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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Can't believe I'm writing this, but disappointed in JK today

451 replies

RobynMiller · 22/04/2026 21:22

I know she is just one person but her tweets today are really undermining the whole GC argument.

Link: https://x.com/jk_rowling/status/2046948644373274709

'Nothing's changed. I was being honest about how I feel about an individual trans woman I know, who was a gay man pre-transition, and who I met for the first time post-transition. Objectively speaking, she has physical characteristics that make it fairly obvious she wasn't born female, but she's a gentle, funny person I've never referred to as anything other than 'she' and 'her'. I find it perfectly easy to reconcile my fond feelings towards her, and my experience of her as someone with very female-coded energy, with a belief that she hasn't literally changed sex (and incidentally, she doesn't believe she's literally changed sex, either).'

Basically, someone asked her about the trans identified male she mentioned in her 2020 essay and this was her response.

Does she not realise there can be NO EXCEPTIONS? Give an inch they'll take a mile and all that. It doesn't matter that he is gentle and funny or that he has very female-coded energy whatever the hell that means.

This does make it seem like when she calls TIMs out she is now doing it maliciously as she is perfectly happy to play pretend if she likes them enough.

Just so frustrating as it basically says that 'we could all play along with TRAs just fine and are choosing not to because we're such meanies 😡'

J.K. Rowling (@jk_rowling) on X

@surreykiwi @tonymc39 @theglassfish13 Nothing's changed. I was being honest about how I feel about an individual trans woman I know, who was a gay man pre-transition, and who I met for the first time post-transition. Objectively speaking, she has physi...

https://x.com/jk_rowling/status/2046948644373274709

OP posts:
RapidOnsetGenderCritic · Yesterday 23:44

Imdunfer · Yesterday 21:10

I think the point being missed is that calling a person you know is male "she", (and I've never seen anyone getting upset about calling a female "he"), is likely to become just as entrenched and accepted as "brother" and "auntie" for non blood relatives.

Language changes over time, "she" has always been used satirically about men behaving in a female stereotypical fashion. The chant at football matches for men that dived to try and win a free kick/penalty has always been "she fell over".

You cannot police language in respect of pronoun use.

I'm also responding to "I think you underestimate the ability of parents and other people to call people who they love "she" without believing that they have become a physical female."

If you were in touch with parents whose children are caught up in gender identity, you would find that many of them do get upset about calling their daughters 'he', just as I get upset about being expected to call my son 'she'. I cannot cope with the cognitive dissonance of calling him "she" when I was present at his birth when he was unambiguously observed by the four people present (mother, midwife, doctor, me) to be male. He has continued to be observably male throughout his life so far, and I doubt if he fools many people now that he's clean shaven and wearing a dress. Third person pronouns have always referred to sex throughout my reasonably long life, and only recently have I come across trans demands to change language, not via a natural evolution of usage, but through threats of social ostracism for "transphobia" and "bigotry".

And I do not have 'faux concern' about people with body dysmorphia. I have genuine concern about my son's future. I also have concerns about women losing their spaces to men claiming they have a right to be there. These are not mutually exclusive concerns. They are the natural outcome of observing what has happened societally during the ascent of gender identity ideology.

BettyBooper · Yesterday 23:49

Joliefolie · Yesterday 23:32

Humans can never and will never be reduced to aritthmetics. Such a self-defeating argument.

Humans can't change sex. It's an analogy about statements of truth.

selffellatingouroborosofhate · Yesterday 23:53

BettyBooper · Yesterday 22:35

I know that 2+2=4, but my friend is bad at maths and thinks 2+2=5, so I go along with it to not hurt my friend's feelings.

Oh, erm, now when I go to my friend's shop to buy two things that cost 2 quid each, my friend charges me a fiver.

Best be kind though, eh?

🙄

Better analogy:

I have a friend who thinks 2+2=5. I disagree and say that 2+2=4, even though it causes friction when splitting bills.

JKR's friend thinks that 2+2=5, but because JKR is made of money, she can afford to play along.

I think JKR is being daft, but I don't have the right to dictate how she interacts with her friends. The important thing is that I have the right to refuse to play along.

BettyBooper · Today 00:11

selffellatingouroborosofhate · Yesterday 23:53

Better analogy:

I have a friend who thinks 2+2=5. I disagree and say that 2+2=4, even though it causes friction when splitting bills.

JKR's friend thinks that 2+2=5, but because JKR is made of money, she can afford to play along.

I think JKR is being daft, but I don't have the right to dictate how she interacts with her friends. The important thing is that I have the right to refuse to play along.

Hmmm. I like the cut of your jib.

And the world continues to be round...

RapidOnsetGenderCritic · Today 00:17

@Imdunfer "You cannot police language in respect of pronoun use."

My son and his partner are trying to do just that. Other parents' experience says this is typical of gender identity adherents. They are trying to unilaterally redefine third person pronouns as referring to gender identity, not sex. This is for their own comfort, because they want trans people to be seen and affirmed as the gender identity they claim.

But changing language like that has a profound effect on other people.

Firstly, it means that parents have to go around effectively telling everyone they talk to that their son is their daughter, or that their daughter is their son. Similarly, a wife is told she must accept that she is in a lesbian relationship with her husband, who is now her wife. This is altering other people's identity, not just the trans identified person. I am the father of my son, and his newfound identity does not make a significant part of my identity to be the father of a daughter. This is an effect of compelled speech, to give me the choice of accepting a new imposed identity, or being vilified as a bigot.

Secondly, using gender identity language removes sex-based rights because they cannot be upheld if the language makes the sex category 'men' include some women and the sex category 'women' include some men. The sex-based rights have now been replaced by gender-based rights, and anyone can therefore claim women's rights by saying "my gender is that of a woman". This is the wholesale removal of women's ability to have any space of their own, and in some circumstances this matters a great deal.

So let's not police pronoun use. I can then call my son 'he' without him taking offence and refusing to talk to me – because pronoun use should not be policed. He can, if he wishes, make a case for me to call him 'she', but it will have to be convincing. Likewise, JKR can call her gay trans friend 'she' – because pronoun use should not be policed. I can, if I wish, make the case that this (repeated millions of times by kind people who don't want to upset their trans-identifying friends) has serious negative consequences, and that I would prefer pronoun usage to be sex-based. If JKR was listening to me, or other more eloquent people with a similar perspective, I believe she would at least consider whether she is being consistent and whether her standing up for some gender-based third person pronoun usage supports gender identity at the expense of physical reality.

UrsulasHerbBag · Today 00:47

womendeserveequalhumanrights · Yesterday 18:06

Showing that it's even quite usual for people to - shock horror - get people's names wrong probably as a result of having too much to think about and is not any comment about them, positive or negative, at all.

Edited

I got the name wrong. Shock horror. Not the pronouns. I'm not usually that thick or blind.

UrsulasHerbBag · Today 00:51

A man is still a man.

Kimura · Today 01:52

Humptydumptysat · Yesterday 16:16

Calling men ‘she’ destroys the meaning of the word ‘she’ - it ceases to refer to females. There is then no word to refer to females that way. Who benefits from that?

A tiny number of people being referred to as 'she' as a term of endearment in social situations does not destroy the meaning of the word or mean it ceases to refer to females. Dramatic nonsense.

BellsoftheCarols · Today 04:43

I wonder if her associate is that blonde guy who grifted money off GCs for FFS a few years back.

TheHereticalOne · Today 05:15

Imdunfer · Yesterday 20:56

I do see your point but they would still call each other brothers after their nonsense claims were debunked.

The nonsense sex change claims have been debunked, we don't now need to police other people's language. Even if that were possible, which it isn't.

I absolutely disagree that that this has now been debunked and we can now all relax and go home. I'm afraid we're far from out of the woods yet.

As I've said elsewhere in this thread, I have no intention of falling out with people who decide themselves to use incorrect sex pronouns for people and therefore reject the idea that I'm "policing their language".

Do I think it's inadvisable? Yes. Do I think it is likely to prolong the confusion and nonsense around all this? Yes. Do I think it's most likely harmful to everyone involved, including those who are genuinely distressed about their sex? Yes. Will I do it myself? Not if I can possibly avoid it (but I acknowledge that there are some circumstances where other considerations might have to take precedence).

So I politely disagree with their conclusion and choice, but I often understand why people make it.

TheHereticalOne · Today 05:50

Ponderingwindow · Yesterday 22:13

Nope. Respecting individuals is not the problem. Codifying fiction into law and obscuring proper data collection is what does harm to women, including those who identify as transgender.

i will always fight for people to freely express themselves. JKR has made it clear from her earliest statements starting either phrases like “dress how you want” that she holds to the same ideals.

I may not believe someone can change sex, but I absolutely will always respect an individual and their right to be themselves.

As Naomi Cunningham's fight to be allowed to use correct sex pronouns and words for Dr Upton in court demonstrated - you don't have to codify anything or change any laws in order to run into an issue around this.

If it becomes a social more that refusing to refer to any man who wants to be a woman as 'her' and 'she' is nasty and bigoted and the only reasonable, polite or socially acceptable thing to do is call him 'her' and 'she' if he wants, you will find yourself at risk of losing your legal defence against widely drafted laws such as harrassment (using 'he' and 'man' will no longer be 'reasonable conduct' and even the interpretation of your objective intent will likely shift) because they are, really, dependent on prevailing attitudes of society at large (i.e. what is considered 'reasonable' will have changed over time without the letter of the law ever changing).

You will then find yourself, as Naomi came very close to doing, having to try to explain to a court why a particular 'woman' should not be permitted into the female changing rooms, why you were reasonable to ask management to remove 'her' and why it was reasonable to tell another woman that she was not welcome in your space. That is a far less clear and convincing argument than, "there was a man in the women's changing room and it was therefore reasonable for me to tell him to leave and seek to have him removed by management".

You can argue all you like that really everyone knows we're talking about the latter, even if required to use the language of the former, but human psychology is such that it makes a material difference to the strength of your case, people's reactions and everyone being very clear what we are talking about and what is at stake. A judge is likely to pause more over delivering a judgment that, in balance, this particular man should be permitted to undress in a communal women's changing room because it will hurt his feelings if he's not allowed to, than if he is able to write that this particular woman should be allowed to do so, like all the other women.

This is to say nothing of how it hampers even the flow of speech for barrister and witnesses if no-one is allowed to say what they see and must mentally substitute one word for another before any sentence (like having to avoid the words 'yes' and 'no' or words with the letter 'e' while giving evidence / cross-examining or presenting legal argument).

Just to be devil's advocate about the idea that deciding to refer to an individual using the wrong sex pronouns to be nice to them can have no detriment to women. In my opinion it's less obvious than your examples but is insidious in widely eroding all sorts of protections.

MoistVonL · Today 06:27

Because men.

napody · Today 06:59

BruachAbhann · Yesterday 23:18

No, I said that the arguments I see here for agreeing with her use of preferred pronouns are 'what's the harm' and 'be kind' and we've all seen where that's led us. It's led us to men in women's sports, men taking women's awards, men in women's prisons and hospitals, bathrooms, changing rooms, children being lied to and gaslighted, children being socially transitioned, children being told they're in the wrong body, children getting puberty blockers, people getting irreversible surgery that leave them with long-term permanent health conditions, men in sex-specific support groups, men elected to women's positions, men demanding they are treated as a lesbian and wanting access to lesbian spaces etc.

I really get this, and the worry about going down these slippery slopes again. But you can't step into the same river twice, and JKR has done probably more than anyone else to reroute that river. I criticised 'female-coded' upthread (would have been fine with 'feminine'). But I don't think JKR is saying 'what's the harm?' at all. Her caveats around her friend knowing you can't change sex, and respecting single sex spaces, make it clear that conflating sex and gender is where the harm comes in. Not with 'be kind', with the muddled thinking it was used to obscure.

I think, as a society, with a clear head and the full backing of the law it's time to reclaim 'be kind'. People can "call themselves what they want' in the knowledge that they can't change sex. We're not going down that road again.

With apologies for my liberally mixed slope/river/road metaphors!

pigeonist · Today 07:30

I feel there have been signs in the past that she doesn't see eye to eye with the most dogmatic pronoun-policing GCs, so it makes sense she tweeted this to wind them up a bit and clarify her own views at the same time.

Imdunfer · Today 07:42

selffellatingouroborosofhate · Yesterday 21:42

"she" has always been used satirically about men behaving in a female stereotypical fashion. The chant at football matches for men that dived to try and win a free kick/penalty has always been "she fell over".

This use of "she" to denigrate men is not the winning argument for routine use of cross-sex pronouns that you seem to think it is.

The adaptation of language to address and talk about some people in the way they have asked you to talk about them is not going to threaten women's rights as some people seem to think it is.

It isn't even helping the fight, it's just creating a sideline fight where there doesn't need to be one and nothing can be gained by it. You're even fighting with other women now over whether they can call a relative or a great friend "she".

It's also a fight you can't win, since you can't police other women's language and there are plenty of women on this thread who don't see a problem with what Rowling has said or done. It's a thing that now exists, you can't undo it, you can only choose the words that you yourself use.

Women are not defined by being called "she" any more than by how they dress or the way they look or the way they behave.

Women are defined by not having a Y chromosome.

TheHereticalOne · Today 08:00

napody · Today 06:59

I really get this, and the worry about going down these slippery slopes again. But you can't step into the same river twice, and JKR has done probably more than anyone else to reroute that river. I criticised 'female-coded' upthread (would have been fine with 'feminine'). But I don't think JKR is saying 'what's the harm?' at all. Her caveats around her friend knowing you can't change sex, and respecting single sex spaces, make it clear that conflating sex and gender is where the harm comes in. Not with 'be kind', with the muddled thinking it was used to obscure.

I think, as a society, with a clear head and the full backing of the law it's time to reclaim 'be kind'. People can "call themselves what they want' in the knowledge that they can't change sex. We're not going down that road again.

With apologies for my liberally mixed slope/river/road metaphors!

Edited

I think I once would have thought the same thing re not going down that road again, but people have short memories and history does have an unfortunate habit of repeating itself. I think there is a real danger in becoming complacent, especially at this stage when we have really only succeeded in holding back the worst of the tide (and that only recently). The EA2010 as clarified by the FWS judgment and Workplace Regs 1992 are still being openly, routinely flouted (including, I gather, by the government itself) for no better reason than some people don't like the law protecting women and feel empowered to break it with impunity.

I remember asking my mother when younger after learning about what life used to be like for women in various countries (including ours) if she thought women could ever lose the rights we'd gained. She said no, she thought that once we'd established them it would be extremely unlikely that they would be capable of reverse. As we've seen in all sorts of ways in all sorts of countries over the past 10 years - education, dress, physical freedom (Afghanistan), reproductive rights (US), single sex spaces and safe, fair sports (nigh on world-wide) - this is not the case.

womendeserveequalhumanrights · Today 08:06

The problem with it is that wrong-sex pronouns are fine in your own home but as soon as you get into social spaces you get into the issue where you using 'she' for a man means anyone you talk to about that person will think it's a woman.

So, for example in the Guides, 'Oh yes Trisha's a volunteer, she's going to be sleeping in the tent with the 12-13 year olds'. And the person you're speaking to, who may be a parent or even a parent with a religion which requires their teen daughters to not disrobe in front of men (though presumably the massive safeguarding risk of sharing with a man without consent or knowledge would be the biggest issue) is deceived- if they haven't met Trisha. So they let their daughters do something they absolutely wouldn't if they knew the truth.

And the fact that Trisha is pretending to be a woman and keeping secrets from parents which enables him to get into spaces with young girls (which is what this scenario is) is, frankly, a much bigger safeguarding failure than if it was openly stated he's a man. It's gaslighting the girls and deceiving the parents.

Notabarbie · Today 08:17

RobynMiller · 22/04/2026 22:36

Finally found her tweet: https://x.com/ThePosieParker/status/2046938476428370267

''Of course men larping as women should be refused employment. Who wants to work with them? Who wants to be a customer wherever they work?"

It's not a reply to any other tweet. Just a call that trans identified men shouldn't be employed.

I have a much greater problem with this comment than with what JKR said about her friend. It's an ugly thing to say.

pigeonist · Today 08:18

Anyway it sounds like the guy she's using preferred pronouns is some sort of megatwink gay. It would be different if she was she/herring an AGP.

womendeserveequalhumanrights · Today 08:25

And then you get the absolutely rabid TRAs, desperate - seemingly - to get penis into girls spaces labelled 'female only', who don't care about sexual assault of girls if it means men won't feel sad, who will claim that Trisha is a literal woman. So even a parent who is clever enough to say 'Um, I've never met Trisha, can you confirm Trisha is female' could get someone lying to them in the deluded belief they're morally right and following procedure (often). The whole 'Upton is biological and he's a woman so he's a biological woman' deception.

This is also why girls are being forced to strip in front of boys in schools ffs. Claiming boys are literal girls with their penis and 160% punch power and far higher statistical risk in terms of sexual assault. (before we even get to dignity, privacy and eroding boundaries of girls and making them feel that them being valued only and solely as male validation tools is reasonable).

Yes of course, there have always been men, paedophiles, who want to get into spaces where little girls undress, and will go to any length to do so (Catholic Priests, Jimmy Savile). But this obfuscation of what words mean, including what is 'kind', leads to well-meaning idiots helping them.

We've been here before and as the wonderful and much missed LangCleg pointed out creating a sacred caste to whom normal safeguarding does not apply never ends well.

womendeserveequalhumanrights · Today 08:27

No adult who lies about their sex directly or indirectly or anyone else who helps them to do so should be employed to work with children. That should really go into KCSIE but I've done the consultation now and didn't include it. Rats.

anyolddinosaur · Today 08:31

Would JKR describe her friend as "she" if she was speaking about him in a situation where safeguarding was relevant? She has not said but she's also been quite clear that both she and he know he's a man. So maybe not. In the guides example the person telling others about Trish have a safeguarding obligation to disclose, however they personally wish to refer to Trish.

I dont believe most of us want to deny trans people protection against discrimination in employment - as long as they are not claiming positions that should be restricted to women. The TRA who is constantly complaining about pronoun use, though, or like Upton looking for anything he can complain about in a colleagues behaviour - yes no-one will want to work with them. That's not discrimination on the basis of gender identity, it's because they are troublemakers Unfortunately those trans people who really just want to get on with their lives are being harmed by those who claim to support them.

Screamingabdabz · Today 08:46

Kimura · Today 01:52

A tiny number of people being referred to as 'she' as a term of endearment in social situations does not destroy the meaning of the word or mean it ceases to refer to females. Dramatic nonsense.

Edited

Telling people, who have genuine concerns of what happens when you capitulate to this ideology, that it is ‘dramatic nonsense’?

Come on now.

If people were complaining about calling a pantomime dame ‘she’ in the middle of a panto? You’d be right.

Being coerced into accepting that males are ‘she’ for the purposes of work, intimate procedures, changing rooms, sport, refuges and female spaces? No. You’re wrong and gaslighting.

BusyAzureTraybake · Today 08:53

I haven't got the brain capacity to remember everything that has been said on this thread, but has anyone pointed out that this seems to be an established friendship of JKR's that may well predate the whole 'TW really are W' nonsense? It would be quite harsh to say to a friend, that you have called 'she' for years, that you are going to call them 'he' from now on. It feels a bit like punishing that individual for the sins of the whole 'trans community'.
The interesting question is what JKR and the rest of us are doing when we meet new trans-identified people. Personally, in social situations where activism would do more harm than good, I am using proper names and, if I absolutely need to reach for a pronoun, I use 'they'.

womendeserveequalhumanrights · Today 09:04

anyolddinosaur · Today 08:31

Would JKR describe her friend as "she" if she was speaking about him in a situation where safeguarding was relevant? She has not said but she's also been quite clear that both she and he know he's a man. So maybe not. In the guides example the person telling others about Trish have a safeguarding obligation to disclose, however they personally wish to refer to Trish.

I dont believe most of us want to deny trans people protection against discrimination in employment - as long as they are not claiming positions that should be restricted to women. The TRA who is constantly complaining about pronoun use, though, or like Upton looking for anything he can complain about in a colleagues behaviour - yes no-one will want to work with them. That's not discrimination on the basis of gender identity, it's because they are troublemakers Unfortunately those trans people who really just want to get on with their lives are being harmed by those who claim to support them.

I'm certain JKR would not use she/her pronouns for a man in a safeguarding context.

The point is that if it's normalised, or overheard, then you do end up with situations where people are deceived about sex where normal English usage would mean they were not.

Same is true of rape crisis counsellors, doctors etc.

If everyone calls Upton 'she' in a medical context then a vulnerable woman may think she's getting a female doctor until confronted with someone who's obviously male with 160% the punch power of her and all the power in that situation and frankly, observing Upton in court, obviously going to get nasty if she then objects. SP has ovaries of steel and asked nicely for him to remove himself from the women's changing room so she could use the space and look how nasty he got then - trying to get her sacked.

It's only because SP is so brave that we know about it. There was mention at the time of Upton complaining about an elderly patient who used correct English pronouns for him. I wonder if that patient was denied medical care as a result, because that's what it says in many of the NHS policies.

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