OK, I've tried to cover a range of incidents across a range of time to demonstrate a pattern of behaviour.
Again, almost any of these as a one-off? OK. As a collection, I believe it paints a clear picture. Apologies for length.
Here's Rowling implying all trans women are 'violent, duplicitous rapists':
The context being she is laughing at people who have said they can't support her/ the recent Hogwarts Legacy video game over her position on trans rights. Given obviously no one has ever suggested she should support actual rapists, and she gives no details, this is openly inviting people to conflate a vanishingly small number of genuine cases with the entire trans population.
Here's Rowling getting caught liking a critical tweet comparing antidepressants to hormone therapy (insinuation - neither are needed if you 'heal people's minds'), then denying she'd done it, then clumsily going on to say antidepressants are fine because she uses them but hormone treatments could cause lifelong damage before pivoting to compare hormone treatment to gay conversion therapy (basically, a clusterfuck of tweeting and then digging down)
https://www.vulture.com/2020/07/jk-rowl ... -lazy.html
I cite this one as an example that she's disingenuous, unable to back down, and will take any opportunity to get a kick in at her pet subject. Apologies for the tone of the article, nevertheless the facts in it are clear as to the sequence of events.
Here's Rowling's Strike novels being critiqued by, for one, that bastion of left-wing thought, the Telegraph as being (to put it generously) 'a bit on the nose':
https://edition.cnn.com/2020/09/15/ente ... index.html
Quote:
“One wonders what critics of Rowling’s stance on trans issues will make of a book whose moral seems to be: never trust a man in a dress,”
Here's Rowling taking a single incident and implying because this happened, no trans women should be allowed in women's bathrooms/toilets.
https://web.archive.org/web/20220307163 ... 597747716/
Context being discussion of her opposition to the Scottish equality laws. I would argue that a single incident being used to justify any other blanket ban/restriction of freedom based on a personal characteristic would be rightly frowned upon on this forum. And also (and more importantly), as a legitimate concern it's horse shit based on zero evidence:
https://www.nbcnews.com/feature/nbc-out ... ds-n911106
Rowling supported - and encouraged her followers to financially suppport - Maya Forstater, a woman who's contract was not renewed because of her stance on trans and non-binary people. While a lot of articles give some detail and imply Forstater was simply not comfortable with trans women in women's spaces, the full reality of what she said and went on to say is quite different:
https://www.nbcnews.com/think/opinion/j ... cna1105201
In brief, she compared use of preferred pronouns to the date rape drug rohypnol, and defended deliberately using trans people's pre-transition names and genders in public.
A quote from the article:
as part of her complaint, Forstater submitted the following statement: “I believe that it is impossible to change sex or to lose your sex. Girls grow up to be women. Boys grow up to be men. No change of clothes or hairstyle, no plastic surgery, no accident or illness, no course of hormones, no force of will or social conditioning, no declaration can turn a female person into a male, or a male person into a female.”
This, then, is what Forstater wanted the courts to uphold: Her right to make her co-workers uncomfortable; her right to place her nonprofit organization in an untenable position vis-à-vis potential donors (like Credit Suisse senior directors); her right to be, even as she defines it, rude and disrespectful in social and professional contexts; and her right to disrespect U.K. law, which defines transgender women as women and transgender men as men if they jump through the right legal hoops. (As Judge James Tayler noted in his ruling against her: “If a person has transitioned from male to female and has a Gender Recognition Certificate that person is legally a woman. That is not something that the Claimant is entitled to ignore.”)
This is all public knowledge and was at the time, and the sort of person Rowling thinks is deserving of strong, unwavering support.
Here's a breakdown of the misinterpreted/disingenuous stats in Rowling's 2020 open letter/essay on why she holds the views she does (breakdown taken from a reddit post, hence quote) that are used to imply trans activism is a fashion/fad/being forced on kids - in particular, the first point is similar to the data on the 'sudden explosion of left-handed people after the Victorian era' that I'm sure we're all aware of the absurdity of:
1. She says there has been a 4400% increase trans-identifying youth in the UK. This sounds shocking. The actual numbers we're looking at is an increase from 97 in 2009–2010 to 2,510 in 2017–2018. <my note for clarity - Rowling only gives the headline percentage in her letter> Yes, when you start with such a low figure as ninety seven (in a country of 67 million) a small rise can come across as a shocking percent. Rowling here is using the fact that a still extremely small portion of the youth now considers coming out as trans something that is possible and (to an extent) comfortable to make it appear as though trans identity is a rampant, uncontrolled plague ballooning out of proportion and targeting unfortunate, misfit cis kids. This is an echo of panic against homosexuality.
2. She says that 60-90% of trans-identifying children later desist, a figure which comes from studies which include any gender non-conforming behavior. Yes, little girls who play with bugs often grow up to identify as cis women. This is not a surprise, she wasn't claiming to be trans in the first place.
3. She refers to a "study" by Lisa Littman on "Rapid Onset Gender Dysphoria" which was a poll conducted on websites for parents who were opposed to or struggling to accept their trans children. This "study" uses the parents perception of an explosion of trans-identifying youth (again, the actual figure is still infinitesimally small) and presents it as though it depicts an actual, measured phenomena for which she's even created a scary name. This is not just bad science, it isn't science. It's pearl-clutching gossipers spreading tall tales.
Rowling followed the late Magdalen Berns on Twitter and Youtube, and continued to do so even after being told what sort of a person they were - examples of Berns' output can be seen here:
(Is this 'open support' by Rowling? Granted, no. But given the vitriol of the posts if this were, say, Lee Anderson following Tommy Robinson, I think we would all reach the same conclusion about the message this sends.)
Example (and breakdown) of Rowling persisting with conflating sex and gender and persisting with the claim sex is a biological binary (with bonus points for her actually using the "in fact, I have a lot of friends who are black" defence), and why this is inaccurate. This is a stance Rowling has been told is both morally and scientifically incorrect many times and she has not modified her position
And lastly, a piece on her most recent effort where she tweeted a 10-tweet thread calling 10 trans women men, deliberately mixing in criminals with others:
https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-ente ... 22155.html
Among these were several convicted sex criminals, as well as an athlete, the head of a rape crisis centre, and broadcaster India Willoughby. In one tweet, she details the crimes of a trans child rapist; in the next, she sarcastically praises Gaelic footballer Giulia Valentino for taking “some boring cis girl’s place” in a squad. Rowling wrote: “Obviously, the people mentioned in the above tweets aren’t women at all, but men, every last one of them.”
If this were a list of prominent gay people with some criminals mixed in, or prominent black people with criminals mixed in, or prominent jewish people with some of the Israeli cabinet mixed, or prominent immigrants with criminals mixed in followed by a statement that 'all these people are gay' or 'all these people are black' or 'all these people are jews' or 'all these people are foreign born', or heck - how about some of us and some of the worst, bigoted trots with the line 'all these people are labour supporters' - it would be rightly considered appalling. I see this no differently. I do not consider the 'get out' that she's saying they're all men (itself offensive) rather than all
trans as anywhere even approaching acceptable. It is obvious what she is inviting you to think, and is as blatant as a Braverman rant on 'illegals', or a Johnson puff piece on tank-topped bum boys. It's deliberate and offensive and she is showing you precisely who she is.
I am satisfied that, whatever position she started out from and for whatever reasons or justifications, Rowling is now openly and deliberately transphobic.