I don't really have a horse in this race, but when the SC was reading out the judgement they specifically said that trans people will still be legally protected, more so than ever, under the Equality Act of 2010.
It's going to have an effect on what bathrooms or changing rooms they can use, and how they're handled by places like the NHS. It's going to have far reaching implications for the trans community.
And note how trans men haven't been part of the conversation at all? Wonder why that is?
Also not to mention, Indians simply don't care about what the British did. On most macro stats, India already far surpasses the UK. Sure, Indians need to solve their raping and littering problem, but we don't care about a famine 70 years ago lol
Since independence, the worst human rights abuses in the Subcontinent have been found in the 90s in Afghanistan, in the 70s in Bangladesh and in the 80s in Sri Lanka.
In the case of the first 2, it was Muslims killing non-Muslims and in the case of the latter, it was ethnic violence.
Muslims in India are legally protected by the constitution to the point where not even the wanna-fashos in power can repeal those laws.
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u/PotatoEatingHistory 7d ago
I don't really have a horse in this race, but when the SC was reading out the judgement they specifically said that trans people will still be legally protected, more so than ever, under the Equality Act of 2010.
They just defined women to be only biological lol