I think that would be a good solution. A single bathroom open to anyone that they could use privately. And not difficult to implement. (Potentially)
Discussion
The rub is it costs money. People hate spending money on things they don’t personally benefit from.
This is true. And in some cases, it may be impossible. Pretend you are a small business owner of a restaurant. You are limited in what you can do by budget and physical space. So requiring compliance to such a thing could have the unintended consequence of bankrupting small business owners unable to comply.
I’ve previously been an investor in a
Few nyc restaurants. And every table you can fit in a space you need to as margins are tight.
You have the weigh personal and property rights. For NYC restaurants maybe you need to make seats wheelchair accessible. Do you side with people with disabilities or small business owners?
Here’s the thing for me: I tend to side with those who are marginalized. I’ve been marginalized before. It’s lonely in that corner, things are stacked against you. I would side with the disabled people, and try to make rules about it fair but accepting.
These are not mutually exclusive. It’s better for both if the business is able to remain open, EVEN if I (the disabled) am not able to personally attend this specific instance. My friends and neighbors will have jobs, possibly me indirectly even, and takeout will still be available to me.
More importantly, incompatibility with the state-designed plastic solution doesn’t mean that there is no other solution pursued, innovated, and implemented, dare I say probably a better one.
Agreed. Finding that balance is tough, not one size fits all. Unfortunately there’s likely someone who experiences hardships no matter what the solution. To me it should be the non-marginalized group. But that’s just me.
Well every restaurant has to be ADA compliant or you won’t get a COA.
Personally, I’ve never felt the world owed me anything. And the harsh reality is, it doesn’t.
I have no problem with people choosing to be who they want to be. But requiring others to go along with it is a bridge too far imho.
What happens if others won’t let you chose who you want to be? You looking different is somehow ‘requiring’ others to go along with it? This is a friction point.
Never worry about the others. Live your life.
Much of who you are is determined by your biology and you don't get the choice though, right?
Nature/nurture is usually 50/50. Sex is biological and gender is socially constructed. That’s just the definition of those categories. Identity is a blend of both.
No, that’s kinda the point. Nobody can take your will from you. (see: Epictetus, etc. ancient Stoics)
You only control four things: opinion, pursuit, aversion, desire. “Or in a word… everything of your own doing.”
Whatever the external results (which might inform the use of all of the above) you still are who you choose to be.
That doesn’t mean anything goes: that means everything BUT that one thing can and will be taken from you, even if it SHOULD be, in some sense, respected by society.
Most places (at least in my localities and experience) especially local institutions like schools and churches, already have some individual restrooms available for families (diaper-changing) and the handicapped. Implicitly this would already be available for other unique situations,
are you saying they’re not superfluous enough, or that some whole-new fourth category should be made?
Personally I’m not. I think the existing ones you reference which are open to all should do the trick.