Posted on 12/19/2019 3:30:39 AM PST by Morgana
A picture of a gender-neutral restroom in Lewes, England, has gone viral. Why? Because it has a giant urinal along one wall.
Now, gender-inclusivity apparently means that if what was formerly the womens room is full and a female of any age just cant hold it (ladies with toddlers, you know), theres a good chance theyll walk by men peeing to get to a toilet stall.
The establishment in question, Charleston Trust, is committed to creating safe, welcoming and inclusive spaces for all our visitors and staff. It said it introduced gender-inclusive toilets in one area of our site in September 2018 to help members of the queer and trans community feel safe with us, and to ensure disabled visitors who need assistance are not troubled by the gender of their carer.
We recognise that the way the toilets are currently designed has practical limitations, and are exploring removing the urinals to make both toilet blocks truly gender-inclusive.
The administrators of Charleston Trust say they realize mixed-sex spaces can be uncomfortable because of sex differences. While other organizations try to address concern by posting reassuring flyers, such as this one at right that Federalist contributor Caroline DAgati found in Seattle, Charleston Trusts answer is to erase as much of the evidence of those differences as possible and declare publicly that its all in the name of safety and inclusion.
But getting rid of urinals or posting notices wont make women much more comfortable sharing the space with men because womens objections to the erasure of their exclusive space go beyond safety or even awkwardness.
Even progressive feminists used to be concerned about womens bathroom experiences and achieving potty parity. In 2001, the Los Angeles Times ran a piece on the subject, lamenting the long lines due to insufficient and poorly designed stalls. The laws governing womens bathrooms seem to change only when men are inconvenienced, the staff writer observed. Although the language has shifted, the Western world of 2019 proves she was right. The Transgender Agenda Is Undoing Womens Progress
Bathrooms are changing primarily because biological males attempting to live as women desire access to the bathroom aligned with their gender identity. Females who identify as men also want access to mixed facilities, but their numbers are fewer. Either way, its safe to say the only things women are changing are diapers on that single changing table in the restroom.
Thats a shame, because the struggle to make public life more accommodating to women has been long and hard. Nineteenth-century women had to limit their excursions outside the home to how long they could hold it because there were no womens rooms. An article in Time Magazine outlining the history of sex-segregated bathrooms notes, counterintuitively, that mens and womens facilities didnt arise simply from basic biological differences.
Even as women entered the workplace, often in the new factories that were being built at the time, there was a reluctance to integrate them fully into public life, it reads. But it became a necessity. Those spaces from reading rooms to train cars to privies were designed to mimic the comforts of home think curtains and chaise lounges.
One may find it sexist that womens reading rooms and train cars (at the back, to protect them and the children) were a thing, but the development of the designated womens bathroom was critical to allowing women the freedom to work and move about freely, as long as they wanted, outside the home. Now the transgender agenda has many women begging for those hard-won, women-only spaces to be eliminated. Womens Bathrooms Serve Many Purposes
Since the late 19th century, those female restrooms became, and perhaps were meant to be, much more than a utilitarian set of closets. The restroom is unquestionably a social and emotional space.
Single-occupancy bathrooms are seen as a sensible solution by people who want to quell the outrage, while the unisex restroom is the gender-inclusive answer many in the avant garde of gender ideology demand. But they both eliminate an important, although banal, sociocultural institution.
The womens room is where women get real with each other and with themselves. Its where they gather to regroup when social situations get awkward or intense or they need to communicate in private. Its where chit-chat warms women up to each other in a world where its easy to turn a cold shoulder or entertain suspicion or false ideas of what other women are like.
What lipstick is that? Where did you get your purse? Could you spare a tampon? Those questions might seem trivial to men, but they are part of the social cohesion that isnt fully appreciated until its gone. Plus, sometimes you really need a tampon.
The resistance to eliminating womens rooms was never just about sexual abuse or having regular moments of awkwardness. The bathroom is where women go to take deep, slow breaths to overcome their anxiety before an interview or presentation. Its where teenagers vent to each other. Its where broken hearts spill out in hot tears onto wet counters, and blessed strangers come alongside to offer comfort. You think all thats going to happen in unisex washrooms? Womens Accommodations Arent Sexist
The Time author seemed to insinuate that mimicking the home in public accommodations for women is sexist. But youd be hard-pressed to find a woman who doesnt appreciate spacious bathrooms with seating, music, non-fluorescent lighting, some decor, and ample counter and mirror space.
Who doesnt want public accommodations tailored to his or her own needs and preferences? Its like turning down a Holiday Inn room for a co-ed bunk. Designing a mixed-sex space with no urinals and enough stalls for everyone is a challenge; not many businesses are going to invest in the extra non-stall square footage or any of the little details that make public restrooms less drab.
Thats not to say a male who identifies as a woman wouldnt love homey bathrooms, too, but the temptation is to appease everybody by turning restrooms into a utilitarian row of single-occupancy water closets for both sexes or turn the existing facilities into unisex spaces. Its not fair to women and apparently not fair to men, either, because they network in bathrooms (John Kerry said as much).
Do you think men are going to linger and talk if theyre sharing the space with women? Certainly not if the urinals are done away with. Do you think men want to make women uncomfortable with their presence for longer than they have to? Women Are Losing Ground
Women who used to be chained to their bladders because of a lack of female restrooms are now expected to fight for their elimination. We are being taken advantage of, and not solely by the tiny minority of transgender people who just want to use the restroom they identify with.
This is, however, the consequence of gender ideology, which disregards the behavioral and biological differences between men (males) and women (females) as meaningless. Women are being erased as the term is broadened to cover those who arent female and is thus emptied of its rich significance. When anyone can be a woman, no one really is. It is no surprise, then, that womens spaces are increasingly devalued and perhaps facing extinction.
Women and girls deserve their own spaces, depend on their own spaces for privacy, and gain from them socially. We shouldnt have to justify that with sexual harassment or assault statistics, or the fact that females and males are biologically different. As Libby Emmons wrote recently, Fighting for the rights of women and girls to have fair accommodation is not about other people. Its about women and girls, staking a claim to what they need, and demanding it. Women and girls are notoriously bad at saying what they need.
The more womanhood is scrubbed out for being outdated and bigoted, the harder it will be for us to speak up for ourselves. Policies that snuff out womens spaces are not solutions for gender equity we can live with.
I don’t get how going from restrooms with multiple toilets down to single hole lavs doesn’t violate building codes. Unless public accommodations were installing more than codes required.
Whatever.
Dumb chicks are the ones that promoted this crap. So I should feel bad for them?
They are supposed to be so “strong and empowered”. If a guy comes in and makes them uncomfortable, then just beat him up. Right?
Stores like H&M don’t have separate mens and women’s dressing rooms anymore. I won’t shop there for that reason. I will only shop at stores with dedicated women’s dressing rooms.
Dumb chicks are the ones that promoted this crap.
You got any elderly female relations?
If so, feel sorry for them for having to wait so much longer in a line in public accommodations that have gone to single stall lavs.
BTW, ditto for elderly gents.
So liberals are feeling the trickle down effect of their policies.
The “transgender” movement is all about marginalizing women. More than anything else, it looks like the men who never wanted women to have rights have final!y found a way to abridge our rights. We cannot go into a public restroom without the risk of having men enter; our sports teams are being commandeered by men who claim to identify as women; the new Army physical fitness test was designed for men, and most women cannot pass it so far (leadershi claims passing is a matter of training, which is also sexist).
Way to go, leftists, for erasing the hard-won gains women have made since the 1800s.
repeal the 19th
It has nothing to do with inclusiveness. It’s all about one thing: allowing “trans” to affirm and confirm their delusion about their sex and to force everyone else to accept it.
It’s so that the male who thinks he’s a female can go into a bathroom labeled “women” and thus prove to himself and the world that he “is” a woman.
Bathrooms should be for the necessity that everyone experiences, not to force everyone to accept a manner of thinking.
The left never did accept the “male and female He created them” thing.
Can you name the dumb chicks who promoted this? Links would be a must given your generalization.
Generally speaking women have cleaner bathroom habits than men. If there is no urinal, Men leave the seat up, often pee on the seat, dont flush. These bathrooms go against human nature.
What about women with a penis?
What about the women who use that funnel system?
And it saves water. #SaveThePlanet
i don’t want to share a bathroom with any guy that’s not my husband.
to date i have only seen 1 man in the ladies room, and it was an old, fat guy, clearly not pretending to be a woman.
This is the world you liberals created.
Embrace the Suck!
It is well known that the biggest cheerleaders for all of this gender-neutral bathroom crap for decades have been females that started out complaining about the lines for female restrooms, or how men supposedly had too many of them, leading in the late 90s to the creation and popularity of these darn things in workplaces (see the TV series Alley McBeal).
But why be aware of the cultural shifts that lead here, when you can ignore that and ask for “link” and specific names in a cheap attempt to what? Act like I’m making this up for giggles?
“Generally speaking women have cleaner bathroom habits than men. “
I worked at a big box in high school. One of my jobs (because no one else wanted it) was to clean the public restrooms at the end of the night.
All I can say is, no. That is not the case at all.
Assuming for a moment that "cultural space" is a frivolous concept (which isn't necessarily the case) the fact that women and girls DO NOT want pervert guys in the ladies' room checking them out and,perhaps,even taking photos with tiny hidden cameras is ABSOLUTELY reasonable,normal and proper.
Private restrooms for the ladies and a wood chipper entrance for the wannabees.
Lol sounds like a good place for an abattoir.
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