
Tonje Gjevjon, a lesbian filmmaker and actress, was informed on Nov. 17 that she was under investigation for speaking out against prominent Norwegian activist Christine Jentoft on Facebook. Jentoft is a transgender female that often refers to herself as a lesbian mother.
Jentoft previously accused another woman, Christina Ellingsen, of transphobia for a similar claim. Ellingsen is also under investigation and faces three years in jail if found guilty.
The post on Gjevjon's Facebook page under investigation read, "It's just as impossible for men to become a lesbian as it is for men to become pregnant. Men are men regardless of their sexual fetishes."
Gjevjon has said that she intentionally posted her Facebook message to draw attention to Norway's hate speech laws.
Gjevjon's comments appear to be under investigation for falling under a 2020 amendment to the country's penal code that added "gender identity and gender expression" under protected categories from hate speech. People found guilty of hate speech face a fine or up to one year in prison for private remarks, and a maximum of three years for public comments.

This is not the first time that Gjevjon has spoken out on controversial topics surrounding gender and women's rights.
Last year, Gjevjon confronted Anette Trettebergstuen, Norway's minister of culture and reality, claiming that misconstruing gender identity and biological sex has "harmful" and "discriminatory" implications for women, especially lesbians.
"Will the equality minister take action to ensure that lesbian women's human rights are safeguarded, by making it clear that there are no lesbians with penises, that males cannot be lesbians regardless of their gender identity, and by tidying up the mess of the harmful gender policies left behind by the previous government?" Gjevjon asked.

The first discrimination charge in Norway that centered on gender identity was filed in 2018. The case centered on a transgender woman who complained that she was asked not to shower in the woman's locker room of a sports center, according to female-led news organization Reduxx.
Similar cases have cropped up across Europe, including Finland, where a religious freedom case saw tensions rise between free speech and LGBTQ advocates.

In a 2019 tweet, Räsänen questioned her church's sponsorship of an LGBTQ Pride event and linked to an Instagram post with a picture of Romans 1:24-27, which calls same-sex intercourse "shameful."
Pohjola faced one count of ethnic agitation for hosting a pamphlet written by Räsänen on his church's website similarly critical of gay men and women.
Norway is considered one of the most liberal countries in Europe for LGBTQ individuals, even allowing people to legally change their gender without the need for a medical diagnosis.




Comment: Its a sure sign that you live under an oppressive Orwellian regime when you can be persecuted and imprisoned for stating objective biological facts: