"Best Medical Practice" can't be obviously sacrosanct and unquestionable when the "Accepted Best Medical Practice" for all of this would have been declaring it a mental disorder within many of the people in this discussion's lifetimes.
//ETA: Thread moved faster than I anticipated. Adding quote to clarify who I was responding to//
"Live as the other sex" means nothing in a society that doesn't force the sexes to live differently.
Can you quote just one of them? If so, I'm happy to retract.
Where exactly did someone suggest an alternative treatment?
Who argued otherwise?
Possibly. But most people on this thread seem to agree that there are differences between the experiences of being a woman and a man in the current society.
"Best Medical Practice" can't be obviously sacrosanct and unquestionable when the "Accepted Best Medical Practice" for all of this would have been declaring it a mental disorder within many of the people in this discussion's lifetimes.
We certainly disagree on whether anyone here has argued that gender dysphoria isn't an actual condition. We also appear to disagree on whether anyone has been arguing for treatments other than transition, in this forum.If we don't disagree what was the point of your previous post? Other than to just say 'yes i agree'
If someone can show that it would be significantly harmful to allow transwomen access to women's changing rooms then it would be justified to exclude them. Has that been done?
Yes but those experiences are manufactured, forced, and most of them are negative. "Roles put on the genders by society" is rarely if ever presented as a positive. We shouldn't be propping them up just so some people can use them in non-traditional ways.
Again, have you actually read this thread? There have been cases mentioned repeatedly.
We certainly disagree on whether anyone here has argued that gender dysphoria isn't an actual condition. We also appear to disagree on whether anyone has been arguing for treatments other than transition, in this forum.
Let's be honest here though. Is "Transgenderism" really being presented as some temporary solution put into place until we get around to dealing with gender roles? Because that's never the impression I've gotten from it.
It's always presented as being transgender would still be something exist in a world where the physical, biological sexes where treated 100% identically.
So this is kind of starting to seem like a red herring.
I'm not sure which specific post you're referencing here, but you don't need an MD to realize that there is no single "best treatment" for everyone. Can we at least agree that transition wasn't the best treatment for a (relatively small) handful of detransitioners?Well you argued that it might not be the best treatment.
The discussion is about how to address the bigotry and discrimination faced by transpeople today.
I'm not sure which specific post you're referencing here, but you don't need an MD to realize that there is no single "best treatment" for everyone. Can we at least agree that transition wasn't the best treatment for a (relatively small) handful of detransitioners?
I would like to weigh in on the subject of analogies briefly to note that while Ziggurat and theprestige have argued that analogies fail to convince people with observational evidence ("Have you ever seen someone change their mind based on an argument by analogy"), to simply note that in general, at least on this forum, people seldom change their mind based on any type of argument.
The correct conclusion isn't that argument by analogy always fails, but that argument in general always fails.
I don't think that's actually true, I've often been convinced by arguments made on this forum, but usually in regards to subjects that I hadn't already formed strong conclusions about. Usually if people are at the point of engaging in the argument, it's pretty hard to change their minds, with an analogy or other form of argument.
I think both of you have very good points. In general, I think Roboramma is correct about arguments here in general. Like the pirate's code, my rule is more of a guideline. Where other arguments might succeed, the analogy is almost certain to fail.When I have seen arguments succeed is usually when the argued presents truly new (at least to the other person) information. But analogies are a bad way to present new information. They are primarily a tool for framing existing information.
This is a fairly poor analogy, for fairly obvious reasons.No more than chemotherapy wasn't the best treatment option for people who died of cancer anyway.
In fairness if that's the bar then all attempts to argue by any method seem to be pretty futile. Certainly using facts and logic have failed to convince anyone here.
Four threads and over 10k posts into this topic, some would say we've not made any headway. Personally, I think we've generated some excellent questions for further discussion.
1) The first unanswered question was basically "Why should people be denied entry to spaces which have been set aside for the other gender?" and it came up in at least two ways; firstly at thread #3 post #1503, and then again in response to this post. Here is the latter version: