LONDON, ENGLAND – The organizers behind a weekly lesbian speed-dating event in London are coming under fire from the trans-identifying community after the organizers instituted a mandate where only “adult human females” can attend following an incident involving a trans-identifying individual getting an erection during an event.
Jenny Watson, one of the lead organizers behind the lesbian speed-dating effort held in Bloomsbury in London, posted the newly adopted rules on her website, which read, “If you are male, please refrain from coming to the events, you are not a lesbian.”
Apparently, the weekly speed-dating affair has been dealing with biological males asserting that they’re trans whilst also claiming to be lesbians, which in one instance, “a person turned up sporting a purple latex outfit…and an erection,” according to Watson.
The erection fiasco wasn’t the only issue stemming from the gender-bending mixers, with Watson saying, “Another time, a transwoman came into the female toilet and pushed their body at a woman who was upset and told me after. It got me thinking that this isn’t fair on women.”
Activist groups sympathetic to the trans-identifying community in London reported Watson to her London council employers as being “transphobic” in light of the implemented rules at the speed-dating events, apparently also taking issue with Watson having stated that, “lesbians don’t have penises.”
Watson agrees that trans-identifying individuals should be shown respect in certain contexts, but insists that, “there is a need for protection of sex-segregated spaces for lesbian women.”
Gregory Hoyt is a former contributor to outlets such as Law Enforcement Today and Red Voice Media, and current host of The Breakdown with Greg Hoyt. Based out of Sierra Vista, Arizona, Hoyt is a staunch and outspoken advocate of law enforcement and first responders, while also harboring the unique experience of having spent nearly 5 years in prison. Since then, he's used his unique perspective to offer support and commentary about the criminal justice system. When not working or combating bad ideas, Hoyt also leisurely studies economics, history, and law.