Not wheeshting like a boss

It’s not easy being the National Library of Scotland.

Scotland’s national library has been accused of “cowardice” after removing a bestselling gender-critical book from a major exhibition following staff complaints.

The Women Who Wouldn’t Wheesht, co-edited by Susan Dalgety and Lucy Hunter Blackburn, features more than 30 essays from contributors including JK Rowling, former MP Joanna Cherry KC, MSP Ash Regan, and former prison governor Rhona Hotchkiss.

It charts a five-year campaign opposing Nicola Sturgeon’s bid to reform Scotland’s gender recognition laws to allow so-called self-ID law.

Well not “reform” so much as “change” – because “reform” implies improve.

The collection received four public nominations for the National Library of Scotland’s Dear Library exhibition, twice the number usually needed to guarantee inclusion in the 200-title display, which opened in June to mark the library’s centenary.

Then that’s why. Two is the right number; more than two is just greedy.

[D]ocuments released under Freedom of Information reveal the library’s LGBT+ staff network raised concerns at a meeting with managers on May 7, later warning that the book carried “significant risks” to relationships with authors and stakeholders and could cause “severe harm” to staff.

They claimed it promoted “hate speech” comparable to racism.

Ah but you see it’s not comparable to racism. That’s where the ideology gets it so very very very wrong. It’s not like racism at all. Men pretending to be women is not like Medgar Evers attending the University of Mississippi (and being murdered for it). India Willoughby is not comparable to Fannie Lou Hamer. Men being told they can’t barge into women’s toilets is not like the murder of nine people at Emanuel African Methodist Episcopal Church.

On May 14, the network was told the book would be included, with “safeguarding measures” in place. An internal note described it as “a book that calls for exclusion of a section of society” and asked whether calling it “divisive” would “minimise the harm” of including it.

That’s a lie though. Knowing and saying that men are not women is not a form of cruel/unwarranted/phobic exclusion, just as it’s not “exclusionary” to say that potatoes are not lemons or bicycles are not airplanes. We’re allowed to know the differences between things, and in fact we have to know them in order to function. If we refuse to know differences we’ll be eating dog shit and throwing away ice cream. Knowing the difference between women and men is very literally how we got here. Without it? No humans at all.

In a letter to Ms Shah, Ms Dalgety and Dr Hunter-Blackburn said: “The material disclosed makes clear that you, and some of your senior colleagues, allowed activists on your staff to characterise the very existence of the book as harmful, hateful and akin to racism and homophobia. By conceding to this internal lobbying, not only have you allowed this defamatory misrepresentation to go unchallenged, but you have in effect endorsed it.”

And you are a library.

Ms Dalgety and Ms Hunter Blackburn called for Ms Shah and chair of the Library, Sir Drummond Bone, to meet them and explain “why our book was deemed too harmful to the Library to be treated like any other”. Ms Cherry said she was “appalled” the library had “bowed to pressure from a small group within their staff to censor a book written by feminists, sex abuse survivors and lesbians, about their experiences during an important period in Scottish recent history”.

Bathgate and Linlithgow MP Kirsteen Sullivan tweeted: “Absolutely ridiculous – censoring a book that gives detailed accounts of women who have been unjustly censored!  I’ve had my copy since day one – if you’ve still to read it, now’s the time to buy!”

I suppose this will sell more copies. Always look on the bright side of life.

8 Responses to “Not wheeshting like a boss”

Leave a Comment

Subscribe without commenting