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Students

The university has let women down and let down the nature of university as a place for free speech and discussion

I care because I can understand and empathise with young girls who want an option out of misogyny. I was given the freedom by my parents to grow up relatively gender neutral – having short hair, playing football, wearing my brothers hand-me-downs. I was bullied then for looking like a boy – if then was now i would be scared this would have led to me questioning whether I was actually a boy.

As a woman I know what it feels like to be over-sexualised and objectified by men constantly. I know that there is no way of identifying out of this. I also know the physiological toll this has, in seeing myself through patriarchal eyes, victim blaming myself, and seeing my own body as too sexual. I care because as a life-long feminist, it enrages me and upsets me so deeply to see the feminist movement highjacked by men who are centring themselves in our movement in a way which inevitably breaks down sex class solidarity among women.

It angers me that men have the entitlement to define women and define themselves as women without any understanding of what it means to be a woman. I care so much about this because I recognise what generations of women have fought for before me, and I can see how these achievements are being retrenched every time men are allowed access into female spaces.

I think back to high school and the shame I felt surrounding my period, how even in the girls toilets I would try to open my pad so quietly so no one knew. Imagining what this would be like now, knowing that girls are increasingly forced to accept male bodies in these spaces, makes me beyond sad.

While millions of women and girls around the world experience brutal oppression directly linked to their sex and reproductive capacity, it astounds me how these experiences of male violence are being erased.

This matters to me because mainstream feminism in the UK has failed these women and is no longer serving the goal of female liberation. 

I have actively campaigned alongside other women in Scotland to bin the Gender Recognition Reform Bill and raised my voice by filling in the consultation for the bill. I have attended For Women Scot meetings and the launch of LGB Alliance. I have defended my position, sought to explain it to anyone who will listen, and talked non-stop about this issue since I became aware of it. I have spoken out online but find real life discussions more productive. I am part of XX (Nicole Jones’ young feminist network) and am hoping this will create space for young radical feminist women to feel able to talk publicly about these issues.

Although the majority of my friends have been openminded and interested in this discussion (often themselves feeling like they have been unable to question the logic of transgenderism) and I have gained more friends than I have lost, I have still lost multiple friends and acquaintances. I have faced intolerance from my university in their inability to accommodate the position that a woman is an adult human female, not someone who identifies as one.

Being told by staff at my university (the University of Glasgow) that a gender critical view is transphobic and not to be tolerated, has left me feeling like the university has let women down and also let down the nature of university as a place for free speech and discussion. I am concerned that in the future I will be unable to openly hold these opinions in the workplace.

Kirsty

Categories
Students

It makes me angry that people think woman is an identity

I care about this issue because it makes me angry that people think woman is an identity. It makes me angry because I don’t feel like a woman, no one can feel like a woman. It makes me angry because women have been oppressed for so long based on their sex, to say you can now identify in and out of that oppression is either weak or misogynistic. It erases the struggle and fighting women have had to put up with simply down to their sex. 

I have set up an Instagram account where I’ve posted a lot of gender critical posts, some my own and others are re-posts. I have also had discussions with many people about it online and in real life.

I have had people threaten me, tell me to kill myself, threatened to stamp on my face, tell me I’m a bigoted wh*re, been made fun of. But the worst part was having some of my family and friends tell me that maybe I deserved it and “what can you expect when you post and say things like that”.

Ellen M

Categories
Students

I find transgenderism borderline cultural appropriation

I find transgenderism borderline cultural appropriation. Men with no idea about any issues women face pretending to be a parody of women. The invasion of women’s sports diminishes any illusion of fairness. The invasion of women’s privacy is an attempt to role back decades of fighting for male-free safe spaces (no concern for female trauma victims or women who just want privacy). The policing of language is dehumanising. All of the above I find offensive and distasteful and a regression of women’s rights.

I’m now a gender crit in Twitter and a member of r/gendercritical. Planning a slogan campaign for next year at uni.

All my accounts are anon.

TS, U.K. uni student observing the changes in women’s rights with concern

Categories
Students

As a woman and lesbian sex is important

As a woman and lesbian sex is important.

I have engaged in online activities primarily. I have also distributed information in person (leaflets, stickers and chats)

I have been shunned and ignored. I have been silenced by simply knowing there will be negative consequences. This is due to wholescale institutional capture in my field.

Jane, A worried scientist

Categories
Healthcare Students

The idea of a toddler being declared ‘trans’ in the wrong body is dangerous and wrong

I care because Gender ideology has been surreptitiously adopted into public policy without scrutiny. It is based on fantasy and poses a clear threat to women’s rights, their safety and the safeguarding of children.

I have no issue with people wishing to adopt gender non conforming identities but not at the expense of reality, of women and children. The idea of a toddler being declared ‘trans’ in the wrong body is dangerous and wrong. 

Many of the people taking advantage of this trend are nothing like the transsexual people the GRA was designed for. They include fetishists, misogynists and predators  both sexual and political with an eye to the main chance.

I have joined a pressure group, explained to Labour why they have lost my vote and attended meetings. I have contributed and shared legal fee crowd funders  

I have had my twitter account closed down for referring to a person with a male name and an ambiguous face as ‘he’.

Ally, Politically homeless student