The internet 2.0 helped trans people become more visible than ever. It also gave those who hate us a new way to organize. Proud to give you this piece which weaves my own experience of this past decade into a complicated narrative for trans visibility.https://www.vox.com/identities/2019/12/27/21028342/trans-visibility-backlash-internet-2010 …
She tweeted as part of the public gender ID debate, as all were encouraged to do, during the Gov public consultation period. She said even though sex is immutable, she'd use preferred pronouns to be polite. She didn’t misgender anyone at work, she's just against compelled speech
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She said that she'd use preferred pronouns as a courtesy, but not across the board, and reserved the right to misgender "without hesitation, censure, or shame."
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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I encourage you to read the judgement. The judge specifically said that she should be allowed to tweet and campaign against trans reforms.
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With the caveat being she not refer to trans women as male. The issue there is, when discussing female-only spaces, the reason why people like Forstater object to trans women in said spaces is because they are male. How would she tweet agasint these reforms if she can't say why?
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