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As it stands now, if I see a man going into the women’s restroom, I can say something, maybe cheerfully advise him that he is going in there by mistake. If he continues in, I can assume he is maybe hard of hearing and repeat what I said louder. Won’t cause a magic force field to appear to keep him out but at least any

And if a woman gets assaulted in a free-for-all restroom, is she going to be asked why the hell would she take the risk of using that restroom if she knows men are allowed in? Maybe be told she knew the risks so she was kind of asking for it? If she was trying to adjust the fit of her blouse in front of a mirror when

Never been raped but have been groped by men, seen a few flashers jerking off in front of women and kids, had lots of creepy men get all into my personal space and even try to follow me. Have friends who were raped. Being a good assertive little lady and telling them to leave me alone was usually followed by an

Maybe you know more about this story than is in the article. All I read is that he lured her into “a bathroom” but was that the women’s restroom or a family restroom or a one seat locking door type that anybody can use?

Agree totally. Women are not bigots for wanting spaces away from men, especially when we are or may be more vulnerable to attack. Until men gives us a couple of decades free of rape, perving, groping, etc. I don’t see why we need to care more about the feelings of a tiny number of men who want to use women’s

The story above says he lured the girl into “a restroom” so I don’t think we can claim it was a women’s restroom, could have been the men’s room, a family-type restroom or one of those single seat lockables that anybody can use.

Not sure it is allowed by law everywhere for men to be in women’s restrooms - would depend on the state. Also, if a man is seen entering a women’s restroom now, there is nothing stopping somebody from helpfully calling out “excuse me, sir, the men’s room is over there” and that way he can avoid making a mistake if he

Thank you! You may never get out of the grays making sense like that but good to know that somebody gets that it is preferable for the man to be subject to questioning and outcry before he goes into women’s spaces. That way the fellows with bad intent may decide to hunt elsewhere or at least the people in the vicinity

Always said that if I was raped, I would go to the police if the attacker was a stranger but never if the rapist was somebody I knew. That way when some guy’s body was found with his skull bashed in, nobody would be able to say “hey, what about that woman who said he raped her?” or something like that.

When I was a teenager, even though the stuff I did was petty compared to this, I knew that if I got caught my parents would never tell cops or judges to go easy on me. Maybe that was one reason I stuck to the petty stuff and never dared to go on to worse stuff.

She mentions it in the video interview. I also noted that the article seemed to have missed that things went beyond a peaceful petition drive. Saw some pretty ugly stuff directed at her on Twitter just now.

Greer states that she has received death threats and has had stuff thrown at her.

Not even the people who have threatened her with violence if she does show up?

Cannot agree. Women have as much access to guns and suffer as much misery, in general, in their lives as men. Yet the mass shooting is almost always committed by men. I have had firearms all my life and have had bad patches over the years and have a terrible temper in general but shooting up a place just does not ever

Not sure why men are not fighting for abortion rights. Last time abortion was illegal, the only available paternity test was a blood test that could only rule a man out as the father, not tell for sure who the father was. So the man dancing off into the sunset was pretty common. Now we have DNA testing. So, abortion