Women No Longer Legally Exist in NSW

Women’s rights have been firmly erased in NSW. Independent Alex Greenwich succeeded in convincing Premier Chris Minns and the Labor party to pass sex self-id law. The bill was passed by both houses. This means males can self-identify as female on a whim and access all women’s sex-based services, spaces and sports. Women do not have legal protection for their own sex-based rights and can be penalised if they try to exclude males from their spaces. The bill rejects the scientific fact that sex is evidenced in every single cell that contains a nucleus in the human body. The bill disregards women’s safety, dignity and fairness by rendering the word female or woman completely useless. If a person “feels” they are the opposite sex, or if they attempt to “live as” the opposite sex, that is enough apparently. What does it mean to “live as” the opposite sex? Who knows, but it appears to be that employing and appropriating sex stereotypes such as costumes, hairstyles, or drug taking can do it.

Sex descriptor means the following—

(a) female

(b) male,

(c) non-binary,

(d) non-specified,

(e)any descriptor prescribed by the regulations.

 

32B Application to Registrar by person 18 years of age or more about alteration of record of person’s sex

(1) A person may apply to the Registrar to have a record of the person’s sex, specified in the application, altered if—

(a) the person is 18 years of age or more, and

(b) the person’s birth is registered in this State.

(2) An application under subsection (1) must be—

(a) in the approved form, and

(b) accompanied by a statutory declaration in which the person declares that the person—

(i) identifies as being of the sex specified in the declaration, and

(ii) lives, or seeks to live, as a person of that sex, and

(c) accompanied by a support statement by an adult who has known the applicant for at least 12 months stating that—

(i) the adult believes the person is making the application in good faith, and

(ii) the adult supports the person in making the application, and

(d) accompanied by any other document or information the Registrar reasonably requires in relation to the sex of the person.

Source: Binary

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