TailWindHome
Active Member
Insisting that Peggie won *and* the judge was completely wrong is quite funny though.
Insisting that Peggie won *and* the judge was completely wrong is quite funny though.

Phillipson's claim that the law would mean that mothers couldn't take young sons into the Ladies loo with them was laughable.
You might like to take careful note of Lord Hodge about the same talking points in his recent interview.
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You've been one of the people attempting to lead others on here to believe men like you had rights to access women's single sex spaces when they didn't.
It's for service providers to work out how to provide single sex spaces when such spaces are appropriate, not the supreme court. They can accommodate people who are uncomfortable using the facilities of their birth sex with further facilities/services if they wish but again it's not for the supreme court to get involved in the logistics of every example of this.
Is there not an important distinction between a person 'not having the right to' something and an obligation being created that the person be denied the 'something'
You can only provide important things like fairness, safety, dignity, privacy etc for some groups by denying access to the 'something' that provides that fairness, safety, dignity, privacy etc by others. It's not unreasonable to exclude adults from children's sports events, able bodied people from disabled clubs, or men from women's changing rooms. All require creating an obligation to exclude others from those 'somethings'.
Where fairness, safety, dignity, privacy etc don't matter, there's no need to exclude anyone.