Career Security Guard Tells The Truth About 'Trans Women' In The Toilets At The Club
Everything that TERFs have said for years is true
Paul Bradley lives in the UK. He is a product developer for an ammunition company, but he was also a bouncer for 23 years of his career as a security guard. In this recent video, he shares “direct, frontline experience dealing with a specific subset of individuals who presented as female but were biologically male” and created “safeguarding and security concerns” with their behavior.
Bradley is careful to emphasize that his criticism is confined to a “specific pattern of behaviour, in a specific context, that my colleagues and I encountered repeatedly” in his line of work. He is aware of autogynephilia and understands it as a fetish that makes heterosexual men “sexually aggressive towards women”.
For this reason, “we had many, many situations where women would come out of the toilets, and say ‘There’s a guy in there swinging his dick around’, or ‘just walking around with his bits out, and purposefully doing it, obviously to make us uncomfortable’”. Nobody paying attention to these issues will be shocked by the disclosure.
Men would leave the stall door open and stare. They sometimes got handsy. While the bouncers would take action, “pretty much in all these cases, no one wanted to press charges” for all the usual reasons that women avoid going to the police for a sexual assault. Predictably, when Bradley made these men leave the establishment, he was accused of transphobic hate. Management worried about bad publicity for political impurity instead of customer safety.
Bradley says that the “LGBTQ+ community is one of the most divided, contentious, bitchy, unpleasant communities I’ve ever, ever worked within.” Contrary to the public image that activists and lobbyists project, gay men, lesbians, and transgender-identified men do not get along in the privacy of the club. He believes some people are genuinely transgender “from the bottom of their soul”, and asks the viewer to refrain from leaving hateful comments. However, he argues that the rest of this “community” is poorly represented by the “loudest group”.
While “everybody is bloody frightened to talk about it”, Paul Bradley insists that “taking security seriously for everyone is not an extreme viewpoint”. Indeed, safeguarding is not extreme at all. Transgender ideology frames normal safeguarding as ‘literal genocide’ because the loudest men in the bunch are the most interested in violating women’s boundaries. Bradley’s honesty is refreshing.


