thompsonx
Posts: 23322
Joined: 10/1/2006 Status: offline
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ORIGINAL: Awareness LOL! So you think the only reason we have separate bathrooms for women is because women are anxious about their place in the world. Tell that to the Sisterhood, they'll love that one! I will repost this so that perhaps you might find a grown up to help you with the big words. ORIGINAL: Awareness Look, part of the fucking problem here is that you're really fucking stupid. Christ, I am so bored with your ludicrous fucking inability to think. I'll explain it to you - very simply. Try and fucking keep up. We gate access to female bathrooms to protect women from men. You, of all people, keep on pushing the line about what pieces of shit men are, so you should - in theory - understand this. You really do only open your mouth to change feet. Jesus you are phoquing stupid. Though the first sex-segregated toilets were established in Paris in the 1700s, regulations requiring that American men and women use separate restrooms got their start in the late 1800s. The first regulation requiring separate toilet facilities for men and women was passed in 1887, when Massachusetts required the establishment of separate privies in businesses. “Wherever male and female persons are employed in the same factory or workshop, a significant number of separate and distinct water-closets, earth-closets, or privies shall be provided for the use of each sex and should be plainly designated,” the law reads. In the next line, mixed use of such facilities is prohibited. Over the course of the next three decades, nearly every state passed its own version of that law. Get your history fix in one place: sign up for the weekly TIME History newsletter But the rules that govern who pees where in public spaces were not created simply because of physical differences between men and women that affect how bathrooms are used. “One might think that it makes perfect sense, that bathrooms are separated by sex because there are basic biological differences,” says Terry Kogan, a law professor at the University of Utah. “That’s completely wrong.” Kogan, who has done extensive research on the history of sex-segregation in public restrooms, tells TIME that the policies came about as a result of social anxieties about women's places in the world. MORE: ‘Little Rock Nine’ Student: Transgender Bathroom Debate Is Part of Civil Rights Fight Social norms of the period dictated that the home was a woman’s place. Even as women entered the workplace, often in the new factories that were being built at the time, there was a reluctance to integrate them fully into public life. Women, policymakers argued, were inherently weaker and still in need of protection from the harsh realities of the public sphere. Thus, separate facilities were introduced in nearly every aspect of society: women’s reading rooms were incorporated into public libraries; separate train cars were established for women, keeping them in the back to protect them in the event of a crash; and, with the advent of indoor bathrooms that were then in the process of replacing single-person outhouses, separate loos soon followed. The suggested layouts of restrooms, says Kogan, were designed to mimic the comforts of home—think curtains and chaise lounges. http://time.com/4337761/history-sex-segregated-bathrooms/ Opponents of transgender rights have employed the slogan “No Men in Women’s Bathrooms,” which evokes visions of weak women being subject to attack by men if transgender women are allowed to “invade” the public bathroom. In fact, the only solid evidence of any such attacks in public restrooms are those directed at transgendered individuals, a significant percentage of whom report verbal and physical assault in such spaces. http://theconversation.com/how-did-public-bathrooms-get-to-be-separated-by-sex-in-the-first-place-59575
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