Dear subscribers,
First, a huge apology.
I’d promised to publish a newsletter at least once a week, and have already reneged. As you’re about to read, within days of launching this Substack, with the suppressed story on youth gender transition, I became the focus of media attention for all the wrong reasons. At times I had the sensation of witnessing my own funeral, albeit with the eulogies broadcast on Sky News. And the drama played out just days before I was heading off to Europe for a month-long family holiday, and then two days before boarding my teenage daughter came down with a nasty flu and then…you get the picture.
The point being; my production schedule was derailed.
I want to thank you for subscribing; the response has been impressive and heartening, and suggests people are hungry for stories and perspectives that an increasingly polarised mainstream press cannot deliver. I particularly want to thank everyone who has pledged a subscription or seed funding. I’m humbled and terribly grateful… especially now that, err, my weekly income has taken a hit. As I’ve said, the money will help me produce value-added reporting, commentary and analysis.
Because I’ve had to disrupt the publishing schedule, I won’t be hitting the “turn on payments” button yet. I’m going to delay drawing on the pledges until the end of September. This way I won’t be short-changing those who’ve pledged monthly subscriptions. This will also provide a cooling-off period for those who were under the misapprehension they were subscribing to a porn site.
I’ll be going quiet after this post for some weeks lest my long-suffering family drown me in a canal in Venice or whatever. (As it is I’ve had to work on this post surreptitiously in Helsinki.) Expect me to resume programming in late July, including new instalments in the series A QUESTION OF TRANSITION. I’m thrilled to see the suppressed story has sparked a lively conversation in the comments section. I haven’t even had a chance to read them properly, with the proverbial hitting the fan and all. But I’ll be doing that too, and following up leads.
For now, you can listen to me in conversation with the mighty and the generous Julie Bindel, a radical British feminist and investigative journalist: https://juliebindel.substack.com/p/julie-szego#details
If I sound a bit shell-shocked in the interview that’s because I was.
What follows (further below) is a slightly modified version of the inevitable tell-all about The Age that was originally published in UnHerd, a wonderful UK-based publication dedicated to free thought. As you’ll see in the piece, the tension between me and the paper had been building for some time. During this period colleagues and friends often asked if the trans issue was really “the hill” I wanted to “die on.” My answer then, and now, is threefold:
1. Our politicians seem willing to die on that hill judging by their unflinching commitment to radical laws on gender identity. To stop here a moment: I reckon some of you are wondering why there’s suddenly so much controversy about people who’ve undergone what we used to call a “sex change operation.” (The rest of you can skip to point 2.) The short answer is: there isn’t. So let me explain. In the past decade or less, in Australia and throughout much of the West, new legal and cultural norms have entrenched the idea that a person can become male or female by mere declaration. For instance, in Victoria and Queensland, a man can legally become a woman through a simple bureaucratic process. There is no requirement for this male to undergo surgery or even to produce a doctor’s certificate verifying the change of sex is necessary for health reasons . The social justice rationale for all this— known as “gender self-ID”— is understandable; trans people get to move through the world with more dignity and are no longer pathologised as “sick.” The main problem is that the male-bodied person becomes a woman for all legal purposes. This male can enter female changing rooms, domestic violence shelters and lesbian clubs, and win prizes reserved for women. This male has a presumptive right to be housed in a women’s prison and compete in women’s sporting competition. If what I’ve just outlined seems astonishing, and frankly unbelievable, I hear you. If you’re wondering why this profound revolution in how we conceptualise the human species is news to you, the answer is as simple as it is depressing: the progressive media has largely failed to report it.
2. I’m happy enough to be martyred in defence of the material reality of sex and everything that flows from it.
3. But the ultimate cause is truth itself; the right to tell it without fear or favour. You may disagree with my professional judgments, but I hope you— I hope my former Age colleagues— accept that my devotion to principle is sincere.
The “hill” I’ve died on is journalism.
So here’s the inside story.
***
For a quarter of a century, on and off, The Age, Melbourne’s “quality” daily newspaper, has not only published my words, it’s been my intellectual home.
I was first published as a freelance writer, then joined the paper’s staff as a trainee journalist, progressing to social affairs reporter, senior writer, leader writer and columnist. In 2012, I took a voluntary redundancy. Two years later I was invited back as a regular columnist, at first fortnightly, then weekly. For the most part, my views aligned with the paper’s superego, which— for the benefit of my overseas readers— fluctuates between soft Left and small “l” liberal. And there was always space for dissent, even when my opinions sharply diverged from The Age consensus — more on that soon.
About two years ago, my harmonious relationship with the paper began to deteriorate. The tension reached its climax last week when the editor, Patrick Elligett, sacked me as a columnist. The breakdown in trust was down to one issue: gender-identity politics, the trans debate — or severe lack thereof.
Needless to say, my dismissal was linked to the suppressed feature on youth gender transition. The piece had originally been commissioned by the previous editor, Gay Alcorn. Elligett had refused to run it. I told Elligett that I intended to publish the piece on my new Substack and would disclose that he rejected it. He looked uncomfortable, but said The Age would take it on the chin.
When I published a few weeks ago, I announced to the world that if they wanted to know why the piece was rejected, they would have to ask Elligett himself. A standing army of gender sceptics on Twitter did just that, under the hashtag “gutless” . This can’t have been pleasant for Elligett. But he attributed the sacking to another remark in my launch statement where I flagged that in future posts I’d be writing on gender-identity politics more broadly, “without the copy being rendered unreadable by a committee of woke journalists redacting words they deem incendiary, such as ‘male’”. Elligett responded: “Obviously we can’t have our columnists publicly disparaging the publication like that so we won’t be commissioning further columns from you.”
For those yet to read the feature, I discuss the growing debate around “affirming” care for children and teens in gender distress, and the use of puberty blockers and cross-sex hormones. The controversy attracts regular coverage in Australia’s Murdoch-owned press, but it remains taboo in the progressive media, where the “no-debate”, “the science is settled” mantras are consistently reinforced by stories of young people blossoming post-transition. The worst offender is our public broadcaster. The ABC has even been rebuked by its own Media Watch programme for failing to report on the closure of the NHS’s scandal-hit gender clinic for children in England and Wales, the Tavistock; and for its partnership with LGBTQ organisation, Acon— Australia’s version of the UK’s Stonewall, on the grounds it could lead to “perceptions of bias in coverage, or bias itself.”
Yet here’s the interesting part: Elligett said very little to me about my piece, other than that it was “good”. We had discussed it in late March, about a fortnight after Melbourne’s Let Women Speak rally, which was gatecrashed by neo-Nazis and which I had attended out of professional curiosity. The problem, he said, was not the piece, but its author: me.
He said I had nailed my colours to the mast on trans issues so my byline would create a perception of bias, notwithstanding I had successfully “distanced” myself from own bias. I said I had no firm view on paediatric transition. (You don’t have to believe in unicorns to see the affirmation model at its highest; an attempt to save kids from life-crippling distress and stigma.)
He said that nonetheless publishing the piece under my name would damage the reputation of “the masthead.”
Let me attempt a translation: I had been pegged as a “Terf”, a trans-exclusionary radical feminist, a category into which many a reality-based woman, or indeed man, self-identifies. And this meant I was considered partisan where a veneer of neutrality was required.
I’m sad about what’s happened; as I know Elligett is, too. In writing this piece, I’m not seeking vengeance or vindication. Nor is this a “woe-is-me” story. On the contrary: I’m hugely grateful to the people I worked with. They saved me from howlers, and fixed my sloppy prose and wobbly reasoning more times than I care to admit.
But I feel a sense of obligation to commit to the historical record yet another account of a newsroom buckling under the challenge of gender-identity ideology: the belief system that deems “male” and “female” as more a state of mind than of body, and casts even the most gentle questioning of the doctrine tantamount to bigotry.
In this, I can’t help but be reminded of Hadley Freeman’s fate, save that she left The Guardian voluntarily. She started there at around the same time I started at The Age. Like Freeman, I’m a veteran Left-leaning campaigner for the rights of sexual minorities. Like Freeman, the main tension I found myself navigating in my early years in the newsroom involved Israel. Like her, I’m Jewish and a Zionist. As a leader writer, I was sometimes asked if I was sure I could write “objectively” on Israel and Palestine. As with Freeman, the odd colleague would lecture me about what I should and should not consider to be antisemitism.
But as a columnist, I found no issue off-limits. Sure, sometimes an editor would disagree with me. Some had little appetite for edgy, post-9/11 critiques of the Left’s accommodation of political Islam. And most merely tolerated my regular meltdowns about government funding of private schools; they didn’t relish the blowback from the well-resourced private school lobby, or, indeed, from the great many Age readers who sent their kids to posh schools. I’m also yet to live down effectively backing the US invasion of Iraq long after the original liberal hawks had issued their mea culpas.
Still, in no universe could I have predicted that ground zero of the culture wars would be the definition of a woman as an adult human female.
**
My first foray into the transgender debate was in February 2021 when Readings, Australia’s largest independent bookseller, apologised for having hosted an event three years earlier with Julie Bindel, the British radical feminist. This was a post-facto cancellation. In my column, I affirmed both sides of the discussion. “Each is mighty and indivisible,” I wrote. I saw the fight between the subjective (gender identity) and the objective (embodied sex), a bit like how Amos Oz saw the fight between Israel and the Palestinians as a war between “two rights”.
My piece was well-received, but mostly ignored. Recently on Twitter I saw someone cite the column as evidence I’d once belonged to the #BeKind brigade. A bit harsh! I still subscribe to the views I expressed; to even speak of a conflict of rights is to acknowledge there are, in fact, two legitimate sides. I not only accept that trans people “exist”, but also that their right to dignity and equal opportunity requires the rest of us to affirm their identities to the greatest possible extent, at least in so far as the affirmation doesn’t undermine others’ sex-based rights. When these two rights conflict, it’s surely the job of governments to ethically adjudicate between the competing interests.
But gradually it dawned on me that Labor governments around Australia weren’t just failing to adjudicate between conflicting rights — they proudly disavowed a conflict even existed. “Anyone who identifies as a woman is a woman,” said Queensland’s Minister for Women and then Attorney General, in May, to the widespread indifference of the media.
Then, a year ago, Rohan Leppert, a senior member of the Victorian Greens, inadvertently laid bare the serious ructions in his party over trans issues. Members were calling for Leppert to be disciplined after comments he made in a private Facebook group came to light; shockingly reasonable comments, needless to say, about the affirmative care model, the state’s sledgehammer conversion therapy laws and the conflict over single-sex spaces. Should I have held back?
I filed a column in which I defended Leppert’s views and his right to express them. The editing process was hell. I had referred to the pressure on women to cede their spaces to “males who have not medically transitioned”. Intense pressure from an unknown number of journalists further down the food chain saw the word “males” become “people” in the final copy. Hence the crack that got me sacked.
This was my first encounter with what journalist Bernard Lane has described as the “self-appointed queer (and allied) caucus” — a feature of many a contemporary newsroom. As to how many journalists sit on it at The Age, I’ve heard conflicting accounts. Less than a handful of zealots. Everyone aged under 30. Half the newsroom, when putsch comes to shove. The article ran under the headline “Trans rights shouldn’t automatically trump the rights of other groups.”
This one got noticed.
The response to the piece was overwhelmingly rapturous, if only for the sheer relief that a Lefty journalist was saying the usually unsayable. But on Twitter, transactivists and their allies made chopped liver of me. I had interviewed two of these activists for my as-yet-unpublished paediatric transition story. They redacted their interviews, claiming — falsely — that I had deceived them about the story’s angle. (I would later learn that two female candidates for the Animal Justice Party in Australia’s upcoming federal election were ordered to undergo re-education after sharing or “liking” the column on social media. They resigned instead.)
A formal complaint was made about the piece to the industry body, the Press Council. It’s a frequent tactic of the trans lobby, aimed at keeping the progressive media on message. By contrast, it isn’t too exercised about Sky News and the Murdoch empire running “anti-trans” stories; in fact, such coverage helps them deter principled critics of the transactivist agenda who fear playing into the hands of “the Right”.
The Age began desperately hawking space on its opinion page for a “pro-trans” piece to “balance” mine. The transactivists refused: I was beyond the pale, too hateful to be savaged with rational argument. Ultimately, the takedown fell to the “Victorian Commissioner for LGBTIQ+ Communities”, in his words, “a young, queer Wiradjuri cis-man”. He accused me of creating a false divide “between women’s rights and the rights of trans people”, but didn’t explain why the divide was false. Nor did he address the concerns of “L”s within his remit who believe he’s sold out their interests to the “T”s.
In August, I learned that a detransitioner in Sydney — who had had testosterone treatment, as well as a mastectomy and hysterectomy before re-identifying with her birth sex — was suing her psychiatrist for negligence. The Age and stablemate The Sydney Morning Herald were keen on the story. Once again, the editing process was hell. This time, transactivist talking points appeared suddenly in my copy: “Trans groups say that the highlighting of those who de-transition is part of a campaign by anti-trans activists to de-legitimise gender dysphoria.”
Hilariously, they couldn’t even get their propaganda lines right. Almost no one denies that gender dysphoria is a thing; they had meant to say “de-legitimise trans identity”. My critics were themselves trying to de-legitimise a straightforward report about a legal case, not to mention the testimony of a traumatised woman.
After I pointed this out, the lines were removed and the story ran on the front page. The following day, the mood in the newsroom was described to me as “edgy”. The day after that, the paper published a letter to the editor accusing me of “transphobic rhetoric.” This was a bit much. It was one thing to be called a transphobe on Twitter; quite another to read the accusation in my own paper. I raised the matter with the editor, who apologised, citing a breakdown in internal processes.
Before learning of the detransitioner’s case, I’d filed an entertaining column about Scotland appointing a bloke as its inaugural “period dignity officer”, his stated ambition to make menstrual products available to “anyone of any gender”. The column, being trans-adjacent, was spiked. I was told I couldn’t violate the church-and-state divide between commentary and reporting; I had started reporting on trans issues so now I couldn’t commentate on them.
The editors were, in part, trying to save me from myself. I was told they didn’t want me to end up “a Suzanne Moore” — a reference to The Guardian columnist martyred after her colleagues waged a campaign against “transphobic” content. And yet, just as The Guardian had done, The Age invited an LGBTQI+ organisation to address the newsroom about avoiding “harm” in their reporting on trans issues.
I went on sulk leave.
On my return, by which time Elligett had taken over as editor, I found the de-facto gag order still in force. Queensland was ushering through state Parliament a gender self-ID bill similar to Scotland’s Gender Recognition Act, at roughly the same time that a doomed Nicola Sturgeon was tying herself in knots over whether a two-time trans-identified rapist — initially housed in the female prison estate, post-conviction — was “a woman”. (The bill was passed last week to the usual triumphal reporting.)
Similar legislation. Identical propaganda lines. And here, also, violent sex offenders were being sent to female prisons. I was told no. There was no “news trigger”.
But the mother of all news triggers came in March, when Kellie-Jay Keen-Minshull, aka Posie Parker, the British campaigner widely credited for popularising the term “adult human female” to define a woman, staged a Let Women Speak rally in Melbourne
I was — still am — looking to write a book on gender-identity politics in Australia. I thought the rally might yield a dynamic narrative, what we journalists call “colour”. I got colour all right: armed and mounted police several columns deep, two frontlines of counter-protestors of varying and bewildering political tendencies, and neo-Nazi gatecrashers performing a Sieg Heil on the steps of Parliament.
The Age published a very fair report in the immediate aftermath. But among the newsroom editors, a clear “line” took root: Parker was clearly linked with “far-Right” groups — the black-clad neo-Nazis had turned up to “protect” her. Never mind that in the week before the rally, far-Left groups had plastered the city with posters urging the comrades to turn up and fight the “far-Right”. Never mind that such rhetoric lures neo-Nazis to the scene just as flies are lured to shit.
Having been at the scene of a huge story, I pushed to write an op-ed on the rally. I explained to the editors that I was incensed at the response of Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews, whose pro-trans government was the primary target of the protestors’ anger. The women who came to speak came from all walks of life: Christian conservatives, butch dykes, Jewish Leftists, disaffected Greens, health workers, women in hijab.
But in the rally’s aftermath, Andrews tweeted: “Anti-trans activists gathered to spread hate. And on the steps of our Parliament, some of them performed a Nazi salute.” I told the day’s op-ed editor that, in saying this, Andrews had at best slurred the women as hateful bigots; at worst, he’d conflated them with the neo-Nazis. “Well, that’s your interpretation,” the editor responded.
Frankly, I’m happy the column didn’t run: the pressure to describe Parker as associated with the “far-Right” strained the logic and the tone. (And it also turned out to be wrong— a trumped-up accusation largely based on a Wikipedia entry that would be exposed as dodgy.) The piece wasn’t good enough, I was told. There were too many holes. The timing was wrong. I had glossed over “the Nazis’” appearance. “And then,” the editor said, “you have these... paragraphs of Terf rhetoric.” I think we both knew there would be no coming back from that moment.
The shockwaves from the rally were felt in the Liberal Party, the Greens and Melbourne University, bringing repercussions for many of the women who had attended and, I’m sure, for plenty who didn’t. By the time Parker arrived in Auckland, the ugly rest is history: her dousing in tomato juice, the slack policing and crowd surge, the elderly woman punched in the face. The placards reading “Suck My Dick” and “Get off our land, CUNT!” This — apparently — is what progressivism looks like in the 21st century.
After Elligett said he wouldn’t run my piece on paediatric transition, it became clear that I could neither report nor commentate on the trans issue, even as it made headline news day after day. When Barry Humphries died, for instance, I was told I was allowed to write about his cancel-culture controversy with the Melbourne Comedy Festival — so long as I didn’t focus on the anti-trans comments that had prompted his cancellation.
In the end, like Freeman, I felt I could no longer write about anything that viscerally mattered to me. Hoping against hope, I pitched a column that would advocate for nationalising the education system. That weekend, half the Saturday magazine was a paid advertisement for the private school sector.
My mood darkened. I went on sulk leave — indefinitely, as it turns out.
My last column for the paper was pegged to Mother’s Day. It tackled the female body and ageing, the intergenerational feminist struggle. I wrote about Victoria Smith’s book Hags: The Demonisation of Middle-Aged Women, and how it had “radicalised” me. Smith speaks for us middle-aged Gen Xers; how it’s now our turn to wear the age-old slur of “hag”, “witch”, or a contemporary variant such as “Karen.”
There’s another slur I could have used, one that Smith writes about at length in her book: “Terf.”
But I knew I had to leave that word out.
A version of this article was originally published in UnHerd.
.
Terrific piece. Raises so many issues for me. About journalism fundamentally. We talk about mainstream media as if it still exists. Does it? I’m not sure. Even the ABC feels less and less mainstream to me.
Thank you, Julie. Faith in the media stalwarts, for me, has almost completely disappeared. There was no real effort to disentangle the threads surrounding the Posey Parker event by the ABC, the Guardian, the Age or the SMH. The media outlets I have relied on for most of my life have capitulated to the loudest and shrillest voices, and failed to undertake an analysis of a regressive and illogical ideology.