Anonymous wrote:Ok so we go back to policing what women can do
Anonymous wrote:The reality is bachelorette parties treat gay bars like going to the zoo. They aren’t there because they have a bunch of gay friends and it’s a place they frequent. They are there to gawk.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah. The problem here is bachelorettes. They need to be banned in every public space.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trans women are not a threat to you.
Biological straight women aren't a threat to anyone in a gay bar. 🤷🏽♀️🤷🏽♀️
They are a threat to the existence of a space established exclusively for gay men to feel free to behave as they wish, without judging straight eyes upon them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Trans women are not a threat to you.
Biological straight women aren't a threat to anyone in a gay bar. 🤷🏽♀️🤷🏽♀️
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:False equivalency. Gay bars become gay bars because of the clientele they attract - you can’t “make” a space inaccessible to people based on their sexual orientation. Women and girls - historically and currently under threat by biological males in cases of childhood sexual abuse, sexual assault, and domestic violence (to say nothing of systemic sexism) - seek to have places and situations where they are most vulnerable to be free from biological males. I think that is a reasonable expectation.
Historically gays have been prosecuted, arrested(with lose of employment to follow), beaten, sexual violence, rape, discriminated against, etc and it stills goes on today. If some gays want a place safe from straights you should respect their rights. You should also not bring a bachelorette party to a gay bar to look at the “gays”. I find it troubling that you seem to say only women experience this and are dismissive of other groups experiences because they are not women.
So, women can demand the same in our safe spaces? We want our spaces to be for biological women to be protected from biological males.
No. You are lower on the victim ladder. Have respect for your superiors
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:False equivalency. Gay bars become gay bars because of the clientele they attract - you can’t “make” a space inaccessible to people based on their sexual orientation. Women and girls - historically and currently under threat by biological males in cases of childhood sexual abuse, sexual assault, and domestic violence (to say nothing of systemic sexism) - seek to have places and situations where they are most vulnerable to be free from biological males. I think that is a reasonable expectation.
Historically gays have been prosecuted, arrested(with lose of employment to follow), beaten, sexual violence, rape, discriminated against, etc and it stills goes on today. If some gays want a place safe from straights you should respect their rights. You should also not bring a bachelorette party to a gay bar to look at the “gays”. I find it troubling that you seem to say only women experience this and are dismissive of other groups experiences because they are not women.
So, women can demand the same in our safe spaces? We want our spaces to be for biological women to be protected from biological males.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:False equivalency. Gay bars become gay bars because of the clientele they attract - you can’t “make” a space inaccessible to people based on their sexual orientation. Women and girls - historically and currently under threat by biological males in cases of childhood sexual abuse, sexual assault, and domestic violence (to say nothing of systemic sexism) - seek to have places and situations where they are most vulnerable to be free from biological males. I think that is a reasonable expectation.
Historically gays have been prosecuted, arrested(with lose of employment to follow), beaten, sexual violence, rape, discriminated against, etc and it stills goes on today. If some gays want a place safe from straights you should respect their rights. You should also not bring a bachelorette party to a gay bar to look at the “gays”. I find it troubling that you seem to say only women experience this and are dismissive of other groups experiences because they are not women.