Things that make you go.......WTF?
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- David
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You'd have to ask the students who voted for the policy, but I'm guessing it has to do partially with trans, intersex or 'genderqueer' students not feeling comfortable with male and female toilets, and partially one step in the wider agenda to eliminate gender altogether. I'm probably not the best defender of the policy because I think most student politicians are fundamentalist nutcases who shouldn't be in charge of anything.
"Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence." – Julian Assange
- stui magpie
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I agree on the remark about student politicians.David wrote:You'd have to ask the students who voted for the policy, but I'm guessing it has to do partially with trans, intersex or 'genderqueer' students not feeling comfortable with male and female toilets, and partially one step in the wider agenda to eliminate gender altogether. I'm probably not the best defender of the policy because I think most student politicians are fundamentalist nutcases who shouldn't be in charge of anything.
On the agenda to eliminate gender, that has to be utterly ridiculous doesn't it? If gender had no impact, is irrelevant, WTF are transgender people doing?
Every dead body on Mt Everest was once a highly motivated person, so maybe just calm the **** down.
- think positive
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Hehe thanks for the laugh on a not particularly funny day!stui magpie wrote:I agree on the remark about student politicians.David wrote:You'd have to ask the students who voted for the policy, but I'm guessing it has to do partially with trans, intersex or 'genderqueer' students not feeling comfortable with male and female toilets, and partially one step in the wider agenda to eliminate gender altogether. I'm probably not the best defender of the policy because I think most student politicians are fundamentalist nutcases who shouldn't be in charge of anything.
On the agenda to eliminate gender, that has to be utterly ridiculous doesn't it? If gender had no impact, is irrelevant, WTF are transgender people doing?
You cant fix stupid, turns out you cant quarantine it either!
- think positive
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I'd like to know when they had the vote, non of juniors friends heard anything about it, and I just asked her, she said she hasn't met any transgenders yet, so I'm guessing it's not rampant! Her female and male gay friends do not like it, any more than the straight kids do.David wrote:You'd have to ask the students who voted for the policy, but I'm guessing it has to do partially with trans, intersex or 'genderqueer' students not feeling comfortable with male and female toilets, and partially one step in the wider agenda to eliminate gender altogether. I'm probably not the best defender of the policy because I think most student politicians are fundamentalist nutcases who shouldn't be in charge of anything.
You cant fix stupid, turns out you cant quarantine it either!
- think positive
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- think positive
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- Joined: Thu Jun 30, 2005 8:33 pm
- Location: somewhere
- Has liked: 342 times
- Been liked: 105 times
- think positive
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- David
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The trouble is, when do you define that someone is 'post' gender change? Transitioning isn't just about surgery; it's a long journey that often starts with presenting (i.e. dressing according to the gender you identify as, binding/tucking etc), counselling and then hormone therapy, and may or may not end with surgery (indeed, many choose not to go through surgery at all). This can all take years. So there's a whole period there where a trans person will probably be pre-surgery or even pre-hormone treatment but still living as their preferred gender. Using the correct bathrooms can be an important part of that process, and telling them they can't do it pretty much invalidates their identity.
I remember the first time my (pre-surgery) trans male friend used the men's bathroom. We were at a nightclub and I encouraged him to do it because he was feeling unsure. He said later that it felt like a valuable emotional/psychological breakthrough and a bit of a moment of self-acceptance. So while I don't have direct experience of what it's like to be in someone's shoes in such a position, I feel like I have some idea of how important this stuff can be.
I understand that people are alarmed by the idea of someone opportunistically exploiting such a policy in order to commit sex offences. But such a phenomenon is too rare to base policy around, particularly when, as others have pointed out, such policy would have little effect on the freedom of sexual offenders to dress as women and gain access to women's facilities anyway. The fact that these crimes aren't already happening all the time suggests that this is all a massive storm in a teacup.
I remember the first time my (pre-surgery) trans male friend used the men's bathroom. We were at a nightclub and I encouraged him to do it because he was feeling unsure. He said later that it felt like a valuable emotional/psychological breakthrough and a bit of a moment of self-acceptance. So while I don't have direct experience of what it's like to be in someone's shoes in such a position, I feel like I have some idea of how important this stuff can be.
I understand that people are alarmed by the idea of someone opportunistically exploiting such a policy in order to commit sex offences. But such a phenomenon is too rare to base policy around, particularly when, as others have pointed out, such policy would have little effect on the freedom of sexual offenders to dress as women and gain access to women's facilities anyway. The fact that these crimes aren't already happening all the time suggests that this is all a massive storm in a teacup.
Last edited by David on Sat Apr 30, 2016 5:18 pm, edited 2 times in total.
"Every time we witness an injustice and do not act, we train our character to be passive in its presence." – Julian Assange
- stui magpie
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- luvdids
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