A Grotesquely Pathetic Public Threat
"Some of my clients have been very significantly affected on a personal level. [Another client also] closed her business, she has been depressed, anxious, sleepless and that has gone on for a period of many many months."Jonathan Yaniv -- or if you prefer, Jessica Yaniv -- has been harassing people innocent of the kind of malice that he excels in, for years. Posing as a transgendered woman, visually flaunting on his Twitter account his extremely generous proportions dressed in flimsy female attire, he is sometimes a man, sometimes a woman. And always precipitating formulaic and manufactured denials of his persona as a female by women who specialize in Brazilian wax techniques. He presents as a woman on contact through emails to make appointments, then reveals he is transgendered. The female business owners back off the appointment explaining they don't have the expertise to wax male genitalia, and he reports them to the B.C. Human Rights Commission.
"It is a very serious thing to launch a human rights complaint against a person. My clients are people. They have a right to make a living and this has interfered with their livelihood, but also you have the stigma of being associated with this hanging over you."
"I don’t think that somebody making complaints to the scale that the complainant is making should be able to hide behind a publication ban and then publicly discuss the cases online."
"My perspective is that the tribunal came to the right decision and I think that’s part of the open court process."
Jay Cameron, lawyer, Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms
"It's not so much whether or not there's bias, it's that it's easy to perceive bias because of the lack of transparency and accountability on Twitter."
"The broader problem is that Twitter is inconsistent and is not transparent in its decision-making processes when it comes to whom it bans."
"The issue is not so much the guidelines. The issue is who are the people at Twitter who are making these decisions, interpreting those guidelines."
"The inconsistencies with which they enforce their own regulations ... would probably be exposed. It wouldn't be favourable to Twitter to do that and therefore it would be probably undermining of corporate image."
Fuyuki Kurasawa, associate professor of sociology, director of global digital citizenship lab, York University
Jessica Yaniv, she of the confused psyche who appears to enjoy counselling young girls about their sexuality and femininity, and enjoys even more, it seems, challenging anyone who might question her bona fides as a woman though born male and sporting all the male genitalia that comes with his genetic inheritance, like a true misogynist, out to punish women for questioning a man's right to transition if he so pleases even while he presents as a risible human chimera. Jessica Yaniv has in her career as a transgender and LGBTQ2SIA activist so far shattered the peace of mind and ruined the businesses of about 15 people.
More latterly she (ze?) has manipulated permanent bans from Twitter of other, legitimate feminist and free speech activists from Twitter; Feminist Current founder Meghan Murphy and free speech activist Lindsay Shepherd. B.C. NDP VP and potential candidate Morgane Oger, is familiar with this sociopath, for an alleged history of potentially predatory behaviour including an apparent interest in advising 11- and 12-year-old girls how to effectively insert tampons. In pursuing a human rights tribunal case in 2018, Yaniv strove to have his identity concealed.
Ligitation manager with Alberta's Justice Centre for Constitutional Freedoms, Jay Cameron, now defending Yaniv's latest victim, Marcia Da Silva who operated a new waxing service out of her home, argued before the tribunal that contrary to Yaniv's appeals to keep her identity unpublished, on her Twitter account she regaled her followers with details about the appeal she filed so that her role and the accusation against the business owner could be read by anyone on line. The argument succeeded in having her anonymous status removed and her identity revealed for publication.
This is not about waxing. This is about businesses and individuals using their religion and culture to refuse service to protected groups because -they- don’t agree with it or the person and use that to illegally discriminate contrary to the BC Human Rights Code and the CHRC. Jessica Yaniv, Twitter |
So two women with credentials of decency and integrity are kicked off Twitter by the sage intellectuals employed by the social media platform giant, and a defaming sociopathic, delusional drama queen can go on spewing her absurdities and be protected by 'progressive' interests that are the latest rage, no small thanks to a Liberal government led by a feminist prime minister whose love and protection the LGBTQ2 community can bank on, with ever more outrageous displays of antisocial tantrums, demanding rights and entitlements beyond the expectations of any minuscule minority to tail-wag an entire population among whom are many other minority groups wondering if the world has gone mad.
In the case before the B.C. Human Rights Tribunal the hearing has the choice of accepting Yaniv's "half-truths and fabrications" to uphold her contention that the owner of the waxing business should be compared to a 'neo-Nazi', while the woman being defamed explains her discomfort at being expected to perform a Brazilian wax on an individual carrying full male genitalia. Untrained to do so, her husband was uncomfortable with his wife being engaged to provide "intimate services" to a male body dressed in women's clothing. The proverbial wolf in sheep's clothing must have occurred to Marcia Da Silva and her husband.
Yaniv has had ample experience in the demands, claims and accusations she has levelled in this case for there have been previous such instances of the same theatrics occurring in outraged hurt feelings, in some of which instances the matter was settled without going to the Human Rights Commission, those accused obviously having been intimidated by the social-political climate that has enabled Yaniv to wreak havoc wherever she pleases. "I have no problem with LGBT", assured Marcia Da Silva -- her problem was waxing male genitalia.
Another two aestheticians became similar subjects of complaints from Yaniv and were been represented by JCCF; one, a Sikh woman, declined to provide the waxing service for religious and safety concerns. Religion and culture are insufficient reasons to refuse service to those like her, insists Jessica Yaniv. An aggrieved victim of social discrimination, who in his own postings writes scathing commentary over the lack of cosmopolitan flair of immigrants. Who, in effect, appears to be making great headway in formulating vastly improved rules and regulations that the social contract has heretofore been absent in, in her drive to perfect society in the image he/she represents.
The issue, as she sees it, is transphobic discrimination.
Labels: B.C. Human Rights Tribunal, British Columbia, LGBTQ2 Entitlements, Private Business, Transgenderism
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