TRASHFUTURE - Plumber Occupied Government feat. Abigail Thorn
Episode Date: May 27, 2026Our good friend Abi joins us to discuss the new EHRC guidance and the plan to spend billions of dollars on bathrooms. But first… we look to the skies. The truth is out there. In Doncaster. Get more ...TF episodes each week by subscribing to our Patreon here! RILEY ALERT Check out No Gods, No Mayors here! HUSSEIN ALERT Check out 10k Posts here! MILO ALERT Check out Milo's tour dates here: https://www.miloedwards.co.uk/liveshows NATE ALERT Lions Led By Donkeys will be performing live in London on 29th May and you can get tickets here! Also, Nate's band Second Homes has just released their debut album, which includes the song used in this episode’s outro, and you can stream it for free here!
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello everybody. Welcome to this free episode of TF.
Bit late because it was a bank holiday in the UK.
It's the free one.
It's the free one. And that sound means we got Abby Thorne all the way from across a continent and an ocean, joining me, Nova and Hussein, who'll be joining in a second.
Abby, how is it going?
It's going mixed.
I'd say, Carrivas.
How?
However.
It's going great.
Uh-huh.
Career-wise things are going great for you,
really pleased.
Just found out some episodes of Philosophy to you
are going to be preserved in the British Film Institute's
National Archive of Importance,
which fucking rocks,
all sorts of awesome career things happening.
House of the Dragon season three about to drop two.
Politically speaking,
well, listeners, you're hearing from me on TF,
so that means they're politically speaking things
are not going great.
They wheeled me out like Hannibal Lecter when shit's fucked.
So what apparently we have decided to do
is we have decided to say,
okay, on average, transgender people are going to be doing okay.
We've concentrated a lot of that in the acting career of Abby Thor.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, pretty much.
Spiders Abigail.
It's like the average trans woman has zero jobs, but employment Abigail.
They call her Abby the median skewer.
So, no, we're going to talk a little bit about the, you know, I just, can I just say,
after so many decades of ambiguity and chaos
and just like fumbling with the dictionary,
I'm so glad that there's clarity.
Absolutely.
Yeah.
Clarity?
So much needed clarity.
Yeah, as mud.
Yeah.
Oh, of course.
Hey, some mud is quite clear according to the EHRC.
However, before we get to that,
there is something I need to discuss.
And that is...
The aliens.
So, well, so remember, remember.
Yeah.
Well, maybe clarity for them too.
We're going to figure out what bathrooms they should use.
We're going to have to build fourth baths.
No, you know what it is?
Fourth bathrooms.
It's every single service in this country just converted into bathrooms.
And that's all you can do.
Yeah.
Men, women, freaks, tentacles.
But men in black will enforce it.
They're going to be outside the fucking bathrooms with neuralizers.
So basically, remember, we knew when reform got into a bunch of councils,
we would start meeting some of their guys.
We predicted.
this. They're freaks. And there are different kinds of reform guys, capital G. And these are some
like the people who want to get in there and see where all the money is going who are like, well,
once we, I'm sure there's something. My favorite being the reform counselor newly elected
who got up in the council chamber and was like, none of us know what an amendment is or what like a
proposition or emotion is or how to do anything help. Which is fair enough, to be honest, for an
outside of Parsi, but kind of funny, this guy, on the other hand, blows that out of the water.
Yeah, this guy is, look, I don't want to say he rocks because I'm going to be honest, I don't know
much else about him, however.
He rocks on one thing.
Yeah.
If you're a single issue voter, and the issue is, which bathroom do the aliens use?
This is your guy.
These fucking Venusians coming down here.
Because the thing is, right, we know that Reform, like, hoover's up this random graph.
bag of generalized institutional distrust.
You know, whether experts lying, secret woke cabals running the BBC, the budget of pride flags,
and they forge this into a reactionary program.
Yeah.
And it's people who, people who like have these grievances because they don't understand
that, you know, we need migration in this country.
We just flatly do.
And if you cut off access to EU migration, it's got to come from somewhere like Venus.
So, Reform UK's Kieran Lay, who was actually elected last year, but just burst onto the scene
this year in Doncaster.
Just through the sternum of another
reformed council.
Told a city of Doncaster
council meeting, an overview and safety
committee for unidentified aerial
phenomena, UAPs, which I guess is like the woke
way we're calling UFOs now.
Everything's changing these days, isn't it?
You can't say anything anymore.
I can't call him UFOs.
UAP wet ass pussy.
That's right, yes.
Should be established for Doncaster
Sheffield Airport as he had seen
UAP activity over his own ward this weekend.
Well, I'm glad that we're getting to a place where sort of anomalous aerial phenomena or whatever
can be identified and tracked by the really serious actors, you know, globally like Doncaster
and Sheffield Airport.
That's the only DSA I support.
I'll tell you that.
What, the DSA Terminal 1 caucus?
Do you think Doncaster Sheffield Airport has multiple terminals?
No, actually.
Sorry.
Yeah, the Terminal 2 Exploratory Caucus.
An optimistically named Terminal 1.
You know, terminals 2 through infinity TBD.
Oh, that's it.
It's bathrooms.
Chef Doncaster, Sheffield Airport terminals.
Every building, one of those two things.
So the thing is, because the airport closed in 2022.
No, what?
Probably must have been the fucking Venusians.
Yeah.
Well, the council's trying to reopen it.
And then it turns, and the thing is, what always runs from my head about this,
is that the reform guy who's like, well, we got to talk about the U.S.
sorry, excuse me, UAPs can't say anything anymore.
We got to talk about the OAPs flying above the airport.
Sick of the Venusian's triple lock on their pensions, fucking the economy.
And I bet they have access to council flats as soon as they land.
Just imagining this reform council like coming into the next council meeting in like a skin soup in like sugar water.
Honestly, it's always the same story, isn't it?
It's like, oh, you're so bigoted against aliens and it turns out actually you're
into sugar water.
We have the recipe for sugar water.
Why do we need the aliens here still?
Like this thing in Doncaster,
Sheffield has been mired in controversy.
A bunch of counselors got like suspended and had to step down
because it turned out they were starting a company
called Doncaster Sheffield Airport Services Limited
that was supposed to deal with the airport
that they were overseeing.
They're just like, oh, can we start something
to funnel money into our pockets?
Small airport stuff is a fantastic grift.
I think often of the Spanish exurb of Madrid
that built a massive airport on the grounds
that they could kind of steal traffic from Madrid,
forgot to build a rail link to it,
and it got six months of no flights and then closed again.
So, and I don't, yeah, Doncaster and Sheffield
in a sort of similar space, I would suggest,
where there's bigger airports close enough
to make it completely impractical,
but it's this optimistic,
idea. And you know what? There's a couple of reasons why it could have closed. One is, of course,
the business case not being there in a kind of general contraction in the economy, but the other
is the aliens. And I just think it's good that we're not getting railroaded into one explanation.
No, absolutely. The thing, like, alien sightings are as old as anything. We just used to call them
angel sightings or like armies charging through the sky or dragons or whatever. Yeah. And they were
fucking with Doncaster Air Force specifically, even then.
Yeah, you could never fly out of Doncaster in the 1600s for a lot of other reasons.
But I think it's like, this is what reform was designed to appeal to.
Thinking about a beautiful piece of base of visualization you could do that is number of flights leaving from Doncaster per year on like a geological time scale.
Yeah, it was, in fact, there was a small period in the Anthropozoic.
You get like a teradactal bump and then nothing and then another bump when they open it and then it's just back to zero again.
Yeah, a lot of flights landing, though, from the aliens from Venus.
A lot of these guys, like the whole point of Kieran Lay is that he's sure there's something going on,
that the money's not going where it's supposed to be, that something but between like Stonewall and Davos is like taking all the council tax and that's why like his kids can't go to school.
Gay, W-E-F aliens.
It's really.
Because, I mean, fair enough, right?
Because as we've seen, not only is a lot of local government money being sort of channeled into various scams and bullshit, but like, it's not weird to look at the machine of governance in this country and be like, the outcomes here are perverse.
This isn't working the way it should do.
It's not even weird to be suspicious about why that's happening.
It is weird to go because Doncaster Council is doing men in black.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Klatu Schwab is behind
this like actually a guy who's just like a tiny
guy inside another guy's head
who's just like sucking up all the money from the council
The thing is it's like Dulge
like the Department of Local Government Efficiency
Dolge was the same thing which is
oh there's something going on here we just have to get to the bottom of it
and it's just what's happened is Kieran Lay
is not directed by a political program
and this is what happens when a reform guy
is not like corralled with the rest of them
and forged into a unit
he starts going off about UFOs
it is actually the same impulse
that all of this is based on.
It's so cool how everyone is insane now.
Yeah.
He said, of course, well, that a UAP committee
could help coordinate with authorities
across Yorkshire on aerospace monitoring
and help restore some public confidence in the airport
saying NASA has recommended that local authorities...
Yeah, that really restores my confidence in the running of local services.
It's like, well, are they dealing with the threat from Venus, first thing?
What about all these fucking cylinders touching down, man?
Well, if they've got a cylinder, at least we know which bathroom.
they should use.
They don't even experience time
like a proper British person.
They experience it all in circles.
Not right.
Abbott is male socialization process?
Well, if he's male socialization process
that he's actually protected
underneath the gendernating shift.
If he's proposing to undergo it.
So why would Doncaster not want to leave the way
in Yorkshire and the Humber on this issue?
Yeah, everyone else in Yorkshire and the Humber
is fucking up,
not guarding against the alien threat.
They're leaving a lot of UFO money on the table.
Local airport terminal has a departures and an arrival section.
If it comes to this, right, and humanity is conquered.
We're all slaving in the salt mines for our sort of like many-gendered alien overlords.
I have faith that Doncaster Council can be a nexus of resistance.
I'm glad that if someone is going X-Com 2, it's Doncaster.
It's like the premise of a Nick Frost-Cybered Pegg lost movie.
is like Doncaster Council has to oppose the alien threat.
Or it could be.
Doncaster 2 either could be like the commanding body from like XCOM.
Or Doncaster Council could be like the collaborator regime because that's just the first
government the aliens discussed like meat.
Take us to your leader and it's like, okay, who's the council leader of Doncaster?
Yeah, it's just reform guys.
It's Kieran Laisley, I told you.
He later then said when people started making fun about it, he was like, I was just
joking.
It's like, I don't think you were.
He says, I want to lighten the mood slightly.
But again, he said he saw it last the weekend.
He has served to do that for this episode.
Correct.
Thank you, Karen.
The actual thing is right there, right?
There is something they're not telling you about the airport.
It's not UFOs.
It's just the thing that are not telling you is that they're having trouble building it
because the finance isn't there because none of the fucking economy's working.
It was kind of a dumb idea to build an airport serving Doncaster in Sheffield.
Yeah.
Could have done trains.
But now with the addition of Hussein,
Yeah, I arrived in the big cylinder,
then I had to take a train from Doncaster.
And actually, we trained from Doncaster
was the most difficult part of the journey.
Yeah, that tracks, actually.
Venus to Earth, pretty seamless.
Getting a bunch of emails from the train line
being like, it looks like you're going to Venus, babes.
But I want to move on to another locality,
which is, of course, Makerfield.
Remember how we said Burnham wasn't the guy?
And then November said,
by the time this episode is released,
he'll probably have flipped on gender issues.
in November, what happened?
Oh, before the episode came out, he flips.
He pushed us in front of a not publicly owned, but publicly operated bus.
And immediately went, well, the important thing now is that we've got to implement the
Supreme Court ruling and the HRC guidance, you know, next segment.
And to be, you know, we've got to stop looking backwards.
We've got to sort of like learn how to get along with each other.
in the same way as his sort of like a change of tone on Brexit has been, which is, yeah, I would prefer us to rejoin the European Union, but we've got to stop looking backwards and fighting each other. And whether or not you believe that this is sort of him talking to his constituency, given that the polling is very bad at the moment or not, it is absolutely shameless. Yeah. And the thing about Burnham is, as you say, as we could
extrapolate from that is he's a weather vein, right?
But he's been a weather vein for his locality.
And what he's trying, what we're thinking is
that a weather vein in one place,
if we move it to a place the winds are blowing differently,
we'll stay pointing the way it was originally pointing.
Because what's happened is, the Manchester
Weathervane is moving up to national
political ambitions. And wouldn't you know it,
the winds are blowing differently. And so he now is
adopting every position Keer Starmor has.
Pretty cool. Well, I was going to say,
that feels like there's a sort of venom situation,
but the symbiote is Keer-Starmor.
What's also, what's true? What's
really funny about this is
and do you need to put them in a
third space
what's really funny
about this is that
he's actually losing
popularity as he tries to
tack to you know
the sort of the wind right
and it's not
like the sort of internal logic of that of like
I should take more popular positions
makes him less popular because people
correctly view him as being insincere
almost as though
He's following the wrong wind, you fucking idiot.
Maybe.
And I'm not going to say necessarily that he would do a ton better in Makerfield if he got
out there and he was like, we should rejoin the EU tomorrow and also everyone has to be
transgender now.
But I think it gives you the sort of measure of the man.
And I think everyone sort of has a sense of that now, which is this is not a person, right?
This is a sort of like, functionally a large language model almost.
This is a collection of polls with like a guy attached.
I have the quote here, in fact.
He said, the full quotes which you've referenced Nova.
I think the time has come to take the Supreme Court ruling and the guidance and implement it.
Good luck doing that based on when we talk about the guidance.
Yeah.
But to do it in a way that protects those spaces but does not marginalize already marginalized communities,
that's my view.
What view is that?
In terms of the kind of level of detachment from reality that we're talking about here,
This is a little bit like saying, I think the time has come to take Doncaster Council's view on UFOs and implement it, but do it in a way that's sensitive to not being completely fucking insane.
It's like we should build quite a bit of UFO defenses around Doncaster Sheffield Airport, but no more than are warranted by the genuine threat posed by UFOs right now.
This is a perfectly consistent position because, I mean, Abby, this is something you pointed out to me.
There's something sort of prompting you to almost.
this is, because it's a segregationist document, it's like saying, we're going to apply Jim Crow,
but in a non-racist way.
Yeah, that's, that's one of the strangest things, well, strange to be on the receiving end of,
about this EHRC guidance, is that it is calling for the public segregation of a minority.
It's deeply authoritarian and deeply anti-democratic.
But to have someone like Burnham turn around and say, oh, we need to do that fairly and compassionately.
It's like, first of all, that's impossible.
And second of all, fuck you, actually.
I'm reading his quotes here and he says like
we all need to get on, we need to stop
arguing with this show and it's like, no, actually
the argument ends when we have equal rights to you
and the people who've taken our rights from us are punished.
It does not end until that point, I'm afraid.
And like the last person
I heard articulate that kind of segregationist system
in the way Andy Burnham has, fucking Hendrick
Vorwood. It's a deep cut.
Was he like a Manchester guy as well?
He's the main architect of apartheid
who was like the band who stands
that we're creating.
It's actually about us developing in our own ways.
And we have different needs.
And, oh, but we're doing this in a very,
we're actually quite egalitarian because we're all just apart.
Yeah, so it's Hendrik Forward, not Hendrik Vakwit.
I actually prefer to go into the Venetian bathroom.
Venetian.
Venetian.
Well, the Venetian bathroom is like, it closes differently.
It sounds lovely, actually, yeah.
We could say, as promoters of trans rights,
that if we were to seize the sort of levers of power in this country,
we would say, yes, different bathrooms for all trans people,
but they're all the Venetian bathroom, and they're very nice.
I feel the Venetian bathroom is more like a sort of like hole over a canal.
I don't know that it's necessarily better.
The bathroom from the Cypriani.
Yes, please.
Chissing into a gondola like the Dave Matthews band tour bus.
I think this quote from Burnham is also a pretty sure sign
that he doesn't understand the issues at play here.
Like, the fact that he's talking about this as if it's normal guidance
that has come down in a normal way from a normal government,
It's like, no, this has been a campaign by right-wing billionaires, one in particular, to undermine democracy in the UK.
And the fact that he's talking about this is something that we all just kind of have to deal with is a sign that he doesn't understand the issues, I think.
It's not a serious person living in reality.
No.
In my opinion.
He would be a serious person living in reality if he was not trying to also appear progressive.
You know what I mean?
Where he's like, no, you would understand that if you're trying to mask sort of, you know, hateful authoritarianism,
as much as possible, that's what you would do for, like, if you were running as the to, for the Tories,
but if you're trying to be like, I'm the progressive labor candidate, unlike Stamer, you're
not living in reality if you think that you can just gloss this verbally.
Yeah, in particular, what you're looking at is a sort of transphobic movement that is so dedicated
to the elimination of trans people from public life that all of this kind of like, we've got to
turn the temperature down stuff just becomes a nonsense, right?
Because it's always intended to be like, well, we want, you know, politeness.
and like talk to each other and understand each other.
But when one side is saying,
your existence is a huge problem
for a sane society, we want you
to detransition or die,
basically, or, you know,
maybe have some kind of, you know,
pitiful, you know,
like closeted, crossy experience.
That's not a problem of tone anymore.
Not that it ever was, but that's not something
that you can then go, this is something
where we just need a little bit more
humanity here and a little bit of compromise.
because there is no compromising with that.
The compromise to you should die or detransition is, no, I'm not going to.
I reflected on this a while ago when Keir Stoma said something like,
we need to take the heat out of the conversation, and those sentiments are often repeated.
And it's like, okay, so nobody voted for this.
This was not in Labour's manifesto.
Parliament will not have any chance to scrutinize or vote on this new guidance.
the Supreme Court refused to hear from any trans people during the case, the case funded by a billionaire.
I think to date no British court has taken up the question of whether this is compatible with Britain's human rights obligations, which is not.
The EHRC has ignored that question too.
Bridget Phillipson appointed the new head of the EHRC against the select committee's recommendations.
The press are pretty much going along with this or saying it should go even further.
And of course, every single member of every single one of these institutions is cis and always have.
has been. And so when people like Osama
say we need to take the heat out of the conversation, it's like,
what conversation do you imagine has been
taking place? There's been no
conversation. There's been cis people telling
us what we have to do, to which the answer
is not, oh, we're all just going to get
on and like hold hands and be kind to each other.
The answer is, fuck you actually.
Yeah, it's, as you say, right?
It's a monologue.
No. What cis people call the
quote-unquote trans debate has been
for years, cis people lying
to each other. That's all it's ever been.
And I mean, if we want to talk about more lying, right?
But just a final thing on Makerfield before we get the new guidance sort of in detail,
is that Burnham, for being pro trans in 2019, you know, some years ago,
is now being described as the anti-woman candidate in Makerfield by like the Express and stuff.
When his opponent, I know, look, it's just baffling to see this in front of you.
It makes you feel like you're going crazy.
Yeah, I mean, just at this point out of spite, thank you, Andy,
for your trans-allyship.
Thank you for helping crowdfund my hormones.
I really appreciate it.
Thanks for everything you do.
Really, we're just happy to have you as an ally.
So his opponent, who's being called now
like The Feminist Vote in Makerfield,
was connected to a Twitter account
that once posted, I'm very sexist.
I'm sorry, but I am.
Women can't ref, drive, or give directions.
Yeah, but that guy's in tune
with like biological reality.
And all of those things are statements
of biological reality.
if you're a feminist.
Yeah.
Right.
True on a mitochondrial level, I guess.
Yeah, absolutely.
It's very funny that Rob Kenyon, the opponent, is he's just a Twitter, like, thread guy who will post like, I love sexism.
In another post for 2019, the account criticized the use of women as pundits on Sky Sports, saying the women on the panel aren't up to the job, but only there to take a box.
It's brutal, the stuff that this guy's been through in his life, you know?
Like, those are, that's, those are serious problems to have to contend with.
But what I think is most interesting that's been uncovered by some of the stuff about this.
guy, which I know, I know it's important that we get to the guidance and we talk about it.
I really don't want to.
It's also important that we talk about the book written by Rob Kenyon.
Yeah, men are from Mars, women are from Venus.
Get rid of the fucking women from Venus.
Yeah, well, they're all in Doncaster.
Men are from Mars, women are from Doncaster.
This is a book written by, hey, if he's an MP, Nish, we're ready when you are.
But this is a book written by Rob Kenyon, the Blood Waltz.
I'm sorry.
Uh-huh.
It's available on Kindle for 99 cents.
I would hate to have a blood wars.
I feel like it'd mostly be a lot of like sploshing, you know?
Like you're just like, you know, it's like singing in the rain.
This is the guy who's being positioned as the alternative to Birdham in Megaville.
This is the feminist reform candidate is the Bloodwaltz.
Yeah, written the Blood Waltz.
Right.
British soldier Bradley Clyde has accidentally time traveled back to Northern France in 1940.
Happens my buddy Eric.
Yeah, she's a weapon angel's going.
Approaching the Varmak's being like, thank God, at least you guys know what a woman is.
British soldier Bradley Clyde has accidentally time traveled back to Northern France in 1940,
just as the Dunkirk evacuation is happening.
After discovering a device in a dormant Nazi bunker in the German countryside,
a dormant Nazi bunker, one that's no longer admitting.
Yeah, put my bunker in sleep mode.
In attempt to survive, he tries his best to disguise himself as a German officer.
He falls in love.
Sorry, sorry, this guy has written a book in which his protagonist is like having to go undercover as announcing.
It's crazy.
You know, while trying to find World War II memorabilia in northern France.
No, you don't understand.
For plot reasons, I have to wear this.
Indiana Jones wore it.
I was going to say, it's a very creative excuse, like if you ever get called with like a swastika or something.
It's to be like, no, I actually, I time traveled.
Research for my novel.
He falls in love.
with a high-ranking Gestapo investigator's wife,
vows to kill the man who killed his best friend.
So I guess he gets a best friend in 1940.
Like he travels back in time,
makes a best friend, falls in love,
and teams up with a secret agent
trying to help the Allied war effort.
Despite his good intentions,
things take a dramatic turn for the worst.
Plans thrip through his fingers
as he desperately tries to hold things together
and remain in control.
Yeah, I love Auslander.
Do Sauss.
The Blood Walsh is an epic journey
of one man's attempt to readjust
an alternate future while wrestling
with his moral compass,
lust and ego, all while practicing the art of self-preservation.
Rob Kenyon, you will have your book read on this podcast one day.
I wish this guy had stuck to writing this.
I wish he'd found every success and not tried to enter politics,
because of course, when have successful British authors ever influenced politics to the far right?
As an awesome history enjoy it, you know what?
I'll read this.
I'll read this for the episodes.
Yeah, I think, I think.
I'll read it and I'll leave a positive goods review if you drop out of the race.
How about that?
Oh, yeah, how about this?
How about this?
Kenyon, we're going to up the ante on Abby's offer.
We're going to encourage the tens of thousands of people who listen to this to absolutely goose you on the Amazon algorithm.
You're going to be number one.
What, goose?
Like, you're juiced.
You're boosted.
I tell you all, Rob, Kenyon.
I know a lot of movie producers.
If you want to drop out of the race, then make it feel I could make some intros.
You know, let's get this on the screen.
Here's the thing. If we have them drop out of the race and make a field off of this, that guarantees Burnham Prime Minister, you know?
So it's really, it's kind of a thorny issue here. I'm not sure that there's a good answer here.
November, I think with an issue this thorny, we need clarity and to turn the temperature down on the debate of whether or not Rob Kenyon should be rescued from politics by being turned into a successful author by us as a kind of bribe.
I would say so, yes. So the goddamn guidance.
I don't want to. I don't like, apart from anything.
else. Like, there's, it's a kind of, it's a series of things at the same time, right? Where it's like,
it's terrible, it feels terrible, it's going to have a lot of material consequences. At the
same time, it isn't going to have a lot of other material consequences and a lot of people
pushing it are going to be really mad that it doesn't. But mostly, I think about the Tony Morrison
thing about how racism is primarily a waste of time, because anything else that you could be doing,
you spend litigating it, feeling bad about it. It's just, you, you have, you have, you, you have,
to sort of justify yourself and your own existence,
even in your own head,
and you could be using that time so much more productively.
And just on a personal level,
I sort of resent using, you know,
this shitty thing that is being done to us.
You know, being in a position where it's like,
yeah, I guess I guess there's content here, I guess,
or worse still, that I have some kind of role for the community here
to be some kind of a spokeswoman.
when I have really not much to contribute other than this fucking sucks.
And it's a terribly, you know, sort of like offensive thing that is also going to not do what it wants to do very well.
It's deeply insulting. It is. It is.
To us as human beings that we have to waste our time even considering this trash.
Yeah. And in terms of the sort of personal outlook of this, it sort of, I'm sure,
there are some things that it will affect me very profoundly on, but like what this is basically
about is about bathrooms, right? And everything else is kind of downstream of that. And so there's
this kind of nightmare transphobic idea of like, oh my God, I might see a tranny in the women's room.
We have to ban this somehow. And so now the guidance has finally come out to that effect. I've,
I've used women's bathrooms for as long as I've been trans. I've never had anything happen,
but I'm keenly aware that I'm sort of like,
I'm drawing a card every time I do that, right?
And I'm drawing it from a deck that is being stacked further and further against me.
So as much as that's a sort of privilege on the one hand,
and I can generally not worry about it too much in that sense.
I know that that won't always be so.
And it's a very perversely affirming thing to be like,
man, I really am a woman because this completely everyday activity,
I have to be on my guard all the time because, oh, I could just get assaulted.
I could get arrested doing this.
Any number of things could happen if someone decides that they don't like my face.
So that's, you know, it's nice to feel included, I suppose.
I mean, one of the things that's very apparent about it is, you know, given that trans people have been around,
basically for as long as people have been around.
And the transphobia is a relatively recent invention, especially political transphobia in this way.
It's very, very new.
In this form.
Yeah.
And it's what these guidance seems to be trying to do is retrofit this lunacy onto a previously perfectly
functional system of bathrooms.
We had an equality act that had a sort of pretty unambiguous statutory basis that trans women are women and that trans men are men, that there's no such thing as biological sex.
And that gender reassignment is a protected categorical.
that then also changes your gender that is also a protected category.
Right.
Besides that, we had a sort of like functional, everyday settlement that most people just did not care.
And, you know, we've succeeded in sort of displacing one of those, but probably not the other.
But it's, I don't know.
That's going to be so, so individual and so unpredictable and so stochastic.
And, you know, that's the part that I'm worried about more than I am about the sort of
formal legal stripping of my rights because, you know, Britain as a state barely has any way of upholding
those for anyone at this point. Yeah. And I mean, the whole thing contains numerous contradictions.
And I think the contradictions are kind of the point because they create the opportunity for that
stochasticism. Absolutely. Yeah. This is the naked rule of insane power of people who can't resist it.
It's not meant to make sense. I mean, we could bash on and on about how unworkable it is and how stupid it is.
but it's not meant to.
It's meant to express contempt for us
that these people didn't even need to bother
putting a coherent program for our segregation in place.
It's just the kind of like,
well, the strong will do what they can
and the weak will suffer what they must.
And it's like, well,
I think you're going to find
that many of us are not as weak as you thought.
I was going to say,
because this feels like a bit of a dumb observation,
so apologies if like it comes across such.
But I've always sort of found the bathroom discourse
to sort of be bizarre because, you know,
and I've said this a few times on the show,
which is I wish that, like,
like there was some, like, even like a sort of small percentage of effort that is put into like the policing of who can use public bathrooms and who can't to actually contribute to making, to actually number one, like stop closing public toilets, but also to sort of make them better.
Yeah, this idea that like the sort of the bathroom is like some holy, you know, single sex face.
It's like, no, we as a nation are deeply embarrassed to need one in the first place.
and like you see us as, again, as a nation of cisgender people as well.
We fucking scurry in there and just like scurry back out and we're terrified the whole time.
I think one of the funniest things that I've seen on like Reddit, like from Japanese tourists.
So not Reddit, but like some website for like Japanese tourists like visiting London.
And like almost all the advice in Japanese that is given is do not go to,
do not use any of the public toilets in London because we're all fucking disgusting.
And this is like coming from a country, like coming from a place,
where like there is a lot of kind of care and effort put into like, you know,
the fact that anyone can use a public bathroom in these types of spaces.
But like, I think partly my issue is like, okay, well, we've sort of really missed the point here.
But like, in a lot of ways that is the point of all this.
Because it's not like really, if you ever saw what will bring this up to like, well,
what is the point of kind of like implementing any of these types of punitive measures
when the reality is like most people can't use public bathrooms because like the doors don't have locks on them.
And there's no toilet seat.
and like it's disgusting and unhygienic
and also like the toilet roll
has not been kind of refilled for a week right
like there are so many sort of structural
and like this is like a genuine public health issue as well
like I think there was an FI that was made a couple of years ago
and it did sort of say there was like a non- insignificant
percentage of people about like had to go seek medical help
because they needed to go pee in London
and they could not find anywhere to be able to do it
and obviously this affects people who have like disabilities
who have diabetes for example where like you know regular toilet access
This is kind of, you know, it's really, really important.
Like, you know, but the point, I guess the point I'm trying to get to is that, like, this, like, so much of, um, the ways in which, you know,
minorities are kind of being, you know, pushed out of public spaces and are sort of being told that, like, whatever public spaces are left that you currently can use,
you're going to be heavily surveilled in them, up until the point where like, you know, because I think this is very much a blueprint for just, like, pushing out other minorities from, like, public spaces, right?
And this is the instructive point.
And this is like, this isn't, like, this is about trans people.
I don't want to, like, diminish, like, any of that.
Like, this is, this is, like, a continuation on, like,
one of the most sort of, like, awful and pernicious, um, attacks on a, like, on a minority
group in sort of modern history.
And it's something that I hope that we look back on with deep shame and deep regret.
But I think it's also important to bear in mind that, like, this is a blueprint.
And the reason why so many people have gotten behind it is not because they have all sort of
of rallied behind the cause of, like, you know, on the sort of so-called,
biological women can use these disgusting toilets.
It's like, no, this is a way that we can push out undesirable people, of which there is an
expansive number from like what remains of public space in this country.
Yeah, also just institutionally, it's a fight for the sort of like title of feminism.
And I think it's very instructive that you're sort of like, your turfs did not get a lot of
support from even your sort of like most sort of politically fact.
Ascile, like, feminist institutions is why they had to make their own, right?
And even within the sort of, like, LGBT community, part of the point of this is to, you know, put a leash on Stonewall, for instance.
Or to ensure that, like, the arbaces of feminism aren't the vast majority of cis women who support trans rights.
But, you know, Sonia Soda in The Observer, for instance.
And so it's this, again, it's this kind of power grab in that sense.
And it's not enough for them.
It's never going to be enough for them.
And so this is why you start seeing these op-eds where it's like,
yeah, this is inefficient and this is still endangering women.
Because I don't know, maybe we could assume our sort of like tentacle form
and get in through the air vents and start fucking raping women in there somehow.
I think to both of your points, one of the most insulting to our intelligence rhetorical features of this entire campaign
has been the placing alongside one another of safety and dignity.
We are told that this segregation and the stripping of our legal rights is necessary for the
safety and dignity of women and girls.
Now, anyone who says that trans people being included is a threat to women's safety is lying.
There is evidence from dozens of countries where we are fully included and not segregated
where there's no threat to cis women at all.
So anyone who says that we're a threat to women's safety is lying.
Any journalist that allows someone to say that without pointing out that it's a
is misleading the public. But to put dignity alongside that, to say that our presence is an offence
to the dignity of a cisgender woman invites the quite blunt response that if my presence
isn't an affront to somebody's dignity, that person needs to get over themselves. That is their
problem. That's prejudice, literally prejudging us. They need to get over themselves. That is a
bigoted attitude they should fix themselves. And it has absolutely no place in a modern democracy
at all. And Hussein, I think you're absolutely right that how long before, we've already seen people
saying that the presence of migrants is a threat to the dignity and safety of women and girls.
We've already seen fifths literally lining up on the beach, staring moodily at France,
saying all these men, these military age men coming over in small boats is a threat to the safety
and dignity of women and girls. And it's like, it's never going to stop. It's never going to
fucking stop until you tell these people, shut up and get over yourselves.
In effect, I mean, it's like the fact that this is like a threat to a minority is enough.
but we as you said this is also a threat to what remains of liberal democracy genuinely it's a huge threat to what remains of liberal democracy because it is any if you're you know sort of um patch of black mold piloting a billionaire you've been able to do this one right but the next billionaire is going to be able to just say okay we're going to astro turf kind of the same number of institutions uh we're going to get hook up to the same networks of american fascist dark money yeah it's it's it's already kind of you know either disfigured beyond recognition or seriously impassiourable
Herald, the W.I. and girl guiding, like, which are the sort of totemic pieces of, like, you know,
middle-class, like, feminism in, like, society. So, again, if they can do this to us,
they can do this to anyone, for one thing. Again, it is profoundly undemocratic. I think a lot about
just recently, there was, I think it was a confederation of rowing clubs that voted to exclude
trans women on a 98% to 2% vote in favour of allowing us to continue participating.
Yeah, this was Oxford.
We've just been banned from participating in women's rowing in Oxford, despite the fact
that I think of the 55 captains who were asked to vote, 49 voted in favour of exclusion,
five abstained and one voted in favour of segregation.
And that one got their way.
I can't really explain how it feels to just sort of get up of a morning.
and sort of open the news and find out that just in case you wanted to start a career as, say, a professional cricketer or whatever at the age of 35, just in case you wanted to do that, that is now impossible. That's illegal now.
It's just, it's like, I don't know what it's like. It's an experience that I can't even really analogize to anything other than to say that it's, it's profoundly surreal.
I think to use the phrase that a lot of these public institutions live in fear of, what it's done is bring these institutions into public disrepute.
I think the Supreme Court, and I have already been criticised publicly in the Times for saying this, I think the Supreme Court has disgraced itself.
The fact that it did this without hearing from any transgender people, the fact that one of the judges in this case, I believe it's Lord Hodge and I apologize if I've got the name wrong, has previously written homophobic documents for the Church of Scotland.
The fact that he was allowed anywhere near this kind of judgment is a disgrace.
the law in the eyes of the public.
The EHRC, similarly, has disgraced itself.
There is no solution to this now.
There's no way to restore public trust in those institutions
other than by sacking the people responsible for this,
which I very much doubt Andy Burnham is going to do.
Yeah, crucially, as far as the sort of coercive value goes,
I'm not going to stop transitioning,
no matter how illegal it is.
So, you know, the way that that goes is,
if you want to stop me from being trans in public,
you have to arrest me and imprisonment me
forever or kill me or I guess sort of bully me into killing myself. And, you know, God willing,
none of those things happens. But that's essentially the confrontation that they're trying to
engender. And we talk about a number of things, right? Number of this confrontation is, when I say
artificial, I mean, it's highly elite driven. Yeah. And those elites have a fantastic way of just
shutting the door on these things. And I think Burnham's statement is that par excellence, right?
where you just go, okay, well, that's the way it is now, that's what sensible politics is now,
and we just sort of draw the line under it.
And what frightens me, I suppose, about that, is that there are a lot of people who do not pay a lot of attention to news.
I almost guarantee you, if you pull someone off the street, they will not really be able to articulate what the guidance says,
and not just because it's confusing, or the Supreme Court judgment said.
Most people do not know anything about trans people.
But if they are told by these elites that the debate's been settled, you know,
and it's been sort of one unambiguously because of this kind of elite capture,
then most people just sort of go along with that.
I don't expect most people to care, and I wish they would, but I don't expect it at all.
I don't expect they will either.
I'm continually shocked and dismayed by the arrogance of cisgender people who are so determined to stew in their own ignorance that they'll allow this to happen.
And institutionally, I think that the reason I bring up the elite names,
of this particular, you know, segregationist political movement is, I think it has to be understood
as an auto-goldpe as a coup from the top of a huge number of brings-
So, Golpe sucking yourself off?
That's when the state does it.
Oh, wow.
What does it mean? Go on.
An auto-go-Pay is a self- coup.
It's a coup from the top, where you, as someone who's, like, in control of an institution,
fundamentally change the rules of how it works so that you become very cemented in power.
And even if it's not about like Baroness Cuisher Faulkner or whatever, cementing herself particularly in power, the way that the Supreme Court, the EHRC, these different institutions, these papers have worked together is that the ideology of transphobia has cooed a great deal of these places, making them utterly unrecoverable if we are going to want to have a liberal democratic society at some point in the future.
Yeah, yeah.
I think a big part of this was the foresighted decision which gave quote unquote gender critical beliefs, protect.
under the Equality Act.
And this new guidance from the EHRC also explicitly says that people with gender critical
beliefs do not necessarily have negative animus towards transgender people.
And to treat them as if they do might be discrimination.
So let me just say they absolutely do.
That's good news.
I didn't know that.
I thought it was another thing.
Oh, well, episode over, I guess.
I think it's worth talking then about how we get out of this.
At this point, the only fix to this is primary legislation to restore the rights of trans people.
and I would say I will welcome that guidance
and I would refer it to go even further.
I would love to see a freedom of sex act
that establishes the right of every British person
to change sex without hindrance at all. That would be great.
And I also think we do need to remove gender critical beliefs
as a protected belief in this country
because it's clear now from the last several years of lawfare
that this has been a fucking nightmare for the entire country.
We've been embroiled in this stupid argument
funded by mad billionaires and it's time we drew a line under it
and say trans people are part of Britain if you don't like it,
there's the fucking door you can go back to Venus.
Yeah.
Well, the thing is,
I think a lot of the sort of quietest view on this is this is so nakedly incompassable with the European Convention on Human Rights that we wait until this gets to the European Court in Strasbourg and bearing in mind that this is how we got the trans rights and, you know, sort of like queer rights that we have in Britain is because Strasbourg forced the Blair Ministry to sort of like give them in the first place is we wait until it goes to Strasbourg.
They rule that this is a nonsense and the whole thing gets overturned.
Now, the flaw in that is, well, there are two.
One is that taking anything to the European Court of Human Rights takes about 25 years.
But the other is that it is entirely possible that before that time, Britain leaves the Council of Europe and thus the ECHR and the European Court making the whole thing futile.
But there are still a lot of people who are putting their hope in this.
And by people, I don't necessarily mean trans people so much as like,
the more tepid sort of ally, right?
The kind of soft left Labour Party,
if I had to guess at Andy Burnham's
private convictions in heavy air quotes,
I think he probably knows
that this is mental shit
and probably feels some kind of
instinctive sympathy that is worth nothing
and probably kind of has that same view
of like, this will get sorted out
eventually in Europe
and until then we just have to wait for this to blow over,
right? Clearly that is insufficient.
And I think it is deeply, deeply naive
to put any faith or any hope or any trust in that happening. So yes, it has to be primary legislation.
Who is going to do that other than a green party or remarkably more left-wing labor party leadership
than seems possible at this point? Yeah. And I mean, what do we say? Optimism of the intellect,
optimism of the will. I guess it'll all go fine in AHR. Burnham. Well, look, I don't want to be a sort of like
monetized optimism dispenser, right? I again, like I say, I profoundly resent.
that. But if you want me to come up with a kind of optimistic button to put on this so people don't kill
themselves, first of all, don't kill yourself. Second of all, this is ultimately premised
philosophically, if you like, on the idea that like, okay, great, all we have to do is establish a
completely immutable concept of sex or gender, right? And it has to hold sway forever. That is not
a vision that's compatible with the laws of physics, let alone biology. Entropy takes care of that.
And so long as there are trans people alive and existing, right?
And as we know, trans people existing and knowing trans people is like one of the biggest
drivers of like having more liberal attitudes towards us, then that's going to change the
cultural thing to the point where the law will be absolutely flouted or ignored.
And then at some point maybe it will catch up.
I don't want to seem like that's inevitable because it isn't and there's a lot of deeply
annoying, humiliating, dangerous bullshit that we all have to get through.
And there are certainly ways that this could turn out very much for the worse.
But the best thing you can do as a trans person is to continue to exist and to live,
the best thing you can do as a cis ally is to be, I suppose, extremely vocal about this.
And what that means in practice is to get campaigning and to get protesting.
Yeah.
Particularly through your unions, if you're a member of a union, that's a good way to go.
Yeah.
Within any group that you're involved with, because this is designed to stack the deck against any kind of institution,
any kind of organization to force them into the surrender
that the women's institution has had to do,
the girl guiding has had to do.
And I think it's a perfectly valid thing
for any kind of institution,
any kind of group that wants to make a stand on this
to go, okay, well, we are going to,
we would sooner have the thing dissolve
than allow it to be segregated.
And I think it's a profoundly decent thing to do
to be like, if we would have to do this
in a way that excluded trans women,
and then we're just not going to do it.
And I think that's the ultimate kind of level of
allyship that we would ask for, really.
Yes, absolutely.
And I mean, some of the things, just before we close out,
I think it's worth just going a little bit
into some of the things that these organizations
are being asked to do because, further to Nova's point, right,
that you can't put walls around this thing.
You can't because you were trying to legislate away humanity effectively
saying, hey, if you operate some kind of a service provider,
university, hospital, courtroom, hospitality industry, whatever, and you reach certain thresholds
of, like, largeness, and you must begin building out to segregate. And again, I'd never want to
make the claim that this is bad because it's unworkable. It's bad because it's bad. But if you look at the
practical implications of what you would have to do in order to make this statement of ambition in the
guidance match reality, it would require like over a billion pounds of capital expenditure to
reshape the world in the way that this quite radical, like, America.
funded group wants and has managed to do the hijacking legislation.
Riley, the problem is that we said that the only way out for the British economy was a massive
program of public investment.
The monkeys poor curls.
It turns out it was all toilets.
Okay, fine.
Listen, there's a real, like, the reform guy, right, who was like, you know, women can't
referee rugby games or whatever is a plumber.
Yeah.
Like the most recent Green candidate in Gorton and Denson, Hannah Spencer, is a plumber.
We're about to invest a billion pounds in segregating the toilets.
This is some kind of plumber occupied government.
Oh, shit.
Well, also, like, you know, there's a lot of, like, politicians who are basically saying about,
oh, like, we need more plumbers.
Like, you know, young people, we're too busy doing gender studies.
And, you know, with a minor in kind of, like, you know, basket weaving, whatever.
They still use those examples, which is, like, really fascinating to me,
considering there's so many more bullshit degrees that you could sort of cite.
But their solution is, oh, we need more plumbers, right?
Yeah.
And so, okay, fine.
This is it.
Fight the real enemy.
It's been plumbers all along.
Yeah, it's big pipe.
We need more plumbers because we need more public toilets.
And, okay, fine.
If you want to do a whole, like, segregation thing,
I'm not saying I support it,
but if you are going to go down that route,
then, like, you know, you should fight for,
you should fight for, like, better toilets, you know?
I'm going to need a bunch more of them, and that's, yeah.
It might be nice if, like, the toilet roll was replaced maybe once every two days
so maybe once every three days.
I'm not talking about like major things.
I'm not saying that you need to have like nice heated toilet seats
or, you know, a little bit of like Ud and Hinoki,
like, you know, like essence in the background.
I'm not saying that you have to like have like the background music,
you know, but you can get in most like Japanese like Shinkansen toilets.
Like go, let's go, let's go basic, right?
I think the way that this might be heading, right,
in an attempt to extricate some sanity from this
is that most bathrooms just become gender neutral.
and then turf's like, you know, just complain about it endlessly and try and like, you know, sue a couple of places into oblivion.
But de facto, I think that's, that's the only thing that, like, people are going to do for the most part.
The other outcome is that, like, you know, you have, you have, you have companies that adjust or you have, like, places that are just like, it's not worth having a toilet because you're just getting all this, like.
Britain, year 2026, just hold it.
Yeah, there is no place for you to pee in shit.
and you can thank like every British columnist for that, I suppose.
And then when one of these columnists like shits themselves in public,
they can then begin a campaign of like,
we need public toilets because, you know, this is, this now is a problem, right?
Oh my God, it's literally all been building to the JK Rowling thing
where it's like wizards just shit and piss themselves and then magic away the evidence.
They laughed at me for writing it.
So I did, by the way, I looked into this.
Just because I'm me and I had to do this,
I looked up if there were any freedom of information requests made of public bodies about how much were spent on adding unisex toilets.
And I found one.
Devon County Council in 2023 responded to a FOIA request about this.
They said,
we can confirm that to deliver three gender neutral WCs to stairwell be at County Hall has cost approximately 39,000 pounds per VAT.
Noting this was delivered as part of a wider toilet refurbishment scheme.
That's money that they could have spent on UFO defense.
Yeah.
So if you assume it's about 13 grand per unisex toilet,
they have to have like full doors, not cubicles and whatever,
full locking doors, not cubicles, whatever.
Yeah, just in case anyone sees any, like, tranny ankles.
So, let's like multiply that out by every covered hospital,
university, courthouse, hospitality premise,
all those things I listed and so on and so on and so on.
Like, do like a management consulting interview.
See if you can estimate it.
This is, this is toilet-cadianism.
I'm telling you, like, this is going to be the single thing that keeps Britain out of the
Great Recession is we will be too busy in stalling toilets.
Yeah, we've created modern monetary theories.
by routing it through a sort of lunatic right-wing panic.
We have restored Keynesianism in a way that appeals to almost everybody.
Am I not right in thinking that Kemi Badenog made it illegal to build gender-neutral facilities?
Was that not a regulation that she introduced?
And the last government...
Maybe what she's doing is she's fighting against the plumber occupied government.
Yeah, she's doing de-growth.
Yeah.
It's like, look, the arc of history is long, but it points towards the toilet.
The S-Bend of history.
Thank you.
And you know, it's like, we have this pretty huge KAPX build out now.
Maybe not enough to rival AI, but like bathrooms?
Really?
The thing is we're going to build them all out of reinforced air-raced concrete.
And then every single person in Britain is eventually going to get killed by a toilet collapsing in us.
I think there are lots of ways to look at this, right?
Something Nova said in a previous episode, which we need to bring back sneering.
And I think that the fact that the government has issued, or at least is endorsing by not voting it down,
an official guidance document that says
a whole bunch of extremely capital-stretched industries
need to spend about one-and-a-third billion pounds
immediately on the toilets that J.K. Rowling's moldy wall demanded
is laughable. It's genuinely fucking laughable.
The response should be, really?
Toilets? That is pure chaos.
And it should be treated with utter contempt.
Yeah. It's notably, I think, as well,
how much of an outlier this makes us in Europe.
Oh, I'm such a thought of laughing stuff.
The idea that, like, you can sort of, like, get the train from a normal country to Bathrooms Island is, I think...
We're supposed to be hosting Ida Hobbit next year.
And under these regulations, all the trans representatives who'll be coming to the country to celebrate Britain's history of LGBTQ rights will be required to be segregated whilst they are here.
How do you think that's going to go?
I mean, our history of LGBT rights is doing them kicking and...
screaming. It's like, hello, I'm welcome to the country that killed Alan During. Like, at least, hey, at least
sex matters are still unsatisfied. Well, that's the important thing is that they will, they have chosen
a path that means that they will never be happy. And the fun thing is that that that's what they
accuse us of. And I'm feeling actually pretty good. Despite, like, this is, this is a kind of
endorsement of transition that you don't really get to hear is that, like, you can have the, the actual
government, the guys you pay your taxes to, the people in charge of the police and everything.
like redefine you as a man and ban you from like ever taking up rowing for whatever reason
and go, yeah, this is still good enough that I'm going to keep doing it.
Yeah, yeah.
Well, I think that's a pretty good note to end on.
Abby, I want to thank you, of course, for coming and talking to us all the way from a sunny California.
Thank you so much for having me.
Thank you very much.
May I get in a cheeky plug?
Plug away.
Is it for your bathroom renovation business?
No, it's actually my interplanetary business.
flying people from Doncaster de Venus.
Listeners, House of the Dragon season three
comes out on HBO Max
on the 13th of June.
If you would like to see me
playing a blood-soaked,
furious, polyamorous, lesbian pirate
on a mission of vengeance
against the politician who has ruined her life,
punching and killing and hacking her way
through everyone in her way.
If that is something that would be cathartic to you,
you should watch House of the Dragon season three.
I hope someone at a con asks you, like,
Hey, where do you find your motivation?
No jokes.
One of the pivotal scenes was filmed two minutes after the skimetti decision came down.
I was like, ah, no acting required, actually.
We're just going to, please, can you stop swinging the sword so hard?
Anyway.
A lot of stuntmen didn't come home to their families after that.
Anyway, anyway, look, thank you very much for listening.
Thank you, Abby, for being on.
Check out.
Hey, we're going to give House the Dragon a little plug.
You know, we like to help up and coming shows.
around money, you know?
Maybe we can lend a few ears that way.
But thank you, of course, for listening.
And we will see you on the bonus episode in a couple short days.
Yes, don't worry, we know SpaceX has released its IPO documents.
We're getting to it.
See you then.
Bye.
Bye.
