UPDATE
Apr 2, 2024 4:38 PM CDT
Police in Scotland said Tuesday that they have received complaints about a tweet from JK Rowling but her "comments are not assessed to be criminal and no further action will be taken." In the post, the author described several transgender women as men and dared police to arrest her under a new Scottish law that makes "stirring up hatred" related to transgender identity, among other characteristics, a criminal offense. Robbie de Santos, director of human rights at the Stonewall charity, said it was "simply incorrect" for commentators to say misgendering or "stating facts on biology," as Rowling puts it, would be criminalized, the Guardian reports. "This kind of misrepresentation about the act and its purpose only serves to trivialize the very real violence committed against us in the name of hate," de Santos said.
Apr 1, 2024 11:35 AM CDT
JK Rowling has a pretty deep history of making comments taken as inflammatory in the transgender community, and the Harry Potter author isn't backing down. As the BBC reports, Rowling's latest throwdown is with the government of Scotland, the country in which she resides, and which recently passed a law making it a criminal offense to "[stir] up hatred" against people related to their age, disability, religion, sexual orientation, transgender identity, or intersex status. Among the classes not protected under the new law, per the AP: women, meaning attacks based on gender wouldn't be illegal. And Rowling is inviting Scottish authorities to arrest her if her opinions flout the law. A look: