BBC trans coverage ‘censored’ by its own reporters | Watch | The Telegraph

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

The BBC’s trans coverage is subject to “effective censorship” by specialist LGBT reporters who refuse to cover gender critical stories, one of the broadcaster’s own advisers has warned. BBC staff have expressed concerns that the LGBT desk – which is shared by all of the corporation’s news programmes – has been “captured by a small group of people” promoting a pro-trans agenda and “keeping other perspectives off air”.

This has led to “a constant drip-feed of one-sided stories … celebrating the trans experience without adequate balance or objectivity”, a leaked internal BBC memo concludes. It reflected a “cultural problem across the BBC” which treats issues of gender and sexuality as “a celebration of British diversity” rather than a complex and contentious subject.

The latest accusations of BBC bias come after The Telegraph revealed that a Panorama documentary doctored footage of a Donald Trump speech, and that the corporation minimised reports of Israeli suffering in the Gaza war to “paint Israel as the aggressor”. Read more: https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2025/11/05/bbc-trans-coverage-censored-own-reporters/ #bbc #transition #bias

Source: BBC trans coverage ‘censored’ by its own reporters | Watch

Women experience sexual dysfunction in menopause, but testosterone is not the answer | SMH

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

An Australian study believed to be the biggest of its kind to examine sexual function and sexually related personal distress in women aged 40-69 revealed a big increase in symptoms of female sexual dysfunction as women start the menopausal transition – known as perimenopause.

Symptoms of dysfunction included problems with sexual desire, arousal and orgasm. Low sexual desire (13.3 per cent), impaired arousal (13.1 per cent) and poor sexual self-image (12.8 per cent) were the most prevalent sexual dysfunctions.

The fact that 25 per cent reported poor sexual self-image without a physical dysfunction implied other factors in their lives were affecting their sexual wellbeing in their midlife.

Half of participants said they had “sexually related personal distress”, and women were more likely to be distressed by a sexual dysfunction if they were partnered.

Of the 29 per cent of women aged 55-59 who had low desire, only about half of them were distressed by it.

The authors of the Monash University study, published in The Lancet on Thursday, found that, contrary to the messages being promoted by some menopause influencers, the increase in sexual dysfunction causing distress among women in their 40s did not coincide with a drop in levels of testosterone in the blood.

The average age of menopause (the end of ovulation and periods) in Australia is 51, late perimenopause is considered the few years before it. The average woman goes into perimenopause in her mid-40s.

[Ed: Hmm. I wonder if  the “other factors” impacting women’s sexual wellbeing might include men?]

Source: Women experience sexual dysfunction in menopause, but testosterone is not the answer

California Drivers Sue Uber, Lyft Alleging Gender Discrimination | The Epoch Times

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

Male drivers affiliated with ride-hailing companies Uber and Lyft filed lawsuits against the businesses in California, accusing them of enforcing gender discrimination through programs that allow women to opt for female drivers.

The class action complaint against Uber was filed on Nov. 3 at the Superior Court of the State of California for the County of San Francisco.

The lawsuit took issue with Uber’s “Women Preferences” set of features announced for the U.S. market in July.
Initially, the Women Preferences option was introduced in Saudi Arabia in 2019, which was “overwhelmingly positive,” the company said, adding that the option has since been expanded to 40 nations.
[Ed: Another example of sex discrimination laws being used to reduce women’s safety and opportunities rather than for their protection as originally intended.]

Source: California Drivers Sue Uber, Lyft Alleging Gender Discrimination | The Epoch Times

Martine Croxall broke rules over ‘pregnant people’ facial expression, BBC says | BBC

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

The BBC has upheld 20 impartiality complaints over the way presenter Martine Croxall altered a script she was reading live on the BBC News Channel, which referred to “pregnant people” earlier this year.

The presenter said: “Malcolm Mistry, who was involved in the research, says that the aged, pregnant people … women … and those with pre-existing health conditions need to take precautions.”

The ECU said Croxall’s facial expression after she said “pregnant people” had been “variously interpreted by complainants as showing disgust, ridicule, contempt or exasperation.”

It added that “congratulatory messages Ms Croxall later received on social media, together with the critical views expressed in the complaints to the BBC and elsewhere, tended to confirm that the impression of her having expressed a personal view was widely shared across the spectrum of opinion on the issue”.

Harry Potter author JK Rowling was among those who praised Croxall at the time.

Source: Martine Croxall broke rules over ‘pregnant people’ facial expression, BBC says

Dr. Benjamin’s Fantasy World – by Glenna Goldis – Bad Facts | Glenna Goldis

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

No book has shaped trans ideology more than Harry Benjamin’s The Transsexual Phenomenon. Published in 1966, it’s built on personal testimony, emotional blackmail, contradictory theories, and literal mythology.

Benjamin, a dapper endocrinologist beloved for his bedside manner, is the architect of trans ideology.

The 1920s were an exciting time for medicine (insulin, antibiotics) but Benjamin’s arc bent toward blunders. He became a disciple of Eugan Steinach, an Austrian who transplanted opposite-sex gonads into rats with intriguing results but then staked his career on “rejuvenation” – one-testicle vasectomies intended to make men over 40 feel young.

Benjamin brought “Steinach operations” to NYC, offering ovary X-rays to women for the same purpose of “reactivation.”

Scientists were racing to synthesize sex hormones. Benjamin formed a team to manufacture androgens in the late 1920s but the venture was unsuccessful. He continued to offer “reactivation” and various potions. His bedside manner made him popular.

Before the Nazis took over, Benjamin frequently traveled to Germany. In Berlin he’d visit his friend Magnus Hirschfeld’s Institute for Sexual Science, where a museum displayed BDSM gear and frilly underpants worn by Prussian officers. Hirschfeld and the resident scholars puzzled over the distinctions between transvestites and homosexuals.

In 1949, the sexologist Alfred Kinsey introduced Benjamin to Val Barry (pseudonym), a man in his early 20s whose parents had raised him as a girl from a young age because his personality was so feminine.

Benjamin informed Barry that he was “a woman [who] accidentally possesses the body of a man,” prescribed estrogen, X-rayed his testicles, and referred him to Sweden for genital surgery.

In 1952 the media alighted on Christine Jorgensen, a young homosexual man who’d just arrived home to New York in women’s clothing after castration in Denmark. Benjamin, now in his 60s, wrote Jorgensen a letter offering his services. By that point his practice was struggling, according to Ostertag, as the Steinach operation had become known as quackery.

As homosexuals and transvestites bombarded Jorgensen with requests for advice, he referred them to Benjamin. Soon the doctor had shifted his practice from reactivation to transsexualism.

Benjamin advocated for legalized prostitution. In 1964 he condemned the recent cleanup of San Francisco (where he lived during the summers), suggesting the dearth of accessible “whores” caused a sailor to murder a woman.

By the mid-1960s Benjamin was transitioning young male indigents in San Francisco. It appears some of these youths were underage; some may have been prostitutes. ”Harry Benjamin, he gave hormones to everyone,” one reminisced decades later.

The Transsexual Phenomenon was released in 1966 by Julian Press, which published works on sexology and exotic religion. The New York Times covered it twice. Aloof academics like Robert Stoller started taking Benjamin seriously. The San Francisco Police Department had a copy. The Erickson Educational Fund granted Benjamin $50,000 (around $500,000 in 2025). Johns Hopkins opened the country’s first “Gender Identity Clinic” – with full surgical services – that year. One of its founders, John Money, said Phenomenon made it possible.

Transsexual clinics soon cropped up all over the country. New practitioners honored Benjamin by naming guidelines, a conference, and finally their guild after him, the Harry Benjamin International Gender Dysphoria Association (HBIGDA).

Benjamin acknowledges fetishistic cross-dressing. “[T]o take sex out of transvestism is like taking music out of opera. It simply cannot be done.”

Benjamin describes “accompanying perversions or deviations that often complicate transvestism” like “bondage,” “flagellation,” and wanting to be “humiliated.”

He illuminates the condition’s sophisticated pedigree:

Havelock Ellis proposed the term “eonism” for the same condition, named after the Chevalier d’Eon de Beaumont, a well-known transvestite at the court of Louis XV. In this way, Ellis wanted to bring the term into accord with sadism and masochism, also named after the most famous exponents of the respective deviations, the French Marquis (later Count) Donatien de Sade, and the Austrian writer, Leopold von Sacher-Masoch.

Recently feminists like Roisin Michaux and Genevieve Gluck have made similar observations to Benjamin – that these men are addicted to feeling sexually humiliated – by reviewing their social media activity.

Source: Dr. Benjamin’s Fantasy World – by Glenna Goldis – Bad Facts

Students launch women’s society excluding trans women | Varsity

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

Students have launched the first women’s society at the University of Cambridge to be restricted to those defined as “female at birth,” a move that has been criticised by other groups as “an assault on the trans community”.

The move immediately provoked backlash from across the University. The Cambridge University Labour Club (CULC) called it “the latest assault on the trans community at Cambridge,” accusing the society of promoting “transphobic rhetoric under the guise of ‘free speech’,” while several societies issued a joint statement in support of the trans community.

Maeve Halligan, a 22-year-old MPhil student at Lucy Cavendish College, told GenderBlog.net that she founded CUSW after being unable to find any single-sex societies at the University’s Freshers’ Fair earlier this term.

She saw the society’s creation as a way of preserving women’s rights to single-sex spaces. “If you’re a male person who seeks to enter into female spaces, that directly erodes the right of women to have a single-sex space in the first place. And that’s just bad,” she said. “Our USP, the fact that it’s women only – isn’t it funny that that’s controversial?”

Source: Students launch women’s society excluding trans women | Varsity

Commissioner recommends watchdog to steer government efforts against domestic, family and sexual violence – ABC News

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

A national watchdog is needed to ensure state, territory and federal governments effectively implement policies and programs to stop violence against women and children, according to the Domestic, Family and Sexual Violence (DFSV) Commissioner.

In her latest assessment of whether governments are meeting their commitments to prevent and respond to violence against women and children, commissioner Micaela Cronin said the amount of progress being made is not commensurate with substantial government investment nor in line with years of inquiry recommendations.

“The risk is that activity is mistaken for progress,” the commissioner’s report said.

The DFSV commission found systems meant to keep governments accountable are so fragmented they are leading to authorities passing the buck on responsibility.

The numbers show a failure to meet a key performance measurement in the national plan: a 25 per cent reduction per year in female victims of intimate partner homicide.

Sexual assault statistics also rose to their highest rate in over 30 years.

The commission analysed more than 1,000 recommendations from more than 25 federal, state and territory inquiries, royal commissions and coronial inquests into violence against women and children since 2010.

It found that while recommendations were often “repeated in report after report” many had not been consistently or widely implemented.

Source: Commissioner recommends watchdog to steer government efforts against domestic, family and sexual violence – ABC News

Mom Gets 15 Years after Fleeing to Protect Son: Elaborate Scheme to Capture Her | Women’s Coalition

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

An Ohio mom was just sentenced to a draconian 10 to 15 years in prison after fleeing to protect her son from sexual abuse.

This excessive sentence for a protective mother with no criminal history is insane, especially considering she was not married to the father and had custody of her baby when she fled the state.

In this case, as so many, a Cadre of Colluders collaborate in an elaborate and fraudulent scheme to capture and severely punish an errant woman who’s escaped the clutches of her baby’s father.

Source: Mom Gets 15 Years after Fleeing to Protect Son: Elaborate Scheme to Capture Her

Unregulated sperm donor still advertising services despite court warnings to women | Sperm donation | The Guardian

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

A prolific unregulated donor is still attempting to sell his sperm despite warnings from two family court judges, a Guardian investigation has found.

Robert Albon, who calls himself “Joe Donor”, has appealed to the courts to gain access to at least four of his biological children against their mothers’ wishes. In a rare move, a judge named him in 2023 to warn women of the risks of using his services, which he promotes on social media.

Albon, who has appeared on This Morning and in a Channel 4 documentary, claims to have fathered 180 children around the world, including the US – his home country – Australia, South America and the UK.

In three family court cases involving four children with different mothers in England and Wales, Albon has sought a number of different court orders allowing him access to the children – including gaining custody of one and changing another’s name. This is despite previously stating: “Moms I help can choose no contact and I respect that.”

In most cases it was in firm opposition to their mothers’ wishes, with a former partner of one of the women describing his involvement as “a nightmare and a horror story”, and another saying she had been left “broken” and suicidal by her interactions with him.

In communications with the 54-year-old, the Guardian posed as a woman seeking a sperm donation. Albon said he would travel to Leeds for sex with the woman, costing £20 to cover travel, or he could also “ship the sample” at a cost of £100. He added: “Is it possible to see a picture?”

Unregulated donations are not subject to the same legal protections as those organised by an accredited clinic, where donors are kept on an anonymous register that is only accessible to the child when they reach 18.

In 2023, Albon took a same-sex couple to court in Cardiff to try to get his name put on the birth certificate of a child born in 2021 after impregnation with a syringe of his sperm. He also sought parental responsibility, court-ordered time with the child, including building up to overnight stays, and to be able to change the child’s name to a first name of his choosing and his last name – something the judge described as “frankly absurd” and said was “motivated by ownership and perceived, and rather old-fashioned, entitlement”.

He made the application despite being “a stranger” to the child, who he had met for a photo two years earlier in a “one-off”, 10-minute meeting, the court was told.

Source: Unregulated sperm donor still advertising services despite court warnings to women | Sperm donation | The Guardian

Hunting Ground – ABC News

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

In a powerful follow up to her Logie-winning investigation, Adele Ferguson returns to Four Corners with Hunting Ground, a searing expose that reveals the true scale of sexual abuse in Australia’s childcare sector.

Drawing on over a year of reporting and newly obtained data, Ferguson shows the crisis is far worse than previously known, and far from over.

Source: Hunting Ground – ABC News