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Leslie Roberts: LGBTQ rights used to be about equality. Now it's about ideological coercion
Leslie Roberts: LGBTQ rights used to be about equality. Now it's about ideological coercion

National Post

time10 hours ago

  • Politics
  • National Post

Leslie Roberts: LGBTQ rights used to be about equality. Now it's about ideological coercion

Every June, rainbow flags fill our streets, storefronts and social media feeds as the world marks Pride Month. As a gay man who remembers a very different time, I feel a genuine sense of pride and gratitude for how far we've come. But I also find myself increasingly uneasy, not about being gay, but about what the LGBTQ movement has become. Article content You won't find me dancing shirtless on a float or wrapped in a feather boa. I'm more likely to be found in the suburbs, where many of us now live, raising children, caring for aging parents and commuting to work. That, too, is what being gay looks like today. And it's a vision of normalcy we fought hard to achieve. Equality, after all, meant being treated like everyone else. Article content Article content Article content But somewhere along the way, the movement changed. What was once a focused, hard-won campaign for equal rights and recognition has been absorbed into a broader cultural project — one that many of us no longer recognize, and increasingly struggle to defend. Article content Article content This is especially true when it comes to the current direction of trans activism, which has not only dominated LGBTQ discourse in recent years, but has also sparked sharp political and cultural backlash. Let's be honest: many in the gay, lesbian and bisexual communities are quietly asking how and why the T became the centrepiece of our shared movement. Article content The transgender cause, particularly as it relates to children and adolescents, raises medical, ethical and social questions that are far more complex than the fight for same-sex marriage or workplace protections ever was. Puberty blockers, irreversible surgeries, pronoun mandates and policies around sports and shared spaces — these are issues that affect not just trans individuals but families, schools and society at large. Article content Article content And yet, to even raise a question about any of this is to risk being branded a bigot. That's not progress. That's ideological coercion. Article content Article content For years, the LGBTQ community stood united because we had to. We faced the same threats: violence, discrimination, marginalization. But that solidarity was based on common ground: sexual orientation. Now, gender identity, a fundamentally different concept, is redefining the movement's priorities, its language and its public image. Article content Let's not forget: many moderates in the gay community stepped back from activism once the major battles were won. When same-sex couples could marry and adopt, when we could live and work without fear of legal consequences, many of us moved on. We integrated into the mainstream. We cut our lawns, raised kids, joined school committees. And in doing so, we believed, perhaps naively, that the struggle was over.

JK Rowling is right: The Guardian should be embarrassed by this pro-trans propaganda
JK Rowling is right: The Guardian should be embarrassed by this pro-trans propaganda

Telegraph

time14 hours ago

  • Health
  • Telegraph

JK Rowling is right: The Guardian should be embarrassed by this pro-trans propaganda

The Guardian has long been celebrated for its typos. The other day, however, it ran a headline which appeared to have an entire word missing. It read: 'One in three across UK are overdue for cervical cancer screening.' One in three what? Mothers? Midwives? Marchionesses? Members of Bananarama? I scanned the article's intro to locate the mislaid noun. Unfortunately, though, I ended up even more confused. Because the answer turned out to be 'people'. 'A third of people across the UK,' reported someone with the unusual job title of health and inequalities correspondent, 'are overdue their cervical cancer screening, while in parts of England some are at greater risk of the disease than others due to a low uptake for the preventive vaccine.' Naturally, I was alarmed. Because 'a third of people across the UK' includes me. In all my 44 years on this Earth, I've never had a single screening for cervical cancer. Am I in danger? Should I ring my GP and demand a detailed inspection of my cervix as soon as possible? Then again, there is another way to interpret this story. Which is that the poor old Guardian is so desperate not to offend trans activists, it's got itself tied up in knots. Any sane newspaper, after all, would simply have used the word 'women'. But The Guardian daren't do that. Because then it would be besieged by horrified ideologues, irately reminding it that trans women are women but don't need cervical cancer screenings – while trans men are men but do need cervical cancer screenings. To use the word 'women', therefore, is hateful and trans-exclusionary. Sadly, there's just one drawback to The Guardian 's wonderfully inclusive approach. Which is that other readers will be baffled. They'll think: 'Does it mean a third of women? Or a sixth?' As JK Rowling put it on social media: 'This is what happens when you erase the word 'woman' from your reporting: you disseminate inaccuracies and falsehoods. If you prioritise an ideology over giving clear and accurate information, you aren't journalists, you're propagandists.' To be fair to The Guardian, however, it doesn't always get it wrong. Less than a month ago, it ran the headline: 'New AI Test can predict which men will benefit from prostate cancer drug.' So they are clear about the difference between men and women sometimes. When the cancer only affects men, anyway. Still, it would be nice if they and other progressive outlets could be consistent. In an important medical context, such nonsense is enough to give you a thumping headache.

Trans women say influencer Lilly Tino's 'rage-baiting' posts are putting them at risk
Trans women say influencer Lilly Tino's 'rage-baiting' posts are putting them at risk

Daily Mail​

time5 days ago

  • Entertainment
  • Daily Mail​

Trans women say influencer Lilly Tino's 'rage-baiting' posts are putting them at risk

Trans activist Lilly Contino has been condemned by trans women for putting the already marginalized community at risk of even greater 'harm and malice' by reinforcing negative stereotypes in 'ragebait' clips on TikTok. The most recent controversy stemmed from a viral post that included mirror selfies of the 31-year-old as she 'rated' the women's bathrooms at Disney World in Florida - and has spiraled into a call for Lilly to be 'banned' from TikTok and the amusement park. A petition started by a 'concerned parent' has received over 500,000 signatures at the time of writing, as its creator urged the platform to 'carefully evaluate Lilly Tino's presence' on it. Georgia native Lilly - who was born male - rose to fame in 2022 when she came out on professional networking platform LinkedIn, adding: 'Hey, my name is Lilly and I use she/her'. Since then, she has used her social media platforms - with over half a million followers in total - to document her trans journey, but critics within her own community say the influencer is doing more harm than good. Earlier this month, Lilly found herself at the center of a social media storm after she shared a series of selfies taken inside women's bathrooms at Disney World - forcing trans women to publicly declare 'we do not condone' her behavior. The photographs were uploaded to TikTok and showed the reflection of Lilly - wearing different crop tops and Disney Ears headbands - in different mirrors inside the toilets. In a few snaps, other guests at the amusement park are also visible in the background - with several people calling Lilly out for violating the women's privacy. The TikTok has received over 15 million views and 70,000 comments - most of which are critical - at the time of writing as trans women say it's only the latest example of Lilly's brand of content that prioritizes user engagement over the community's safety. Her detractors argue that Lilly's TikTok presents a warped portrayal of trans women with the sole purpose of gaining views and social media clout - without considering how they might adversely impact their well-being in what is already a hostile environment. Secretly recording waitstaff that 'misgender' at American restaurants, 'sneaking' into women's bathrooms, and using corndogs and cake pops to explain sex modification - while surrounded by children at amusement parks - play into transphobic cliches, it is felt. 'I promise you that trans women do not walk around begging to be misgendered or enter women's spaces with the intent of causing a public disturbance - let alone document it and put it online,' Jade Dugger clarified in a strong reaction video to Lilly's Disney clip. 'Because going into several different women's restrooms and rating them online, taking photos in those restrooms, and posting those photos knowing that there are other women in the background is very predatory behavior that we do not condone.' In response to Lilly's admission she 'peed standing up' at the bathroom at Disney World, influencer Amelia Majesty said 'these videos are rapidly decreasing trans acceptance'. She also blasted the American content creator for suggesting trans women don't need to 'disclose' they've had 'their downstairs done' before getting intimate with a partner, adding: 'What is there to disclose? There's no deception.' Shaking her head in disagreement, Amelia replied: 'Trans women need to disclose they're trans before that happens, this is unacceptable and wrong - and it puts the entire community in danger.' She said Lilly's 'advice' - which was widely discredited in the comments - fuels the 'negative stereotype' that trans women are 'trying to trap men, and that's absolutely not true'. According to another creator Dominque Morgan, is that Lilly is the 'product of TikTok' - and uses sensationalism to drive engagement by cosplaying as children's cartoon characters or exaggeratedly describing how being 'misgendered' created an 'unsafe' or 'threatening' environment. Trans influencer Seana Momsen dismissed Lilly by saying 'I don't think' of her, adding: 'I think she just rage-baits for the views, for the money and she's quite dramatic with her pieces.' Reacting to videos of Lilly expressing profound hurt at being misgendered - including leaving restaurants despite receiving an apology - Seana added that 'we're not at the place where everyone is going to default' to gender-neutral pronouns. Lilly has since addressed the backlash in a separate video - that has been viewed over eight million times - as she doubled-down on her decision to post the bathroom ratings in a statement that, many felt, missed the point. Lilly said bathroom selfies were a common fixture of celebrity's social media profiles as she added: 'And it's not just celebrities. Any woman you ever meet has likely taken a photo in a public bathroom. 'So, what is different about me that I'm not allowed to take bathroom selfies?' She argued that people judge trans women differently 'depending on how well they pass' or whether they 'look trans'. 'I know that I don't pass, trust me I know,' she continued. 'But passing privilege is a real thing. 'There are some trans women out there who will never be able to pass. Do they deserve to be treated differently? No! They should be able to take bathroom selfies too.' She dismissed the privacy concerns in relation to the women that appeared in the background of the now-contentious clips - after some social media users cited the Florida statute 810.145 that prohibits 'digital voyeurism' in places where people have a reasonable expectation of privacy like bathrooms. Lilly asserted that 'law only applied to buildings owned or leased' by the state, before adding: 'And even if it wasn't allowed, who cares! Let us tinkle in peace.' Reacting to the statement, TikTok users pointed out celebrity bathroom selfies don't typically 'have people in the background' as they said 'not everything is transphobia'. Lilly's visit to the Happiest Place on Earth has taken on a distinctively unhappy twist in view of the backlash - but the bathroom selfies aren't the only thing people have complained about. She was called out by internet users after she refused to eat her meal at Tiffins Restaurant at Disney's Animal Kingdom Park after the waiter accidentally misgendered her. She was eating Tiffins Restaurant at Disney's Animal Kingdom Park and the waiter was explaining the first course when he used the male pronoun. Despite the employee instantly apologizing, Lilly explained in her video about the incident that she 'no longer felt safe' at the restaurant. She ultimately decided she didn't want to eat there anymore because she knew she wouldn't 'enjoy' the food with her 'guard up.' The content creator ended up not having to pay for the food or her drink, but the interaction left some viewers disgruntled. In the now-viral video, Lilly was seen sitting at the table as the waiter brought out her first course, the $18 Tiffins Signature Bread Service. But as the waiter was explaining where all the different breads came from, he called Lilly, who was wearing a blue, cropped tank top, white jean shorts, and pink Minnie ears with a bow, 'sir.' 'It's coconut bread from Thailand?' Lilly asked, to which the waiter replied, 'Yes sir.' 'It's ma'am,' Lilly quickly corrected him. 'Ma'am, I'm sorry. My bad sir,' the flustered waiter said. Afterwards, Lilly reflected on the moment to the camera, explaining: 'That totally sucked the joy out of this bread tower.' Controversial: Lilly's interaction with the waiter has since gone viral, gaining million of views on both of her platforms 'It makes me want to immediately leave because I no longer feel safe here. Now my guard has to be up. 'I'm not gonna enjoy this bread as much because my guard is up. We should be able to go places and not have to worry.' The video then cut to Lilly flagging down a waiter, and telling them: 'I don't think I want this bread tower, actually, I'd rather have the check if that's okay. 'I think their training says they're supposed to say "friend" and not used gendered language, it's a pretty big thing that Disney has done,' Lilly told the camera in another clip. 'Nothing was wrong with the bread, I just don't want it anymore. Just because they apologized doesn't mean [I] don't feel sad or offended. 'Have you accidentally ever hurt someone and said, "I'm so sorry, it's an accident?" Do you expect them to be like, "Oh, it was an accident, of course, no problem whatsoever. All of that hurt is now undone." That's not how it works.' It appeared that Lilly didn't have to pay for the uneaten bread or her soda. In one final clip, a staff member at the restaurant was heard apologizing to Lilly once again, before he told her that her drink was 'also on him,' seemingly confirming the bread was free too. 'They meant well but it still hurts,' Lilly captioned the clip. In March 2022, it was announced that Disney World staff members, as well recordings throughout the parks, would no longer include 'gendered greetings' like 'boys and girls' or 'ladies and gentleman.' In December 2022, the same year that Lilly came out, she said that bullies and drug addiction stopped her from realizing her gender for 27 years. It was only when she got clean did she understand her gender identity - after relocating to San Francisco from Atlanta and went to Target to buy a dress and 'put on a wig'. She added: 'It was a bittersweet moment because I thought there's something here, it's the answer to my emptiness and loneliness, I've been living a lie. 'I kept it a secret and I would try on clothes and makeup - it was a cocoon and I was figuring it out on my own.' By December 2020 Lilly was sure of her true identity and knew her name instantly. She said: 'Like many trans people, I'd been playing videogames for years and I would always pick girls and call them Lilly.' She gained a mentor, a trans woman in 2020 called Eve who helped her to discover herself and answer any questions she had. In October 2021, she told her best friends Deborah and Jake on a trip to Atlanta - before coming out to her parents and brother. Lilly started wearing dresses and make-up and was prescribed the hormones spironolactone in May 2021, a male hormone suppressant, progesterone and later oestrogen. She added: 'Taking progesterone helps the boobs and my emotions run hotter. I cry a lot better now.' Lilly worries for trans women who don't have insurance to pay for hormones, and says many are resorting to buying hormones off the black market. She added: 'There is a global shortage of oestrogen and progesterone right now.' Lilly has since undergone FFS - with the influencer revealing her new face on TikTok. In 2023, Lilly revealed she was verbally assaulted at a restaurant in San Francisco while she was dining with her dog at the Cheesecake Factory. In the clip, the woman can be heard describing herself as a TERF - or a trans-exclusionary radical feminist - before threatening Lilly with physical violence.

Labour STILL cannot decide what a woman is: Weeks after trans ruling, party axes women's conference to avoid protests
Labour STILL cannot decide what a woman is: Weeks after trans ruling, party axes women's conference to avoid protests

Daily Mail​

time21-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Daily Mail​

Labour STILL cannot decide what a woman is: Weeks after trans ruling, party axes women's conference to avoid protests

Labour last night scrapped its annual women's conference rather than face legal challenges and protests if it continued to admit transgender women. The party's governing body was attacked by both women's rights campaigners and transgender activists over the decision as it wrestled with the consequences of the landmark Supreme Court ruling on single-sex services. Meanwhile, in a parliamentary debate on Monday, four Labour MPs called for transgender people to be allowed to 'self-identify' as the opposite sex, revealing the depth of opposition within the party to the judgment, despite ministers saying they will abide by it. A Labour Party spokesman said: 'Labour must ensure all party procedures comply with the Supreme Court's clear ruling. Labour is clear that everyone in our society deserves to be treated with dignity and respect.' At a meeting of Labour's National Executive Committee yesterday, members voted to rewrite policies aimed at boosting women's involvement in politics on the basis of the court ruling, so that they apply only to those born female and no longer include men who identify as women. Background papers warned: 'To do otherwise would expose the party to significant risk of direct and indirect discrimination claims succeeding.' But the NEC also agreed to indefinitely postpone this year's National Women's Conference, a day-long event with speeches from leading MPs, due to be held in September, rather than let it go ahead with a ban on trans women. Background papers said there was a 'significant risk of legal challenge to the event as it currently operates' and warned: 'There may be protests and heightened security risks to staff and attendees should the event go ahead.' Labour Women's Declaration said: 'We're pleased that the party has at long last decided to follow the advice we have been giving them since 2019 and to comply with the 2010 Equality Act. 'And it's right that all the party's positive action measures to support women's representation and participation will now be for women only. 'But, having finally confirmed the correct basis for participation in women's structures in the party, the cancellation of this women's conference is ridiculous and unnecessary.'

Trans activist arrested for threatening to KILL pro-Trump crusader Nancy Mace and her kids
Trans activist arrested for threatening to KILL pro-Trump crusader Nancy Mace and her kids

Daily Mail​

time16-05-2025

  • Politics
  • Daily Mail​

Trans activist arrested for threatening to KILL pro-Trump crusader Nancy Mace and her kids

A teenage trans activist has been accused of threatening to assassinate Nancy Mace, the most outspoken lawmaker in Congress on transgender issues. Samuel Theodore Cain, 19, of Greenville, South Carolina, was arrested and charged with threatening the life of a public official on Thursday, the State Law Enforcement Division (SLED) announced. Cain, who goes by 'Roxie Wolfe' online, posted in April: 'I'm going to assassinate (redacted) with a gun and I'm being 100% dead a**,' according to a copy of the arrest warrant. The redacted part said: 'Representative Nancy Mace,' images of the original X post show. Mace, 47, a high-profile Republican congresswoman from South Carolina, said she would attend the first court hearing in person. She wrote on X on Friday morning: 'Heading to Greenville, SC for the bond hearing of the man in a dress who threatened to kill me. Real women stand together. Real men stand up to protect women.' The bond hearing was scheduled for 9:30am local time Friday. Cain faces a potential maximum of five years in prison and a $5,000 fine. Mace has tackled transgender issues head-on more than anybody else in Congress. She has fought transgender participation in school sports and passed a ban on trans women's bathroom use of female facilities at the Capitol. As Mace has cracked down on pro-trans policies, there have been angry and even violent reactions at times. 'The radical tr*ns movement is no longer just about pronouns,' Mace wrote in one of her many social media posts about the death threat and subsequent arrest. 'It's about silencing anyone who dares to speak the truth. With threats. With violence. With hate.' Mace told Fox News that Cain even threatened to kill her children. When contacted by the FBI regarding the death threats, Cain allegedly confessed to authoring the post, but added that he 'didn't mean it.' In another post with a mugshot of Cain, Mace wrote: 'Samuel Theodore Cain is first trans activist in country to be arrested for death threats against us, thanks to Capitol Police and SLED.' 'Roxie was 'dead*ss' arrested. We'll let the photo stand for itself because this individual is obviously unwell in more ways than one. Hopefully they have makeup wipes in prison.' Mace has shared that her crusade is mostly about defending women's rights. A survivor of sexual assault, she openly talks about her belief in protecting spaces for females. South Carolina Congresswoman Nancy Mace has shared an extraordinary clip of a heated exchange with a trans activist over her use of the term 'tr**ny.' The activist picked up a pot plant and appeared to be contemplating throwing it after Mace disagreed with her 'Real men don't threaten or hurt women,' she posted about Cain. 'Although, you obviously wouldn't know that. You also apparently didn't know actions have consequences.' Photos taken of Cain's X account, which has since been deleted, show that he supported Democrats and liberal causes. One image shows Cain holding up two 'I voted' stickers in November claiming, 'did my civic duty today and voted for Kamala twice.' Posts he made after writing the death threat show he was afraid of the online backlash he received for his post, and he expressed dismay he could be doxxed. It is not the first time Mace has had a violent encounter with the trans community. In December, Mace claims she was 'physically accosted' by a trans activist. The individual was later arrested by Capitol Police and the Republican wore a sling over her arm and shoulder for days after. Mace has also taken on Rep. Sarah McBride, D-Del., the first trans member of Congress. She called the Democrat a 'man' repeatedly and admitted her bathroom ban was specifically to target McBride. Keen on enforcing her bathroom ban, Mace and fellow Republican Lauren Boebert even chased a person into a women's restroom thinking they were trans, though it turned out she wasn't. Mace has also had several other high-profile run-ins with trans activists, including a recent incident where one individual appeared to almost throw a plant at Mace. The spat came at a constituent event where Mace used the word 'tr***y,' causing a crowd member to confront the Republican over the 'derogatory' phrase.

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