Protesters storm Kathleen Stock speak at Oxford Union

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GBT+ activists stormed a chat with feminist Kathleen Stock on the Oxford Union earlier than one in all them glued themselves to the ground on Tuesday.

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Hundreds of chanting protesters marched in direction of the 200-year outdated debating society the place they blared music together with Nancy Sinatra’s These Boots Are Made For Walking as Prof Stock arrived.

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Professor Stock spoke for round 10 minutes earlier than three protesters emerged from the viewers of the packed corridor, shouting: “No more dead trans kids”.

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One of them, Riz Possnett, glued themselves to the ground as safety guards rushed to take away the others and viewers members booed the protesters, shouting for Prof Stock to “carry on”.

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One viewers member addressed the protester, who wore a t-shirt saying “no more dead trans kids”, shouting, “we are here to listen” whether or not you “like it or not”.

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Shortly later, 4 law enforcement officials eliminated Riz and escorted them out of the constructing to cheers from the viewers.

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The interruption, which lasted for round half an hour, was later dismissed by Prof Stock, who mentioned: “It wasn’t traumatic for me”.

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In a sequence of tweets after they had been eliminated, Riz, an Oxford University scholar who has appeared on GB News, described Prof Stock’s beliefs as “dangerous and hateful”.

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“Kathleen Stock is not welcome here. Terfs (Trans Exclusionary Radical Feminists) are not welcome here,” they mentioned.

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“We will resist hatred, and we will fight for trans rights”.

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The altercation got here after the Oxford Union LGBTQ+ Society’s president Amiad Haran Diman, which organised the rally exterior, promised that the society wouldn't attempt to “shut down” the occasion.

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Speaking after the protesters had been pulled out of the corridor, Prof Stock mentioned: “I actually don’t mind that protest. It wasn’t traumatic for me.

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“Generally what I find more worrying is that when institutions have listened to the protesters and (…) then basically become propaganda machines for a particular point of view and everyone else feels they can’t say what they want to say.

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“That’s happening, I’m afraid, in lots of workplaces and universities”.

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Prof Stock went on to problem requires trans-women to entry feminine bogs and altering rooms, arguing that a few of them may “take advantage”.

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She mentioned it's “not fair on females”, asking: “Why should females take this burden on?”

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When pressed by the union’s president, Matthew Dick, on whether or not trans ladies posed the same threat to males, she cited statistics by the Ministry of Justice which confirmed that “at least 50%” of these in jail are there for sexual assault, including: “That’s a higher rate than the average male.”

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“I hate to be the one to tell you this sort of thing because the people outside totally misunderstand what I’m saying but somebody has to say it,” she mentioned.

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And when questioned on whether or not trans folks had been much less more likely to assault ladies as a result of they undergo from “huge amounts of violence” themselves, Prof Stock hit again: “I’m afraid it doesn’t follow that people who are subjected to violence aren’t violent, I think you need to talk to some criminologists.”

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She added: “If we do not talk about reality then we go wrong.

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“You can go about your life pretending for a while but reality will hit you in the face.”

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Days earlier than Prof Stock’s speak, a bunch of Oxford University lecturers and workers signed a letter supporting the best of transgender college students to talk out in opposition to her.

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The BBC reported that the open letter, shared on Saturday by the college’s LGBTQ+ society and signed by 100 lecturers and workers, mentioned: “We believe that trans students should not be made to debate their existence.”

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Earlier on Tuesday, Prime Minister Rishi Sunak intervened to assist the speak, writing within the Telegraph newspaper that debate was an indicator of a “tolerant society”.

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Before the controversy, the college’s vice-chancellor, Professor Irene Tracey defended the thinker’s look as a matter of “freedom of speech”.

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