• File under "brave but foolish".

    A Pakistani man who tried to set up the nation's first gay club has been thrown into a mental hospital, after religious conservatives claimed he only did so after coming back from the UK.

    The man, who was not identified by the Telegraph, filed an application to set the club up in Abbottabad, a conservative city in the north of the nation that nearly 240million call home….

    But gay sex is criminalised in Pakistan, and can be punished with prison sentences of up to two years. On top of this, a deeply conservative culture can make it difficult to be openly gay.

    So much so that the man was transferred to the Sarhad hospital for psychiatric disease in Peshawar on May 9.

    He received much abuse for his application from local citizens and politicians alike.

    The leader of the Jamiat Ulema Islam (JUI) party, a conservative religious group in the region, claimed that the applicant tried to set up the club had recently returned from a visit to the UK.

    One local MP from the far-Right Pakistan Awami Tehreek party said he would've doused the club with petrol and set it alight, while the leader of the party, Naseer Khan Nazir, said there would be 'very severe consequences' if the club was allowed to go up.

    Will "Queers for Palestine" set up a "Queers for Pakistan" campaign in sympathy? Organise demonstrations outside the Pakistan embassy? Perhaps not.

  • From the Mail:

    Police chiefs are under fire for failing to stop transgender officers being allowed to strip-search women.

    After an outcry earlier this year, the National Police Chiefs Council (NPCC) withdrew guidance permitting biological males identifying as female to intimately search women.

    It said it was launching a 'thorough' review of the rules, while Home Office ministers said they shared campaigners' 'profound concerns' that forces were breaking the law and risking safety.

    But activists fear the NPCC is ignoring them and that new guidance will still allow transgender officers to strip-search women.

    At a consultation last week, police allegedly referenced a claim that there are '72 recognised genders' and said a trans activist lawyer is working on the review. The NPCC chairman Gavin Stephens is now facing calls for the entire process to be scrapped and restarted with a new adviser.

    That sounds like a very good idea.

    In a letter seen by the Mail, the activists said: 'This review is not fit for purpose. We call on you to stop it now, and restart it only after making a clear statement that no male officer or staff member (however they identify, and whether or not they possess a gender-recognition certificate) may search a female detainee beyond removal of jacket, outer coat and gloves, or head and footwear.'

    The campaigners – Maya Forstater of Sex Matters, Heather Binning of the Women's Rights Network, Kate Barker of the LGB Alliance and retired police officer Cathy Larkman – say they had hoped last Tuesday's meeting would acknowledge that the old guidance was 'unlawful and abusive'.

    But they say the NPCC staff they met took a 'neutral stance' over whether trans women should be allowed to search female detainees.

    'Those attending for the NPCC did not accept that it is just as inappropriate, humiliating and degrading for a woman to be searched by a male officer who calls himself a "trans woman" as for her to be searched by any other male officer.'

    The activists added: 'During the meeting, we were told that a participant in another session had said there were '72 recognised genders'.'

    The campaigners are also angry their consultation responses are to be given to trans activist barrister Robin Moira White, who has previously branded equalities minister Kemi Badenoch and Equality and Human Rights Commission chairman Baroness Falkner 'evil'.

  • May 9, 1913. "Detroit City Gas Company, north end of gas holder."

    image from www.shorpy.com
    [Photo: Shorpy/Detroit Publishing Company]

    With Erection Car no.9 helping to put the pieces together.

  • David Walsh in today's Sunday Times has been reading Doriane Coleman’s new book On Sex and Gender — A Commonsense Approach, with her discussion of the old East European tradition of doping female athletes.

    Coleman had some experience of the difficulties. On a July afternoon in Munich in 1983, she competed in an international 800m race. Lined up against her was the 32-year-old Jarmila Kratochvilova. Long before they reached the 400m mark, the bell had tolled for every other runner in the race, including Coleman, who eventually finished third.

    By then the Czech athlete was disappearing into the distance. Her winning time, 1min 53.28sec, was a world record. Forty-one years on, Kratochvilova’s record still stands. Some athletics people believe it will endure for decades to come. It is the oldest record in her sport. Coleman’s memory of the race? “We knew it was two races in one race. All of us started with the same dream but it was only available to half the competitors. The rest of us had to change our goals from medals and titles to personal bests. The anti-doping culture wasn’t robust back then. You’d be asked, ‘Are you OK to be tested?’ We assumed others were doping.”

    Evidence has shown the Czech authorities ran a doping programme and Kratochvilova’s name shows up in a list of athletes pre-tested before competing internationally, which was standard practice in countries that systematically doped.

    And includes this image of Kratochvilova in action:

    Kratochvilova
    [David Maddison/Getty]

    Yes, there's clearly something, well…not quite right about her physique. But I'm intrigued by that "Bruce Jenner" on her chest. It's a stock photo, and that's definitely Kratochvilova. Is it just serendipity that she's wearring the name of Caitlyn nee Bruce, former athlete and perhaps America's most famous trans woman?

    Walsh gets on to the new guidelines produced by the International Olympic Committee (covered by me here):

    Last week the International Olympic Committee (IOC) issued its latest guidelines on how journalists, broadcasters and national federations should portray and refer to male, female, transgender and DSD athletes. First, though, the IOC wants us to understand that “women, like men, are not a homogeneous group, nor are they solely defined by their gender identity. Indeed, women are as different from each other as they are from men.” Really!

    An annex has been provided “to promote a more accurate, responsible, respectful, and inclusive coverage and communication” of any transgender athletes and athletes “with sex variations” who will be competing in the female competition category in Paris.

    The IOC also asks us not to refer to DSD athletes as “biological males” but simply as women. This is the IOC’s thought police gone mad. While respect for gender identity is important, this guidance makes no sense. Not only are they conflating sex and gender, they ignore the scientific facts, set out by the Court of Arbitration for Sport in the Caster Semenya case, that from puberty onwards DSD athletes produce testosterone levels in the male range (7.7 to 29.4 nmol/L) rather than the much lower female range (0.06 to 1.68 nmol/L) because they have male chromosomes and male gonads (testes, not ovaries).

    Those testosterone levels give them clear physiological advantages, including bigger and stronger bones and muscles and higher levels of haemoglobin in the blood that significantly affect sports performance. Hence the need for separate male and female competition categories. This is also why World Athletics says that for purposes of sports competition it is biological sex, not gender identity, that counts, and why for the purpose of competition, it treats DSD athletes as biological males.

    Failing to acknowledge biological realities, which is what the IOC is doing with its guidelines, is dishonest and dangerous. There is a section in the guidance on what the IOC calls “problematic language”. They tell us we are never to say “born male”, “born female”, “biologically male”, “biologically female” “genetically male”, “genetically female”, “male-to-female” and “female-to-male”. Someone at the IOC has lost their senses.

    Like a practised politician, the IOC hasn’t taken a position on the participation of transgender and DSD athletes in its Games. That’s for individual federations to determine, it says. Why get involved in what is divisive when you can simply issue guidelines promoting diversity and inclusivity? Instead of guidelines, it should just try to keep women’s sport strictly for women.

    Yes – though I don't agree that "respect for gender identity is important", when claims for its reality and its significance are a major part of the problem. Gender expression, perhaps…

  • https://platform.twitter.com/widgets.js

    "This isn’t the 1930s, you can’t just call for antisemitic, genocidal regimes to murder Jews on the streets." Well, they just did.

    Meanwhile any claim by the "Gaza Health Ministry", aka Hamas, goes straight into the BBC headlines – Gaza health ministry says Israeli hostage rescue killed 274 Palestinians.

  • Sonia Sodha in the Observer – Labour’s reaction to Kemi Badenoch’s plan to define sex is not only a hapless fudge, it’s legally illiterate:

    The law is a mess, and the situation is made worse by activists such as Stonewall who have taken advantage of the confusion to mislead people about what it says….I’ve spoken to several lawyers who practise in this area and all say the law badly needs clarification. The Equality and Human Rights Commission agrees. Spelling out that sex in the Equality Act means biological sex would make the law on single-sex spaces, services and sports much clearer, and so help organisations fulfil their rights and responsibilities to women. It would in no way undermine the act’s important but separate protections against discrimination for trans people under gender reassignment.

    There is so much to criticise the Conservatives for on women’s rights and provision, but on this they are right, though they should have prioritised doing it before an election. So why the frenzied anger about Badenoch’s proposals? It is the symptom of a mindset often found in those who spend too much time online, which rots their critical faculties and drives them to see the world as a cartoonish set of heroes and villains. To them, Badenoch is hateful and so anything she says must be wrong. It doesn’t help that there are many men, including on the left, who feel little empathy for women who don’t want to be forced to undress or talk about their trauma in front of, or receive intimate care from, anyone male, regardless of how they identify. I also suspect that the heightened irrationality on display is a product of the different standards that black women are held to, whether they have the politics of Badenoch or Diane Abbott.

    The polite way to describe the Labour response to Badenoch’s proposal is “legally illiterate”. The party claims that the law in this area is clear, despite the fact it is so unclear that, as the result of a judicial review that has made its way through the Scottish courts, in the next year or so the supreme court will have to try to interpret what parliament meant by “sex” in the Equality Act. Labour will argue that the problem can be fixed through statutory guidance, which is nonsense: guidance cannot change the law; only parliament can. As one lawyer I spoke to said, Labour’s position is to uphold the problematic status quo. If it goes ahead with its plans to make a GRC easier to get without first clarifying the law, it will make things worse.

    But in a world where few journalists understand the laws and there is no shortage of people willing to express a zealous view based on vibes instead of knowledge, Labour has got away with it. Why expend political capital on solving a real and important issue when you’ve got pundits who will happily denounce it as the invention of an evil witch called Badenoch? It’s a win-win situation: the said pundits get the thrill of fomenting their culture wars, even as they performatively call them out; Labour frontbenchers escape accountability for their hapless fudge. It’s only the female survivors of rape and abuse who can’t access single-sex services who lose out.

  • Amusing letter from Andrew Lloyd Webber in today's Sunday Times:

    Have any political pundits considered the following scenario (offered with apologies to Mel Brooks and The Producers)? A prime minister wishes to lose an election to pursue a far more lucrative career elsewhere. The PM contrives an unelectable case for his or her party; MPs refuse to stand in droves; a dreadful campaign ensues; a totally unacceptable manifesto is announced. But just as a triumphant disaster is inevitable, the electorate warms to the appalling scenario. A landslide victory follows, with the prime minister lamenting: “Where did we go right?”

    The Normandy D-Day farrago would certainly support the idea that Sunak wants out, and will go to any lengths to ensure failure. On the other hand – toxic Keir Starmer

     

  • Ca. 1900. "Château Frontenac & Dufferin Terrace, Quebec City."

    image from www.shorpy.com
    [Photo: Shorpy/Detroit Photographic Company]

    Opened in 1893, now the Fairmont Le Château Frontenac Hotel.

  • Just when you thought Stonewall was on the way out. From the Telegraph:

    Staff at a top university say they feel coerced to subscribe to a Stonewall agenda by signing a pledge to oppose transphobia and demonstrate “allyship” by sharing their pronouns.

    Exeter University last week asked its academics to sign the “inclusive practitioners commitment” produced by its “LGBTQ+ colleague and student” group.

    The online document requests staff make six pledges to prove they are “the kind of person that LGBTQ+ people can confide in and feel safe around”.

    These include promising to “affirm trans staff and students” by using their chosen names and pronouns.

    They are then encouraged to seek out LGBTQ+ people’s contributions to their teaching subject and ensure when they refer to trans and non-binary experts they “respect their identities, names and pronouns”.

    Lecturers are also told to “educate” themselves about how anti-LGBTQ+ sentiment can be perpetuated through “micro-aggressions, dog whistles and talking points”.

    In addition, they are asked to promise that they are “firmly against” transphobia, bi-erasure, acephobia (discrimination against asexual people) and intersexism, a term for prejudice against people with variations in their sex characteristics.

    Finally, staff are asked to ensure their “allyship” is visible by sharing their own pronouns where appropriate.

    How unutterably depressing. 

    But last night academics at Exeter – a member of the prestigious Russell Group of leading universities – criticised the document as a tool to crush dissent against gender ideology.

    Dr Edward Skidelsky, a philosophy lecturer, said: “Schemes like this are coercive and intended to put pressure on people who are gender-critical.

    “You will be made visible if you sign up because a badge will be displayed on your staff profile. So if you don’t sign it can be easily identified and mean you will possibly targeted by student activists.

    “Also gender-critical people will want to be free to be able to refer to trans people by their biological sex in certain cases. If someone is a rapist then it is ridiculous that you should say ‘she’."…

    Another Exeter academic, who asked not to be named for fear of being disciplined or fired, said: “I just hope that no one notices me abstaining from such things.

    “If I am noticed, someone will complain about me and the university will try to sack me. Even if they don’t succeed, the process will be brutal – the disciplinary process is itself a brutal punishment.

    “It’s a tyranny, with no concept that those with dissenting views should be tolerated.”

    It's no surprise I suppose that universities are the last bastions of this particular sugar-coated tyranny.

  • Excellent news:

    It has been cleared for publication that in a complex operation by the IDF, Shin Bet, and the Israel Police (Yamam), four Israeli hostages were rescued this morning (Saturday). The hostages, Noa Argamani (25), Almog Meir (21), Andrey Kozlov (27), and Shlomi Ziv (40), were kidnapped by Hamas to the Gaza Strip from the 'Nova' party on October 7th.

    The hostages were rescued by Shin Bet and Yamam fighters from two different locations in an operation in the heart of Nuseirat.

    Their medical condition is stable, and they have been transferred for further medical examinations at the 'Sheba' Medical Center in Tel HaShomer.

    Many, myself included, believed that any remaining hostages would be dead by now. Not so!

    A Times of Israel report from April:

    It’s the last wish of a dying mother, to be with her daughter once more. But six months into Israel’s war against Hamas, time is running out for Liora Argamani, who hopes to stay alive long enough to see her kidnapped daughter come home.

    “I want to see her one more time. Talk to her one more time,” said Argamani, 61, who has stage four brain cancer. “I don’t have a lot of time left in this world.”

    Her wish finally granted.