🐱 Activists are hounding women out of public life

CatParty

The New Year Honours list included an OBE for Kathleen Stock, a professor of philosophy at the University of Sussex. Recognised for her services to universities and the higher education sector, Stock’s achievement was something that should have been celebrated by fellow academics. Instead, hundreds of her peers wrote an open letter denouncing her and many activists began to harass her. Why? Because Stock believes that people cannot change their sex.

This might sound like just another row between academics that has no relevance to the outside world. But it is emblematic of a much wider – and more sinister – phenomenon: the hounding of women who dare speak out on trans rights. Across our public institutions women are being harassed and, in some instances, fired for not adhering to the new gender identity orthodoxy.


It is possible that you may have heard Stock’s name mentioned alongside other female professors like Selina Todd and Alice Sullivan for the simple reason that they have appeared in the press following spats about being ‘cancelled’ or ‘de-platformed’. Their opponents often cynically point to the media’s interest in these cases – even to articles such as this one – as evidence that feminist academics aren’t really being cancelled. After all, how can you cancel someone when they are being openly defended in a national newspaper? But this is a deliberate distortion tactic, used to downplay the seriousness of what is going on.

The treatment of these women is merely a high-profile symptom of a larger social affliction. Women like Stock, Todd and Sullivan have, in the past, been forced to have security guards accompany them when speaking in public – and they’re the lucky ones. For there are countless young, often working-class women and women of colour, that do not have a public profile, who have lost jobs, been bullied and labelled bigots and transphobes.

This debate has become so toxic that across the board people are afraid to speak out for fear of losing their jobs, whether they are nurses, midwives, teachers, public sector workers or civil servants. The situation has become so extreme, in fact, that even staff in the Gender Identity Development Service may have felt unable to speak out for fear of being disciplined, as David Bell told Channel 4 last week

Before the ideology of trans activists took hold in elite universities, many turned a blind eye because they tended not to care about grassroots feminists being targeted. Some initially went along with the notion that those accused were anti-trans but defended our right to speak. Others, particularly in Gender Studies departments, took a different approach, labelling feminist activists and campaigners ‘transphobic’. But look where this has got us – women are now afraid to speak for fear of being attacked, harassed, hounded, and fired.



We need to think about the world that this approach has led to. Isn’t now the time to speak out?

It is worth remembering that there are two issues at play here: the first is narrower, the question of what a ‘woman’ is. Then there is the broader issue: should you be allowed to question what a woman is at all? You don’t need to have a view on the former to recognise the dangers of clamping down on the latter. If you believe in liberal democracy, you believe in free speech.

The law does not afford an absolute right to free speech. There are, clearly, legitimate boundaries. It’s why, under international human rights law, Germany can ban the sale of Nazi propaganda and memorabilia, and why incitement of racial or religious hate is a crime in this country. But telling women that they cannot talk about their sex-based rights is not about protecting others from harm – it is about silencing women. Telling a group that has been subjugated throughout history that they cannot talk is an oppressive tactic.

What has happened in academia and to grassroots feminists over the past ten years might seem irrelevant to you but, make no mistake, it is now bleeding into wider society. University students who have been steeped in this ideology have graduated and gone on to take positions in journalism, hospitals, schools, publishing houses, the civil service, and many institutions that make up our liberal democracy.

As they rise up the ranks in their professions, they take with them the gender identity orthodoxy prevalent in higher education. Often this orthodoxy is not about an ideological position, but about silencing anyone who holds a different view. They are the people who cancel book contracts, who sack the ‘wrong’ kind of feminists, and write the policies that then perpetuates the culture of silencing.

It is not only the policies of institutions that need addressing. This culture – that tells us that questions cannot be asked, and that certain positions cannot be discussed without causing ‘harm’ – means that students only hear one side of the debate. That is surely the definition of indoctrination – and indoctrination must always be challenged.

You might not think it, but you too have a duty to ask questions – to challenge the increasingly unchallengeable – because it won’t be long before they eventually come for you.
 
99% of people think stories like this are disgusting and the actions of these activists is nothing short of moronic.

But they keep winning. Why?
The media wants that 1% of idiots to win every argument and signal boosts them religiously, and that 1% have become experts in making enough of a fuss that they can get authority figures to support them over regular people who don't want to cause too much of a problem or go through effort to actually fight them.
 
Before the ideology of trans activists took hold in elite universities, many turned a blind eye because they tended not to care about grassroots feminists being targeted. Some initially went along with the notion that those accused were anti-trans but defended our right to speak. Others, particularly in Gender Studies departments, took a different approach, labelling feminist activists and campaigners ‘transphobic’. But look where this has got us – women are now afraid to speak for fear of being attacked, harassed, hounded, and fired. We need to think about the world that this approach has led to. Isn’t now the time to speak out?
No. The time to speak out has long since passed. You saw this coming, so you should've been the first to speak out against this, but you didn't, and now you're paying the price. In other words:

dont-call-it-a-grave.gif
 
Not long ago we were dealing with the religious right and their insanity, now we're dealing with the tranny left? and their insanity. Somehow things get better for a while and then they get much, much worse. I'm not saying the '90-2010 was better in any significant way but we at least didn't have this shit. It's hard to imagine that people might be fighting a civil war soon, all because Zoe Quinn was a whore and some faggots wanted to go into women's bathrooms.
 
The law does not afford an absolute right to free speech. There are, clearly, legitimate boundaries. It’s why, under international human rights law, Germany can ban the sale of Nazi propaganda and memorabilia, and why incitement of racial or religious hate is a crime in this country. But telling women that they cannot talk about their sex-based rights is not about protecting others from harm – it is about silencing women. Telling a group that has been subjugated throughout history that they cannot talk is an oppressive tactic.
These women are committing incitement to gender identity-based hate. If Jews have the right not to see someone selling swastika flags on the street, why can't transpeople have the right not to hear cis women incite literal violence against them and invalidate them with their words?
 
99% of people think stories like this are disgusting and the actions of these activists is nothing short of moronic.

But they keep winning. Why?
At any point of party control, especially in political machines, you need thugs. Now, in some cases they may be quite literal. Tammany Hall had people go to Irish bars and beat drunks with irons to force them to the voting booth. Back then, the 'ideology' part was held by 'respectable' people.

In modern political machines, activists serve as the same thugs. There are still the violent, somewhat uncontrollably criminal thugs (ANTIFA) who typically get crushed when their usefulness ends. The second, more common type of thug is the modern 'activist'. They're not designed to change things for the party. They are there to instill fear and enforce loyalty. This works primarily on members of the party. You don't see these activist types gunning for hard targets, they gun for the soft ones in their own party to keep them loyal. In terms like these where they're forcing 'women' out instead of trans, troons are easily lead sheep, mentally ill men who care more about pronouns than the ravages of hormones they take. Questioning doesn't lead to anything good, so these thugs intimidate, harass and verbally assault these women until they back down or relent.

The institutions these thugs focus on are allied institutions (universities, academia, etc.) so the likelihood that they will be tolerated are high. Basically, the less you question and the more you accept ridiculous shit, means more things the party can impose on you. White women are frequently targeted more because its obvious that their spaces are slowly but surely being destroyed by mentally ill men. Troons work because think about it: how many troons are pedophiles and sex predators? How mentally stable are they? They're far easier to control than a free thinking woman. Not only that, troons possess literal armor against criticism. Therefore, the party can enact policies it wants without fear of it being criticized, especially by insurgents in its own ranks because troons propose it. In a troon, you have the ultimate end of debate. They are so marginalized and 'oppressed' nothing they do is wrong. Perfect for a thug or an operative to push an agenda.

It used to be women that held that rank, but now its become too easy to criticize them and they tend to go to the other side a lot more recently, which looks like splitting the ranks, so they have to go. This is what machine politics looks like. Until people stop viewing them as activist and correctly viewing them as what they are, thugs trying to use intimidation and coercion to enforce a doctrine, this will keep happening.
 
It is not only the policies of institutions that need addressing. This culture – that tells us that questions cannot be asked, and that certain positions cannot be discussed without causing ‘harm’ – means that students only hear one side of the debate. That is surely the definition of indoctrination – and indoctrination must always be challenged.
Someone, send help. I think I'm dying of acute irony overdose.
 
These women are committing incitement to gender identity-based hate. If Jews have the right not to see someone selling swastika flags on the street, why can't transpeople have the right not to hear cis women incite literal violence against them and invalidate them with their words?
I'm guessing this is a joke post because it's transactivists who are inciting violence. Not women. Trans "women" are not women. They are men and they have absolutely no right to verbally abuse and threaten women with violence if we don't agree with their appropriation and redefinition of womanhood, motherhood, lesbianism and the fetishing of female children.
 
Women need to start resisting this bullshit en masse. They can cancel a few, but they can't cancel ALL of us.

I imagine, because everything in this goddamn clown world is centered around famous people and a handful of mainstream media franchises, that as more famous women pull Rowlings that that'll be what kills the trans beast in feminism.
 
99% of people think stories like this are disgusting and the actions of these activists is nothing short of moronic.

But they keep winning. Why?
You ever encounter one of those families that's completely under the control of a single dysfunctional person?

You know the ones where grandma's an absolutely insufferable cunt and her presence makes everybody dread holidays, but everyone continues to grit their teeth and walk on eggshells around her because if they don't, she'll have a huge dramatic meltdown about how everyone hates her and maybe she should just go die. Sometimes, some well-meaning young family member or in-law will innocently ask why they can't just not invite her to the next family event, but they're inevitably met with some excuse like "oh, it's only one day" or "she's family" or "she's just an old woman, she won't be around for much longer". Grandma has basically guilt-tripped and manipulated everyone in the whole family for so long that even though nobody actually likes her, they still don't want to be the one who's responsible for setting off the nuke by telling her "no". So grandma continues to lord over the family for the rest of her days.

It's like that.
 
Why do people think transphobes are freaks again?
If you have an anorexic friend, would you sit there and tell your friend that their skeleton body, "calorie" counting, and participating in pro-ana communities is healthy, normal, and perfectly okay to do? If you had a friend suffering this way, and they ended up dying from it, would you sit there and defend their death? "Well, they chose to do this! They were happy!"
Honey, even if their brain was telling them they were doing a "good" thing by starving themselves, it doesn't change the fact that they were inflicted with a serious mental illness.

The same logic can easily be applied towards trans people and their community. You cannot seriously sit there and think there's nothing wrong going on inside the brain of a tranny, when a biological man in makeup and a skirt sits in front of you and demands that you "respect" their pronouns and "identity". I don't care if they were even "born" that way, even if they have no pedophilic/predator tendencies in them, I still cannot find any good reason to allow a biological man into female spaces. Why do I have to give up my comfort, and the comfort of millions of other women and young girls so that some selfish asshole can feel "good" in their fucked up headspace?

Like what someone else said, have fun sucking tranny cock you traitorous wench.
 
It is worth remembering that there are two issues at play here: the first is narrower, the question of what a ‘woman’ is. Then there is the broader issue: should you be allowed to question what a woman is at all? You don’t need to have a view on the former to recognise the dangers of clamping down on the latter. If you believe in liberal democracy, you believe in free speech.
Something I noticed, why are these questions never asked about men? I’ve seen fewer trans men pull this kind of shit than trans women.
 
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