Sunday, August 11, 2019


When Free Speech Clashes With Trans Power

While Vancouver, British Columbia, has been on the front lines of the trans and free speech debates, the recent Pride Parade was a real flashpoint, giving us a clear insight into what we might expect on the U.S. cultural front in the not-so-distant future.

Tennis legend Martina Navratilova was ejected from her position on an LGBTQ advocacy group because she questioned whether or not male-bodied persons should compete in women’s athletics. Maya Forstater, a senior researcher at the think tank Centre for Global Development, lost her job for saying men aren’t women. The leader of Girl Guides, the U.K.’s answer to the Girl Scouts, was “expelled for objecting to boys who identify as female joining.” Activist Julie Bindel was attacked for giving a gender critical talk. The experience of detransitioners have been largely ignored.

Journalist and women’s rights activist Meghan Murphy is one of these women. She has been banned on Twitter for misgendering Jessica Yaniv, the notorious trans woman who is litigating before British Columbia’s Human Rights Tribunal demanding that aestheticians who specialize in waxing women wax her private parts as well. Murphy has been protested, mobbed, and deplatformed. She has no qualms about speaking her mind, and while her views on pornography, sex work, and women’s issues used to be de rigeur in the feminist movement, they are now vilified.

Murphy booked a community room at the Vancouver Public Library to give a talk to interested persons. VPL, being a public space, allowed the booking. The library is a natural advocate for free speech. Pride  balked [banned the library from its parade because of whom it hosted].

Libraries exist for use by the community, having long since gone beyond books to become collective spaces for all people. That includes those who don’t toe a progressive political ideology. In being banned from Pride, the Library’s right to provide access to their public space came into conflict with their desire to express inclusion. Apparently, according to Pride, the only way to be inclusive is to exclude people Pride doesn’t agree with.

This penchant for exclusion under the guise of inclusion is a huge problem for a Left that was already beginning to buckle under a mentality that often advocates for group rights over the rights of an individual.  The Left used to believe, fundamentally, that nothing was more essential than First Amendment protections.

Even for those who agree with Pride’s stance on trans, this should be a splash of red across the rainbow flag. Under no circumstances is it right to shut down speech.

SOURCE 

3 comments:

Bill R. said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Anonymous said...

Watch as Women's Sports becomes a relic of the past when all it takes is a guy in a dress to be eligible to compete. Men are stronger than women 99 times out of 100 and to ignore that logical fact is to kill women's sports. We need to stop giving these people a platform.

Anonymous said...

The backlash is building and when it finally explodes the LGBTetc community is going to be forced back into the closet! And they can blame only themselves for continuing to push more and more of their agenda.