I never cared about or used Twitter, hence those details go past me. But it seems to me that the obvious way to handle a platform where you are put at a disadvantage by the rules is not to use it. Why this obsession with twitter and what is said there? Why feed it? You do know that these social media corporations deliberately incite divisions because that gets them more posts, more views and more advertising money?
If the rules of the game and vitiated, refuse to play it. Is that so hard?
If you've never cared about or used Twitter, maybe you're not best-placed to advise on how people handle a big name on Twitter using that platform to spread discrimination?
JK Rowling has 14.5 million followers. That's a
lot. People critical of her leaving the platform would only let her preach to the platform she has
already garnered. Twitter exists at this point, and individual actions aren't going to be able to effectively undermine that. Nevermind the fact that some people need to use it for their jobs.
Besides, none of this has any relevance to you defending Rowling's "free speech" when she's using the moderation tools on a moderated platform to prevent the free speech of her critics. It's just you telling her critics to suck it up and go elsewhere, which wouldn't actually impact Rowling negatively in the
slightest. By "negatively" I mean "be affected by constructive criticism of her terrible and discriminatory opinions".
You know what "fundamental" means in "fundamental right"? It means they should not be subsidiary to others, except where absolutely inevitable whent they clash with other fundamental rights. If freedom of expression is a fundamental right you can't suspend it in some cases - arbitrarily decided on - because it might "cause harm" to some people. You have to prove very clearly that some other fundamental right is being undermined by it.
What harm is caused? Is another fundamental right being undermined by the exercise of free expression on the issue of whether "trans women aren't proper women" ? Who even defines "women" and "trans-women"? Because that may be the point of contention. Want what is "proper" but a weasel word?
This looks to me a dangerous invitation to arbitrary judgement in suspending a fundamental right. I cannot support it.
Why are you talking about fundamental rights (I'm guessing to free speech)? What does that have to do with the basic decency of calling trans women, women?
You didn't even answer the question, disappointingly. It's not a question of "might cause harm". Dehumanising trans women causes them harm. Dehumanising
anybody causes them harm. Nevermind segregating them in terms of legal protections, it comes with a whole host of cultural baggage. It causes harm. I asked you for an argument as to it
not causing harm; for you to provide some kind of counterargument. Anything, really.
You can complain that being forced not to say discriminatory things (or outright hate speech) infringes on some kind of fundamental "right", but that complaint doesn't invalidate the harm done. The way your post reads, it suggests that it doesn't matter what harm is done by what Rowling has said and written - what matters most is that she gets to say such horrendous things.
Hard pass. Trans women are women. We wouldn't even need the prefix in common culture if there wasn't this transphobic attempt to exclude trans women from being called women in the first place. You hold free speech up as a fundamental right, but apparently the basic human right to existence is secondary to that.