Ten of Swords wrote: » A significant number of posts have been deleted, this is the second (and final) reminder that this thread concerns the gender recognition legislation for children under 18. Any more posts conflating trans with pedophilia or mental illness, traveller rights, transgender prisoners, crime from people of a migrant background or any other off topic posting will earn an immediate card and threadban.
wildeside wrote: » No I don't know that, how do you know that?
AndrewJRenko wrote: » And you know that about half the class have parents who won't have a conversation with their kids, so.....
Dravokivich wrote: » But they don't. The curriculum is the responsibility of the Department of Education, not an individual (or set of) school(s).
The_Brood wrote: » How did voters choose this direction?
VillageIdiot71 wrote: » What's she going to do if her daughter thinks she's fat when she's fifteen?
wildeside wrote: » If my primary age child came home and said one of their class mates was saying they were transgender I'd have a conversation about it with them. If they came home and said their teacher was teaching them about transgenderism I have a conversation with the school principle. See the difference?
RandRuns wrote: » I've suspected for a while now that the whole push to "transition" kids early is a result, in many if not most cases, of a combination of susceptability to trans pressure groups, a parent who wishes to be cool and trendy (or possibly suffers from Munchausen Syndrome), and peer pressure. An interesting thread here about a school in the UK - 9 girls were "transitioning" to male, but once they were seperated from their peer group due to Covid lockdown, 7 went back to being girls, and another is considering it.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » So your children may well have a trans child in the classroom, and you have a huge problem with educating their classmates about what this means.https://twitter.com/TarynDeVere/status/1280078770410606593?s=19
Deleted User wrote: » Can you provide a source that backs up your claim on why it was changed? Otherwise it would seem you're making outlandish claims. The below piece would tend to back my statement. Meanwhile, you've got a conspiracy about trans ideologies.https://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/23/fashion/gays-lesbians-the-term-homosexual.html
Deleted User wrote: » Can you provide a source that backs up your claim on why it was changed? Otherwise it would seem you're making outlandish claims.
Gruffalox wrote: » Well here's one for the gay historians - Merriam Webster dictionary now thinks that the word homosexual is ''now sometimes disparaging and offensive''. This is based on radical trans ideology. I mean fcuk-ing hell....https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/homosexual
Gruffalox wrote: » It is not. My god, how can you be in such denial. Homophobic people have used slurs on gay people since forever. Merriam Webster has been around since 1831. Yet only very recently has the dictionary added the qualifying phrase ''now sometimes disparaging and offensive''. One major hint is in the word ''now''.
Deleted User wrote: » No, you've invented that motivation for the addition. It's more likely in relation to homophobic people using the term in a negative way. Unless you've got proof of your claim?
Gruffalox wrote: » You know exactly how it relates. If homosexuality is same SEX attraction - which to be fairly fecking frank is exactly what it is - it is transphobic, as per 2020. And now Merriam Webster, one of the world's most used dictionaries, has taken it upon themselves to declare the word homosexual ''disparaging and offensive''. It has zero to do with name calling gay people as homosexuals, it has everything to do with the ideology that a gender identification is supposed to literally change one and any discrimination for any purpose including sexual attraction thereafter is transphobic. I find it mind blowing.
Deleted User wrote: » How does that relate to "radical trans ideology", it can sometimes be used in a disparaging or abusive way. That's a reality.
Bannasidhe wrote: » Even worse , IMHO, for a gayman to try and rewrite what is clear from the sources from the time period. And yes, I do think you have an agenda, and yes I do think you are pursuing that agenda - which is, as you term it -"not following the critical gender/queer theory cult ". I am basing this belief on your very own words. Rejecting an ideological agenda is itself an agenda. No- one knows who, if you want to name names, started the riot at Stonewall. No-One. You want it to be Stormé to suit your agenda of removing Johnson and Riveria from the narrative. Stormé said she threw the first punch - she may well have - but there is no proof. All three of them were there. There are enough eyewitnesses to confirm that. I, personally don't care who started it, I'm just glad they did. I am glad the butch dykes, the transexuals (as they were then called), the drag kings and queens fought back - and yes, that story needs to be taught in case young LGBTQ kids grow up believing the fictionalised film version is our history. What it telling about you is that your above post contains an awful lot about your perception about me. Incorrect perceptions born out of your own ideological viewpoint. It is a shame you cannot debate without attempting to personalise things but when that's all you have I suppose you have to attack the poster.
Sir Oxman wrote: » Even though you have managed to drag the post I was responding to into your personal gripe against me for the original sin of not following the critical gender/queer theory cult and manage to miss the point, I'll tap this out to you. Assuming is pretty sad. Luckily for me, I'm a gay man. That's gotcha #1 gone. Luckily, I have no 'agenda against transpeople'. That's gotcha #2 gone. Is that ok, o spokeswoman and arbiter of 'your' community's history and who may or may not make a point or comment or dare to speak? Well, according to your very first sentence I'm a straight person with an agenda against trans people. As for communities, do the wider community a favour - in which (back on topic) history lessons on this topic in all schools may in the future be part of the curriculum - and seek only the maximal truth and transparency and reject any current day ideological political agendas. <Me: snip blocks of text with nothing to do with my point> Storme was indeed a lesbian and was (up until this year in particular) the generally accepted 'first' at Stonewall 1969 - that particular starting event being the one under discussion as being revised by all and sundry. And if the latest ideological theory is now gaslighting the world (inc. it's own community) about something like that, what chance for transparency and truth in wider, grander debates. Back to the point of my post - would a school class know that Marsha was a gnc drag queen/transvestite who was a gay man who wasn't at the vanguard of the protest (which is my point) going by the outpouring of posts/articles (in print, online and media) designating the closest person they could use (incorrectly) to advance the narrative that the virtual 'leaders' of the Stonewall riots were trans women? As for Sylvia - well, it is widely accepted Sylvia was not present (MPJ even said so) despite wanting to be portrayed as being at the vanguard of those protests. Oh, there's my perceived 'agenda' again which you denied saying I had. Hmm. I don't tend to go down ideological routes so no, I am not writing anyone out of anything. You're obviously stuck on the phrase I used to emphasise the sidelining of anything or anyone gay/lesbian/bi nowadays and replace with the trans umbrella and also based your umbrage-led reply on your preconceived notions. I could have a preconception of you as the poster who quotes Pink 'News' as a primary source in other serious threads - a well known clickbait rag which for some reason has never signed up to the UK's IPSO Editors Code of Conduct - for starters. It would be so easy for me to label you as <insert useless fingerpointing snipe that assumes blah blah> Luckily, I'm not into that garbage...anymore :pac:
Bannasidhe wrote: » Firstly I would really like it if straight people didn't use LGB people to further their agenda against trans people. Secondly I would like to emphasise my first point. That is my agenda.
Bannasidhe wrote: » I never mentioned you having an agenda I said your 'version' of the history of my community is utter BS and I stand by that statement.
Bannasidhe wrote: » See - us 'stupid gays and lesbians' are well able to research our history, using primary sources, and it is filled with trans people so you can take your agenda of writing them out of our history and shove it.
RandRuns wrote: » Yeah, I'm sure he was just having a chat about the issues of the day with him. I wonder would a heterosexual politician who was caught with a female protitute, in a known red-light area, receive the same leeway? I doubt it.
Obvious Desperate Breakfasts wrote: » But I don’t believe that self IDing should allow somebody to bypass sex-based rights.
Obvious Desperate Breakfasts wrote: » Hmmm, it seems like it’s very easy to dismiss opposing views based on some sort of lofty standard that is probably quite arbitrary. It’s a handy out - “Oh, the standard of debate here is simply beneath me”.
keano_afc wrote: » Using Pink News as a source? Bloody hell :D:D
ronivek wrote: » You're literally criticising the LGBT movement in this post; and there is plenty of anti-LGBT sentiment expressed on this and other platforms too. I would be very much in favour of the free expression of ideas and debate also; but one of the key issues is that much of the dross on social media does not really rise to the level of debate or even discussion. Even this particular forum reads more like a Conspiracy Theories forum much of the time.
AndrewJRenko wrote: » Some interesting stats from the UKhttps://twitter.com/wendylyon/status/1281149837862461441?s=19
wildeside wrote: » If the school had a Marxist philisophical underpinning and ethos I would not need to get into each and every specific concern, I'd know enough for my conerns to be valid. But if you want a specific hyptothetical example, if the school were to teach my primary age kids about transgenderism on the ciriculum I would have a very specific problem with that, not least because I would know where this teaching was coming from i.e. a political movement.