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    Arezoo Badri, a 31 year old mother of two, has been left paraplegic after being shot by the Islamic regime over hijab.

    Arezoo was driving in Northern Iran with her sister on July 22, when police flagged her car over a confiscation notice for violating hijab laws. To be clear, there was no claim that she wasn’t wearing hijab at the time, just that the car was associated with someone who may have once violated mandatory hijab laws.

    The police opened fire on Arezoo, directly targeting her from the driver’s side, striking her in the lung and damaging her spinal cord.

    Arezoo is now paralyzed from the waist down and remains in the intensive care unit.

    This comes after Gasht-e Ershad (the “morality police”)—which the media last year misreported as having disbanded “because the Islamic regime said so”—increased their draconian enforcement by advancing to AI and CCTV to identify women not wearing hijab and plant a “hit” on them, as they did on #ArezooBadri

    Please say her name and share her story.

  • Over the past few years we've seen a number of academics – mostly women, mostly gender critical – having to fight to protect their livelihoods and their right to speak their minds. It's a fraught, expensive business. The last government's Higher Education (Freedom of Speech) Act 2023 was an attempt to put that right, but it may be repealed according to indications from the new Labour government.

    Akua Reindorf KC in a guest post on Julie Bindel's substack – A Freedom Worth Having:

    What the new legislation does is to give the existing law teeth. It is by no means perfect, but it has the substantial benefit of bundling together the law in this area into a package that contains an accessible enforcement mechanism: a complaints scheme to be operated by the Office for Students. Cases may be taken to court, but only after the complaints process has been exhausted.

    The displeasure of many university leaders at the prospect that academics will be able to enforce their rights has somewhat surprisingly been heeded by the Labour government, which appears to be taking the side of institutions against individuals deprived of a just remedy for unlawful conduct. If we have law, it should surely be able to bite. And this is not just any unlawful conduct; it is conduct which breaches the right to freedom of expression, the cornerstone of all human rights.

    In any case, the protests of the university administrators are surely misplaced. The OfS complaints process will be free and should be relatively speedy, and complainants may not take a case to court until the complaints process has run its course. The filter of an efficient and informal scheme of this sort seems bound to represent better value than the financial drain of interminable employment tribunal cases like that brought by Professor Phoenix against the Open University. If a case does end up in court, it will be in a civil court in which legal costs can usually be recovered by the winner.

    The government has also expressed concern that the new Act will negatively impact the welfare of students from minority communities, a view shared by the National Union of Students and other stakeholders. From a legal point of view this is a puzzling objection. It pitches the right to freedom of speech against the rights of minorities not to be subjected to hate speech as though there is not already a mature and well developed framework of legal principle which holds these rights in careful balance, to which the new Act would be subject….

    The freedom to say only uncontroversial things is not a freedom worth having, and challenging consensus is what universities are for. We must hope that repeal is not a done deal, and try to persuade the government to take a level headed approach to it.

  • Jo Bartosch at Spiked on the church of trans dogma:

    The Reverend Dr Bernard Randall didn’t piss in the font or gamble away the collection-plate money. No, he did something far worse in the church’s eyes – he preached traditional Christian views to students at Trent College, a private school in Derbyshire, where he was the chaplain.

    In 2019, Randall gave a sermon he titled ‘Competing Ideologies’, during which he reassured his young flock that they ‘are not obliged to accept someone else’s ideology’. In his moderate and well-reasoned speech, he reminded students that they were at liberty to listen to other points of view, whether on religion, Brexit or ‘all this LGBT stuff’, as he put it.

    Randall went on to say it was not wrong to think ‘that human beings are indeed male and female’. He also suggested that, according to the Christian church, marriage is between a man and woman and that a dim view is taken of sex outside of wedlock. His words, which until recently would have been considered mainstream fodder for a CofE chaplain, triggered complaints from pupils, parents and staff members. Some even claimed they were nearly left in tears.

    Notably, Randall’s sermon was given in response to his school’s embrace of a programme by Educate and Celebrate, a now defunct LGBT educational charity. This was the organisation that boasted of its mission to ‘smash heteronormativity in the classroom’. To this end, it encouraged kids as young as three to read books about questioning their gender. Randall, understandably, called into question whether any of this was in line with church teaching.

    Educate and Celebrate brought this bizarre, radical trans activism to classrooms. Yet according to both the Bishop of Derby’s safeguarding staff and Trent College, it was Randall’s views that supposedly put children in danger.

    Shortly after he gave his ‘Competing Ideologies’ sermon, Randall was sacked from his position. He was even reported to the government’s anti-terrorism watchdog, Prevent, by the safeguarding lead at Trent College. It was later acknowledged that Randall’s views did not make him a threat to national security.

    Following an investigation by the church, Randall was exonerated for the comments he made during his sermon. But the Derby diocese’s safeguarding team, under the watch of Bishop Lane, still stopped Randall from taking any position as a vicar. In 2021, the diocese refused to grant him a licence to officiate without first going through a risk assessment, effectively banning him from preaching….

    At this point, Randall was prepared to turn the other cheek and accept an apology. But when the matter was brought to the attention of Archbishop Welby in 2022, the turbulent priest was thrown to the lions. Welby has repeatedly refused to allow Randall to proceed with a misconduct case against Lane. This week, the Telegraph reported that one of the lead lawyers on the review into Randall’s case described his treatment as ‘plainly wrong’ and ‘egregious’. According to Christian Concern, he has not given a sermon or worked in church ministry since his ordeal began. To date, neither Welby nor Lane has had the humility or grace to apologise.

    It's a classic throwing the baby out with the bathwater situation. If the church abandons its traditional teachings, in a ridiculous attempt to keep up with the latest social trends, then it's losing its whole purpose – if it has one anymore.

    Whether you agree with his views or not, Randall is a man of unshakeable Christian faith. He has been sacrificed by the leaders of his own church to appease the LGBT cult. In this, he is the ultimate modern martyr.

  • If there was a scandal involving Elon Musk – and, let's face it, the chances are fair to good – would it come to be known as Elongate?

  • Another legal victory against the gender cult. From the Times:

    A former barrister who was expelled from a psychotherapy school over his gender-critical views has warned that higher education establishments will face repercussions for sanctioning those with different opinions.

    James Esses, 32, reached a settlement with the Metanoia Institute after he was taken off a master’s course for raising concerns about transgender issues and the treatment of children. The institute admitted that it was wrong to expel him and apologised for its treatment of him.

    The campaigner and author initiated legal action against the institute, one of the UK’s leading psychotherapy and counselling schools, claiming that he was treated unlawfully.

    Esses was removed from his course in 2021 after starting a petition against the government’s proposed ban on conversion therapy, the practice of attempting to change a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity.

    His petition called for the government not to “criminalise essential, explorative therapy” for children with gender dysphoria under the legislation.

    He expressed similar views in an article for a US publication, noting concern that there was a trend in therapy to “affirm” patients with gender dysphoria rather than interrogate their symptoms.

    He expressed similar concerns about the impact on therapy of what he has called “gender ideology” to the United Kingdom Council for Psychotherapy (UKCP). He had applied for trainee membership of the umbrella body in 2020.

    Esses, who was in his third year of training at the time, claimed that the UKCP ordered the Metanoia Institute in Ealing, west London, to take him off the five-year integrative psychotherapy programme.

    Having attracted criticism for his views online, Esses received a short email from the institute’s deputy chief executive in May 2021 with the subject line “Termination of Contract”.

    He said the email claimed he was being expelled with immediate effect, without a hearing, because he had brought the institution “into disrepute”. The institute published his expulsion on Twitter/X the same day.

    Three weeks later he was informed that because he was no longer a student, his trainee membership of the council was also terminated.

    The decision effectively brought an end to Esses’ training, in which he had invested thousands of pounds.

    Esses, a former criminal defence specialist, sued the bodies at an employment tribunal, claiming that he was discriminated against, harassed and victimised because of his beliefs.

    The institute apologised to Esses for its treatment of him in a statement. It accepted that it breached its own policies by expelling him without due process and contributed to him receiving online abuse by publicising the decision.

    Metanoia's statement here:

    We are pleased to announce that we have reached settlement in the Employment Tribunal claim brought by James Esses against us.

    Metanoia recognises that gender-critical beliefs are protected under the Equality Act 2010. These are the beliefs that sex is binary, immutable and biological and is fundamentally important. Whilst Metanoia specialises in professional training for those working in adult and not child psychotherapy it accepts as a matter of general principle the validity of the professional belief that children with gender dysphoria should be treated with explorative therapy, rather than being affirmed towards medical intervention. Discrimination against students because of these beliefs is unlawful….

    Times are changing.

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    "The court says UCLA must protect the rights of ALL students, including JEWS!"

    AP report:

     A federal judge ruled Tuesday that the University of California, Los Angeles, cannot allow pro-Palestinian protesters to block Jewish students from accessing classes and other parts of campus.

    The preliminary injunction marks the first time a U.S. judge has ruled against a university over the demonstrations against the Israel-Hamas war on college campuses earlier this year.

    U.S. District Judge Mark Scarsi’s ruling came in a lawsuit filed in June by three Jewish students at UCLA. The students alleged that they experienced discrimination on campus during the protest because of their faith and that UCLA failed to ensure access to campus for all Jewish students.

    “In the year 2024, in the United States of America, in the State of California, in the City of Los Angeles, Jewish students were excluded from portions of the UCLA campus because they refused to denounce their faith.” Scarsi wrote.

    Scarsi ruled that the university is prohibited from providing classes and access to buildings on campus if Jewish students are blocked from it.

    Yitzchok Frankel, a UCLA law student who filed the lawsuit, celebrated the order.

    Scarsi ruled that the university is prohibited from providing classes and access to buildings on campus if Jewish students are blocked from it.

    Yitzchok Frankel, a UCLA law student who filed the lawsuit, celebrated the order.

    “No student should ever have to fear being blocked from their campus because they are Jewish,” Frankel said in a statement. “I am grateful that the court has ordered UCLA to put a stop to this shameful anti-Jewish conduct.”

  • This really spells it out. A man tells his therapist he "did not want to be a gay man". The therapist tells him he's trans. Off he goes for the surgery, despite his repeatedly expressed doubts. The operation – vaginoplasty – is horrendous. He loses three pints of blood, and knows straight away that he's made the worst mistake of his life.

    From the Telegraph:

    Ritchie Herron has been experiencing a living nightmare for six years.

    The 37-year-old civil servant, who in 2018 underwent radical gender surgery to complete his physical transformation to live as a woman, is one of a growing number of patients who have come to deeply regret undergoing medical interventions to change gender.

    Herron’s distress has been compounded by the NHS response to his desire to “detransition”, which has appeared clumsy and ill-suited to the situation in which he found himself. He claims that the inadequacy of the health service’s approach was highlighted by the fact that the main clinician assigned to oversee his care was a gynaecologist – a specialism which would clearly “not [offer] the right expertise” for someone seeking to overturn their transition to the female gender.

    In recent days, however, Herron has been feeling some hope. Last week the NHS announced that it was planning to launch a new service for transgender patients wanting to return to the gender of their birth.

    The development has given Herron optimism that “detransitioners” like him may finally now get the “right care” for the physical and mental pain with which many have been suffering for years.

    Previously unseen data obtained under freedom of information laws gives the clearest indication yet of the number of “regretful” transitioners who changed their gender at the Tavistock child gender identity service, which was recently closed by the NHS for being “inadequate”. According to that data, at least 64 Tavistock patients detransitioned between 2010 and 2020 alone….

    In the years that followed, his regret at the extreme changes made to his body only grew, as he grappled with the dire physical and psychological consequences. His health difficulties were myriad, ranging from bone density problems and incontinence to skin conditions and numbness affecting his entire crotch area. He was near suicidal as he struggled to come to terms with the horrifying predicament he was in – for which he initially blamed himself.

    Finally, in 2022 he decided that his only hope for survival was to stop living as “Abby” and return to being “Ritchie”….

    So when the NHS revealed that it planned to establish a service specifically for “individuals who choose to detransition”, Herron says he could not have been happier. “We definitely need this,” he says. “I cannot wait for the clinic to open. I would use the service straight away once it’s up and running."

    The problem, as the article makes clear, is that there's a lack of expertise among doctors about detransitioning. There are plenty of clinicians, it seems, happy to dish out the hormones and encourage patients to embrace their exciting new gender identities, but not so many willing to face the consequences of these grotesquely irresponsible interventions.

    On Herron’s part, he certainly has “no plans to undergo any more experimental surgery”. He is also conscious that some of the changes that detransitioners like him have undergone are irreversible. But he is optimistic the service will still be able to help him.

    “I might be lucky to slow things down, but I do worry that things may be a bit too late for me because it’s been over a decade with no testosterone,” he says. “But maybe they can help me with my urology problems, the pain and the lack of sensation I have. And maybe they can advise me on the hormone side of things and curb the onset of osteoporosis and the emerging autoimmunity issues that I have.”

    Jesus, what a mess.

  • Should be interesting. Imane Khelif names JK Rowling and Elon Musk in cyberbullying lawsuit over Olympics gender row.

    JK Rowling and Elon Musk have been named in an online bullying lawsuit filed by an Olympic champion boxer embroiled in a gender eligibility row.

    Imane Khelif, who won gold for Algeria in the women’s 66kg title, triggered heated debate when she was allowed to compete at the Paris Games despite failing a sex test last year.

    On Tuesday night, Khelif’s lawyer, Nabil Boudi, revealed Rowling and Musk have both been named in a criminal complaint the boxer has filed with French authorities.

    “JK Rowling and Elon Musk are named in the lawsuit, among others,” he told Variety.

    He suggested Donald Trump would also be part of the investigation by the Paris prosecutor’s office. The lawsuit alleging Khelif suffered “aggravated cyber harassment” was filed against unknown persons.

    Under French law, that grants the prosecution “the latitude to be able to investigate against all people,” according to Mr Boudi, including people who used pseudonyms online.

    Both Rowling and Mr Musk have referred to Khelif as a man as they discussed the controversy over the boxer’s eligibility at the Olympics with their considerable online followings.

    Mr Musk? Doesn't sound right somehow.

    Will it all come out in court? We shall see. Could be a disastrous own goal for Khelif. Surely the IBA test results – showing his XY chromosomes – will have to feature.

  • A depressing review of a comedy gig from Dominic Cavendish in the Telegraph:

    Sunday night’s performance by American stand-up Reginald D Hunter of his new Edinburgh Festival set ranks without doubt as the most unpleasant comedy gig I’ve ever attended. This came down to five minutes midway in when a theatre full of people erupted in vocal animosity at an Israeli couple who had briefly heckled Hunter.

    Hunter, 55, had made a crude point, rather than an especially sophisticated gag, where he said a Channel 5 documentary containing a scene about an abusive wife herself accusing her husband of abuse made him think, “My God, it’s like being married to Israel.” There was audience laughter in response, but not from the couple on the front row, who shouted “not funny”.

    The pair, who said they were from Israel, then endured their fellow audience members shouting expletives (“f— off” among them), and telling them to go – with slow-hand claps, boos and cries of “genocidal maniac”, “you’re not welcome” and “free Palestine” part of the toxic mix.

    In the past I’ve had time for Hunter, a free-thinking outsider, who has lived in the UK since 1997. Amid a climate of censoriousness and offence-taking, his determination to tackle difficult subjects, without mincing his words, has usefully tested limits and galvanised debate. He’s no stranger to controversy: he was accused of anti-Semitism at the 2006 Fringe for Holocaust material and has attracted ire for alleged misogyny and his use of the ‘n word’, whether in show-titles, shows or a furore-attracting hosting of the Professional Footballers’ Association gala dinner in 2013.

    But here he gave an object lesson in how not to pick on people in the front row. Instead of tolerating the couple’s joint heckle, he doubled down with a sinister air of beaming bellicosity: “I’ve been waiting for you all summer, where the f— you been?” He continued: “You can say it’s not funny to you, but if you say it to a room full of people who laughed, you look foolish.”

    “Look at you making everyone love Israel even more,” he jeered, after the woman remonstrated with the audience.

    “That tells me that I still got voltage,” he purred, with satisfaction, after the pair left, slowly (it turned out that the man was disabled, not that this caused a flicker of restraint in the host, who openly laughed at them). He then related a remark that his female partner had made at the time of the Holocaust controversy about accessing the Jewish Chronicle’s website: “Typical f—ing Jews, they won’t tell you anything unless you subscribe.” “It’s just a joke,” he added.

    Added, from the JC:

    Speaking to the JC, the Jewish man who wished to remain anonymous, said, “It was just a heckle because it wasn’t funny, it was poor, he was nervous and sweaty. He put on a bad set. When he told this joke about an abusive husband leaving the house but it was really the husband being abused by the wife, I just said: ‘That’s not funny’ and then he really started.”

    So Hunter's line, “That tells me that I still got voltage", sounds like the whole episode was a welcome interruption for him – playing up to the audience antisemitism to rescue a gig that wasn't going well. Nasty. And a shame, because, like the Telegraph reviewer, I've usually found Hunter to be worthwhile. His BBC US road trip Songs of the South – a three-part look at the music of the Deep South – was great.

    The real horror here though is surely the audience reaction. A "baying mob", said the Jewish man. Grim. Very grim.

  • A crack in the edifice? Leor Sapir in City Journal – The American Society of Plastic Surgeons becomes the first major medical association to challenge the consensus of medical groups over “gender-affirming care” for minors.

    The main justification for “gender-affirming care” for minors in the United States has been that “all major U.S. medical associations” support it. Critics of this supposed consensus have argued that it is not grounded in high-quality research or decades of honest and robust deliberation among clinicians with different viewpoints and experiences. Instead, it is the result of a small number of ideologically driven doctor-association members in LGBT-focused committees, who exploit their colleagues' trust. Physicians presenting different viewpoints are silenced or kept away from decision-making circles, ensuring the appearance of unanimity.

    As the U.K.’s Cass Review pointed out, the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) and the U.S. Endocrine Society were especially important in forging this consensus, and they did so by citing each other’s statements, rather than conducting a scientific appraisal of the evidence. The “circularity” of this approach, says Cass in her report to England’s National Health Service, “may explain why there has been an apparent consensus on key areas of practice despite the evidence being poor.”

    Well yes, that might explain it. You scratch my back…

    Perhaps because it has never really depended on evidence, this doctor-group consensus has shown remarkable resilience in the face of major system shocks, including several whistleblowers, revelations from court documents that WPATH manipulated scientific evidence reviews, the Cass Review, a bipartisan commitment in the U.K. to roll back pediatric medical transition, and a growing international call for a developmentally informed approach that prioritizes psychotherapy over hormones and surgeries.

    But the U.S. consensus now appears to have its first big fracture. In July, the American Society of Plastic Surgeons, a major medical association representing 11,000 members and over 90 percent of the field in the U.S. and Canada, told me that it “has not endorsed any organization’s practice recommendations for the treatment of adolescents with gender dysphoria.” ASPS acknowledged that there is “considerable uncertainty as to the long-term efficacy for the use of chest and genital surgical interventions” and that “the existing evidence base is viewed as low quality/low certainty.”

    The treatment of "gender dysphoric" teens in the US has become a conveyor belt, starting with the ideologically-captured mental health professionals, and driven by a fear of going against the consensus…and, of course, by the money. Plastic surgeons are the last in line, to try and make acceptable – to prettify – the butchery that constitutes the essence of "gender-affirming care". 

    How they process the unfortunate children:

    Gender clinics across the country have adopted letter-of-support and letter-of-medical-necessity templates to ensure that adolescents seeking surgery get approval, with few hiccups. The message these templates implicitly send to therapists, who are the first and arguably most important gatekeepers, is that gender surgery for minors is a standard procedure rather than an extreme departure requiring strong evidence.

    The gender clinic at Seattle Children’s Hospital is an example of a major clinic that offers mental-health professionals a template to use for writing letters of support for surgery. The template contains language designed to bypass any concern that the candidate fits the profile of “rapid onset gender dysphoria” (ROGD), the most common adolescent presentation and the one that prompted the course reversal in Europe. The template effectively instructs the referring therapist to attest that the ROGD presentation is really just a teen who has always known he or she was transgender but only disclosed that information to his or her parents during adolescence. This common anti-ROGD refrain is based on highly dubious research.

    Seattle

    The author of this template appears to be Caitlin Thornbrugh, a creative writing instructor in the Department of English at Northeastern University who received the university’s “LGBTQA Resource Center Gratitude Award” in 2021.

    Perfect. Rather than medical professionals making the decisions on clinical grounds, we have academics from the English department setting the tone – fuelled no doubt by their Judith Butler readings.

    And the plastic surgeons may just have had enough:

    [Sheila] Nazarian, the Beverly Hills surgeon, told me that surgeons in her professional network who perform gender surgeries typically defer to mental-health professionals and endocrinologists to determine for them whether minors should receive procedures like double mastectomy. That approach, she believes, is misguided, and reduces surgeons to mechanics.

    “We are not highly trained technicians,” Nazarian told me. “We are physicians with responsibility for the health and well-being of our patients. We can get input from other clinicians, but ultimately the responsibility for determining medical readiness lies with us. That means that we have to examine all the data and studies available to us. Furthermore, you can’t help people by ignoring the reasons they want to go under the knife. With every patient, I exercise discretion as a professional and determine whether the procedure they are seeking is in their ultimate best interest.” The idea that surgeons should defer heavily to the prior assessments of clinicians struck Nazarian as wrong. “You can’t outsource your professional judgement to other clinicians. It’s your responsibility as the last in a chain of treatment to ensure you are doing what is best for the patient now and in the long term.”