It's just the most poisonous social issue on Twitter, by far: transexual hysteria on both extremes.
I haven't yet watched all of John Oliver's episode which is a full on attack on Right wing moral panicking of the "they're coming for our children" kind in the USA. From what little I saw, he made some good points, but also showed uncritical acceptance of a key "hot" pro-trans claim that seems very much up for debate: the question of whether puberty blocking hormones for teens are essentially harmless (and truly reversible). One of the biggest issues, which I have only just read about now, is how there is no doubt that the blockers during the teen years can cause serious loss of bone density, with permanent effects. I presume the pro-trans side argue that it is manageable if monitored, and is something fully disclosed as a risk to patients and their families; but you would have to suspect that informed consent from a young teenager who will typically (I gather) not just have a desire to change their bodies, but also suffer depression, is a very tricky issue to be confident about.
I strongly suspect there will be other lines that Oliver should have been more sceptical about: such as a dismissal of the likelihood of a degree of social contagion in recent years, especially with respect to the rise in girls deciding they are trans.
I followed a bit on the recent TERF wars in England, with Graham Norton getting a lot of praise from pro-trans people for saying people should listen to experts and families, not celebrities. But this was after saying that "cancel culture" is really just "accountability for what people say", and I felt this was a rather weak stuff: pretending that there isn't a serious issue from overly aggressively and censoring on line campaigns. Then JK Rowling made comments that set off (apparently) a Twitter pile on by her supporters against Norton, which led to him cancelling his account. Some sort of irony there.
Rowling complains about threats of violence and rape which trans supporting extremists have made against her. And I have to say, pro-trans people - like Greg Jericho in Australia - who refuse to acknowledge extremism on their own side of the fence are just part of the problem.
[UPDATE: I had missed though her exact response, to Norton and something Billy Bragg said, which was this -
which is, to be honest, over the top in its own way. Although, I can understand her frustration if no one on the pro-trans rights side never, ever, acknowledges that anyone on that side has made vile threats against her.]
Rowling's key issue at the moment is the belief that it is wrong to allow any male (whether intact, or on hormones, or not) to legally have access to women's "safe" spaces by being able to simply declare he's a woman. She is active, I take it, in the "TERF" movement to prevent that law change in Scotland. This is the situation:
Typically, at present, successful applicants must obtain a diagnosis of gender dysphoria and must swear an oath that they have been living in their new gender for two years and that they intend to do so for the rest of their life.
They must provide one medical report outlining their diagnosis and a second detailing any relevant treatment or surgery. Other information, such as utility bills to prove how they have been living, can also be requested by the panel.
The Scottish government is proposing to relax some of these requirements, making the process "less onerous".
Under the proposals applicants would no longer need a clinical diagnosis or medical reports, and the two-year period would be reduced to three months. This would be followed, if an application was accepted, by three months for reflection before the gender recognition certificate was issued.
Cases would be handled by the Registrar General for Scotland, removing the need to apply to the panel.
Applicants would still have to swear an oath confirming that they intended to live permanently in their acquired gender, and making a false statement would be a criminal offence.
I don't see how the TERF concerns about this are controversial. The current law seems to indicate that the change of gender normally would be for people who have been on hormone treatment for some considerable time. I doubt that many women who were confident that a man whose testosterone has been chemically removed, so to speak, and who dresses as a woman, would be particularly concerned about him (or her, whatever) being in their toilets. But to argue that all women in, say, a change room or (even worse) a rape refuge centre, have to accept that any fully intact, hormonally normal man in their space who simply has declared he is a woman would never represent a risk to their safety just doesn't make any common sense.
Anyway, it's easy to despair of a middle ground ever being recovered here - although, to be honest, it's hard to convince me that JK Rowling isn't the one who is much closer to being there already.
UPDATE: Oh! I see via a video posted only 4 days ago on Youtube, and which seems credible, explains that the big, big problem many now have with Rowling is that she has appeared with, and offered support to, some very Right wing, anti-gay and anti-abortion figures, some who are supported by the worst type of Trump-ish Right wing culture warriors, as long as they align with her on the trans issues. Apparently, there is a divide in the "TERF" world as to whether it is appropriate to ever do that, but it would seem Rowling is definitely falling on the side of "the enemy of my trans enemy is my friend", no matter how illiberal they are on other women's issues.
That really is a bad way to win an argument, at least if you claim to be a long time liberal.
I am with rowling
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