A group of nurses has drafted guidelines for the National Health Service that would ban men who believe they are women from entering women's changing rooms.
The policy guidance was requested by the UK Health Secretary Wes Streeting.
The nurses said they were forced to share changing rooms with male staff members who were allegedly female. When the nurses raised their concerns with human resources, the women claimed they were told they needed to be “re-educated” on the subject.
The women's group then took the employer to court for gender discrimination and sexual harassment.
The nurses called the proposed changes “common sense” and said there should be no “hierarchies” when it comes to equality laws, so the rights of men who believe they are women take precedence over those who actually are women. They argue that it should not be done.
Bethany Hutchinson, one of the authors of the proposal, said: “We want to set a precedent for all public services and workplaces in the UK.”
Mr Hutchison added: 'As frontline NHS nurses who are directly affected by these issues, we can help politicians understand what is going on and what must change urgently. I believe we are in a position to help.” GB News.
said Conservative MP Claire Coutinho. telegraph “Women should not be patronized, disrespected or ignored,” she said when expressing concerns about not wanting to be different from men.
”[This] This shocking incident shows what can happen when institutions prioritize ideological commitments over safety. I fully support their fight for fairness,” Coutinho exclaimed.
“No one should be forced to undress in front of a man.”
A document delivered to the government in November reportedly stated that “discrimination or harassment in relation to one characteristic is never justified by the need to protect another characteristic.” There is.
The nurses also wrote that legal requirements regarding sex and gender “must take precedence” and that the term “sex” must refer to “biological” sex.
Nurses wrote sympathetically about treating transgender people with “respect and consideration,” while women-only spaces were not “communal spaces” whose function was to include transgender people. I said no.
The document emphasized that the issue at hand was the “protection of women's spaces.”
“'Gender identity' is not a protected characteristic and no one should be forced to undress in front of men. We are saddened that our rights on this issue continue to be violated and discriminated against. I continue to be amazed,” the women said. continued.
“We are not transphobic,” the women declared. The nurses added that the new policy would give “transsexuals” a private space to change without affecting women's rights.
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