“The arguments referencing the risk of homosexuality and abortion may well be welcome and normal within the context of [his] private life and views. However they are disgraceful when used in the present context. The balance of [the teacher’s] arguments are borne from unrealistic hysteria and we need not go into them further.”

Brutal. Good on them for sending such a strong message about their low opinion of bigoted teachers.

  • @DaveMA
    link
    English
    151 year ago

    This is one case when the title really undersells the story.

    I am also drawn to this comment like a shark to blood:

    He also pointed out the conditions required in New Zealand for a person to legally change their name.

    They don’t say what he thinks the requirement are, but I’ve worked with someone who is likely to be the foremost expert on names in NZ (not close enough that they would know my name, though). Legally changing your name is as easy as starting to use the new one. If it’s not done in an attempt at identity theft or fraud, and you actually use the name as your own, you have assumed the new name and “legally” it is yours.

    The tricky bit is proving your new name to organisations. The bank won’t take your word for it, so you need proof. They will ask for a birth certificate or passport, etc, to prove your name. So there is a process needed to change your name on your birth certificate, which is probably what they are referring to.

    Do I expect anyone to know or care about this distinction? No, unless you’re claiming to know the legal details of changing your name.

    Like a shark to blood…

    (Do I have proof of any of this? No, I can’t work it out in the legislation. Maybe it’s common law? I don’t know, take with a grain of salt).

    • @RaoulDukeM
      link
      English
      71 year ago

      The fact is, if being trans isn’t a legally valid reason to change your name, then the law is the problem. And what the law says isn’t relevant anyway. It has nothing to do with what a teacher can call their student.

      • @DaveMA
        link
        English
        51 year ago

        Absolutely, I was just rambling about his lack of knowledge about legal name changes despite claiming to know.

        • @RaoulDukeM
          link
          English
          31 year ago

          I completely understand. That kind of thing irks me far more than I wish it did.

    • David PalmerOP
      link
      English
      71 year ago

      Nah you’re correct, this is the advice my lawyer gave me about name changes.

      • @RaoulDukeM
        link
        English
        31 year ago

        That’s really interesting. I always thought it took an appearance in court at least.

        I know a person whose middle name was left off their NZ passport but not their British one. It caused an unbelievable bureaucratic nightmare.

        • @DaveMA
          link
          English
          4
          edit-2
          1 year ago

          That’s really interesting. I always thought it took an appearance in court at least.

          “Legally” it’s your new name. But in practical terms, that means nothing. You need to get ID documents changed in order to actually do anything.

          Basically it means it’s legally ok for you to just start going by a different name. But if you want to open a bank account in that name then you’ll to get the name added to your birth certificate or other documentation because the bank is not going to just trust you that it’s your name.

          • @RaoulDukeM
            link
            English
            21 year ago

            I wonder how that would play out if you did that with the Police. If they asked for your name and address, you could decide your new name happens to be the name of your flatmate, and give them that. Technically, you haven’t lied.

            • @DaveMA
              link
              English
              51 year ago

              You have to actually use it as your name. If you made it up on the spot, it probably falls under fraud or something similar, so may not be a legal assuming of a new name.

              • @RaoulDukeM
                link
                English
                2
                edit-2
                1 year ago

                But couldn’t this be the first time you’re using it? Some time has to be the first time. Especially if you kept using it after that. I know it’s convoluted contrived, I just like playing these things out in my head.

                • @DaveMA
                  link
                  English
                  41 year ago

                  This is why I want to find the legislation that backs it up! If the rules are written down then it’s easier to find loopholes!

                  If it’s just common law, backed up by precedent, that’s a lot less fun.

      • @DaveMA
        link
        English
        31 year ago

        Good to know, thanks for confirming!