The problem is the extremist nutters seem to be driving the push for self ID, and they seem to be winning.
We are in a society where whomever shouts loudest seems to get their way, at the moment, and I don't agree with the entirely self-ID concept (as much to protect impressionable people as anything else) but I don't think we need to roll everything back, either.
If you want to make changes to women's rights to accommodate transwomen then it needs to be done a more evidentiary basis than what seems to be the current approach to me.
I don't think we can appreciably slow the movement that's happening, we can just try to steer it. That said, I'm not convinced that it's moving unnecessarily fast at the moment - we're implementing changes because we identifiably have people being harmed as things stand; I'm sure I can justify saying 'we should stop' on the possibility that some people might take offence.
Another friend asked the Lib Dems if they could be in the part and be gender critical and were told no.
'Gender critical' - is that where you hold to the idea that gender is an irrelevant new-age construction that should be ignored? If so, I'd agree with the party. Additionally, at the moment, where they are still struggling to overcome the toxicity they were smeared with during their coalition days, they're trying to ensure they have consistent messages throughout and are sticking to a party line fairly strictly - that doesn't make it right in itself, it simply explains why they're a somewhat narrower church than they have been historically.
The Greens regularly proclaim the mantra Transwomen are Women, and Partick Harvie regularly retweets and has made speeches attacking 'TERFS'.
Trans women are women, they're just not female ones. I don't know Patrick Harvie, but if you wanted to identify a group that shouts louder than its content might warrant, TERFS fit the bill.
Labour has allowed transwomen on all women shortlists - shortlists set up tpo deal with a sex based exclusion.
Again, I'd define a political shortlist as a gender-based exclusion - I'm pretty sure no-one's going to be expecting DNA or blood tests to prove sex in order to take part. Whether those electing a candidate feel that a trans-woman has the lifetime of experience to adequately represent them and elect them is down to the electorate, but that they are women is fair enough.
There SNP has office holders who regularly attack Joan McAlpine and Joanna Cherry, demanding they are thrown out the party because of their views on gender.
And there are special interest groups demanding all sorts of people be thrown out of all sorts of parties - I don't agree with it. How they express their ideas might be a justification - and I've not been keeping up with Scottish politics to know - but just holding to the idea which doesn't seem to me to be fundamental to Scottish Nationalism shouldn't be enough to have them thrown out.
Meetings held by women to discuss how they approach it, and how they accommodate trans rights with trans speakers are regularly blocked, or picketed. The strand that is pushing this seems to be the ones in control.
That just doesn't make any sense, to me - why block that, it's your chance to make your case and get involved. Even if you can't actively take part, you can send information, submit a written statement... to shut down discussion is never the answer.
O.