Being a Woman Will Soon be Seen as a “Disability” by the Woke! By Mrs Vera West

This one is more directed to our female readers, so men folk may want to go outside for a few minutes, to perhaps have a cigar, or puff on their granddaddy's old pipe.

Not only do we live in a time, where traditional masculinity has been degraded, then cancelled as "toxic masculinity," but moving right along, the elites in the gender agenda then began a deconstruction of the notion of being a woman. Along with the trans movement, and the phenomenon of trans women competing in women's sport, and usually winning, we are seeing other disturbing trends. One is that the menopause, a quite natural event of the ending of the female reproductive life cycle, now is viewed as a "disability." At least by the UK Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC), who in a statement warned employers that they had "legal obligations" to make "reasonable adjustments" to the working conditions of menopausal employees. Failure to do so would mean facing costly legal fines.

But what are the "reasonable adjustments" that need to be made for menopausal women? Being a woman, I can tell you from life experience, having daughters and granddaughters, is no easy matter as far as hormones go. The bigger issues relate to young women with menstruation, period pain and the like that can make life a misery for a few days. But we survive it, because we are women, and overcome whatever trials life throws at us.

As an older woman, I find the idea of taking the menopause, God's fitting ending to a great reproductive life story, to be in any way a disability, deeply offensive. I hope this nonsense does not filter through to Australia.

https://dailysceptic.org/2024/02/27/how-long-before-being-female-is-itself-classed-as-a-disability/

"Many sceptical readers will have had hot flushes when opening their newspapers last week only to discover that being menopausal had apparently suddenly been officially reclassified as an actual 'disability'. On February 21st, the Equality and Human Rights Commission (EHRC) put out some formal guidelines warning U.K. employers that, under the terms of the Equality Act 2010, they had "legal obligations" to make "reasonable adjustments" to the working conditions of menopausal employees or else face potentially costly legal fines.

"Reasonable adjustments" like what? Subsequent media reporting suggested firms employing ladies of a certain vintage might need to allow them to "wear cooler uniforms and work from home on hot days" or even give them "quiet rooms to rest in and have fans or air conditioning in their workplaces", whilst if colleagues "ridicule women for their problems, it may constitute harassment"….

The EHRC's 'friendly reminder' came in the wake of an Employment Tribunal involving a menopausal social worker named Maria Rooney, who claimed to have been "discriminated against and victimised" by her employer, Leicester City Council, due to the severe effects of her symptoms (i.e., she took lots of time off with stress). Her wider case still awaits final closure, but judges have already ruled that, for the purposes of the Equality Act 2010, being menopausal can count as having an official 'disability', just so long as the symptoms can be shown to "have a long-term and substantial impact on a woman's ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities" for 12 months or more.

The EHRC backed Rooney's case, as well it might, considering the quango's ultimate bosses in Whitehall seem equally obsessed with the various life-phases of the female menstrual cycle. The country may be falling to bits, with Islamists owning the streets, the national debt spiralling out of control, our nuclear missiles mis-firing and our national borders non-existent, but still the Government somehow has the time and money available to set up a "U.K. Menopause Taskforce" and appoint a "Menopause Employment Champion" to encourage (or, more likely, force) major firms to do more to pander towards their more litigious-minded 50-plus female staff-members.

Women's Lib-tards

Various female, human-identifying MPs rushed out to add their shrill voices of agreement to the EHRC guidelines, from all sides of the House – a great example of the Uniparty in action! According to someone called Mims Davies, who would appear to be His Majesty's Minister for Disabled People, Health and Work, such measures are somehow "vital for the growth of our economy", as otherwise all women in their 40s and 50s will immediately flee the British workforce in severe hormonal distress, or something. Perhaps this would not be quite such a bad thing, as such a scenario would also flush 51-year-old Caroline Nokes MP out of employment.

The current Women and Equalities Committee Chair, Nokes may pose as a Conservative politician, but is clearly a Blairite right down to her very last remaining gamete, spouting out dead-eyed post-1997 mandarinese upon the topic like the following:

I hope this guidance helps – we know too many women are forced out of work due to challenging menopause symptoms. Of course the menopause is not a disability and should not be seen as that, rather something that will pass with the right support and medication.

That's classic pseudo-feminist Newspeak, isn't it? Woke Nokes is placed in a difficult rhetorical position here. Naturally, not being a true feminist who just wants men and women to be equal, but an identitarian Leftist in 'Conservative' guise who wishes at all times to poke the patriarchy, she desires to simultaneously portray women as being victims of their harsh and no-doubt overwhelmingly male employers, but also as inherently independent and empowered modern go-getters like she thinks she herself is. Therefore, Nokes welcomes the EHRC's guidance officially classifying the menopause as a potential form of disability, whilst at the same time also explicitly denying that it is one at all. So which is it, Caroline? Presumably it can be either or both, it just depends upon which particular special-interest, special-pleading argument she wishes to make on any given day of the week.

And don't go thinking things will get any better when Labour get into office. Labour's Shadow Women and Equalities Secretary Anneliese Dodds, distinctly post-menopausal in demeanour herself, also welcomed the EHRC's guidance, but claimed "women experiencing menopause deserve more", promising that, after winning the next election, her party would "require large employers to produce Menopause Action Plans" for their staff.

Menopause for Thought

There are several pretty obvious flaws with the above thinking. For one thing, some menopausal women suffer very badly, and (despite my jokes, which are aimed here against the blatant politicisers of the subject, not the patients themselves) do deserve actual sympathy, whilst others barely even notice the whole thing. A letter in the Times recounted the response of one woman to the whole phenomenon: "I think I had it one day after lunch."

Women lucky enough to get away similarly unscathed could very easily simply begin swinging the lead, demanding days of 'working' at home whilst watching Bargain Hunt, or special breaks to avoid doing any actual labour for a few hours per week in quiet rooms for no good reason, upon credible threat of taking their employers to tribunals, helpful EHRC guidelines clutched firmly in hand.

Furthermore, having to sanction potentially inconvenient patterns of home-working (what if the employee in question is a teacher, surgeon, or helicopter-pilot?), whilst investing in quiet rooms and air-con, is obviously going to add unwanted and unnecessary costs to doing business, as will producing Soviet-style nonsense like Menopause Action Plans.

And what will these 'Action Plans' actually look like? For many employers, I suspect the most likely (unwritten) such Action Plan will simply consist of the single sentence: "I will henceforth never employ any more middle-aged women if I can possibly get away with it, because I don't want to end up getting sued over absolutely bloody nothing." As the main stated purpose of the EHRC scheme is supposedly to prevent menopausal-age women from being forced out of the workforce, this would seem rather counterproductive.

Plus, there is the whole issue of the reasons given by the EHRC's supporters for why employers might wish to dismiss menopausal females in the first place: standard symptoms are listed as debilitating ailments like brain-fog, confusion, inability to concentrate, lethargy, hot flushes, voting Liberal Democrat and the need for lashings and lashings of paid time off work in consequence.

Even though only some women actually suffer from the above symptoms, arbitrarily classifying every woman pushing 50 in the workforce as being, essentially, latently disabled, seems perilously close to legislating to decree that females as a whole are inherently unfit for any meaningful employment at all, when quite clearly this is most untrue: it's just Caroline Nokes, Mims Davies and Anneliese Dodds who are so affected.

A Woman's Wisdom

So, whom do you vote for if you don't want any of the above menopausal madnesses to take place? No actual mainstream Uniparty MPs, obviously: they all suffer from permanent woke ideological brain-fog. Instead, you could do far worse than try casting your ballot for journalist Kate Muir, author of the book Everything You Need to Know About the Menopause (But Were Too Afraid to Ask). Following the release of the EHRC's guidance, Muir went on BBC Radio 4 saying that, unfortunately, it was physically impossible for governments of any stripe to pass legislation giving women all their youthful hormones, eggs and energy back.

Muir, who clearly doesn't suffer from an addled brain herself, told her interviewer the new guidelines made no sense and that those who drafted them "don't know enough about [the] menopause to be writing laws around it". Muir explained that "It's not a disability, it's something every woman goes through, obviously," other than perhaps Ursula Andress in She.

Whilst some women may indeed require a little understanding of their temporary condition, Muir's view was that any sensible employer "should just be humane about that. I don't know if we need to entrench this as legislation". Surely the true issue here was ensuring women who did genuinely become physically or mentally debilitated during the menopause should be given reliable access to the necessary medical care, rather than to grasping employment lawyers? "It's a matter of health, not law," Muir argued.

No need for official legislation? Just leave human beings to sort things out informally amongst themselves on a purely common sense basis? I'd certainly vote for Ms. Muir with a sensible platform like that, but sadly such a concept is entirely alien to the current governing-class mindset, which is one of purest Gesellschaft over Gemeinschaft.

Allowing professionals to use their common sense rather than having automatic recourse to the law or pseudo-academic accreditation is now wholly taboo within the chronically overregulated public and corporate sectors alike. For example, would you like to become "menopause-friendly accredited"? In the good old days (i.e., pre-1997), a sensible boss could have just told a visibly affected employee: "Look, love, I can see you're a bit off it today – just finish an hour or two early, then catch up on the backlog in your own time, when you feel up to it. …" 

 

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Wednesday, 15 May 2024

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