LondonJohn
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- May 12, 2010
- Messages
- 21,162
No - this is what YOU keep viewing self-id as. That's not what most of us view self-id as.
In the real world, when we talk about "self-id" we're not talking about a law that allows a person to change their legal sex without a diagnosis - that's part of it, but that's not the problem. When we talk about self-id, we're talking about the activist push that any person should be able to decide for themselves whether or not they are a man or a woman, without ever having seen a doctor about it at all, and without any transition-related activity on their part... and by dint of their declaration, they demand to be recognized as a woman and gain access to female spaces.
We're talking about the impact that has on society. We're talking about the decision to declare oneself to be a woman regardless of ones anatomy, and thereby insist that others must treat you as a woman at risk of being labeled a bigot. It's the demand that a person who bears no resemblance in any way to a woman gains the power to obligate other people to use female pronouns for them at risk of it being considered hate speech. It's the idea of making gender identification on the basis of self-declaration alone be a protected class that overrules the biology of sex and infringes upon the rights of women.
That is what almost all of the other participants in this thread consider "self-id" to mean.
1) The concept of self-identification is/was never simply the case of (eg) a male being able to declare herself a transwomen on a whim: someone self-identifying would have to make a formal sworn declaration to that effect (I think that's the case everywhere, but it certainly is in the UK).
2) I'm guessing that there's little or no reliable data concerning the area of males going through this self-identification procedure (as above) primarily for the purpose of allowing them access to women-only spaces in order to satisfy desires related to sexual deviancy. In other words: males who are actually heterosexual cis men, who choose to lie in going through the self-identification process in order to be able to get into women-only spaces with a view to being sexually deviant. But I wonder just what the extent of that problem might ever be.
3) Personally, I agree with you that it's vastly better (for all, including those with gender dysphoria) to have to go through an appropriate clinical assessment and diagnosis process.
4) If this process of self-identification is removed completely from the table (as indeed appears to be the case in England & Wales in the upcoming reform of the law), what is your view on clinically-assessed, clinically-diagnosed trans women being able to access and use women-only spaces?
You're just going to wedge that in there as if it's patently true, with no support... and then just dictate that it be "put aside"?