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Trans Women are not Women

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This is actually an angle I wanted to bring into this at some point.

How much of this is a distinction that other languages can really even make?

English can't do it either. Until recently, gender and sex were synonyms. The distinction was created specifically to accomodate social concerns.

Other languages can also adapt. Reality is somewhat less flexible.
 
I think that Belz... agrees, and is simply working through a necessary "Shapiro is technically correct, but it's important that I not undermine my posture of dismissal towards everything he says" process.

No, I said what I said because I think it is correct.

Notice that I didn't comment on the things Shapiro said that are factual.

He's still a dishonest weasel, though.
 
English can't do it either. Until recently, gender and sex were synonyms. The distinction was created specifically to accomodate social concerns.

What exactly the non-arbitrary, non-pure semantics, non-circular, distinction is between sex and gender is another one of those ancillary topics I'd love to get a straight answer to.
 
I'm not even sure there's much of a difference between sex and gender, historically. In French we generally don't distinguish between the two, for instance.

Historically, there hasn't been much difference. Most of the social structure that's grown up around the biology has been a pragmatic adaptation to the biological differences between the sexes. You don't need separate words for bio-man and socio-man, when the two are already closely linked by practicality and long tradition.

The issue here is that there are some bio-women who want to be socio-men, but explicitly without having a separate word for it. The entire point, by definition, is to describe women who are socio-men with the same terms used to describe bio-men.
 
An analogy occurred to me this morning. Several thousand years ago when I was doing the online dating thing I remember coming across a few profiles of woman who seemed like they'd be a decent match, but who had specified a minimum height which was a few inches above my own. I never bothered contacting them since if for whatever reason they wanted a man 6' 4" or taller what would be the point of trying to convince them to change their preference?

In any case, what if instead I contacted one of them and said I was 6' 6" and after a while we agreed to meet for dinner. That's when she sees all 5' 9" of me and rightly asks 'hey, what the hell?'. I answer her by saying that I truthfully told her what my internal sense of stature was, not my physical height. See, my internal image doesn't match up, so despite my height being 5' 9", my stature was really 6' 6", and she dare not invalidate my internal identity.

I'd rightfully be called a loon, but something similar is going on in the sex/gender area. For the most part the argument isn't "no, your internal sense of gender isn't what you claim it is", but rather "your internal sense of gender doesn't map to anything external, and therefore doesn't determine how to treat you in areas that depend on that external reality".

That still doesn't leave us with a neat and tidy answer to everything, of course. There's still the question of which discriminatory (in the neutral sense of the word) processes are based on external reality and which on internal image. Names I think are safe to say would be internal based, medical procedures on external. All the other stuff would need to be hammered out and I won't pretend to have the answers on all the various questions myself.

Someone can have the right to have an internal image and the right to be treated with normal human dignity, but still not have the right to force the rest of the world to treat that internal image as an external reality in all situations.
 
...presumably using smoke signals.


At the risk of doxing myself, this was my first profile :




Yeah, I know it's cliche and doesn't really stand out from the crowd, but at least I didn't lie on it like some did. And you'll note the utter lack of duckface or the Myspace Angle.
 
And again I do want to stress that I do, to a large degree, completely respect what trans people are going through.

We have been putting B.S., arbitrary, unfair, harmful, and other assorted meaingless standards on the sexes for a long time, longer we should have. There's still a lot of stupid "Men do this, women do this" nonsense floating around.

I understand in the abstract trying to square that circle by just going "Okay we're never going to get rid of all the stupid arbitrary standards, so I'll do the next best thing and just claim the right to decide which arbitrary standard I have to follow." I get it. I just don't think that way of looking at is A) factually correct or B) logically congruent enough for the center to hold.
 
Oh, you just made a major mistake: it's not about identification; it's about objective facts. It's an objective fact that I'm not a left-winger or a right-winger. The point being that people on both sides of the issue can't even consider any sort of disagreement on it, so much so that anyone who disagrees must be on the other side, entirely. It's a failure to think rationally.

Being 'left wing' or 'right wing' is not an objective fact. You're right wing for European standards. You're center or center/left for US standards.

Oh there are plenty of failures to think rationally, including by you here. The reverse of what you're saying is more true. Identify a stance as bigoted or wrong suddenly becomes making the person whose statements are being criticized attacks on that person as 'an enemy' or 'evil bigot' or something. After all, you couldn't be making bigoted statements because only bigots do that, and you're not a bigot. That other person must be calling you a bigot if they are calling your statement bigoted! Pure identity politics.

Of course it doesn't really work that way. Moreover, the failure to even consider that yes, it is possible you're a bigot and are unaware of it poisons the analysis. Starting with the premise, consciously or not, that 'I can't be the bad guy', can derail reasoning. And does. A lot.

As for "pain", you made that up, once again, because you're clearly not looking for a reasoned discussion. You're looking for a "gotcha" that'll earn you virtue points. "Oh, look! He's on our side!" :rolleyes:

I didn't make it up; I observed it. It's cognitive dissidence that comes out when comparisons are made to forms of bigotry you recognize (against homosexuals, against black people) do actually connect to the reasoning you are using against trans gender people.

Who exactly do you think I'm earning 'virtue points' from here? You're making famous Bernie supporter TBD style arguments. Most of the posters in this thread don't even accept the understanding of the medical community. Those who do aren't looking to give out any virtue points.


Hey, pay attention: just like your self-idenfitication can be wrong, so can your labeling of other people. And it's not "outing" someone when you're lying or are mistaken about that person. This reflexive tendency to label people bigots at the first sign of disagreement is counter-productive and malicous. Remember when right-wingers accuse liberals or wanting to take all guns away or murder babies or turn the US into a marxist state? That's exactly what you're doing.

You're losing the plot. If someone gets fired because some guy from New York calls their employer and identifies the employee as a bigot, that is a weird employer. You normally have to show what bigoted thing they did or said was. If the employer agrees, well, that person should really consider that maybe they are being bigoted.

And you'll note that I haven't actually called you a bigot. You're doing the straw man thing, but you obviously do believe your straw man. I'm sure someone calls you a bigot, but it isn't at first disagreement.

That comparison would work if I was somehow arguing that I had all the defining characteristics of a bigot but just wanted to not be one because I didn't identify as it.

Ah, but you do have all the definint characteristics of a bigot, see? You disagree with some members here about who should be considered a woman. That's all that's needed, apparently

Exactly! Joe, you have made this exact rant before. You know how upset you get when people think something can't be racism, just because the person doing or saying that something isn't a self-identified racist?

You don't have to be a capital b bigot to say bigoted things or use bigoted reasoning. You don't have to be a villain. Also, and I think you know this one but I'll add it anyway, being called a bigot, or racist, or sexist even wrongfully doesn't make you right in the statements that led to the inaccurate label.

The entire 'hierarchy of victims' is actually how some (many?) people appear to model these sorts of interactions, but it is FAR from the only model or explanation for various stances. It would be for people who think not giving a subset of cis women's beliefs privilege over all others is 'throwing women under the bus'. It would be for people who don't think they could be 'the villain' because they're a 'real woman' and that means 'victim', never perp. But I'll tell you right now for me who I 'side' with go with the merits of the case. I'll 'side' with men when college rape accusations don't leave them with proper protections or due process, and then turn around and 'side' against them when college systems too easily brush rape/sexual assault (to not confuse the UK population) under the rug. When a subset of cis women are doing wrong by trans women, I'll side with the trans women. When trans women do wrong by cis women, I'll 'side' with the cis women (and there is a police report with my name as a complainant to prove that, although another trans woman is too, so is that being against trans women?). It's not about 'allegiance' but the merits of the case.

Just a general suggestion for this discussion (or any discussion):

I think it will be more productive if we all try to use the principle of charity and not assume the worst motives or the worst interpretation of other's posts, where possible.

https://theness.com/neurologicablog...error-straw-men-and-the-principle-of-charity/

I have gone back and forth on the issue myself. I don't want to be a bigot or unkind to anyone, but the skeptic in me wonders what is the underlying truth.

The motives generally don't matter regardless next to the merits of the argument. But people do get hung up on their own personal identity as 'a feminist' or 'not-bigoted' or 'skeptic' and it constrains their reasoning. 'I wouldn't fall for that because I'm a skeptic'. 'I wouldn't say something bigoted because I'm not a bigot.'

If the motivations get in the way of advancement, then it might be worth exploring. In such cases, it's better to try to go for the abstract. Doesn't work when people instantly personalize criticisms of their statements.

To be fair, I'm not taking this thread as seriously anymore because generally speaking those being trans 'critical' reject the best evidence that science (and the medical community) has. I'm not reading as closely because it's all circles again. As long as people won't incorporate the best understanding of the medical community, there isn't much of a point in discussing with them.
 
Being 'left wing' or 'right wing' is not an objective fact.

It is so long as you define your terms, as with everything else. "This object weighs 3 kg" is objectively true once you define what the hell a kilogram is.

You're right wing for European standards. You're center or center/left for US standards.

No.

Identify a stance as bigoted or wrong suddenly becomes making the person whose statements are being criticized attacks on that person as 'an enemy' or 'evil bigot' or something.

It's very clear that calling posters here bigots, or transphobes or whatever, simply because they don't agree that self-identification suffices as an indicator of gender, is a transparent attempt to shame the other person into submission lest they be labeled as a bad person. Call it what you will, but it's neither rational nor constructive. It's also incorrect.

After all, you couldn't be making bigoted statements because only bigots do that, and you're not a bigot. That other person must be calling you a bigot if they are calling your statement bigoted!

Do you know how we call someone who tells lies? A liar. Do you know how we call someone who commits a crime? A criminal. Someone who holds bigoted views is a bigot. You're trying to walk back comments made here because you know it's beyond the pale, but you don't want to take back your belief that said comments were bigoted. You're trying to have it both ways.

Moreover, the failure to even consider that yes, it is possible you're a bigot and are unaware of it poisons the analysis.

A bigot is not defined as someone who disagrees with a premise. It's defined as someone who is intolerant of a certain view or group, and no one here has demonstrated such a view. Well, aside from those who don't tolerate disagreement on trans issues, that is.

I didn't make it up; I observed it.

Since no one has expressed 'pain' at anything, you indeed made it up. I understand that your belief about gender might mean that you think mere interpretation shapes objective reality, but I assure you, it doesn't.

Who exactly do you think I'm earning 'virtue points' from here?

You tell me. Maybe it's the opposite, though. Maybe you're overly concerned with being called a bigot yourself and so are agreeing with the gender-as-social-construct view as a defense.

If someone gets fired because some guy from New York calls their employer and identifies the employee as a bigot, that is a weird employer.

Don't play dumb, please. You know full well that people get fired because their employer refuses to be associated with bigots because it's bad for business. Exactly the type of behaviour I described above. So making a campaign to "oust" people as bigots, especially based on very broad interpretations, is malicious because you know full well what the result will be.
 
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Words mean things but there are also lots of nebulous concepts where the same words will mean different things to different people, and that, at least, I should hope, is an incontrovertible fact. The words “god” “left wing” and “gender” may mean eight different things to eight different people, and that that’s annoying and unclear doesn’t make it not so. You can argue that they are using language wrong till the cows come home. Language is always mid-evolution. Clarity is useful, and probably a laudable goal, but certainly not fundamental to language.
 
Words mean things but there are also lots of nebulous concepts where the same words will mean different things to different people...

Even the word discussed most in this thread admits of various meanings. I certainly don’t mean to convey the same meaning when I say “women’s clinic” as when I say “women’s clothier,” since the former usage implies biological needs specific to female humans and the latter has only a mild correlative connection to biology. As it happens “women’s sport” and “women’s STEM scholarships” wouldn’t easily fit into either one of those usages, but each require their own careful line drawing. Personally, I’m fine with doing the conceptual line drawing time and again, bearing in mind the initial justification for separating women and men in the first place.

Yeah it is, but too often that's used as an excuse to have words mean whatever's convenient at the time.

Words are indeed tools of human contrivance and convenience.
 
Sure, but they only work when agreed upon. Seeking to use words to change reality and smear those who disagree with you doesn't seem to be a winning recipe.
I could hardly agree more. Just saying that I'd be content with a handful of various values for "woman" and "man" I'd be putting my social standing at significant risk in polite progressive circles.
 
No, he's saying that being labelled with a vicious slur can have consequences for people's jobs and suchlike.

People can imagine themselves to be anything they like. Napoleon. Black. Stunningly beautiful. Female. Nobody is under any obligation to behave as if any of these things is literally true, even if not doing so might hurt their feelings. Labelling people with derogatory slanders that might get them sacked is something else. Of course trans activists are very fond of trying to get people who disagree with them sacked, we've noticed.

It's a trademark of "progressives", perfectly OK in their effed-up world of 'moral relativism'

If you work with a Liberal voter, be nice but keep a diary of what they say. When you have the evidence, go to HR and get them fired. We have not yet made it sufficiently unsafe to be a right-wing

https://twitter.com/carolmcalliste2/status/1129980347494621184
 
Exactly! Joe, you have made this exact rant before. You know how upset you get when people think something can't be racism, just because the person doing or saying that something isn't a self-identified racist?

Progressivism is not a club I've pledged my allegiance to. I'm not required to agree with about Y just because I agree with it about X.
 
As best I can tell, "Men can't have babies." is a bigoted statement, according to the Official Field Guide to Bigotry.

What if I say "Trans women can't have babies."
 
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