
Katherine
17.4K posts

Katherine
@RadicalRoo
Adult Human Female. ♿ 🇬🇧 🇪🇺 🇪🇸 Mujer no es un sentimiento.





Looks like I won't be shopping at @BootsUK any time soon. There is nothing 'compassionate' or 'inclusive' about profiting from the sale of medicines which harm vulnerable children. #BoycottBoots telegraph.co.uk/gift/0452d1575…

Ayer en el Museo de Arte Moderno, en el baño de mujeres, ¿o sea? Se permite todo, pero en el los hombres es únicamente para ese sexo. Las mujeres dando su lugar… Absurdo!


A transgender pedophile in Germany has threatened a judge under the country's "anti-misgendering" law after the judge mentioned his birth sex in court. Chihiro Mirjam Bella, who was convicted of child sexual abuse, is seeking transfer to a women's prison. reduxx.info/germany-transg…




















Nazi-era fears about gender gave rise to sex testing. Now, the policy is resurfacing. On March 26, the International Olympic Committee announced that all athletes competing in women’s sports will be required to undergo genetic eligibility testing. Claiming to be concerned with “fairness” and “the protection of the female category,” the IOC aims to ban transgender women from future Olympic games by screening for the SRY gene, which is usually found on the Y chromosome. The 2028 Summer Olympics in Los Angeles will be the first games with this policy in effect. For queer historian and writer Michael Waters, the IOC’s announcement elicited a feeling of déjà vu: The institution has employed similar gender verification rules before—only to abandon them amid public backlash. In his 2024 book, The Other Olympians: Fascism, Queerness, and the Making of Modern Sports, Waters traces the history of trans athletes in the early 20th century, showing how a World War II–era moral panic around gender expression directly informs today’s anti-trans attacks. Mother Jones' Schuyler Mitchell spoke with Waters about his book, the history of sex testing in international sports, and how the IOC’s latest policy marks a return to a discriminatory model of gender surveillance that draws from a dark eugenic past. Find the full interview here: bit.ly/4c5j1v4















