Your friend Susan – politicalbetting.com
Your friend Susan – politicalbetting.com
A PBer asked if their trans friend was legally a woman after the Supreme Court Judgement. To preserve her anonymity, I’ll create a fictional archetype: your friend Susan.
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Been looking forward to this. Sorry I was not able to contribute.
I have always believed in ACAB!
https://x.com/UpdatingOnRome/status/2035393722074996908
Maybe that's what makes it so brilliant.
Treat all people with dignity and respect.
When it comes to trans individuals, treat them with dignity and respect. Where it does not violate safeguarding, then call them by whatever name they want to be called and whatever pronoun they want to be called - out of respect.
However if it violates safeguarding, then safe spaces might be required for real women, not trans women.
If need be, alternative provision might be required for trans individuals, eg gender-neutral toilets, that maintain dignity and respect without violating the safeguarding protections for women.
Uh oh.
Patriot missile involved in Bahrain blast likely US-operated, analysis finds
https://bsky.app/profile/rimaanabtawi.bsky.social/post/3mhmyiysqpc2j
This is hugely useful and informative.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lC3MH-U6yDk&list=RDlC3MH-U6yDk&start_radio=1
Do you have a better method, via military tools, to force the reopening of the Straits and the collapse of the regime?
If not, then it is surely justified by military necessity? Considering the fact that we are at a point where they are actively at war and the Strait is closed.
It is almost like after WWII it was decided some things were off limits and should not be repeated.
Yes, I think I'm okay
I walked into the door again
If you ask that's what I'll say
And it's not your business anyway
Appreciated.
Viewcode, I salute your tenacity in getting this done in a balanced and lucid way.
Have a good day everyone.
They are now the "Walk Wheel Cycle Trust". I think that is designed to be un-acronym-able. If you try, it sounds like a guinea pig.
(Expect a rebranding of the National Cycle Network in due course, to reflect that it is used just as heavily for walking and wheeling. There is the slight problem that it is on 70683 signposts to be dealt with.)
In Korea and Vietnam the energy facilities were consistently targeted.
In the Gulf War the coalition forces heavily bombarded Iraq's electricity grid. Justified because electricity is essential to command, control and weapons production.
NATO bombardment of Yugoslavia included heavy and targeted bombardment of Serbia's electrical infrastructure.
If it is proportionate to reopening the Strait then it is a legitimate military objective, under dual-use principles.
I do not think that "we want something else to happen and are willing to blackmail with such threats to get it" is any kind of military necessity as set out in the Convention. It would, if he does it, be a grave breach of the Convention, at least in my view.
Right from the first Hague Convention.
This is approaching Russian logic.
In the Korean War the UN repeatedly targeted Korean Oil refineries.
The US bombed oil depots and refineries as part of the 1966 Operation Rolling Thunder.
More recently Ukraine has been targeting Russian Oil refineries.
I use these examples as in all three cases we are looking at the supposed proponents of international law and order actively targeting enemy oil production facilities.
It reinforces the point I have been making, plenty of the Iranian population and the wider diaspora think this war isn't about regime change but bombing Iran back into the stone age.
Other than "I don't like who is doing it" can you give me a good reason why it was militarily necessary in 1999, but considering the military objective of forcing the reopening of the Strait it would fail the necessity test today?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bEPEx1Zm5Eo&t=422s
As Richard Tyndall also said too, the targeting of energy facilities has been consistently done over time, under the claim of military necessity.
It is one of those irregular verbs again.
In your second to last paragraph, you use the expression “real women” - for a substantial number of activists, that alone puts you in the “TERF JK Rowling CANCEL” box.
Everything else you say would be ignored.
First, thanks to @viewcode and others for the thread this morning.
It's a subject about which I have no strong views and I don't feel equipped to take a view based on my lack of knowledge and experience.
The article is incredibly helpful in setting out the legal thicket into which we seem to have fallen on this issue.
Do I have an answer or solution? No, apart from the general and shallow epithets about people respecting each other which aren't probably of much help to "Susan".
Anyhoo, you fund the Iranian regime by refusing to get an EV, so pipe down.
I struggle to find much to contribute more, beyond that being respectful should be the beginning and not the end of the question.
Paragraph 55 is a useful summary.
"The targeted components of the military-industrial infrastructure and of government ministries must make an effective contribution to military action and their total or partial destruction must offer a definite military advantage in the circumstances ruling at the time. Refineries are certainly traditional military objectives but tradition is not enough and due regard must be paid to environmental damage if they are attacked (see paras. 14-25 above). The media as such is not a traditional target category. To the extent particular media components are part of the C3 (command, control and communications) network they are military objectives. If media components are not part of the C3 network then they may become military objectives depending upon their use. As a bottom line, civilians, civilian objects and civilian morale as such are not legitimate military objectives. The media does have an effect on civilian morale. If that effect is merely to foster support for the war effort, the media is not a legitimate military objective. If the media is used to incite crimes, as in Rwanda, it can become a legitimate military objective. If the media is the nerve system that keeps a war-monger in power and thus perpetuates the war effort, it may fall within the definition of a legitimate military objective. As a general statement, in the particular incidents reviewed by the committee, it is the view of the committee that NATO was attempting to attack objects it perceived to be legitimate military objectives."
The sign posts are the opportunity - to engage with domain expert consultancies is creating signage that is inclusive, modern and forward looking.
After £216 million pounds has been spent on creating signs that minorities find racist, are invisible to those with colour blindness and could attacks for epileptics, no actual new sign would be installed. Probably for the best, since testing revolved that no one can actually read the information on them.
If the precedence is that the West [not merely Russia] has repeatedly bombed energy infrastructure post-1949 then that precedence seems rather valid to today's situation, does it not?
On your gibe, I don't refuse to get an EV. If I could afford one for the same price I got my new car, I would have gladly got one.
My Swift cost me £13k, new direct from the dealer (actually paid negotiated price, not sticker price). If I could have got an EV for the same price, I would have.
Still its a self-charging hybrid and gets double the mileage to fuel ratio that my last vehicle got, so I'll take that as a win and hope that by the time this vehicle needs replacing, EVs will have continued to come down in price and up in quality to the point that a new EV will cost a comparable amount in real terms. Already seems some dodgy Chinese brands are there, but I don't trust them, hopefully other brands will follow before too long.
PS great article viewcode.
Trump continues to thrash and threaten - it's a long while since I was in that state but he sounds more like an angry early teenage boy some days. It's my experience some people, as they get older, revert to a more child like state - I warned Mrs Stodge about that and drew the inevitable rejoinder she wouldn't notice the difference and then sent me upstairs without any supper.
The one thing all this uncertainty won't do is help oil prices (unless you like having high oil prices as a major oil producer who doesn't need the Gulf like, oh I don't know, America or Russia).
I am told by those who have more knowledge of this than I (which is almost anyone on almost anything), petrol supplies are fine but diesel might become an issue - I've literally no clue.
IF I were a bluff old cynic with childlike tendencies, I'd suggest the current situation could almost be contrived to hurt Europe and China at the expense of America and Russia but that would be wrong, wouldn't it?
Tory chief whip reposts AI video created by far-right figure who was jailed for hate crimes
Exclusive: Rebecca Harris promotes latest Crewkerne Gazette skit, created by Joshua Bonehill-Paine who says he is Tory member
The Conservative party’s chief whip has been condemned for promoting AI-generated footage created by a notorious far-right figure who was jailed for hate crimes against Jewish people.
Rebecca Harris reposted the latest skit by the Crewkerne Gazette, which depicts Kemi Badenoch and her shadow justice secretary, Nick Timothy, as characters in the gangster film Scarface.
The online satirical account had gained a large online following before its creator was revealed last month to be Joshua Bonehill-Paine, an activist who previously described himself as a “nationalist, fascist, theorist and supporter of white rights”.
It can now also be revealed that Bonehill-Paine claims to be a fully paid-up member of the Conservative party, despite a history of far-right activism and convictions ranging from assault to racially aggravated harassment against a Jewish Labour MP.
https://www.theguardian.com/politics/2026/mar/22/tory-chief-whip-reposts-ai-video-created-by-far-right-figure-jailed-for-hate-crimes
So NATO attacking energy, as had happened in a plethora of past conflicts, was legitimate.
It is another irregular verb. When they do it, it is a war crime, but when we do it, it is a legitimate military objective.
Well, if the goal is to collapse the regime and reopen the Strait then it is, again, a legitimate military objective.
Deleted details of trans friends in case of jigsaw doxxing.
I seem to recall quite recently.
Off topic. The Iran war is just going to keep getting worse. As bad as prices are now, they're only going in one direction. What a tosser Trump is.
I think we'd all agree that the world would be a better place if such conventions were abided by. There are times when they don't survive contact with 21st century reality - human rights/refugees, and must be reformed - and others when they must be suspended because an aggressor would use them to their advantage otherwise. We should clearly state when this is the case.
I think a justifiable action against Iran would be a total economic blockage - stop them exporting oil to China/India, in the same way they are doing that to the Gulf States for Europe. Destroying their domestic energy/water is entirely different.
Israel and the US are rather flawed good guys, not angelic good guys, but they absolutely are the good guys in this conflict.
Good guys often have flaws. Shades of grey.
Iran absolutely are the bad guys.
During the "many years of trying" I kept up my statistical hours by doing freelance work after-hours or writing articles on subjects of statistical interest, which involved me looking at historical/legal/military/statistical documents and extracting the needful, so this article was no big jump conceptually
What I have written is defensible, cited, and represents my honest opinion on the state-of-play. But the interpretation of the present and the ongoing development will be decided by judges and politicians not me, so I can't vouch for this past the date of submission, which was March 15/16.
(In gambling terms : DYOR)
Are we up for that ?
And in any even professional legal advice is not infrequently wrong.
An interesting question, now there is at least partial license to discriminate against trans individuals, is how broad are the protections against discrimination afforded to them, as trans individuals, by the Equality Act, as you mention in the header.
As far as I can tell there is only a right to exclude eg trans women from women's-only spaces, but that is done not on the grounds that the trans individual is trans. It is done on the grounds that it is a women's-only space, excluding biological males, and the person being excluded is a biological male.
If safeguarding requires excluding males from that space, whether it be on grounds of safety, dignity, fairness (eg sport) or similar then that is reasonable.
If it does not, then there should not be an exclusion of any males, so there should not be an exclusion of trans individuals either.
As far as I know it is never legal to exclude someone on the grounds they are trans alone.
But consider the WI instance. There's no safety or fairness issue there, they want to carry on as they are - inclusive - but following the judgement have concluded they must now exclude trans women.
So we're not there yet.
It’s a Nothing story.
If it were not, they would not be excluding biological males, which includes any "trans women".
The dependency of some Asian countries on Middle East gas supplies is profound, and extends well beyond energy alone.
The S Korean semiconductor industry, for example, imports the vast majority of its helium and bromine from the gulf.
Plenty of people use the gender-neutral disabled toilets for a plethora of reasons and anyway not all disabilities are visible.
Having adequate provision of gender-neutral toilets that can be used by the disabled or anyone else who requires them is a reasonable compromise that protects everyone.
Far better than 99% of the articles published in mainstream journalism on the subject.
But the argument made was that we should not be bombing energy infrastructure because it has been banned under international treaty since 1949. I am simply pointing out that that has not stopped even those countries who supposedly support international law from making these attacks in the interim so that it seems a strange issue to raise now.
https://x.com/eylonalevy/status/2035643069349937578?s=61
Direct discrimination in the workplace is clearly barred, but "things should generally be trans inclusive" is a wish, not a legal statement or test, and it's not now very clear, quite where borderlines are drawn.
But I was severely blocked on the first one, partly on how the American view has supplanted the British view in the discourse, but mostly on the realisation that to do it properly would take more than a year.
So when questions were asked on PB about individual friends, the concept collapsed down to a single question - is there a "your friend Susan" exception - which I could answer in a realistic timeframe. "Realistic" in this case was nearly six months, but you can't have everything.
Has there actually been a war the West has been involved in since WW2 where we have not attacked energy infrastructure if present?
Preservation of facilities was an explicit objective then.
They have pretty much zero budget, including for maintenance, and they have never had one. I think the whole of England is about £10 million per annum, specific funded projects aside. There's no money in it for consultants !
That is why they do not install signposts but put stickers on other people's.
And yet I can see why some would be happier to accept those people in an women only space but not some who has had no surgery. It's not a view I share but I respect others right to disagree.