part of human rights. but in the end, the only way you win an argument is by having a discussion and a debate. tonally, i think lots of people will welcome what you're saying, but there will be plenty of people saying, "hold on, women are women and there isn't a compromise to be had. women's rights must be respected." and i don't disagree that women's rights must be respected, and i think the lgbt movement has got to better empathise with that perspective and to understand why a whole generation of campaigners who fought for women's rights... i think sometimes when people are thinking about what's the answer on trans rights, things like changing language around breast—feeding or talking about parents instead of mothers, it's an unnecessary erasure of language and identity, and i think people have to be sensitive to that. similarly, it's perfectly legitimate for people to disagree withjk rowling and her position on this, but you've got to ask yourself,