Kenneth
Sunday 24th July 2016 5:00am
5,447 posts
Quote: Definitely Tarby @ 23rd July 2016, 11:10 PM BST
Is he just a gay guy who cross dresses casually or is he someone who wants to transition? If it was a casual thing then I wouldn't be so sure about allowing it but if it's someone who wants to change gender I applaud the employer for recognising that.
What do you think?
I often used to wear drag, makeup (and occasionally wigs, although my own hair was plenty long) in public and bars just for the fun of it. Just to be a little different and to shock people. Perhaps I was just an attention whore. Never considered getting the balls cut off or the cock spliced and inverted inwards. (Although I can see where William C. Minor was coming from.)
Last time I was in Australia, I noticed a few of the low-end supermarkets had overtly queer cashiers: lipstick, lisping, mincing, heavy eyeshadow. So perhaps the next step is to allow pooftahs to wear drag in the workplace. Provided they are clean and competent, no worries, but I reckon a few people would feel repulsed by tranny cashiers.
Cutting your balls off and wearing a dress doesn't make you a hero. Nor should it merit any preferential treatment in the workplace.
Quote: zooo @ 23rd July 2016, 11:17 PM BST
And I don't really think 'gay guys cross dressing casually' is actually a thing.
It was with me. Sometimes, when in a bar, I'd convince a woman to swap clothes with me. Christ, I tore a lot of too-tight dresses across the back. Skirts, usually no worries. But bras and bodices were always too tight.
Quote: don rushmore @ 24th July 2016, 2:27 AM BST
Live and let live - but if a 40 year old man walks into the Pig & Whistle wearing a sports bra and panties, there's gonna be murders.
When in drag, in my 20s, I'd often go to the macho bars, frequented by the oil, gas, mining, construction crews. Never had any worries, apart from once being playfully stabbed in both fake boobs.