Get Feminist Complaint Canals Off Our Urinals!
December 1, 2003
by
Bernard Chapin
The
attempt on the part of the radical feminist and gay coalition to create
unisex
bathrooms at the University of Chicago immediately brought to
mind my only experience with non-handicapped, desegregated restrooms
back in the summer of 2001.
At the time I encountered them, I was on a date with a girl at a
Chicago street fair called "Halsted Market Days." The fair
is demographically unique as it's held in the homosexual neighborhood
of "Boystown", and half its attendees, at least, are gay.
Despite the advertising, the neighborhood is quite mixed and features
more than a few non-pastel, "straights" within its confines.
My date later confided to me that she selected the setting on purpose
to see if I was a tolerant guy. Astonishingly, I passed with diversity
flag colors as the sight of homosexuals frolicking in the road is
about as unexpected to me as a runny nose in pollen season.
At any rate, a couple of hours in, she directed me to the inside
of a restaurant/bar called "Roscoe's" so she could use the
bathroom. When she returned we had another round and I used the facilities.
I did not think anything strange about the room as it had a few stalls,
a sink, a mirror, and several urinals. I stood by the mirror doing
what one does after swallowing four Miller's, when suddenly I heard
three girls talking behind me as they waited for a stall. I said,
"Men's room" aloud hoping they'd realize their mistake.
They replied that the bathroom was for everybody. After remembering
our neighborhood location, I understood, as we were tourists in a
foreign land.
That foreign land may now be here though. It seems that activists
at the University of Chicago are lobbying for the creation of multi-sexual
bathrooms to combat discrimination against transsexuals and trans-gendered
individuals. The rational is as follows: "'If a woman in a women's-only
restroom is assumed to be a man, there may be real threats to her
comfort and even safety,' warns the Coalition for a Queer Safe Campus
'Students have faced gay-baiting comments in our university's sex-segregated
bathrooms.'"
How does one react to this? First of all, I do not believe the charge.
Usually when people have to relieve themselves, that alone is the
object of their concentration. Fittingly, no examples are given by
the student. I do not presume the mass of heterosexuals to be anti-gay.
In fact, from what I have seen, heterosexuals today are more tolerant
of homosexuality than they are of their own heterosexuality (which
is another column all together).
Second, I'm willing to grant that somebody, in some bathroom, in
some truck stop somewhere once made a sarcastic or irritable comment
to a human of ambiguous sexuality, but that in no way justifies desegregating
bathrooms for men and women. The "oppressed" in this scenario
need thicker skins as opposed to new sanctuaries. Insisting that the
majority of Americans indulge over-sensitivity cannot be found in
the Bill of Rights.
Yet, the university sees it differently and has to chosen to confuse
student whines with social justice. One of the deans even stated that
the activists complaint has done a great job in raising "community
awareness."
While I disagree with the dean about the beneficent nature of the
coalition, I am pleased that they brought this scandal into the open.
This enables a disinterested public to note the devotion in which
"illiberal" liberals attempt to codify private behaviors.
If the reader has no previous knowledge of radical politics, then
the request made of the university appears odd but not malicious.
Yet, as one who's been aware of the feminist agenda for many years,
the demand for unisex bathrooms is in keeping with their enduring
attack on our culture.
The Feminist Majority, one of the organizations involved in the discussion
at the University of Chicago, considers the creation of desegregated
restrooms to be amongst one of their great achievements. On their
site they refer to a government branch that heeded their advice:
"The Coast Guard quietly did away with its regulations requiring
separate bathrooms for men and women aboard ships. A spokesman for
the Coast Guard confirmed that separate heads no longer are required
as long as privacy is maintained."
A UC professor affirms that desegregated toilets are a part of their
ideology: "'Some feminists might say that any sex segregation
is problematic,' said Mary Anne Case, a professor of law at the University
of Chicago who has studied the early roots of feminism and the inequality
in sex segregated bathrooms."
Consider how bizarre it sounds to someone off the street that "Inequality
in sex segregated bathrooms" is an area for academic study within
our universities. Most normal people do not view this as being a topic
worthy of scholarship. However, this does not stop the academy from
spending millions of dollars each year to investigate twaddle and
pronounce it platinum.
What the casual observer may not fathom about these radical feminists
is that the bathroom is one of their favorite places in which to deconstruct.
Indeed, they waged a War On Urinals in the past and will continue
to do so in the future. To most of us, the urinal is a practical item,
but, to the activists, it was forged with porcelain teeth stolen from
the goddess herself.
In 2000, Swedish feminists wished to micromanage the way in which
men biologically function within their Stockholm university so they
tried to force everyone to take a seat. It seems that our standing
is a "nasty macho gesture" that demeans women. If we extend
their particular line of fallacious reasoning, we will soon discover,
provided the peyote's been swallowed correctly, that using the words
"is" and "was" are misogynistic as well, and probably
one day will be labeled criminal sexual misconduct.
What next? The size of a man's shoes? I can only imagine the shrieks
that will come from a campus brimming with androgynous Pats once they
find out that men have bigger shoes than they do. "The injustice!"
They may well, with their sophisticated minds, then consider male
foot binding as a plausible solution.
Next we have my favorite quotation: ".along with creating more
bathroom space for women -- a typical problem in public facilities
-- the gender-neutral bathroom would also give men and women less
reasons to separate in social functions."
Well, this is total hogwash. While the new water closets will give
men and women less of a chance to separate during organic functions,
I do not see how it would directly translate to social situations.
What it does translates into is the undeniable conclusion that radical
feminists are not remotely concerned about the welfare of women in
general. The real people who'd benefit from this plan are not transsexual
or trans-gendered but rapists. Without question, any rapist who heard
about this new PC edict had to be quite enthused. A stall would be
the ideal place for them to lurk and await their prey, and no one
would think anything of their going into the duck blind as they swung
open its door. Even though these feminists may not be consciously
aware of this potential consequence arising, it is yet another instance
proving that they never reflect on what the unintended consequences
of their actions are.
More likely though, as rape is very rare, the likely outcome is that
women would not use these bathrooms; hence, the activists would inconvenience
the souls whose cause they usually pretend to champion. The reason
women wouldn't use unisex bathrooms is because men would attempt to
expand upon the social and organic functions currently practiced within
them.
Perhaps the activists have some knowledge of this and it pleases
them. Then the dream of heterosexuals openly embracing the gay lifestyle
could be realized. Yes, within time, it could degenerate into a heterosexual
cruising zone-which would be fruitless as it'd only be a bunch of
guys hanging out in empty bathrooms on Friday nights after women vacated
that particular "playing field."
No one should have any illusions about where all of this will end.
It will not end by itself. The activists will take and take as long
as we appease them. No convention or law will remain unturned in their
pursuit to rearrange our culture and daily relations. If the full
range of their totalitarian desires becomes better known, then these
organizations will become widely associated with petty obsessions
and pink cakes of disinfectant rather than "human rights."
It's our responsibility to our country to make their opinions known,
and to fight them vigorously-lobbyist by lobbyist and urinal by urinal.
Bernard Chapin
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Bernard Chapin
is a writer in Chicago.