Actually some good points, namely
However, there's no way I'm going to read the whole thing, because Jesus Christ, who cares about all this stuff she's rambling on about?If you’re looking to run a program designed to reach out to marginalized people and you’re not part of that group, lesson 1 is to listen to people from that group. It doesn’t matter how right you think you are in terms of addressing them. It doesn’t matter if you have all the good intentions in the world, and I know it can suck super bad to be told you’re screwing up when you’re coming from a good place. I screw up too and it always bums me out. But the fact is no one springs forth from a deity’s head a perfect activist or a perfect whateverist - you get better at this stuff by listening to other people and making room for them. I have no doubt that Matthew thinks he’s helping - but you fuck up when you tell the people you’re trying to help how to feel about your fuck ups instead of listening to them honestly and questioning your judgement. Think about why people are reacting this way and recognize that someone who has to live day in day out as part of a specific group is an expert on the experience in a way that you can never be. Realize that for you, being criticized for this is a relatively small part of your human experience, whereas having to deal with most of the world having misconceptions (sometimes with deadly consequences) about your very existence is a significant part of theirs.
"This question was given its own page after the event on February 28 to make the policy clear after consulting with a human rights lawyer in Ontario." TFYC is Canadian? This is news; there's nothing on their site or their Wikipedia page that would indicate as such.