Stonewall sells out the L
All Stonewall had to say in response to the BBC was: We're concerned to hear that lesbians are being pressured to accept male sex partners. This is unacceptable. Lesbians have a right to sexual boundaries and those boundaries should be respected by everybody.
Here’s what Stonewall actually said:
Stonewall is the largest LGBT organisation in the UK and Europe. I asked the charity about these issues but it was unable to provide anyone for interview. However, in a statement, chief executive Nancy Kelley likened not wanting to date trans people to not wanting to date people of colour, fat people, or disabled people.
She said: "Sexuality is personal and something which is unique to each of us. There is no 'right' way to be a lesbian, and only we can know who we're attracted to.
"Nobody should ever be pressured into dating, or pressured into dating people they aren't attracted to. But if you find that when dating, you are writing off entire groups of people, like people of colour, fat people, disabled people or trans people, then it's worth considering how societal prejudices may have shaped your attractions.
"We know that prejudice is still common in the LGBT+ community, and it's important that we can talk about that openly and honestly."
"There's no 'right' way to be a lesbian" sounds superficially progressive, but it's the same rhetorical maneuver as "there's no 'right' way to be a woman," therefore men can be lesbians and men can be women — and women who protest this redefinition and how it affects their lives automatically get labelled as bigots because they’re not ‘accepting’ of the rich diversity of (male) womanhood and (male) lesbianism.
The CEO of Stonewall saying "There's no 'right' way to be a lesbian" = lesbians aren't necessarily female and they’re not necessarily exclusively same-sex attracted, therefore the sexual pressure campaign will continue, in the name of inclusivity.
Lesbians and the BBC drag years of sexual coercion into the open and Stonewall says: "Nobody should ever be pressured into dating, or pressured into dating people they aren't attracted to. But if you find that when dating, you are writing off entire groups of people, like people of colour, fat people, disabled people or trans people, then it's worth considering how societal prejudices may have shaped your attractions. We know that prejudice is still common in the LGBT+ community, and it's important that we can talk about that openly and honestly."
Nobody should ever be pressured into dating… But—
So the problem the BBC uncovered, according to Kelley, isn't that lesbians are being pressured into sex by trans-identifying males but that lesbians view being pressured into sex by trans-identifying males as a bad thing.
Totally shameful betrayal and monstering of lesbian women and girls by an ostensibly LGBT charity.