Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Period blood stinks too
Our all gender bathrooms routinely have thick, chunky blood on the underside of the seat. I see this (as a man) when I lift it to pee. It makes me gag. I can only imagine it's menstruating women pulling tampons out while seated and having it swing, heavy with blood, like a pendulum smacking the underside of the seat.
So gross.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Period blood stinks too
Our all gender bathrooms routinely have thick, chunky blood on the underside of the seat. I see this (as a man) when I lift it to pee. It makes me gag. I can only imagine it's menstruating women pulling tampons out while seated and having it swing, heavy with blood, like a pendulum smacking the underside of the seat.
So gross.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We still live in a society where women are routinely harassed and threatened by men, including at work. This is more than a cleanliness issue. There are ways to ensure inclusivity without making everyone use one bathroom.
Not you again. I don't know who you associate with but women are not routinely harassed and threatened by men. It happens, of course, but baseless fear-mongering does nothing to solve the issue. Using the same bathroom is not going to encourage this because 90% of the time unisex bathrooms are single-use, meaning they aren't being used together. Deal with your anxiety, please.
Lol. I’ve never posted on this topic before, but good to know you’re making sure to police this particular topic. I so wish that violence against women were a figment of my own anxiety
Anonymous wrote:Period blood stinks too
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We still live in a society where women are routinely harassed and threatened by men, including at work. This is more than a cleanliness issue. There are ways to ensure inclusivity without making everyone use one bathroom.
Not you again. I don't know who you associate with but women are not routinely harassed and threatened by men. It happens, of course, but baseless fear-mongering does nothing to solve the issue. Using the same bathroom is not going to encourage this because 90% of the time unisex bathrooms are single-use, meaning they aren't being used together. Deal with your anxiety, please.
I don’t think anyone has an issue with single-use unisex bathrooms.
Anonymous wrote:how about we just have XX and XY bathrooms?
Easy solution.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We still live in a society where women are routinely harassed and threatened by men, including at work. This is more than a cleanliness issue. There are ways to ensure inclusivity without making everyone use one bathroom.
Not you again. I don't know who you associate with but women are not routinely harassed and threatened by men. It happens, of course, but baseless fear-mongering does nothing to solve the issue. Using the same bathroom is not going to encourage this because 90% of the time unisex bathrooms are single-use, meaning they aren't being used together. Deal with your anxiety, please.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We still live in a society where women are routinely harassed and threatened by men, including at work. This is more than a cleanliness issue. There are ways to ensure inclusivity without making everyone use one bathroom.
Not you again. I don't know who you associate with but women are not routinely harassed and threatened by men. It happens, of course, but baseless fear-mongering does nothing to solve the issue. Using the same bathroom is not going to encourage this because 90% of the time unisex bathrooms are single-use, meaning they aren't being used together. Deal with your anxiety, please.
Anonymous wrote:We still live in a society where women are routinely harassed and threatened by men, including at work. This is more than a cleanliness issue. There are ways to ensure inclusivity without making everyone use one bathroom.
Anonymous wrote:Wait until yall hear about bathrooms on airplanes omg
Anonymous wrote:A manager needs to tell people (men) that if they continue leaving the bathroom a mess, they will have to clean it.
Or, just put pieces of paper on the outside of specific stalls - one for people who don't leave a mess, and one for people who are slobs.
Anonymous wrote:At our old work building, we had all-gender, men, and women's bathrooms. We had the men's and women's already and then, over time, some bathrooms were converted to all-gender. In our new building, we only have all-gender. In theory, I love this inclusivity and want to be inclusive to trans folks and all gender identities. In practice, women are finding that the men (and it's obviously the men) leave the bathroom really gross and a lot of the women are just avoiding the bathrooms in general. We've tried signs and reminders from supervisors but the problem persists. Any experience with this, ideas, or suggestions?