Pedro Pascal says
The actor “Mandaloriano” spoke about insulting the author of “Harry Potter” in a profile for Vanity Fair published on Tuesday, telling the magazine why he hastened to tear down Rowling for holding a decision of the Court of the Anti-Trans Court of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom earlier this year.
The main court of the United Kingdom ruled “that a woman is someone biologically born a woman, excluding the transgender people from the legal definition.”
“Listen, I want to protect the people I love,” said Pascal, whose sister Lux Pascal is a transgender actor and activist.
“But goes beyond that,” he added. “The thugs make me cursed.”
While the actor “Last of Us” was happy to consult Rowling, he wondered whether to ridicule the writer, who has prouding parts of the “gender critic” of the United Kingdom, was the most productive way of being an ally.

Tim P. Whitby through Getty Images
“The only thing I would say that I agonized a bit was fair: ‘Am I helping? Am I helping?'” He told Vanity Fair.
“It is a situation that deserves the greatest elegance for something to happen, and people will really be protected,” Pascal continued.
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Thinking about Rowling was not the only way in which the star of “Fantastic Four: First Steps” appeared to the trans community after the historic judicial decision of the United Kingdom.
A week after the failure was announced, Pascal wore a shirt “protect the dolls” to the premiere of “Thunderbolts*” by Marvel.
Handmade by fashion designer Connor Iives, the slogan uses a affectionate term for trans women as a call to action.


