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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Why hasn't "GC light" hit LinkedIn?

11 replies

catspyjamas1 · 22/10/2025 20:16

There aren't many TERFS on LinkedIn. It's been a journey between Sex Matters trying (and failing) and Tanya (This Isn't Working) and nada in between on this site.

I recently had to change jobs and in anticipation of that, I had to go back and scrub my profile of anything related to being a TERF. MANY hours as for the last 10 years I'd followed and engaged with the handful of organisations and women challenging nonsense at work. I also needed a job.

Unfortunately these large multinationals promote nonsense.

I now work for the wokest of woke companies (US owned) where the women's group is infiltrated by all things not related to actual women (apart from the new menopause "friendly" drive in the UK they can use for marketing and fridges for breast milk in Europe)

Is there any "vanilla" woman I can follow and share on LinkedIn? Or a company that understands (Bannatynes) that is PC enough to not get me fired? I can't share KJK and Sex Matters.

Is there a GC group on LinkedIn I need to join? Do we need one???

OP posts:
jeaux90 · 22/10/2025 21:17

Women’s forum Australia is on Linked in and they get a lot of likes. I liked one of theirs and so far no fall out. I also work for a woke US company in the UK (tech)

EmpressaurusKitty · 22/10/2025 21:34

Maybe try Hibo Wardere as a start? She’s an amazing woman, a well known anti-FGM campaigner & has often spoken at FiLiA.

Toseland · 22/10/2025 22:12

I thought LinkedIn was pretty sensible? I don't post there but follow many Terf and related pages on both sides.
I suspect the women's groups in many large companies have been (quite recently) set up by the 'Lead TRA' as a way to gauge knowledge and opinion and also to control the narrative.

EsmeWeatherwaxHatpin · 23/10/2025 07:03

I follow Caroline Criado Perez and Invisible Women on LinkedIn. She is obviously women centred but tends to stick to science, studies, and data. I also follow Tanya and Sex matters too but as I’m not at a large corporate it doesn’t matter so much! Good like cleansing the timeline

catspyjamas1 · 23/10/2025 09:52

@Toseland I thought so but I guess it depends who is in your extended network as I get quite a bit of TWAW and the like! The women's group at my place was for years pretty decent and then it had a seismic shift in 2020-2021 so it's focus basically all causes (trans, disabilities etc) much of the time.

OP posts:
catspyjamas1 · 23/10/2025 09:53

Thanks for the recommendations!

OP posts:
GallantKumquat · 23/10/2025 11:27

catspyjamas1 · 22/10/2025 20:16

There aren't many TERFS on LinkedIn. It's been a journey between Sex Matters trying (and failing) and Tanya (This Isn't Working) and nada in between on this site.

I recently had to change jobs and in anticipation of that, I had to go back and scrub my profile of anything related to being a TERF. MANY hours as for the last 10 years I'd followed and engaged with the handful of organisations and women challenging nonsense at work. I also needed a job.

Unfortunately these large multinationals promote nonsense.

I now work for the wokest of woke companies (US owned) where the women's group is infiltrated by all things not related to actual women (apart from the new menopause "friendly" drive in the UK they can use for marketing and fridges for breast milk in Europe)

Is there any "vanilla" woman I can follow and share on LinkedIn? Or a company that understands (Bannatynes) that is PC enough to not get me fired? I can't share KJK and Sex Matters.

Is there a GC group on LinkedIn I need to join? Do we need one???

I'm curious how Sex Matters 'failed.' I don't follow linkedin much so I'm out of the loop, but their looks active and they seem highly connected.

Iamnotalemming · 23/10/2025 18:32

I follow Naomi Cunningham. She posts lots of interesting stuff. I also have plenty of "allies" in my network posting gender woo so they offset each other.

fabricstash · 24/10/2025 07:19

I am just gearing myself up to be more outspoken on LinkedIn. Most women are worried to be too outspoken due to consequences - you only have to look at the trials and shunning

weegielass · 24/10/2025 08:36

I follow Naomi, Seen in HR, Seen in Charity, Audrey Ludwig and Sex Matters.

I don't like anything though, especially as I'm job hunting so I'm trying to be careful. The nature of what I do is very much a woke industry.

singthing · 24/10/2025 08:50

Like all social networks, what you do, like or comment on and who you follow or interact with affects the algorithm of stuff it shows you. My LI is pretty full of women's rights/women-centred content and I regularly see new pages or people I can follow, based on me liking similar content (plus of course my work related content, so its quite a diverse newsfeed!)

I recognise and am connected with or follow all the names mentioned above, plus some blokes too: James Roberts (Human Gay Male founder) immediately springs to mind.

I tend to like/celebrate/love react more than I will actually comment, and anything I do say on high profile feeds is strictly factual and evidential. I too need to be wary and don't tend to post my own content unless it's a completely "well, duh, yeah!" item that can't really be used to attack me without the attacker looking demented.

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