Ginger men who now identifies as a woman.

Doesn't seem right for an able bodied person to use a disabled toilet, not saying you can't.
It is not reserved exclusively for the disabled. Not all disabilities are visible.

In the building I sometimes manage, I encourage, for example, a father accompanying a small daughter, to take her into the non-specific facilities rather than into the men's or the women's ones.

Some might think that a man who believes himself to be a woman has a problem of some kind.
 
Now there's an interesting question.

Let's suppose a woman, at work as a nurse, in the middle of the night, has an unexpectedly heavy period and wants to go to the women's changing room, where she feels most comfortable, and left her bag, to remove and change her clothes and underwear, and clean up.

She feels most comfortable in a reserved women's room. Not a man's room, or a multisex room.

Let's suppose a man, we'll call him Dr Uptonogood, likes going into the women's changing room wearing a bra under his overalls, and gets into a row with her when she tells him it is a women's room, and he should not be there, because he is a man.

Does the man have more right to use the women's changing room, than the woman?

He and his supporters used to say yes.

In this example, it would be hard to find anyone, other than a raving Transactivist, attempting to support the man demanding access to the women's room. Billy does.
 
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