Speaking of a backslide on rights

Labour MPs resist.

Labour MPs have deemed the Supreme Court’s ruling on the definition of a woman as “completely unnecessary” and a “backslide” on rights, months after the judgment.

Oh yes, it’s completely unnecessary to remind people that women, and women only, are women, and men are not, repeat not, women. It’s completely unnecessary despite the fact that a shocking number of people are insisting that some men are women and that non-men women are strictly forbidden to say otherwise much less act otherwise.

Although many letters sent by MPs, and seen by The Times, featured generic stock responses, an analysis of more than 50 pieces of correspondence revealed how some MPs continued to push back against the ruling and cast doubt over forthcoming guidance being produced by the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), the equality regulator.

Andrew Western, a work and pensions minister and the MP for Stretford & Urmston, told one constituent that he believed the case was “completely unnecessary” and he appreciated “the fear and distress that has resulted” from it.

Thus revealing that he has no awareness whatsoever of the needs of women, which is pretty appalling in an MP.

Josh Newbury, the MP for Cannock Chase, said in a letter it was “clear in my view that trans women are women and that trans men are men”. He said the Supreme Court ruling did not contradict that but that “the misinterpretation of, and fallout from, the ruling has wrongly brought this into question”.

He said: “I do not believe it is morally right for trans people to be excluded from single-sex spaces designated for their gender.”

But he does believe it is morally right for women to be excluded from women’s single-sex spaces. Why? Why does he believe it’s more important to give a small number of men access to women’s spaces than it is to give millions of women access to women’s spaces? How does that work in his head?

In another letter Noah Law, the MP for St Austell and Newquay, said the ruling could “be used as an excuse to discriminate against transgender people”. He said he feared the ruling would “serve as a backslide” and added: “It is, ultimately, not down to any court to decide how people feel living in their own skin, and it seems like obvious common courtesy to let people live in a way that makes them feel happy and safe.”

Unless they’re women. It seems like obvious common courtesy to let men use women’s toilets but it does not seem like obvious common courtesy to let women use women’s toilets. Make it make sense.

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