Since when did Stonewall side with bullies?

May 18, 2022 by

by Julie Bindel, The Critic:

Did you know that “transgender hate crimes” recorded by police forces in England, Scotland and Wales rose by 81 per cent in 2018-2019? And that 41 per cent of trans people experienced a hate crime or incident because of their gender identity in 2017, compared to a measly 16 per cent of lesbian, gay and bisexual individuals during the same period?

These questionable figures came to my attention during the case brought by the black lesbian barrister, Allison Bailey against Stonewall and Garden Court Chambers (GCC). I don’t need to rehash the background and details of the case: enough has been written and exposed about it. Suffice to say that the gender fascists at Stonewall, which was originally established as a lesbian and gay rights charity, complained to Bailey’s chambers after she tweeted about the newly founded LGB alliance. They claimed that any trans member of staff that entered GCC would not just feel, but actually be in danger from this terrible TERF.

Welcome to Stonewall’s World, in which, according to its report, LGBT in Britain: Hate Crime and Discrimination, there is barely a trans identified person in the UK who hasn’t either been murdered, attempted to kill themselves, been the victim of literal, actual violence [usually misgendering] or been beaten up on the street, presumably by radical feminists concerned about sex stereotypes. Stonewall pedals the idea that being trans identified in the UK today is more dangerous than being a heterosexual woman, despite the fact that every three days in the UK, a woman will die at the hands of her former or current male partner. Rates of rape and sexual assault of women and girls are off the scale, and sexual harassment in the workplace and on the streets is a daily fact of life for women everywhere.

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