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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

A growing threat: the anti-rights movement in the UK says Amnesty who claim over 50% are Gender Critical groups

644 replies

IwantToRetire · 09/07/2026 17:01

Quote:

Anti-rights actors seek a society in which women and men have fixed and distinct roles, based on what they view as ‘natural’ and ‘traditional’. These actors perceive the idea that gender is socially constructed as a threat because it suggests that gender roles can, and do, change across societies and over time. In fact, progress in the rights of women and LGBT+ people has been underpinned by changing understandings of gender and social roles.

Anti-rights actors refer to this perceived threat as ‘gender ideology’, portraying it as an attack on national traditions, family structures, marriage and religious freedom. These narratives often seek to generate fear and uncertainty and rely on misinformation or exaggerated claims.

The term ‘gender ideology’ emerged in the context of debates within international institutions, particularly the United Nations, about gender equality and sexual and reproductive rights.

In 1964, the Holy See became a Permanent Observer at the UN General Assembly, the only religious body with this status. As a permanent observer the Holy See can participate in processes at the General Assembly as well as other UN bodies. It cannot vote but it has the possibility to co-sponsor resolutions if a member state requests a vote. Although it cannot vote, the Holy See can participate in UN discussions and processes and has played an influential role in debates on women's rights and LGBT+ rights.

The term ‘gender ideology’ gained prominence in response to progress on gender equality and Cairo in 1994. These conference were a landmark moment for the global women's rights movement. The Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action is widely regarded as a key international framework for advancing women's rights and gender equality, and states continue to report on its implementation through the Commission on the Status of Women.

While opposition to sexual and reproductive rights predates the Beijing conference, the term ‘gender ideology’ became a particularly important response to the advances achieved there. The phrase was coined to explain the growing influence of gender equality agendas and to mobilise opposition to them.

Although the term originated in debates at the international level, it has since become a broad political narrative used by a wide range of anti-rights actors. Today, it is often used to connect campaigns against gender equality, sexual and reproductive rights, and LGBT+ rights across different countries and contexts.

From intro to report at
https://media.amnesty.org.uk/documents/Report_-_A_growing_threat__the_anti-rights_movement_in_the_UK_July_2026.pdf

See images of the list of 51 groups Amnesty is claiming are right wing.

A growing threat: the anti-rights movement in the UK says Amnesty who claim over 50% are Gender Critical groups
A growing threat: the anti-rights movement in the UK says Amnesty who claim over 50% are Gender Critical groups
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HenriettaHippopotamus · 16/07/2026 09:51

EmpressaurusKitty · 16/07/2026 08:51

Yes. I expect the dad will be out doing protests soon if he isn’t already.

I've seen those kinds of parents with signs saying they're a proud parent of a trans child. It's all about them.

PrettyDamnCosmic · 16/07/2026 09:56

HenriettaHippopotamus · 16/07/2026 09:51

I've seen those kinds of parents with signs saying they're a proud parent of a trans child. It's all about them.

I've seen those kinds of parents with signs saying they're a proud parent of a trans child. It's all about them.

In TPA we even have one posting bollocks on MN although to be fair I'm not sure he really has a child of any sort trans or not so it really is all about him.

TempestTost · 16/07/2026 09:58

EmpressaurusKitty · 16/07/2026 05:24

I’m happily childfree & I know plenty of terfs without kids. Motherhood might trigger it for some but on the flip side there’s the likes of Susie Green and TransParentlyAnnoyed.

Maybe it’s more that some people never develop common sense or a capacity for critical thinking?

Someone here posted a statistic on this recently. It was quite striking. Anecdotes notwithstanding.

RedToothBrush · 16/07/2026 10:07

TempestTost · 16/07/2026 09:58

Someone here posted a statistic on this recently. It was quite striking. Anecdotes notwithstanding.

There is the yougov survey where the public at large are well over 80% against medicalising under 18s. And then it's split into related to a trans person and the figure for it is massive.

I can't remember the exact figures off the top of my head but that's the one that says it all.

EmpressaurusKitty · 16/07/2026 10:46

TempestTost · 16/07/2026 09:58

Someone here posted a statistic on this recently. It was quite striking. Anecdotes notwithstanding.

I’ll be a notwithstanding anecdote then!

EdithStourton · 16/07/2026 11:09

EmpressaurusKitty · 16/07/2026 05:24

I’m happily childfree & I know plenty of terfs without kids. Motherhood might trigger it for some but on the flip side there’s the likes of Susie Green and TransParentlyAnnoyed.

Maybe it’s more that some people never develop common sense or a capacity for critical thinking?

There are many people who adopt various positions, learn the mantras and follow the rest of that particular herd. They either never really think through what they believe and whether it has any logical or factual underpinnings, or find (or are given) a rationale that works for them and opt never to work through any challenges to their beliefs. This lack of intellectual curiosity allows them to remain with their in-group, and leads to them outsourcing their reasoning to other people - who need not be honest actors, but believing them and not questioning them or what they tell you makes for an easy life.

if you ask a penetrating question, they either open and close their mouths like guppies and say, 'Well, er, um...' and then give a reply that doesn't actually address the question, or they change the subject.

One of my SILs once came out with the classic of, 'I can't remember why [trendy mantra of a few years' prior] is right, but I know it is so I still believe it.' That was the limit of her intellectual engagement with the political causes she devoutly espoused. I think that there are a lot of people like her out there.

They form up into phalanxes of useful idiots who are easy to manipulate.

Which is not to say that all supporters of ideas that I don't like count as useful idiots. Some of them have thought these things through and come to different conclusions to me. Which is fine - and usually their views are much more moderate, and you can have a decent conversation.

ILikeDungs · 16/07/2026 11:26

hethor · 16/07/2026 08:04

This was a few days ago now, but I just spotted the utter cluelessness of Masha's AI-hallucinated gloss of JKRWF as James Kirkup Review/Writers Fund.

Just in case anyone thought there was any factual accuracy to any of Masha's posts.

Thanks, I did wonder what was up with James Kirkup getting in there but didn't join the dots

lcakethereforeIam · 16/07/2026 11:42

Something occurred to me this morning, but I'm minded to think it's edging into conspiracy theory territory. The ET (Samantha Tempest v DEFRA) would have wrapped up if it hadn't been for the claimant's counsel boring on. The panel would have been starting their deliberations just as this report came out.

I hope the timing is coincidental rather than an attempt at influence. What's made me suspicious is all the SEENs being listed. I'd like to think AI has better things to spend it's time and money on, but then again here we are.

PachacutiOfTheRPA · 16/07/2026 13:02

lcakethereforeIam · 16/07/2026 11:42

Something occurred to me this morning, but I'm minded to think it's edging into conspiracy theory territory. The ET (Samantha Tempest v DEFRA) would have wrapped up if it hadn't been for the claimant's counsel boring on. The panel would have been starting their deliberations just as this report came out.

I hope the timing is coincidental rather than an attempt at influence. What's made me suspicious is all the SEENs being listed. I'd like to think AI has better things to spend it's time and money on, but then again here we are.

That is quite some coincidence, I wonder if any of the main players have a connection.

hethor · 16/07/2026 13:19

lcakethereforeIam · 16/07/2026 11:42

Something occurred to me this morning, but I'm minded to think it's edging into conspiracy theory territory. The ET (Samantha Tempest v DEFRA) would have wrapped up if it hadn't been for the claimant's counsel boring on. The panel would have been starting their deliberations just as this report came out.

I hope the timing is coincidental rather than an attempt at influence. What's made me suspicious is all the SEENs being listed. I'd like to think AI has better things to spend it's time and money on, but then again here we are.

I think it's highly unlikely any lawyer knew anything about this 'report' in advance of it being published.

MoistVonL · 16/07/2026 13:26

I think Cake was suggesting the opposite - that by publishing now, Amnesty UK hopes to influence the social acceptability of SEEN groups before it comes to EDW giving her evidence.

Pollution the water, so to speak, by having SEEN confined by a famous international human rights organisation.

lcakethereforeIam · 16/07/2026 13:34

Yes. My, possibly paranoid, thinking is that AI timed the release of their report to fuck over SEEN. If Tempest's brief was in on the fix (which I actually don't believe for a second) she royally screwed it by causing the case to overrun.

I don't believe AI would have gone to the trouble just for this ET. Though they might have seen it as a nice little bonus.

ItsCoolForCats · 16/07/2026 13:35

MoistVonL · 16/07/2026 13:26

I think Cake was suggesting the opposite - that by publishing now, Amnesty UK hopes to influence the social acceptability of SEEN groups before it comes to EDW giving her evidence.

Pollution the water, so to speak, by having SEEN confined by a famous international human rights organisation.

This could backfire. Caroline Ayres, giving evidence for DEFRA, said that SEEN was misunderstood and misrepresented. If Amnesty have to admit to libel, this will support the view that there is a smear campaign against the smear network.

Ereshkigalangcleg · 16/07/2026 13:36

I might copy out the transcript of both the Chiara Capraro interviews if I get time later.

Ereshkigalangcleg · 16/07/2026 13:37

There’s probably some quick way to download it that I’m not aware of!

MoistVonL · 16/07/2026 13:41

ItsCoolForCats · 16/07/2026 13:35

This could backfire. Caroline Ayres, giving evidence for DEFRA, said that SEEN was misunderstood and misrepresented. If Amnesty have to admit to libel, this will support the view that there is a smear campaign against the smear network.

Obviously it immediately backfired because the whole thing was a dumpster fire of absolute nonsense and I expect Chiara is in fear of her job after screwing it up so badly.

For for the True Believers like her, they are so convinced they are on the RSOHistory that rushing through a report condemning the Evil Terfs Witches without checking with lawyers is pretty on brand.

lcakethereforeIam · 16/07/2026 13:48

I don't get the impression the report was rushed though. It had been trialled with the 'Snowball' report and Chiara had been on at least two podcasts giving long talks on the subject.

The list at the end may have been rushed except there are numbers and percentages in the report of precisely what sort of wrong think AI judged and juried each organisation of being guilty of. These graphs and numbers presumably married up with the list.

ItsCoolForCats · 16/07/2026 13:52

ItsCoolForCats · 16/07/2026 13:35

This could backfire. Caroline Ayres, giving evidence for DEFRA, said that SEEN was misunderstood and misrepresented. If Amnesty have to admit to libel, this will support the view that there is a smear campaign against the smear network.

I meant against the SEEN Network, obviously 🤦🏻‍♀️

MyAmpleSheep · 16/07/2026 14:09

JKR just tweeted that she hopes everyone reads the report. “Nothing could better demonstrate how far Amnesty has fallen than their demonisation of gay rights charities for refusing to adopt Amnesty’s approved gender beliefs, or their attack on a rape crisis centre because it is run by women, for women.

Which is true. Unfortunately if she really wants people to read the report that’s the claim in libel blown up. You can’t both want people not to read the report (which is the point of a libel action) and encourage people to read the report.

Mmmnotsure · 16/07/2026 14:38

Tribunal Tweets have pulled together on their Substack an amazing resource, including the Amnesty report, letters from the named organisations, press coverage, etc.

tribunaltweets.substack.com/p/amnesty-international-uk-letters?utm_source=publication-search

Ereshkigalangcleg · 16/07/2026 14:50

MyAmpleSheep · 16/07/2026 14:09

JKR just tweeted that she hopes everyone reads the report. “Nothing could better demonstrate how far Amnesty has fallen than their demonisation of gay rights charities for refusing to adopt Amnesty’s approved gender beliefs, or their attack on a rape crisis centre because it is run by women, for women.

Which is true. Unfortunately if she really wants people to read the report that’s the claim in libel blown up. You can’t both want people not to read the report (which is the point of a libel action) and encourage people to read the report.

Yes, I see your point.

SternlyMatthews · 16/07/2026 14:58

MyAmpleSheep · 16/07/2026 14:09

JKR just tweeted that she hopes everyone reads the report. “Nothing could better demonstrate how far Amnesty has fallen than their demonisation of gay rights charities for refusing to adopt Amnesty’s approved gender beliefs, or their attack on a rape crisis centre because it is run by women, for women.

Which is true. Unfortunately if she really wants people to read the report that’s the claim in libel blown up. You can’t both want people not to read the report (which is the point of a libel action) and encourage people to read the report.

A libel action can be for remedy for damage done due to a published libel, in a book, newspaper, or in this case, the internet, where it has been widely & wilfully distributed despite the publisher withdrawing it. What is being sought in the various letters & letters before action is retraction, guarantee of non publication, apology, details of evidence, external enquiry into circs of the report. Plus referral to Charities Commission.
So because its out, & cant be recalled or pulped, JKR is in effect saying to the , public gallery 'here, look at what they said & did & judge for yourself'

IANAL

MNLurker1345 · 16/07/2026 15:41

Thanks for the link @Mmmnotsure, good to actually see the list of organisations named in the flesh.

And also to see the Chaira Capraro interview, which is more chilling than the report if possible.

She speaks of a systematic, global effort to undermine Trans rights (as she sees them) and says that all of the organisations named are part of this conspiracy.

For Amnesty to now pull the report, after Capraro stating very articulately and from her perceived position of authority and authenticity - which she does, she is under no illusion that this is happening - is as we know full scale damage limitation.

There are bad actors across woman's services, of course, but Capraro’s research and study obviously didn’t go into detailed investigation as to who these bad actors are, it was just easier to generalise whole categories as anti rights.