
TransAudit
906 posts

TransAudit
@TransAudit1
"Tracking, analyzing, and holding transphobic content accountable on X. Correcting the record and addressing misinformation. 🏳️⚧️🏳️⚧️"


🏊NEW🏊 A transphobic pressure group are still trying to ban trans women from Hampstead ponds, so we’re stepping in: goodlaw.social/likw

















@JuliaHB1 What is terrifying is your very public campaign against trans people. You will go down in history for your reporting on these matters. These are real lives you tamper with. Shame on you and your XX chromosomes.

I see they've released this year's programme for the Edinburgh International Book Festival of Trans-activists 🙄 In a classic cowardly move, the activists who ensured the end of the festival's funding last time are front and centre. And the theme this time is "Changing Your Mind" It's SO Orwellian. They want us on our knees, begging: "Okay, yes, O'Brien, we give in, trans women ARE women, human beings CAN change sex. Please let us appear at your anodyne festival of trans-activist bullies" 😂 edbookfest.co.uk/news/full-2026…





Dear Lush (cc Chelmsford City Council), As a woman who had half a breast removed last year due to cancer, I am writing to raise my concerns about your “Proud of My Stripes” window display. I am also, on behalf of other women who have experienced breast cancer, respectfully requesting its removal. Because mastectomies are not a fashion statement, an identity marker or something to be celebrated. They are something women undergo because they are ill, because they are frightened, because they are trying to stay alive. Around 59,000 women are diagnosed with breast cancer in the UK every year. Many will undergo surgery - a mastectomy, lumpectomy or other procedure. Others choose preventive mastectomies because they carry a high-risk BRCA gene mutation. If a woman chooses to have her breasts removed to affirm a gender identity, that is her personal choice. I honestly don’t know the number of women who have elective mastectomies for this reason. What I do know is that it is a tiny number compared with those for whom breast surgery is medically necessary and not something to be celebrated. I think I speak for many women who have experienced breast cancer - and for their families - when I say this: Breast removal surgery is not something I regard as cute, playful or empowering. Nor is it something I believe retailers should be celebrating. For that reason, I am requesting that the display be removed and that @ChelmsCouncil apologise for promoting it on social media. Yours sincerely, Janet Murray













