Blog

  • No to gender self-ID

    have always been reasonable and yet were dismissed as bigotry. We have always supported the rights of trans people to live their lives free from discrimination and harassment. We also understood that a conflict of rights would need to be addressed.

    Today the Government’s announcement is broadly in line with what we were calling for…

    James Kirkup has some thoughts:

    This decision is a significant reversal in government thinking. In 2017, when the May government announced a consultation on GRA reform, a system of self-ID was effectively the default option. Most politicians paid no attention to the detail, instead outsourcing their judgement on a complex and seemingly obscure issue to officials who were often very (too?) close to highly-effective professional advocacy groups such as Stonewall, which has led the push for self-ID.

    Today’s announcement is a product of remarkable grassroots political organisation. Even though a great many politicians privately came to see the flaws and risks of the self-ID proposal, very few of them engaged with this topic publicly. The real political opposition to self-ID came from 'ordinary' women who saw the proposal as a potential threat to their legal rights and standing. Some of them came to the issue via Mumsnet . Others attended townhall meetings of A Woman’s Place UK, a group set up by women with their roots in the trade union movement.

    This grassroots movement deserves a lot of attention and study. It shows how, even when politicians aren’t doing their job properly and listening to all sides, people with determination and organisation can make themselves heard. They can also go head-to-head with the professional advocacy groups. In the consultation on GRA reform, there were around 102,000 responses. 39 per cent of them came from an online form set up by Stonewall, a professional and well-funded charity. But 18 per cent came via Fair Play for Women, a feminist group opposed to self-ID which has almost no formal resources and largely rests on the tireless work of one woman, Dr Nicola Williams. This was a fight between big organisations and small groups of women. And the women won.

    As Kirkup goes on to say, the government is not making a big deal of this. It doesn't want to set off a round of public gender wars – for the moment. The Labour position is different, with some prominent Labour politicians being vocal advocates of self-ID. This could prove another tricky test for Keir Starmer, just as he's trying to regain the trust and support of Labour's traditional "red wall" voters.

  • The beginning of autumn

    Up at The Hill, Hampstead:

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  • In the grip of a collective national hysteria

    through the crisis swifter than most.

    Instead, Britain is in the grip of a collective national hysteria, unleashed and prolonged by a Government that flails around dementedly, petrified of negative headlines, afflicted by short-termism, imposing extreme and counter-productive measures utterly out of proportion to the problem we face, trashing ancient liberties along the way, and all with disregard for the appalling economic consequences.

    And parliament says nothing.

  • Greenwich and Docklands

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    But this time, instead of a left turn east to Woolwich, a right turn west through Greenland Dock and back over London Bridge.

  • A palpable atmosphere of tension

    rs, untested medical equipment, shoddy construction…with the wind of the Supreme Leader at their backs, there are no obstacles that cannot be overcome with the correct ideological fervour.

  • Chicago cars

    John Vachon, July 1941:

    image from www.shorpy.com
    "Gas station. Chicago, Illinois."

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    "Parking lot. Chicago, Illinois."
    [Photos: Shorpy/John Vachon for the Farm Security Administration]

  • The cure has been worse than the disease

    ing evidence the "cure has been worse than the disease" because of the wider societal costs.

  • Jerusalema

    girls as the most graceful. 

    But only the Angolan originals, I think, are eating at the same time….

    Update: no, my mistake. They're eating here.

    Update 2: and let's not leave out the brilliant Nairobi Women's Hospital, posted yesterday.

    A joyous life-affirming response to pandemic gloom.

  • People who hate women

    cated in earlier research, that the misogyny of the manosphere has permeated mainstream culture. In 2018, Amnesty identified Twitter as “a toxic place for its female users”. Now, regardless of earnest pledges to improve, the reach of its orchestrated abuse must be the envy of the most rabid subreddit.

    So long as misogyny stays off the list of hate crimes, and endemic male violence against women remains a negligible political concern, it evidently suits both certain campaigners and this social media platform to keep up their contributions to the spread of professional, private and street-located hate.

    No mention of the absurd gender trans ideology behind all this – perhaps wisely or the poor woman, like Suzanne Moore, will be subject to censure from her fellow journos – but at least it's an acknowledgement of the blindingly obvious motivation for Rowling hatred.

  • On Shoreditch walls

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