QuoteGender stereotyping and uneven application in dress codes has already been addressed in the courts and they ruled it's illegal. I can't see how this clause harms people in the way it has been accused of doing. I don't see how it leaves anyone out. We are all subject to our employers' rules.
Unless the company in question has a uniform dress code, that is unisex in nature, including everything from hair length to makeup, it's not even. I worked for a major corporation also, and there was a guy there that liked to play dress up sometimes. He was not queer, or transgendered, but he liked to wear a skirt at times. Why? Who knows? There was also someone on staff that was transitioning, and she also wore skirts sometimes. She had full clearabce to do as she pleased, but if he wore a skirt, or eye makeup, he got sent home.
All this is an attempt to make everyone fit the binary standard. I say &(^% the binary standard, and anyone that tries to enforce it. Not everyone that conflicts with gender norms is queer or transgendered either.
The only way for a company to have a uniform dress code that is not discriminatory, is to make everyone wear the same style of slacks, the same cut of top, no prohibitions on hairlength or style, and a ban on makeup. Either that, or allow everyone to dress as they will under a single set of standards. But the public doesn't want that, because they don't want some guy coming to work in heels and a dress on casual Fridays. I don't think they'd be too keen with having some woman come in wearing a three-piece and sporting facial hair either.
This is not about expanding freedoms for all people, this is about finding a way for people to conform to the rules of duality. If an emplyer makes a person choose one gender type or another, that is another form of restriction. The only solution is a unisex code of appearance and conduct. Can you say Mao Tse-Tung and cultural revolution? Because that is where we will be headed to conform to this kind of application.
QuoteI don't see anything wrong in going to work as one or the other, but when you off the job you can be whoever you want. Afterall you are working for a company or family or a person who owns the business and they want you to be their public figure head.
Yeah, well that is probably what they would tell a lot of transsexuals if they could too.
And then this:
Quoteprovided that the employer provides reasonable access to adequate facilities that are not inconsistent with the employee's gender identity as established with the employer at the time of employment or upon notification to the employer that the employee has undergone or is undergoing gender transition, whichever is later.
Again with the transtioning people. What about gender-variant people that are not going to transition? IMO, you are selling them out. Yeah, you can pass the bill as is and come back for them later, right? What a bunch of hypocrites. When the queer population leaves you behind, they are committing a mortal sin. When you leave the gender-variant or gender-ambiguous behind, it ain't no big thang, right? Whatever.