutely no projection. It's a fact that leading a life that means you never need certain protections makes you less likely to understand why they're necessary. Genderism is overrepresented among privileged people because it's a luxury belief.

And if disagreeing with another woman and explaining why is "devaluing her take", are women even allowed to disagree?

But she isn’t disagreeing is she? She is dismissing her opinion of the trans issue based on her perception of EW wealth and class because that is the only thing that is different about them. And yes JKR has a a class issue, it was all over the book she wrote “The Casual Vacancy”.

She could simply say “I disagree with you Emma” or even better actually ask her why she thinks like that.

TheKeatingFive · 30/09/2025 09:56

2021x · 30/09/2025 09:51

JKR is devaluing EWs experience. She could listen instead of using over the top verbiage to kick her while everyone else cheers on.

What have death and rape threats got to do with childish jabs on twitter and award shows? Also how do you know that EW didn’t get death and rape threats over her decision, she is a woman in the public eye having an opinion after all,

What experience though?

What useful experience does Emma Watson bring to this discussion?

TheKeatingFive · 30/09/2025 09:58

2021x · 30/09/2025 09:56

But she isn’t disagreeing is she? She is dismissing her opinion of the trans issue based on her perception of EW wealth and class because that is the only thing that is different about them. And yes JKR has a a class issue, it was all over the book she wrote “The Casual Vacancy”.

She could simply say “I disagree with you Emma” or even better actually ask her why she thinks like that.

She's disagreeing because Emma has calmly thrown vulnerable women under the bus.

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