Zoe Cairns #transphobia grahamlinehan.substack.com

The recent Supreme Court ruling that a woman is a woman and a man is a man (as Dyke & the Blazers pointed out back in 1968) brought the usual mob of trans activists to the streets with their scrawled placards, fishnets, and moobs. Displaying the vitriol we’re used to seeing from them, many of those cardboard signs contained death threats, including the phrase “the only good TERF is a [dead] TERF” - but another sign guilelessly said the quiet part of trans activism out loud in chillingly straightforward terms:

“ALL BOUNDARIES ARE CONVENTIONS WAITING TO BE TRANSCENDED”

Written atop the baby blue and baby pink stripes of the trans flag, it was held up in Parliament Square at last weekend’s pouty shitfit. And there, in black, white, pink, and blue, is the end goal of trans ideology. A world without boundaries, where access to women and children is a right, and any dissent is framed as being part of a bigoted or even genocidal agenda.

The purple-haired prophets see the barrier between men’s and women’s toilets not as a hard-won protection, but as merely a ‘convention waiting to be transcended’.Never mind that DBS checks exist to keep children safe—that’s just another ‘convention’. Those who run shelters know that predators push limits—but in this new worldview, the problem isn’t the predator, it’s the limit. How dare any woman or child ask to be physically and legally protected from men, the group in society statistically most likely to cause them harm?

Perhaps it’s the trans mob’s panic at knowing they’ve lost the ‘right’ (which they never actually had in the first place) to enter women’s spaces that made the sign-writer suddenly confess to just never wanting to hear the word ‘no’. Other groups of people who despise the word ‘no’ include rapists, abusers, predators, pimps, johns, traffickers, and paedophiles.

4 comments

Confused?

So were we! You can find all of this, and more, on Fundies Say the Darndest Things!

To post a comment, you'll need to Sign in or Register. Making an account also allows you to claim credit for submitting quotes, and to vote on quotes and comments. You don't even need to give us your email address.