I stand with Sall Grover who has been ordered to pay up to $120,000 for correctly identifying a man as a man in Australia.
They punish the dissenters with functioning eyes. They've made speaking the truth is some form of hate crime.
And even still, he's a man.
I’ve actually been pretty disappointed with the songs this year overall. Anyway, my 10 favourites: Denmark, Serbia, Ukraine, Bulgaria, Croatia, UK cos I must, Poland, Sweden,
Australia - reluctantly & Romania
#eurovision#eurovision2026
@anon_opin Ours changed it to where you get a different picture every day of somewhere in the world. I found it too distracting so I’ve just changed it to a plain black background. It’s boring, and I’m fine with that.
Yes, the people who call themselves 'trans' exist and they deserve exactly the same rights as everyone else, which, fortunately, they already have in the UK. It would rightly be considered discrimination if a person was refused employment, housing or the vote because they identified as trans.
'Trans women are women' is a thought-terminating cliché. Men are not women. That doesn't mean they're not allowed to present themselves however they like, call themselves whatever they like and believe whatever they like about themselves. It means they haven't changed sex.
If we replace the objective, observable characteristic of sex with the unfalsifiable concept of gender identify, women and girls lose, among other things, their right to fair and safe sport and women-only spaces, including changing rooms, prison cells and rape crisis services.
Women and girls are provably more vulnerable to forms of abuse including sexual assault, harassment and voyeurism in mixed-sex spaces. There is no evidence that trans-identified men don't have exactly the same rates of criminal offending as all other men.
Trans people exist. I have no desire for them not to exist; indeed, I wish them safety, happiness and health. However, 'existence' does not, and should not, mean the violation of other people's right to privacy, dignity and freedom of speech, or the reconfiguration of society to indulge a fallacy.
@anon_opin I grew up in Leicester and it’s very common to hear it there. People would also say they were ‘going up town’ to mean they were going into Leicester city centre, even if they lived north of the city and could literally only go ‘down’ (to) town.