You've spent years on here calling me and others c#nts and d#ckheads so spare us the pretence of patronising politeness. It only lasts until you have another public meltdown then we're all called c#nts again. I'm not engaging with your fake lawyer persona, Monica.
Maybe you should stand for parliament, not lose your deposit, and change the law.
This is a false claim and one that you produce whenever you need to apply a brake to a test of your arguments.
You also wheel out the claim that I am patronising or pompous as soon as you become aware that you are floundering.
You either have the legal knowledge to back up your claim or you do not. Now that you refuse to play the ball, it has become clear that you can not produce the required answer.
It now falls to me to be less gentle and demonstrate to the forum, that you have little understanding of the law in statute, function, or operation.
To be clear I can not fully agree with the words of Lord Hodge when he says the parliament did not intend that trans people with a GRC to be covered under the protected ground of sex - there exists contemporaneous evidence from the development of law since 1999 that it was the case. In my opinion Lord Hodge should have been a little more careful to say that they did not find from statutory reading of the Equality Act alone, that parliament had fully intended that the definition of sex leaned on an an inclusive interpretation of 'sex'.
The Supreme Court are fully entitled to take that view to reach their judgment, though some of us will say that it wasn't the most effective means at their disposal. Therefore the legal ground is that the Supreme Court did not find the intention of parliament written in a single piece of statute, not that the intention does not exist in statute. This is perhaps a subtle point, and people can be forgiven for not having full realisation of it.
However examination of the Supreme Court judgment, tempered by the caution advised by Lord Sumption and Lady Hale show the presumption of gaps made by those who may have not read the judgment more carefully.
The Supreme Court have indeed flattened the rights of trans people with a GRC with their judgment - there can be no doubt of that, and it is not denied. However the SC have said that the rights of trans people with a GRC become the rights of transgender people (trans people without a GRC) forward for cases forward of the date of the judgment, that is to say that their rights can instead be considered under the ground of gender reassignment.
Accordingly, the requirement for an examination of pursuing a ''a legitimate aim by proportionate means'' remains intact. Aurora, Falkner in the name of the EHRC and indeed Sex Matters have been reading down the law as if the Supreme Court are saying that the legal requirement of balance becomes perfunctory.
In the above you should be able to see why Sex Matters are disappointed with the judgments reached in both Kelly and Peggie.
Consideration of the Kelly and Peggie judgments through this lens helps one understand the lack of success experienced by the claimants in both cases.
Consideration of Lord Hodge in his interview brings you to that place, that the Supreme Court did not intend to produce a short cut that blanket bans are readily available as an outcome of their ruling. Lord Hodge has made clear, it was never their intention to do so as they had not heard evidence from both sides. This is the basis of the challenge in the High Court, Good Law Project v EHRC.
I should make clear, that no form of AI was used to prepare or write my post, so claims that this is AI and therefore incorrect are false.