Prime Minister Rishi Sunak has launched yet another attack at the trans community by saying that people âcanât be any sex they want to be.â
He made the remarks during his closing speech at the 2023 Conservative Party conference on Wednesday (4 October) afternoon.
At one point, Sunak said that people shouldnât be âbullied into believing people can be any sex they want to beâ as he made clear his stance on trans people.
âWe are going to change this country and that means, life means life. That shouldnât be a controversial position. The vast majority of hard-working people agree with it,â he began. âWe shouldnât get bullied into believing people can be any sex they want to be. They canât,â â Rishi Sunak
âIt also shouldnât be controversial for parents to know what their children are learning in school about relationships.
âPatients should know when hospitals are talking about men or women,â which was met with a large applause.
He went on: âWe shouldnât get bullied into believing people can be any sex they want to be. They canât.â
âA man, is a man, and a woman, is a woman, that is just common sense,â he added, to yet more noise from Tories in attendance.
Many on social media site X (formerly known as Twitter) reacted to the comments, accusing Sunak of making âpersistent attacksâ and labelling him âdisgracefulâ. âA man, is a man, and a woman, is a womanâ
One wrote in response: âTrying to distract people from his governmentâs corruption and incompetence by attacking some of the most vulnerable people in society. Vile.â
Needlessly stirring up hatred where it is unjustified to make a cheap political dig, before going on to claim the country is wonderful because of its tolerance. Disgraceful excuse for a PM,â another went on to add.
Sunak can go and do one. Pandering to middle class transphobes isnât the election winner you think it is,â someone else echoed.
âThe persistent attacks on not only one of the smallest but most at risk communities is vile. Absolutely disgusting party through and through including anyone who supports them,â a social media user weighed in.
It comes after Health Secretary Steve Barclay outlined plans yesterday (3 October) to ban trans women from accessing female NHS wards.
This has since been backed by other senior Tories such as Home Secretary Suella Braverman.
LGBTQ+ charity Stonewall criticised the announcement, labelling it a âcynical attempt to look busyâ instead of actually improving womenâs healthcare.
Addressing party members in Manchester, Mr Barclay said: âWe need a common-sense approach to sex and equality issues in the NHS â that is why today I am announcing proposals for clearer rights for patients.
âAnd I can today confirm that sex-specific language has now been fully restored to online health advice pages about cervical and ovarian cancer and the menopause.
âIt is vital that womenâs voices are heard in the NHS and the privacy, dignity and safety of all patients are protected.â
The post Rishi Sunak says people âcanât be any sex they want to beâ in new swipe at trans community appeared first on Attitude.
Ignorance? Iâm well aware of the methods youâve suggested, I was just wondering what exactly you were referring to when you said âfight for themâ, and what you consider to be the most effective method.
Unfortunately I donât think itâs as effective as you think (at getting people to give into demands). Thousands of people protested after Liz Trussâ resignation asking for a general election last year. Rishi isnât going to call a general election any earlier than he needs to because he knows the conservatives are likely to lose. That said, yes I do think protests are a good way to drum up support and encourage people to vote. Despite what you may think, voting is important.
Those protests were so big I only found a single article about them. Protesting means doing at the very least what the French were doing. Block roads, wreck havoc,
make transphobes disappear. Raising a big group of people would only work if they were organised and could, ahem, do something to the government.Voting is only impactful to a certain, little, extent, when the government tells LGBTQ community they donât and/or shouldnât exist and the plan to fight back is to vote harder then something isnât right.