theprestige
Penultimate Amazing
I reject LondonJohn's analogy wholesale. Sexual attraction is not a social construct based on a biological fact. What transsexuals are demanding is fundamentally different from what homosexuals demand.
I reject LondonJohn's analogy wholesale. Sexual attraction is not a social construct based on a biological fact. What transsexuals are demanding is fundamentally different from what homosexuals demand.
Bad logic.There's an axiomatic paradox between
1) I do not deny your existence as a transgender person
and
2) I believe trans women are not women, and I do not believe that trans women should be treated within society as women.
(1), rephrased, tells us that the person accepts that transgender identity is a real, valid condition; but (2) tells us that the person does not accept that transgender identity is a real, valid condition.
Valid in what sense? Transwomanhood doesn't make someone a biological female.
I reject LondonJohn's analogy wholesale. Sexual attraction is not a social construct based on a biological fact. What transsexuals are demanding is fundamentally different from what homosexuals demand.
I'm waiting to see where he goes with it.
It doesn't seem very similar to me, either, but I'll let him provide whatever questions he wants and see how he gets to a therefore.
If your analogy breaks down the moment someone starts examining it with a critical eye, it's a bad analogy.
If he did, it would not support allowing trans-women into sex-segregated spaces. It would support ending segregation of men from women.
What this whole argument comes down to is that most seem to agree that sex and gender segregation are both valid in various circumstances, but we can't agree which type of segregation is appropriate in each instance.
If you struggle to identify the extremists on this topic then I'm not going to be able to help you.Well that certainly provides a clear and easily understandable view...![]()
If you struggle to identify the extremists on this topic then I'm not going to be able to help you.
The analogy only really works if you look at two groups (trans-women and cis-women) in isolation. Then you can frame it as breaking down or removing the barrier of segregation. The argument for this is that the reason for the segregation is invalid and therefore the segregation should be abandoned.
But if you broaden the view two include cis-men (and trans-men, but we seem to ignore them) the nature of the analogy changes. It is no longer about removing segregation, but redefining the terms of the segregation. This sounds minor, but it is not. It completely changes the analysis criteria of the proposed change.
It is no longer about fairness. It accepts as a starting point that segregation is desirable and justified, but that the grouping criteria should change. (This is significantly different than arguing that the groupings should be eliminated.) To make such an argument, you have to explain why the reasoning or goals of the segregation are better met with the new criteria.
The analyses of the two situations are not the same.
What I've been reading is that the "anti-trans" side is willing to accept trans people into their spaces provided there is some mechanism that allows them to feel confident in excluding cis-men.
Arguments have been made that there are few trans-women who assault women in bathrooms/locker rooms or that there are currently few instances of cis-men taking advantage of the opportunity to do so.
My answer to that is simply this (gasp) analogy: I'm a programmer. I am aware that there is a vulnerability in my program that would allow a user to do something that I don't want them to. But so far no one has done so. Should I wait until the vulnerability is exploited to address the vulnerability, or should I be proactive and address it up front?
It seems to me that it's not trans people that Emily's Cat, for instance, really wants to keep out of her locker room. It's cis-men like myself...or people of questionable trans status or behavior like Jessica Yaniv. The admittedly few cases that have been cited don't illustrate widespread exploitation of a vulnerability, but they do demonstrate that the vulnerability exists.
Perhaps a better goal would be to address a system that both shifts the line of segregation where appropriate and prevents the exploitation of the vulnerability. Interestingly, LondonJohn and Emily's Cat are not far apart on this particular issue, though I've never seen LondonJohn acknowledge this.
There are more than two sides to this issue. It's too complicated to label someone as pro-trans or anti-trans and all of the insults and hate speak that goes along with it.
No you have completely missed the point of the analogy which is to argue that 'discomfort with another group is not a valid way to decide whether the groups need to be segregated or not' It doesn't go beyond that.
There are two competing/simultaneous arguments that I can decipher here. One is that women are uncomfortable and therefore exclude transwomen
The second is that women are at risk and therefore exclude transwomen
The problem we are having in the discussion at points is that whenever we try to nail down one or the other of these arguments they get switched.
The analogy that was being made was to address and test the former of these two arguments.
I think it's time to reasonably draw the provisional conclusion that certain arguments within this thread are based predominantly upon an overarching fear and hatred of all males, when it comes to anything which might conceivably take things into a psychosexual area.
I don't think those arguments are really about transgender identity or the rights of trans people (especially trans women) at all. I think they're about males. All males.
In English and Welsh equality legislation sex refers to both female and male, the law is "sex neutral".
No idea, but I do know I'm not an extremist in regards to this topic.Tell me, do you hold the pristine middle ground?
No idea, but I do know I'm not an extremist in regards to this topic.
The reason I ask is that there’s no bloody middle ground. There is no solution that will satisfy everyone. You trend to one side or the other. Calling people extremists is simply dismissive.