Politesse
Lux Aeterna
- Joined
- Feb 27, 2018
- Messages
- 13,797
- Location
- Chochenyo Territory, US
- Gender
- nonbinary
- Basic Beliefs
- Jedi Wayseeker
Come to think of it, my great grandmother would have been pretty goddamned upset if she had walked into a gym locker room and found white and black women changing together. Do I understand where she's coming from? Yes, absolutely. That's how she was raised. Her fear and discomfort caused her real and genuine distress. But do I think that black women should be forced to use separate facilities? No. No, I do not, and never will.Real question: If your mother or your partner's mother or your ex or any woman you cared about called you up, upset because while she was showering at the gym, there was a naked stranger with a penis next to her in the shower, would you not understand why they might be upset by that?Interestingly, women are actually much more accepting of trans rights than men, despite the men vs women narrative being pushed in this thread. In both cases, most men and most women oppose the use of bathrooms and locker rooms by trans people, that's not in dispute. Ours is a transphobic country to the core. But women are slightly less likely, not more likely, to hold prejudicial attitudes about trans people in publuc spaces.
I don't see segregation as actually solving the problem, because the bodies of the people you fear aren't the real problem. In Florida, it is illegal for trans children to use single gender bathrooms or changing areas. Has anti-trans hysteria died down in Florida, now that the "problem has been solved"? No, it has actually gotten worse, and violent incidents are on the rise. Because the kids themselves were never the true source of that prejudice. They can introduce as many laws as they like, but the fear of the "threat from within" will always remain.