- are these ten the ONLY rights the bill proposes to grant to intersexed people?
The short answer is “yes”, but It’s more complicated than that.
That was the list of rights that no-one should be excluded from enjoying in Montgomery County, Maryland, “because of race, color, religious creed, ancestry, national origin, sex, marital status, disability, presence of children, family responsibilities, source of income, sexual orientation, gender identity, or age”
The opposition was to the inclusion of the underlined clause.
Different jurisdictions have different wordings to their laws, but the formula follows a certain pattern: “race, creed, colour, sex…” often “national origin”… sometimes “veteran status”… and sometimes ending with “sexual orientation”, at other times “sexual orientation and gender identity”.
One thing that is absolutely in common with all the legislation, everywhere: that is, they prohibit discrimination against Intersexed and Transsexual people for being Intersexed or Transsexual, to
exactly the same extent that they prohibit discrimination against Catholics for being Catholic. No more, no less. Exactly.
- did those Catholics opposing the bill - each and every single one of them - not only oppose it personally but ALSO claim that Church teaching demanded that EVERY Catholic oppose it? I don’t see that claim made in any of the writings you’ve mentioned.
All the ones I asked did

Because all Catholics agree on everything don’t they?
- what practical consequences are attached, for example, to the ‘right to use hospitals’ or other facilities?
Tyra Hunter (1970 - August 7, 1995) was an African-American transsexual woman who died after being injured as a passenger in a car accident and was refused medical care.[1][2] Emergency medical technicians at the scene of the accident uttered derogatory epithets and withdrew medical care after discovering her real sex, and ER staff at DC General Hospital subsequently provided dilatory and inadequate care.
I have to travel several hundred miles, interstate, for necessary regular medical examinations, because the local specialists have religious objections to treating me. 6 hours of travel for a 15 minute appointment, then 6 hours back. I’d actually forgotten about that, didn’t count it as “discrimination” because it’s just “par for the course” for Intersexed people. I live in the capital city of Australia, by the way, not a small country town.
I’ve made sure I have friends in the ER in one of the local hospitals. Not the Calvary Hospital, run by the Little Company of Mary, which is the closest, unfortunately. I think it likely I’d be treated there of brought in after an accident. But not certain, no. Some doctors there have refused me treatment in the past. Most did not refuse though, and my son, who’s also Intersexed, has never had a problem.
Would it include the right of a pre-treatment male-to-female transsexual whose every facet of their physical appearance is male to use a female restroom or gym changing room and scare the bejeebers out of the female patients or clients? Who would simply think a peeping Tom or voyeur had wandered in even if they were, and claimed to be, transsexual? Or vice versa for a female-to-male?
To exactly the same extent they could before the law was passed, no more, no less. Most places do not have laws preventing men from using ladies restrooms, or vice-versa. The usual crimes of voyeurism etc will still be in place. None of the proposed laws mention restrooms as such.
In 33 years, only 2 cases remotely similar to the hypothetical you described have been recorded. One was in Washington state, where a criminal ducked in to a ladies restroom to change into female attire to elude pursuit. Such a law was in effect, but he did not attempt to use it as a defence. The other case was of a man dressed in female attire who paraded himself through the female changing facilities at a gym in Montgomery County, Maryland. The church-backed (through fund-raising drives run by local churches) opposition organisation later admitted that this was a “publicity stunt” - after they had been caught. Before they were caught, they were using it as proof that such things happened, and the story is still being used in WorldNetDaily and other media outlets, despite the later admission.
There are many cases like this one though:
thegavoice.com/index.php/news/atlanta-news-menu/176-trans-man-alleges-restroom-discrimination-at-underground
and this one
365gay.com/blog/manly-lesbian-wins-restroom-discrimination-settlement-from-caliente-cab-co/
Women with Polycistic Ovarian Syndrome (PCOS) - which causes the traditional “Bearded Lady” effect in severe cases - and those with various intersex conditions face similar problems. It’s ironic that I don’t. I look too normal. I did even before the genital reconstruction that gave me a normal, rather than ambiguous-to-male vulva.
I’m not saying that accommodations should not, as far as possible, be made for the intersexed, far from it.
:extrahappy: :dancing:

:yeah_me: