• The Telegraph – Phillipson blocks trans rules protecting safe spaces for women:

    Bridget Phillipson is blocking the publication of trans guidance that would force business and public bodies to protect women-only spaces.

    The Women and Equalities Secretary has given a statement to the High Court describing the proposed rules as “trans-exclusive” and has failed to sign them off more than three months after receiving them.

    She’s looking over her shoulder at Labour’s back-bench trans supporters.

    In her High Court submission, Ms Phillipson says that banning transgender women – biological males – from women’s lavatories would also mean women could not take their “infant sons” into changing rooms at swimming pools.

    Oh ffs. Grasping at straws. She’s looking for any excuse to delay.

    However, more than eight months after the court decision, Ms Phillipson has still not rubber-stamped the EHRC’s guidance. Sources told The Telegraph that she had insisted on additional bureaucratic processes that have held approval up.

    Because of the delay, hospitals, businesses and other public facilities are doing nothing to prevent biological males from using women’s loos and changing rooms.

    Claire Coutinho, the shadow minister for equalities, said: “Government lawyers – working under Bridget Phillipson’s instruction – are trying to rewrite the Supreme Court judgment that sex means biological sex. It is clear that they have no intention of complying with the law or implementing the ruling to make sure women’s rights to single-sex spaces are protected.

    “The minister’s arguments would be laughable if they weren’t so dangerous. Calling for sex-based rights on a case-by-case basis to try and appease radical gender activists in her own party is a betrayal of women and girls everywhere. Whether it’s this court case or failing to publish the EHRC’s draft code of practice, the Government is doing everything it can to deny women the right to single-sex spaces.”

  • Colin Lourie at Cafe Royal Books:

    Piccadilly, taxi drivers protesting VAT, 1972

    Trafalgar Square, 1971

    Berwick Street market, 1973

    Portobello Road, 1972

    On Whitehall, 1971

    Petticoat Lane, 1971

    Trafalgar Square, 1971

    Covent Garden, 1971

    Tottenham Court Road, 1974

    [Photos © Cafe Royal Books/Colin Lourie]

  • Jonathan Sacerdoti in the Spectator:

    Protesters chanting ‘globalise the intifada’ will now be arrested, according to the heads of Greater Manchester Police and the Metropolitan Police. The announcement has been framed as a response to a ‘changed context’. But what it actually represents is an admission, belated and heavy, that the authorities spent years refusing to see what was directly in front of them.

    The chant was never opaque. The intifadas were not metaphors or moods. They were campaigns of organised violence: shootings, stabbings, bombings, lynchings, buses torn apart, cafés turned into graves. And each individual terror attack, each ‘isolated’ act of violence with half a dozen or a dozen dead leads to the next, until one day a full scale atrocity unfolds with hundreds of people murdered in their homes, raped at a music festival, and kidnapped by savages. Suddenly, nobody knows how the signs were ignored. Suddenly, they see a ‘changed context’ requiring action.

    The same refusal to recognise the dangerous truth has marked every stage of the past two years. In October 2023, clear footage from London showed demonstrators chanting ‘jihad’. The Metropolitan Police responded with the laughable, pathetic explanation that the word has ‘a number of meanings.’ Though they acknowledged that the public associates it with terrorism, they seemed wilfully blind to the fact that terrorists also associate it with terrorism. No offence was identified. Jewish alarm was noted, then set aside.

    That posture has repeated itself in more grotesque form. In May 2021, a convoy drove deliberately through Jewish neighbourhoods in North London, waving Palestinian flags and shouting abuse. From a megaphone came the words ‘F*** the Jews’ and ‘rape their daughters’. It was shouted in English for all to hear. The incident was widely condemned. Arrests were made. Yet by November 2022, charges were dropped. No one was convicted. The message absorbed by both those targeted and the perpetrators was unmistakable.

    The same indulgence has extended into places that ought to have triggered immediate alarm. In November 2023, Talk TV broadcast footage from inside British mosques showing sermons and prayers calling for harm, killing and destruction directed at Jews and Israel. Police assessed the material. Regulators reviewed it. In at least one case, police stated explicitly that no criminal offence had been committed. Review replaced enforcement. Concern replaced consequence. When calls for killing are recited as prayer, restraint becomes complicity.

    Each episode has been treated as discrete. Together, they form a pattern. Language prepares the ground. It trains crowds. It lowers inhibitions. The first intifada did not erupt spontaneously. It was cultivated through chants, sermons and ritualised incitement. Stone throwing was celebrated. Stabbings were sanctified. Molotov cocktails were framed as duty. Hamas emerged from that environment and refined its methods with devastating effect.

    That lineage is now being celebrated openly. Palestinian media mark the first intifada as a formative chapter leading directly to the October 7th massacre. They describe a progression ‘from stones to the flood’. They present violence as inheritance and instruction. This message circulates freely across borders, untranslated and largely unchallenged.

    Enough. Pretending that words float free of consequence has become an act of wilful blindness. When chants celebrate intifada, when crowds shout jihad, when men feel licensed to scream about raping Jewish daughters in the street, the meaning is plain. No contortions are required to see it. Only honesty.

    This moment also demands clarity about sources. The Muslim Brotherhood and its offshoots have spent decades refining the language, structures and pedagogy that turn grievance into mobilisation and mobilisation into violence. Western states have treated this as an abstract concern, a foreign problem, or a matter of internal community debate. That indulgence has failed. The Muslim Brotherhood should be banned across the UK and the wider West, as it already is in multiple Arab states that understand its methods at close range. Radical Islamic teaching that sanctifies violence must be prohibited without apology. Hate preaching that incites harm against Jews, or against any non-Muslim, must be met with visible, decisive enforcement. There is nothing complex here and nothing shameful in drawing firm lines. A liberal society does not weaken itself by refusing to tolerate doctrines that glorify murder. It asserts itself.

    The intifada wasn’t a campaign of organised violence according to the BBC, mind.

    The BBC has risked fresh allegations of bias after describing Palestinian uprisings in which thousands of people were killed as “largely unarmed and popular”.

    A report on the BBC website that explained the origin of the word intifada made no mention of the fact that more than 1,000 Israelis and about 5,000 Palestinians died in repeated clashes and terrorist attacks between 1987 and 2005.

    After complaints from Jewish readers, the BBC changed the report, saying that the word intifada was regarded by some as “a call for violence against Jewish people”.

    Danny Cohen, the former director of BBC Television, said the original description was “deeply offensive” and suggested the BBC still had a problem with anti-Israel bias.

  • Braver government would tackle grooming gangs and cousin marriage, provide more female only shelters, get police to take sexual assault more seriously than speech crimes and get men out of women’s spaces. But all Labour has to offer is ‘re-educating’ boys out of ‘toxic masculinity’. Politics as chastisement. Terrible for boys and women.

    Well, nobody could accuse this government of being brave.

  • See also, this open letter from clinicians to Wes Streeting:

    We think that PATHWAYS Trial is unsafe, doesn’t meet the requirements of UK clinical trial regulations, and should not proceed for the following reasons:

    1. The expected benefits do not outweigh the expected risks, jeopardising the safety and wellbeing of participants.
    2. Foreseeable risks to child development are not minimized.
    3. The trial is not scientifically sound.
    4. Important information from people who have already received gonadotrophin-releasing hormone analogues (GnRHa) (the Data Linkage Study) should be evaluated first.
  • Janice Turner on that BMJ Medical Ethics paper:

    How do you end a hideous form of child abuse? Do you a) strengthen laws, protect victims and prosecute offenders, or b) use abstruse language to muddy the ethical waters, sophistry to turn those fighting abuse into the bad guys so — voilà! — the problem magically disappears?

    Nothing has made me angrier this year than the essay published by the BMJ group attacking the global effort to end female genital mutilation (FGM). So angry, I looked up each of the 25 authors and read their other papers, too. From Cambridge to Montreal, Melbourne to Malmo, what privileged self-regard posing as progress.

    Questions for these (mainly) white female academics: do you like having a clitoris? Are you entitled to sexual pleasure and giving birth via a vagina that hasn’t been sewn shut? Are you grateful you’ll never hear your daughter scream as she’s pinned down on a bloody table? Then don’t African women deserve the same?

    But liberal “feminism” stays high in the intellectual stratosphere, above the messiness of bodies, pain, fear and blood. Never, ever let postmodernists make policy: they disdain the material world. As shown in 1977, when intellectuals successfully lobbied the French government to decriminalise sex with children because consent, in Michel Foucault’s words, was just a “contractual notion”.

    How would the authors see suttee, a Hindu practice banned under the Raj, whereby a widow threw herself on her husband’s funeral pyre? They’d condemn “problematic colonial saviour discourse” and say these women had “agency”, so let them burn.

    It’s perhaps worth pointing out that the first name on the list of authors – the lead author – is one Fuambai Sia Ahmadu, from Sierra Leone and now an anthropologist at the University of Chicago:

    Ahmadu is known for her work on female genital mutilation (FGM) and, in particular, for her decision as an adult and member of the Kono ethnic group to undergo it as part of initiation into the female-controlled Bundu secret society.

    With anaesthetic, I think it’s fair to assume – unlike the overwhelming majority of young girls who are forced to undergo FGM.

    So Janice Turner’s characterisation of the authors as “(mainly) white female academics” is accurate, strictly speaking, but a little unfair.

    Contrary to the position of the World Health Organization, UNICEF and other UN bodies, she has argued that the health risks of most types of FGM are exaggerated, its effect on women’s sexuality misunderstood, and that most affected women do not experience it as an oppressive practice. Ahmadu’s views are shared by some other anthropologists.

    Are we surprised? Anthropologists, eh?

  • Exciting union news – Left-wing candidate beats Starmer ally to lead UK’s biggest union.

    Left-wing candidate Andrea Egan has been elected as the new leader of Unison, the UK’s biggest trade union, in a blow to Sir Keir Starmer.

    Ms Egan, who was expelled from the Labour Party three years ago, beat the union’s current general secretary Christina McAnea, an ally of the prime minister.

    We heard from Andrea Egan earlier this month:

    Having joined Labour about 15 years ago, she says, Egan is no longer a member after being expelled for sharing articles from the proscribed Marxist group Socialist Appeal.

    Nor is she a member of any other party, she clarifies, though she is personally enthusiastic about ‘Your Party’, the new one being started by former Labour MPs Jeremy Corbyn and Zarah Sultana, as well as pro-Gaza Independent MPs. It has been a chaotic endeavour so far but when we talk – before its founding conference – Egan says she will have to “see how it develops”: “I do feel that it gives people hope again.”.

    And, of course, lovely trans people.

    Another is standing up for trans workers. I wonder what she makes of Sandie Peggie, the NHS nurse who complained about having to use the same hospital dressing room as a trans colleague. She has launched legal action against her trade union, alleging that the Royal College of Nursing failed to support her. How would Egan react if a similar case came to Unison?

    “I haven’t followed that case. But what were the real issues within that? I have trans friends, trans women friends; my nephew is a trans man. I wouldn’t have an issue. I’d want to understand. Because the argument can then develop to anybody saying… ‘Well, I don’t want you there because you’ve got blonde hair’ or ‘I don’t want them there because they’ve got blue eyes’,” Egan says.

    So…anti-women, and, to judge from the quality of that last argument, stupid as well.

    More than 70% of Unison members are women….

  • It’s a grim irony that the health secretary who’s authorising the puberty blocker trial is gay, given that, as many have argued, the momentum behind “gender affirming care” is profoundly homophobic – “transing away the gay”. Kate Barker at Spiked:

    Figures from the Tavistock Gender Identity Development Service (GIDS) are stark and troubling. Eighty-nine per cent of the girls and 81 per cent of the boys who attended the clinic said they were same-sex attracted. They were persuaded that their emerging sense that they were lesbian, gay or bisexual meant they were trapped in the wrong body and should be ‘treated’ with powerful drugs. Conservative leader Kemi Badenoch was right to describe ‘gender-affirming care’ for children as ‘transing away the gay’. Adding to Streeting’s hesitance must be the fear that he, the first out gay man to run the Department of Health and Social Care, would be the enabler-in-chief of this scandal.

    The medicalisation of homosexuality undoubtedly has a long and ugly history. As the UK’s only charity exclusively for lesbians, gays and bisexuals, LGB Alliance, where I am CEO, led the fight against puberty blockers. Streeting was an incredible ally, and did the bravest thing a politician can do: he admitted he was wrong.

    We call on him to be brave again, and reconsider this mass medical experiment on children – the vast majority of whom will grow up to be lesbian, gay or bisexual.

    It’s sobering to reflect that Alan Turing was given feminising drugs – in effect chemical castration – to “cure” him of his homosexuality back in 1952. It’s now universally recognised as a monstrous betrayal of a man who gave so much to this country as a computer pioneer and a hero of Bletchley Park, and casts a dark shadow over the medical ethics of the time. Yet here we are, over seventy years later….on children.

  • Mount Paektu – “the sacred mountain of the revolution” – holds a special place in North Korean iconography. Supposedly the birthplace of Kim Jong-il – he was actually born in Russia – the ascent by Kim Jong-un on a white horse in 2019 was a deeply symbolic event….

    …echoing the legend of Chollima, the mythical winged horse. “At Chollima speed” is a constant exhortation to drive forward at full speed towards the dream of a great Socialist Nation.

    But it does get very cold up there.

    From the Daily NK:

    North Koreans are bribing officials to remove their names from “voluntary” winter expeditions to Mount Paektu, complaining that the trips force them to spend up to $200 to endure temperatures as low as 20–30 degrees below zero.

    A source in North Pyongan province told Daily NK recently that branches of party and workers’ organizations in the city of Sinuiju had started organizing winter expeditions to Mount Paektu last month.

    While the regime portrays attendance on these expeditions as being “voluntary” and motivated by “a high degree of political fervor,” North Koreans view “nominations” for the expeditions as a form of political mobilization that they dare not refuse.

    On top of that, the expeditions present considerable challenges for their participants. The area of Ryanggang province where Mount Paektu is located gets frigid in the middle of winter—as low as 20–30 degrees below zero. The regime’s promotional language about experiencing “the spirit of the bracing winds” basically means braving extreme cold on the ascent up the mountain.

    “When the wind whips by your frozen face, it feels like your skin is peeling off. Mount Paektu in the winter is not so much an expedition as a military exercise,” recalled a young person who returned from one such trip last month.

    “Many people don’t see the point of spending so much on a grueling experience and observe that under the circumstances, the best option is not to go. It’s not like this is the Wonsan Kalma Coastal Tourist Area,” the source observed.

    But organizations at all levels are enthusiastically organizing expeditions as they race to prove their loyalty.

    “Given the increasing focus on political projects nowadays, an expedition to Mount Paektu is becoming another yardstick for assessing a unit’s loyalty and political posture. As the higher-ups try to hold expeditions, the lower ranks are scrambling for reasons not to go,” the source said.

    It has even become common for people to slip bribes to the organizing officials to have their names removed from the list of people recommended for an expedition.

    “If not for the compulsory nature of organizational life, I honestly doubt anybody would want to go to Mount Paektu in the winter. The expeditions to the mountain used to be focused on learning revolutionary traditions. But now they’re mostly about units competing to prove their loyalty and members anxious to avoid being nominated,” the source said.