Insight manager
More on Fawcett. Check out their staff – most of them were hired in the last six months. It doesn’t say how long the CEO has been there, but other than the CEO the staffer who has been there the longest (hired in 2016) is…
…a man.
ANDREW BAZELEY, POLICY, INSIGHT & PUBLIC AFFAIRS MANAGER
Andrew joined Fawcett in 2016. He works across the breadth of issues Fawcett campaigns on, developing research proposals, formulating policy based on that evidence, and advocating for change in a lead role within our public affairs team. He has led on work including our Local Government Commission, in the development of our Equal Pay Bill, and on our Commission on Gender Stereotypes in Early Childhood. Before joining Fawcett he worked for three years in Parliament, including as a policy advisor on work and pensions issues, and for four years in local government including a year spent managing a ‘big data’ team. Andrew holds a Masters in Public Policy from Birkbeck College, where he is also studying for a Law degree in his spare time, which there isn’t much of as he’s also a new dad.
I guess he’s there to make sure Fawcett “balances” women’s rights with those of the people who matter.
Well, their insight has certainly been “managed.” I could think of a blunter word, but it isn’t proper to use on a staff roster in a potted bio.
But it’s really our perceptions they want to dictate and control They want us to accept the vague, obscuring language that hides their true intent. They want us to deny the testimony of our own eyes. They want us to believe that some men are women. A movement or organization that can only succeed when everyone is willing to knuckle under or play along is doomed to failure if it does not have the power to force universal compliance with its demands. There’s been enough power within some organizations to enforce their diktats among some people, but not enough power to back up their demands everywhere across the board. They can’t fool all of the people all of the time, or threaten all of them all the time either. Someone will always see. Some will always stand firm. It’s been a near run thing, but I think the tide is ever so slowly turning.
These institutions and organizations which have promoted and demanded trans “rights” have aided in a multi-national coup d’etat*. Perhaps there’s been little of the gunplay that one might normally associate with an extra-legal, undemocratic overturning of law and governance, but nonetheless armed with threats, bullying and intimidation. It’s also been a bit slower that most coups, but it has been every bit as far reaching. affecting the lives of half the population of every jurisdiction in which it has taken hold. Consequently, like more overtly violent, military coups, it does have a body count.
* The more I’ve thought about it, the more I’ve come to realize that this insidious behind the scenes transformation isn’t “like” a coup, it is a coup. So no apologies for use of this term.