How this rape survivor feels about transgender women in bathrooms

Jack

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Just as soon as you show me how, "we don't have the numbers to know" equals "but we know..."
Here you go:

  • Transgender people (16+) are victimized over four times more often than cisgender people. In 2017-2018, transgender people experienced 86.2 victimizations per 1,000 people compared to 21.7 victimizations per 1,000 people for cisgender people.
  • Transgender women and men had higher rates of violent victimization (86.1 and 107.5 per 1,000 people, respectively) than cisgender women and men (23.7 and 19.8 per 1,000 people, respectively).
  • One in four transgender women who were victimized thought the incident was a hate crime compared to less than one in ten cisgender women.
  • In 2017-2018, transgender households had higher rates of property victimization (214.1 per 1,000 households) than cisgender households (108 per 1,000 households).
  • About half of all violent victimizations were not reported to police. Transgender people were as likely as cisgender people to report violence to police.
“Research has shown that experiences of victimization are related to low well-being, including suicide thoughts and attempts,” said study author Ilan H. Meyer, Distinguished Senior Scholar of Public Policy at the Williams Institute. “The results underscore the urgent need for effective policies and interventions that consider high rates of victimization experienced by transgender people.”

Contact Rachel Dowd at dowd@law.ucla.edu for the full report.
 

Admin.

“Nobody makes word salad’s like I do!”
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That's an Imgur gallery, you goofy cunt, not a crime statistics report. The fuck.
Sorry, did that trigger your feels? you braindead gibbering tool.


nNoazvx.jpeg


^Also not a drag queen, as far as we know.
 

Mr. Wednesday

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Here you go:

  • Transgender people (16+) are victimized over four times more often than cisgender people. In 2017-2018, transgender people experienced 86.2 victimizations per 1,000 people compared to 21.7 victimizations per 1,000 people for cisgender people.
  • Transgender women and men had higher rates of violent victimization (86.1 and 107.5 per 1,000 people, respectively) than cisgender women and men (23.7 and 19.8 per 1,000 people, respectively).
  • One in four transgender women who were victimized thought the incident was a hate crime compared to less than one in ten cisgender women.
  • In 2017-2018, transgender households had higher rates of property victimization (214.1 per 1,000 households) than cisgender households (108 per 1,000 households).
  • About half of all violent victimizations were not reported to police. Transgender people were as likely as cisgender people to report violence to police.
“Research has shown that experiences of victimization are related to low well-being, including suicide thoughts and attempts,” said study author Ilan H. Meyer, Distinguished Senior Scholar of Public Policy at the Williams Institute. “The results underscore the urgent need for effective policies and interventions that consider high rates of victimization experienced by transgender people.”

Contact Rachel Dowd at dowd@law.ucla.edu for the full report.
I'd like a link to that so I can review it first-hand. Aside from that, of course, you're listing stats for victimization, not perpetration, which was beyond the scope of Admin's (still) unsupported claim.
 

Admin.

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Here you go:

  • Transgender people (16+) are victimized over four times more often than cisgender people. In 2017-2018, transgender people experienced 86.2 victimizations per 1,000 people compared to 21.7 victimizations per 1,000 people for cisgender people.
  • Transgender women and men had higher rates of violent victimization (86.1 and 107.5 per 1,000 people, respectively) than cisgender women and men (23.7 and 19.8 per 1,000 people, respectively).
  • One in four transgender women who were victimized thought the incident was a hate crime compared to less than one in ten cisgender women.
  • In 2017-2018, transgender households had higher rates of property victimization (214.1 per 1,000 households) than cisgender households (108 per 1,000 households).
  • About half of all violent victimizations were not reported to police. Transgender people were as likely as cisgender people to report violence to police.
“Research has shown that experiences of victimization are related to low well-being, including suicide thoughts and attempts,” said study author Ilan H. Meyer, Distinguished Senior Scholar of Public Policy at the Williams Institute. “The results underscore the urgent need for effective policies and interventions that consider high rates of victimization experienced by transgender people.”

Contact Rachel Dowd at dowd@law.ucla.edu for the full report.
It's interesting to me how passionate TQ is on the subject, like maybe a little too passionate.
 

Mr. Wednesday

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It's interesting to me how passionate TQ is on the subject, like maybe a little too passionate.
Gee, that'd be a neat gambit on your part -- except I didn't start this thread about it, and my initial entry into this thread was to agree that LotusBud is shit at logical argumentation. As are you; moreover, you know it, which is why you keep trying all these slimy little red herrings and ad hominems. You resort to childish bullshit because you know that facts and logic aren't on your side.
 

Reggie_Essent

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Here you go:

  • Transgender people (16+) are victimized over four times more often than cisgender people. In 2017-2018, transgender people experienced 86.2 victimizations per 1,000 people compared to 21.7 victimizations per 1,000 people for cisgender people.
  • Transgender women and men had higher rates of violent victimization (86.1 and 107.5 per 1,000 people, respectively) than cisgender women and men (23.7 and 19.8 per 1,000 people, respectively).
  • One in four transgender women who were victimized thought the incident was a hate crime compared to less than one in ten cisgender women.
  • In 2017-2018, transgender households had higher rates of property victimization (214.1 per 1,000 households) than cisgender households (108 per 1,000 households).
  • About half of all violent victimizations were not reported to police. Transgender people were as likely as cisgender people to report violence to police.
“Research has shown that experiences of victimization are related to low well-being, including suicide thoughts and attempts,” said study author Ilan H. Meyer, Distinguished Senior Scholar of Public Policy at the Williams Institute. “The results underscore the urgent need for effective policies and interventions that consider high rates of victimization experienced by transgender people.”

Contact Rachel Dowd at dowd@law.ucla.edu for the full report.
The word "cisgender" is cultural marxist academic jargon. The translation to actual colloquial English is "normal."

Please use the word "normal" when referring to normal people who are not sexual deviants in future postings.

Thanks you.
 

Jack

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The word "cisgender" is cultural marxist academic jargon. The translation to actual colloquial English is "normal."

Please use the word "normal" when referring to normal people who are not sexual deviants in future postings.

Thanks you.
That's medical jargon last I heard.
 

Mr. Wednesday

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The word "cisgender" is cultural marxist academic jargon. The translation to actual colloquial English is "normal."

Please use the word "normal" when referring to normal people who are not sexual deviants in future postings.

Thanks you.
The intent behind 'cisgender' is to de-normalize the normal in an effort to normalize the abnormal.
 

Jack

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The "cis" in "cisgender" comes from the Latin prefix "cis," which means "on this side of" or "on the same side as". It contrasts with the Latin prefix "trans," meaning "on the other side of" or "across". In the context of gender, "cisgender" indicates that a person's gender identity aligns with their assigned sex at birth.
 

Jack

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cis and trans...you guys have no problem with using tranny...gonna have to deal with cissy.

:CooL:
 

Mr. Wednesday

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The "cis" in "cisgender" comes from the Latin prefix "cis," which means "on this side of" or "on the same side as". It contrasts with the Latin prefix "trans," meaning "on the other side of" or "across". In the context of gender, "cisgender" indicates that a person's gender identity aligns with their assigned sex at birth.
True as that is, the word 'cisgender' wasn't broadly used in that sense until 2011. I mean, you could also argue that 'regender' is the term for detransitioners -- but nobody uses it.