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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Talking to non GC people

516 replies

Sausagenbacon · 05/01/2026 08:13

I've been chatting to a few people recently about gender issues, and their opinion runs roughly like this ' we should all listen to each other, and not be so unpleasant. But of course, men shouldn't be in women's sports'
Which begs the question that, if GC people hadn't been 'unpleasant' men would have been firmly in women's sports.
So, should I be pleased that public opinion has shifted slightly, or should I be banging my head against the wall?

OP posts:
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28
FlirtsWithRhinos · 06/01/2026 22:15

financialcareerstuff · 06/01/2026 22:00

Hello Hellofabore, thank you for taking the time and offering to link. You are obviously a go to person for fact stuff, which my brain appreciates.

Personally, for me, the ‘proof’ around biological maleness/ femaleness, or the proof that trans people commit crimes is not where I feel I need more evidence. What I would like to learn more about is the statistics of safety comparing different toilet set ups for women, and if there has been a statistical rise in attacks since male/trans people being in female toilets became more acceptable.

If you have stuff to hand, I’d appreciate it (and maybe others who are lurking would) But I am perfectly happy to go do my own digging, which is what I normally do when I start to focus on something.

I really think, if you have an analytical mind, you need to consider whether the framing of the problem is accurate.

Take a step back and before asking what is reasonable or not to accomodate trans women (aka men who think they should be accepted as women) ask yourself exactly why some people with male bodies should be considered more along a "woman" scale than others in the first place.

As a femimist, do you really believe that the fundamental factor of womanhood is how your mind works?

nicepotoftea · 06/01/2026 22:26

financialcareerstuff · 06/01/2026 21:06

@nicepotofteai think you are probably right. Many individual stories are in response to claims things never happen. These claims I would say are idiotic. maybe it is just my very statistical brain….. I have the same instinct when people knock on the door asking for charity donations. They go into this whole thing of asking about my personal experience and telling me about poor Johnny or Jane…. And I just always ask them to jump to the broad facts (which often they don’t know)- both about the issue and about the split of costs and operational approaches in their charity, so I can make a rational decision on what is actually happening and where my money can have the most leverage. I don’t need to be moved about the issue first. I already care about Johnny and Jane. I know what that tactic is about, and it makes me impatient and feel manipulated. But it’s absolutely central to persuasive communication techniques- from politicians’ speeches to charity drives to planet earth documentaries (always zero in first on one individual ‘character’ before extrapolating to concepts or large groups)….. any communication trainer worth their salt will recommend this, so I guess it’s good to do. It Just doesn’t work for my brain and I do think in polarised debates like this one it can become almost like a retaliatory competition, with each side determined to dismiss the concerns and stories of the other. Statistics of course can be used to manipulate too but I feel more agency to dig down and find the information I believe is key.

Statistics of course can be used to manipulate too but I feel more agency to dig down and find the information I believe is key.

As I said before, lack of agency to dig down and find information is part of the problem.

www.newstatesman.com/politics/health/2025/03/how-gender-ideology-corrupted-government-data

"In February 2024 the government commissioned the UCL professor Alice Sullivan to review how data on sex and gender identity was collected by public bodies. Her report, published on 19 March, revealed that scores of official statistics and data sets have been corrupted over the past decade. “The term ‘sex’ has lost its ordinary meaning in data collection,” she wrote, with implications not just for public policy, but for safety and safeguarding. Some of the greatest risks have been to children."

Helleofabore · 06/01/2026 22:26

financialcareerstuff · 06/01/2026 22:02

@Helleofaboreour posts crossed. I didn’t see your last one. Thank you. I will read and absorb.

This is the thing. Focusing on whether attacks have increased or not is somewhat irrelevantly narrowing the harms to female people in allowing any male person to access female single sex provisions. Safeguarding should be about ‘harm’ minimisation to female people not just protection from attacks. (This ties also into what female people use toilet spaces for and I also refer to that communal space around the basins which is also important to many female people to be kept female only)

How many female people even bother to report abuse by male people these days? We have posters come to FWR and report to us that they have been sexually abused or assaulted by male people and never bother reporting it. How many of us will also report intimidation by male people? So as I said, what will relying on specific attack reports inform you of regarding the degree of harm being done over all?

And quite frankly, how many additional female people being harmed by male people accessing female single sex provisions is acceptable before someone is convinced that actually, those campaigning for strong safeguarding policy again excluding all male people over the age of about 8 years old will be considered as having a valid point ? 1 extra? 2? 50? 100?

Or is it only attacks? How many of those?

What about other types of sex abuse? How many of those? I found a list the other day of just UK male people with transgender identities who had attacked and abused female people in toilets. What struck me was that there was quite a few cross overs of assaults not in toilets but as part of their charge history those male prisoners had been also charged with sexual abuse of girls or women in toilets. So, not ‘attacks’ in toilets but attacks elsewhere combined with sexual abuse in toilets.

The issue is, how many additional attacks etc is acceptable before someone decides that all male people need to excluded (over about 8 years old)?

nicepotoftea · 06/01/2026 22:41

financialcareerstuff · 06/01/2026 22:00

Hello Hellofabore, thank you for taking the time and offering to link. You are obviously a go to person for fact stuff, which my brain appreciates.

Personally, for me, the ‘proof’ around biological maleness/ femaleness, or the proof that trans people commit crimes is not where I feel I need more evidence. What I would like to learn more about is the statistics of safety comparing different toilet set ups for women, and if there has been a statistical rise in attacks since male/trans people being in female toilets became more acceptable.

If you have stuff to hand, I’d appreciate it (and maybe others who are lurking would) But I am perfectly happy to go do my own digging, which is what I normally do when I start to focus on something.

I think the problem here is that there are only really two choices - mixed sex or single sex.

The reality of 'inclusive' services is that nobody can challenge another person's right to use the service, so the service is mixed sex.

This is a 2018 article about mixed sex changing rooms

https://archive.is/LMINt

I understand your need for data, but there is no data to show that trans identifying men are less of a risk to women than any other man.

To use an analogy, I would guess that very few men called Archibald who own Great Danes and have red hair are accused of sexual assault each year, so should my lovely friend Archie have special permission to enter women's changing rooms until someone can prove that he is a risk?

My argument would be that women should just be able to set the boundary at 'no men'.

Helleofabore · 06/01/2026 22:46

financialcareerstuff · 06/01/2026 22:00

Hello Hellofabore, thank you for taking the time and offering to link. You are obviously a go to person for fact stuff, which my brain appreciates.

Personally, for me, the ‘proof’ around biological maleness/ femaleness, or the proof that trans people commit crimes is not where I feel I need more evidence. What I would like to learn more about is the statistics of safety comparing different toilet set ups for women, and if there has been a statistical rise in attacks since male/trans people being in female toilets became more acceptable.

If you have stuff to hand, I’d appreciate it (and maybe others who are lurking would) But I am perfectly happy to go do my own digging, which is what I normally do when I start to focus on something.

Just to point out, women aren’t talking about ambiguous “proof that trans people commit crimes”.

The ‘proof’ is specifically sexual offending. That is important because it is the sexual offending prevalence that is partly why male people on the whole are excluded.

Not just because they might attack. But because male people commit 98% of sex crimes with women and children being their primary target. it is highly likely that a woman or a child in that toilet facility has experienced male violence or sexual abuse/assault.

So, why should a traumatised female person have to face being in a toilet facility where all that is between them and a male person is a flimsy door, knowing that there might be a male person coming in to the facility? It doesn’t mean that the male person would certainly attack them, of course not. However, the woman or child is in a situation where that cannot just leave until they have finished toileting. Plus there is that greater risk that because it is a male person, there is an undeniable higher risk compared to a female person that the male will attack.

Plus due to the strength difference, that the victim has less chance of getting away than if the attacker was a female attacker. That should be all part of the safeguarding decision.

We have women telling us that they expected to be in a female only space, all of a sudden they are triggered because they hear a man’s voice or they see a person who they correctly identify as male as they go into the toilet facility but have to get to the toilet and cannot just turn around. And when in a cubicle partially undressed they feel hugely vulnerable.

It really isn’t about just actual reported attacks.

borntobequiet · 06/01/2026 22:46

financialcareerstuff · 06/01/2026 22:00

Hello Hellofabore, thank you for taking the time and offering to link. You are obviously a go to person for fact stuff, which my brain appreciates.

Personally, for me, the ‘proof’ around biological maleness/ femaleness, or the proof that trans people commit crimes is not where I feel I need more evidence. What I would like to learn more about is the statistics of safety comparing different toilet set ups for women, and if there has been a statistical rise in attacks since male/trans people being in female toilets became more acceptable.

If you have stuff to hand, I’d appreciate it (and maybe others who are lurking would) But I am perfectly happy to go do my own digging, which is what I normally do when I start to focus on something.

What I would like to learn more about is the statistics of safety comparing different toilet set ups for women, and if there has been a statistical rise in attacks since male/trans people being in female toilets became more acceptable

Why on earth do you need this? Isn’t it enough that many women, including of course those of certain religious and cultural backgrounds, simply do not want men in spaces where they are potentially vulnerable? What about privacy and dignity as well as safety? There’s a trans identified man who I’m pleased to say seems to have desisted from using the women’s changing room at my gym. It’s regularly used by pre-teen and early teen girls before and after swimming. What they really don’t need is a 6-foot sixty something man with no idea of appropriate boundaries and a grossly distorted understanding of what it means to be a woman in there with them.

Helleofabore · 06/01/2026 22:53

The issue is, how many additional attacks etc is acceptable before someone decides that all male people need to excluded (over about 8 years old)?

Just for the record, I aim for zero additional attacks. I don’t believe that there should be any policy that allows a male person access to a female single sex space giving him opportunity.

And of course, full exclusion will not prevent attacks from happening but it will allow women to be able to confidently report to security or management or the police that a male was in the toilet. They can also with confidence warn other female people that there is a male person in the toilet so that person can choose to enter or not. Plus female people can have the confidence to leave as soon as they are able, even just turn around and leave, without being told that they are bigots or have shown a micro aggression towards that male person.

AstonScrapingsNameChange · 06/01/2026 22:57

financialcareerstuff · 06/01/2026 22:00

Hello Hellofabore, thank you for taking the time and offering to link. You are obviously a go to person for fact stuff, which my brain appreciates.

Personally, for me, the ‘proof’ around biological maleness/ femaleness, or the proof that trans people commit crimes is not where I feel I need more evidence. What I would like to learn more about is the statistics of safety comparing different toilet set ups for women, and if there has been a statistical rise in attacks since male/trans people being in female toilets became more acceptable.

If you have stuff to hand, I’d appreciate it (and maybe others who are lurking would) But I am perfectly happy to go do my own digging, which is what I normally do when I start to focus on something.

I appreciate your polite reply to my slightly ranty post. I admit I thought you were the same poster who is insisting that women can 'fail' sex tests in sports. Apologies.

I'm always happy to discuss with someone new to the topic - what I meant by it 'getting old' was the suggestion that you seemed to be making (again, apologies if I've misunderstood) that women should just be nicer. That's not a trans vs women's rights issue, that's a women's issue from the year dot, so I had expected that most people posting here would be aware of it.

Regarding this post that I've replied to, this is not quite what you asked for but Women's Rights Network published a report on mixed sex changing rooms and how they are a danger to women and girls (supported by data gained from FoI requests):
https://017ee2dd-4ea6-4d7f-869c-a043485bcc87.filesusr.com/ugd/a86851_84e4785fdf1b4c65afa177a0536de74c.pdf

This is relevant because introducing some men (trans women) into a single sex space turns it into a mixed sex one and make a loophole for predators (note, I'm not saying that trans = predator).

As pp's have said, the issue of single sex spaces is not only about safety. I recently experienced having to wash my blood stained hands and mooncup at a sink in a public toilet, with a man in a dress at the next sink. I'm nearly 50 and thought I was way past giving a toss about periods and who knows Im on, but I found it excruciatingly humiliating. I just don't want to have to unwillingly share such a private and personal thing with a person who will have absolutely no idea what I was going through (and would likely be very interested, if not actually turned on by it). The thought of experiencing that as a 12 year old is unthinkably horrendous.

I know you don't just want individual anecdotes but sometimes they can be powerfully illustrative.

https://017ee2dd-4ea6-4d7f-869c-a043485bcc87.filesusr.com/ugd/a86851_84e4785fdf1b4c65afa177a0536de74c.pdf

Helleofabore · 06/01/2026 23:01

Can you answer a question though @financialcareerstuff please.

What exact differences do you believe there are in a male person who declares they have a transgender identity and a male person without a transgender identity that you feel gives the male person with a transgender identity access to a female single sex toilet?

There are no biological markers for having a transgender identity at all. That leaves the only commonality as those male people having a philosophical belief about themselves that doesn’t reflect the material reality of their body’s sex category.

What other philosophical belief that a male might have that doesn’t reflect material reality should get prioritised over sex category in situations where sex matters? Why is this belief given such special status?

financialcareerstuff · 06/01/2026 23:14

@FlirtsWithRhinosI think you are trying to talk me out of things I don’t believe and have never said I believe? To answer your question quickly, therefore, no I don’t believe that the fundamental element of womanhood is a state of mind.

I joined this thread, unusually, because it felt like it was framed a bit more around the state of the dialogue, versus a bun fight on the issue itself. Don’t assume that I disagree on any particular issue.

Ereshkigalangcleg · 06/01/2026 23:31

nicepotoftea · 06/01/2026 22:41

I think the problem here is that there are only really two choices - mixed sex or single sex.

The reality of 'inclusive' services is that nobody can challenge another person's right to use the service, so the service is mixed sex.

This is a 2018 article about mixed sex changing rooms

https://archive.is/LMINt

I understand your need for data, but there is no data to show that trans identifying men are less of a risk to women than any other man.

To use an analogy, I would guess that very few men called Archibald who own Great Danes and have red hair are accused of sexual assault each year, so should my lovely friend Archie have special permission to enter women's changing rooms until someone can prove that he is a risk?

My argument would be that women should just be able to set the boundary at 'no men'.

Edited

Perfectly put.

5128gap · 06/01/2026 23:32

Why do women need to produce evidence there have been 'enough' assaults on us to justify retaining our rights to single sex toilets, and all TIM have to do is say they want to use them to have people wringing their hands about how we can make that happen?

Ereshkigalangcleg · 06/01/2026 23:35

@financialcareerstuff do you get that it isn’t solely about whether we are more likely to be raped in spaces with men in? (Which we are). It’s about basic privacy and dignity for women and girls. About respite from men and boys. No offence, but it sounds like you think that a self selecting group of men’s feelings are more important than those of the majority of women and girls as long as there aren’t safety issues.

Ereshkigalangcleg · 06/01/2026 23:47

financialcareerstuff · 06/01/2026 23:14

@FlirtsWithRhinosI think you are trying to talk me out of things I don’t believe and have never said I believe? To answer your question quickly, therefore, no I don’t believe that the fundamental element of womanhood is a state of mind.

I joined this thread, unusually, because it felt like it was framed a bit more around the state of the dialogue, versus a bun fight on the issue itself. Don’t assume that I disagree on any particular issue.

Can you actually answer any of the questions though? Can you explain to me why anyone should think for a second that a man should use female only spaces?

Keeptoiletssafe · 07/01/2026 00:06

@financialcareerstuff can I ask if my quiz made you think differently about the reason single sex design is critically important to anyone at their most vulnerable? It was yesterday at 12.33 in the afternoon on this thread.

You said you wanted mixed sex spaces with private cubicles, have you changed your mind on that?

I can give you some stats and scientific and academic evidence on toilets.

BettyBooper · 07/01/2026 00:27

financialcareerstuff · 06/01/2026 23:14

@FlirtsWithRhinosI think you are trying to talk me out of things I don’t believe and have never said I believe? To answer your question quickly, therefore, no I don’t believe that the fundamental element of womanhood is a state of mind.

I joined this thread, unusually, because it felt like it was framed a bit more around the state of the dialogue, versus a bun fight on the issue itself. Don’t assume that I disagree on any particular issue.

Bun fights.

The women on here are so knowledgeable, so well-read, so interesting and tbh so bloody patient imo with people who flounce in with opinions they pulled from their arse 5 minutes ago because they're so kind talking crap that the women on here have dealt with eleveny billion times before.

And you come on here, not having read up, not knowing jack and describe those conversations as 'bun fights'. Oh hee hee hee! Bun fight! So twee! Silly wims!

And say you're a feminist.

Righteo.

Apologies, my patience for this crap ran out last week when I went into a women's toilets at a pub and there was kill list of women's rights campaigners graffitied on the wall.

ThatBlackCat · 07/01/2026 03:30

CassOle · 05/01/2026 11:15

Having had a quick look at one of Quick's links (https://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/2042-6410-3-9 Sex-specific mouse liver gene expression: genome-wide analysis of developmental changes from pre-pubertal period to young adulthood) I think I am going to award Quick a 1/10 for effort.

Is this a list that the TRA's have compiled to use in replies to sex realist posts as a gish gallop of data? Have they actually read, understood and assessed the links?

Going back to the OP's question. My previously absolute handmaiden relative has moved position from 'I don't care about sport' to biological males 'shouldn't be in women sport'. However, 'JKR is still a big meanie regarding Khelif, who is a true and honest woman.' I may have paraphrased a bit, but it is a change of position. They just need to consider the possibility that Khelif could actually be male and that the public were lied to, and I think a further shift could occur.

Khelif was already proven to be male. He is a male with intersex 5-ARD who went through male puberty and has a micropenis, internal testes, a prostate, male chromosomes and DNA and ZERO female sex organs or chromosomes. Plus the fact he failed sex testing three times, and was banned from competing in the recent of the Eindhoven Box Cup in June 2025 and the subsequent World Boxing Championships in September 2025.
His withdrawal followed the new governing body, World Boxing, introducing a mandatory sex testing policy for all female athletes. The rule requires a genetic test (PCR SRY gene test) to confirm eligibility for the female category. If he was female, why would he refuse to have the test and instead flee from the cup? Ask them that. It looks like he is now 'retiring' since the new rule came in. If he were female, he wouldn't need to retire.
Please send these to your relative:

https://www.francsjeux.com/en/short/A-medical-report-relaunches-the-Imane-Khelif-case/

Talking to non GC people
Talking to non GC people
Talking to non GC people
Talking to non GC people
ThatBlackCat · 07/01/2026 03:38

QuickJadeFinch · 05/01/2026 11:44

You are in error, which you'd know if you'd read my response to her.

I stated very clearly that "My use of [sic] is automatic - blame it on my many years in academia! - and not done to attack somebody" and that "whether or not the poster is dyslexic is, again, utterly irrelevant."

That she misinterpreted it as an attack is an understandable mistake and one that required the clarification I gave. The fact that, even with that clarification, you have continued to assert the same reflects badly on you, not on me.

If you were an academic, you would have done due diligence and checked the links you had copied and saved from a TRA site were live, and relevant. You didn't even check your own links, and they had nothing to do with the topic. You FAILED, and failed BIG TIME.

Ereshkigalangcleg · 07/01/2026 05:36

BettyBooper · 07/01/2026 00:27

Bun fights.

The women on here are so knowledgeable, so well-read, so interesting and tbh so bloody patient imo with people who flounce in with opinions they pulled from their arse 5 minutes ago because they're so kind talking crap that the women on here have dealt with eleveny billion times before.

And you come on here, not having read up, not knowing jack and describe those conversations as 'bun fights'. Oh hee hee hee! Bun fight! So twee! Silly wims!

And say you're a feminist.

Righteo.

Apologies, my patience for this crap ran out last week when I went into a women's toilets at a pub and there was kill list of women's rights campaigners graffitied on the wall.

Fucking hell.

Igneococcus · 07/01/2026 06:29

Why is nobody ever asking transwoman to produce data (in a nice, calm and non-anecdotal fashion) that they aren't safe in men's toilets?

Ereshkigalangcleg · 07/01/2026 06:43

Good question. I imagine pp with her “analytical brain” will be posting on Reddit forthwith.

Seethlaw · 07/01/2026 07:26

financialcareerstuff · 06/01/2026 23:14

@FlirtsWithRhinosI think you are trying to talk me out of things I don’t believe and have never said I believe? To answer your question quickly, therefore, no I don’t believe that the fundamental element of womanhood is a state of mind.

I joined this thread, unusually, because it felt like it was framed a bit more around the state of the dialogue, versus a bun fight on the issue itself. Don’t assume that I disagree on any particular issue.

no I don’t believe that the fundamental element of womanhood is a state of mind.

Then what do you believe is the fundamental élément of womanhood? It seems to me that everything hangs onto that one point.

Igneococcus · 07/01/2026 07:36

I joined this thread, unusually, because it felt like it was framed a bit more around the state of the dialogue, versus a bun fight on the issue itself. Don’t assume that I disagree on any particular issue.

It's basically another Bananarama accusation, it's not what you say it's how you say it, non?

FlirtsWithRhinos · 07/01/2026 07:39

financialcareerstuff · 06/01/2026 23:14

@FlirtsWithRhinosI think you are trying to talk me out of things I don’t believe and have never said I believe? To answer your question quickly, therefore, no I don’t believe that the fundamental element of womanhood is a state of mind.

I joined this thread, unusually, because it felt like it was framed a bit more around the state of the dialogue, versus a bun fight on the issue itself. Don’t assume that I disagree on any particular issue.

No.

I am an analyst myself. It's my profession and I'm well paid to do it.

So I know how important it is to keep taking a step back from whatever the surface problem appears to be to be sure you've got to the actual heart of the matter. The Five Whys, I think they call it, though it's just what a good analyst does naturally anyway.

I actually thought you would be interested in the insight that framing the question in terms of what is "reasonable" to accomodate trans women presupposes that trans women truly are more like women than other men and therefore have a justifiable claim on the resources of women that other equally vulnerable, or equally aggreeable, men who would equally enjoy or benefit from the use of women-only resources do not.

That in its own right is a massive rewriting of what it is to be a woman, and it should not be handwaved past. To me it is a significant comment on the "state of the dialogue" that activists are still able to get smart Feminist women like yourself focussing on the question of how to accomodate trans women in women's provisions instead of challenging why trans women should be considered women, and what that presumption of at least some degree of genuine womanhood vs other men says about how society really sees women.

FlirtsWithRhinos · 07/01/2026 07:57

FlirtsWithRhinos · 07/01/2026 07:39

No.

I am an analyst myself. It's my profession and I'm well paid to do it.

So I know how important it is to keep taking a step back from whatever the surface problem appears to be to be sure you've got to the actual heart of the matter. The Five Whys, I think they call it, though it's just what a good analyst does naturally anyway.

I actually thought you would be interested in the insight that framing the question in terms of what is "reasonable" to accomodate trans women presupposes that trans women truly are more like women than other men and therefore have a justifiable claim on the resources of women that other equally vulnerable, or equally aggreeable, men who would equally enjoy or benefit from the use of women-only resources do not.

That in its own right is a massive rewriting of what it is to be a woman, and it should not be handwaved past. To me it is a significant comment on the "state of the dialogue" that activists are still able to get smart Feminist women like yourself focussing on the question of how to accomodate trans women in women's provisions instead of challenging why trans women should be considered women, and what that presumption of at least some degree of genuine womanhood vs other men says about how society really sees women.

Edited

And FWIW, I asked that question about state of mind because I'm pretty sure you don't believe it, and I thought having it laid out so barely would help expose the artifice of the "what's a reasonable middle ground for trans people?" framing.

It's the exact thought process I went through myself when I was on the same journey, and it's the fundamental question that I came to that made me realise I could not reconcile my laudable desire to #bekind and accomodate TWAW with my fundamental beliefs as a Feminist.