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Cont: Trans Women are not Women 4

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I don't think I've ever stated that anyone weighing in on the sex-segregated sports issue is a TERF. In fact, it's an issue that I'm still quite undecided myself and one that is quite tricky.

It is an issue in which the TERFs are very animated, as one small subset of those weighing in. I suspect they intend to use it as a wedge issue for the larger anti-trans agenda. Not all people opposing trans inclusion in sports are TERFs, but the TERFs are definitely very vocal on the issue.

People who want to engage on that issue is good faith should probably make it clear that bigots on their side are not welcome as allies. I would no sooner ally with a TERF on an issue than I would some fascist who happens to overlap in ideology about the evils of corporate power or whatever. Common cause with bigots always backfires.

Even if you think the TERFs hold the correct view on a certain issue, their broader, unwarranted animus towards trans people should be a dealbreaker.

With all due respect I don't think I have read a post so long that says so little.

What is your opinion on people who grew up with blokes bodies and corresponding natural chemical advantage competing against women who were born as a female?

And the bolded bit is particularly weird.

Why should people have to list who they disagree with before giving an opinion, as if it some how makes it more valid to you personally if the people listed fit your dislike?

Personally I am a bloke who is not particularly feminist or TERF or other acronyms people want to make up, but think people who biologically were dudes competing against females brought up as females is incredibly stupid.
 
...the real goal of TERFs, which is to dismiss the legitimacy of trans existence. You know, bigot stuff.

Claiming that feminists (even radical ones) want to erase the legitimacy of trans existence is just as hyperbolic and silly as insisting that TRAs want to erase the legitimacy of lesbians and females in general.

You say they're a tiny fringe group. If so, they're a vocal enough fringe to have a lot of lesbians pretty perturbed, and to cause a lot of lesbians concern.

There really needs to be some rational middle ground here. There should be some reasonable way for people to generally support trans people living without harassment and abuse, and without discrimination... while also not having to literally believe that male people are the same as female people, and without having cis people be abused and harassed either.
 
These whole fringe things are basically just weirdos on Twitter though.

Most normal people just go on with life and live in the real world.

Unfortunately, many of those "weirdos on twitter" have a very large and very vocal following. Rachel McKinnon isn't exactly unknown. She's a pretty active transwoman, with a LOT of voice, who also thinks it's bigoted of lesbians to not want to have sex with penises.
 
But the usage of the term has grown to be applied to people (particularly women)..

It is almost always applied to females. There are a very few men who are extremely vocal and have a large enough following to merit having slurs tossed at them... but most of the time males are able to express disagreement with an aspect or two without garnering dismissal and name-calling.

As supporting evidence, I offer this thread.
 
And Amnesty and Liberty jump in with their views on the recent Bell case:



https://www.amnesty.org.uk/press-releases/amnesty-international-uk-and-liberty-joint-statement-puberty-blockers

They also seems to be trying to frame it as a threat to rules allowing under-16s access to contraception, although there doesn't seem to be anything in the judgement that would impact that.

I don't like the framing and word-choice on that. The "bodily autonomy and determination of young people" bit is... iffy to me. I'd greatly prefer if it were significantly more specific. I personally think there are a whole lot of things that it is very reasonable for parents in particular to limit with respect to the autonomy and determination of their children. Like... getting tattoos and piercings, cosmetic surgery, drug use, and sex with 40 year olds. That's kind of why they're considered children and not adults in the first place - they don't get to make all of their own decisions.
 
I don't like the framing and word-choice on that. The "bodily autonomy and determination of young people" bit is... iffy to me. I'd greatly prefer if it were significantly more specific. I personally think there are a whole lot of things that it is very reasonable for parents in particular to limit with respect to the autonomy and determination of their children. Like... getting tattoos and piercings, cosmetic surgery, drug use, and sex with 40 year olds. That's kind of why they're considered children and not adults in the first place - they don't get to make all of their own decisions.

The phrasing is a little jarring to me, only because "the right to bodily privacy" was one of the issues in one of the American locker room court cases. The judge said that the plaintiffs didn't have any such right.
 
Evidence of this usually seems to boil down to screenshots of nobodies on Twitter. The "receipts" linked in this thread seems to be just a bunch of Twitter cranks. Social media is chock full of extremely noisy fringe groups, including TERFs and anti-lebsian trans people like you describe.

Generally I wouldn't consider many of them worth much consideration. Unless I overlooked something, these fringe trans activists don't seem to have anything near the organization or reach of the TERF extremists.
Sure, sure. Rachel McKinnon is a nobody, definitely doesn't have any influence at all...

With all that said, notice that none of this position will be received and interpreted in good faith by some here, specifically Emily Cat, who will insist with this blatantly bad faith claims of "men trying to silence women". I have yet to receive a meaningful response to my point that queer people, including lesbian women, are supportive of trans rights. EC will try to claim trans women are just men trying to silence "real" women, meanwhile lesbian women vehemently disagree with these TERFs extremists trying to advocate bigotry in their name.

It's observational, mostly in this thread. I have a generally supportive outlook toward trans rights, with some exceptions where I think they infringe upon the rights of women and women's safety. I've been called a bigot, a TERF, I've been told it doesn't really happen, women are just overly paranoid, etc. I was literally called hysterical by a transwoman who claims to be just as much of a woman as I am.

The same points made by males in this thread have been disagreed with... but they haven't been labeled as TERFs. They haven't been personally attacked and had their views dismissed as not even worth responding to.

Some lesbians support the right of transwomen to have sex with lesbians with their female penises. And some women support transwomen being treated as completely female in every respect even if they have a beard and a penis. That's fine. I've never claimed it was all women. I have, however, pointed out that some of the things that transactivists want are detrimental to natal women. And that there is a risk that is being dismissed and downplayed. And that there is a conflict of rights and safety.

There is a very common, very widespread tendency of the views of women to be dismissed and downplayed. Women are frequently told that we're overreacting, it's not that big a deal, we're make a fuss about nothing. We're told that we're paranoid and that because we take reasonable precautions against the possibility of male violence, we hate men and it's unfair to men that we want safe spaces.

I notice the pattern... because it is so very widespread. Including from you. Throughout this thread, you've interacted genially and respectfully with other males. You haven't called them names, you haven't called them out in your posts, you haven't dismissed their views. You disagree with them, but you do it in a civil manner. You interact with the prestige, cullennz, Louden Wilde, Tom B. and others with civility and decency.

On the other hand... you label me and Rolfe and Jihad Jane and other females as TERFs. You call us names, you dismiss our views, and you attack us.

Why would you expect me to ignore that pattern of behavior?
 
Sure, sure. Rachel McKinnon is a nobody, definitely doesn't have any influence at all...

I don't know this reference.




It's observational, mostly in this thread. I have a generally supportive outlook toward trans rights, with some exceptions where I think they infringe upon the rights of women and women's safety. I've been called a bigot, a TERF, I've been told it doesn't really happen, women are just overly paranoid, etc. I was literally called hysterical by a transwoman who claims to be just as much of a woman as I am.

The same points made by males in this thread have been disagreed with... but they haven't been labeled as TERFs. They haven't been personally attacked and had their views dismissed as not even worth responding to.

Some lesbians support the right of transwomen to have sex with lesbians with their female penises. And some women support transwomen being treated as completely female in every respect even if they have a beard and a penis. That's fine. I've never claimed it was all women. I have, however, pointed out that some of the things that transactivists want are detrimental to natal women. And that there is a risk that is being dismissed and downplayed. And that there is a conflict of rights and safety.

There is a very common, very widespread tendency of the views of women to be dismissed and downplayed. Women are frequently told that we're overreacting, it's not that big a deal, we're make a fuss about nothing. We're told that we're paranoid and that because we take reasonable precautions against the possibility of male violence, we hate men and it's unfair to men that we want safe spaces.

I notice the pattern... because it is so very widespread. Including from you. Throughout this thread, you've interacted genially and respectfully with other males. You haven't called them names, you haven't called them out in your posts, you haven't dismissed their views. You disagree with them, but you do it in a civil manner. You interact with the prestige, cullennz, Louden Wilde, Tom B. and others with civility and decency.

On the other hand... you label me and Rolfe and Jihad Jane and other females as TERFs. You call us names, you dismiss our views, and you attack us.

Why would you expect me to ignore that pattern of behavior?

you in particular have been insisting, repeatedly and in bad faith, that my pro-trans attitudes are rooted entirely in misogyny. Don't sling mud if you want to be treated respectfully.

Perhaps you interpret my curt treatment to your replies as some evidence of misogyny on my part. I continue to insist that my rudeness to you is a result of your deliberate obtuse and bad faith reading of my replies.

Despite what you may believe, I am routinely quite impatient or rude with other posters, including men, on this forum that engage in what I consider contemptible discourse. Just a page back I did so with a male poster who likewise seemed to be deliberately discussing in bad faith.

I have no illusions that you will concede this.

Perhaps I am misremembering, but I do not recall ever specifically accusing you or anyone else on this forum of being a TERF. I have, and will continue to do so, point out when TERF arguments or sources are presented, but that's a significant distinction.

Considering that I strongly suspect you are not being sincere in your replies here, I wouldn't even begin to presume to know your real stance well enough to make such a judgement.

Again I will point out that this is the same rehash of your usual response to my point that TERFs do not represent women broadly and that many women are quite unhappy to see them whiteknighting on their behalf. Will you respond in any meaningful way to this point?

Why do TERFs speak for all women, even when women and lesbian women often specifically make a point to disavow TERF ideology as little more than bigotry?
 
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you in particular have been insisting, repeatedly and in bad faith, that my pro-trans attitudes are rooted entirely in misogyny

Dunno about Emily's Cat, but it seems to me that your attitudes may or may not be rooted in misogyny (I assume they're not), but they do have effectively misogynistic outcomes and conclusions.

So if you're *not* coming from a place of misogyny (and I assume you're not), you may want to take some time consider how your solutions seem to end up there.
 
you in particular have been insisting, repeatedly and in bad faith, that my pro-trans attitudes are rooted entirely in misogyny. Don't sling mud if you want to be treated respectfully.
I've noted a pattern of behavior that is consistent with a socially conditioned sex-based bias. Reviewing posts in this volume of the thread has not led me to change my mind on that. I wouldn't call you a misogynist, but I do observe that your responses suggest a bias against females, even if you're unaware of it. In any discussion that touches on the safety and dignity of females, you deride the females and draw parallels to them being racist bigots who don't want to share spaces with black people. When crime statistics, incidences of sexual violence against females, and similar are brought up, you denigrate them and ignore them and pull out quips that suggest the females in question are just transphobic. At no point throughout this thread have you evinced even a shred of compassion or concern for females. You've repeatedly shown a lack of concern and care for females. It may not be intentional... but it is definitely there.

Despite what you may believe, I am routinely quite impatient or rude with other posters, including men, on this forum that engage in what I consider contemptible discourse. Just a page back I did so with a male poster who likewise seemed to be deliberately discussing in bad faith.

I have no illusions that you will concede this.
I concede that you're frequently rude to all sorts of people on ISF. Clearly, that lack of civility is in your nature.

Perhaps I am misremembering, but I do not recall ever specifically accusing you or anyone else on this forum of being a TERF. I have, and will continue to do so, point out when TERF arguments or sources are presented, but that's a significant distinction.
Explicitly? No, you've nto actually said "you are a TERF" in so many words. Rather, you've dismissed concerns put forth by females in this thread as being "TERF talking points" and "transphobic" and made insinuations to "tactics". You don't actually address any of those concerns, you just attack the character of the poster - when they are female. Sure, you also dismiss the arguments of male posters... but you don't do so by attacking their character, insinuating that they're all made up, or by suggesting that the statistics of sexual violence against women are somehow analogous to "black crime" statistics trotted out by racists. That's a treatment that somehow only seems to come about against female posters.

Considering that I strongly suspect you are not being sincere in your replies here...
On what possible basis? Seriously, what on earth leads you to fall back on the petty and infantile accusation of dishonesty? I've been nothing but sincere in this thread. This is not an argument, this is poisoning the well.

Again I will point out that this is the same rehash of your usual response to my point that TERFs do not represent women broadly and that many women are quite unhappy to see them whiteknighting on their behalf. Will you respond in any meaningful way to this point?

Why do TERFs speak for all women, even when women and lesbian women often specifically make a point to disavow TERF ideology as little more than bigotry?

Uh huh. Here again, you're insinuating that I'm a terf. I'm not, but that's irrelevant to you. By labeling me with a slur, you can simply ignore my concerns. It's a particularly useful tactic, since it really only gets applied to females, and thus silences and others the people who are actually being put at risk by the policies that you espouse.

I don't speak for all women - no single woman does. Likewise, you don't speak for all TRAs. But we each represent a group of people that is more than just one group.

And before you trot it out again, I'll take a moment to remind you that the poll you keep referencing shows general support among women that transgender people should be able to live free of discrimination - I myself support that view completely. It also, however, shows that the majority of people - including women - oppose self-id alone as a means for a person to identify as trans, and that the majority of people - including women - are opposed to transwomen who have not had GRS using women's refuges, rape shelters, locker rooms, and being placed in women's prisons.
 
No, I don't believe I have done so. If any of my statements read that way, it's by error on my part.

Some of the linked organizations I've been talking about are about as explicitly TERF as they get, places like LGB (no T, intentionally) alliance. They take an explicitly TERF viewpoint, in that they are feminist, pro-queer people that specifically exclude trans people in that ideology that is otherwise very accepting. I refer to them as TERFs. Again, TERFs are only a small subset of the larger anti-trans community, and a rather small subset at that. The largest group of anti trans people is probably your run of the mill reactionary conservative, the type of person who is also likely anti-gay and anti-abortion, etc.
Is there actually an "anti-trans community?"
I'm not being facetious, here. What I mostly see are individuals who disagree to various degrees with various assertions that come from trans-activists. I suppose there are some groups who have platforms that you could classify as anti-trans.

I suspect a lot of those groups arose, not due to animosity to trans-people, but because they perceived the priorities of their previous groups to be shifting towards trans-activism.

If I were a supporter/member of the National Heart Association, I want them to put their resources towards education, outreach, and research regarding heart disease. If they decided to focus a significant portion of their efforts towards researching liver disease, I might be unhappy and perhaps form another group that is specifically for heart disease and not liver disease. And I might resent the liver disease people for successfully hijacking the platform of the NHA.

So I ask you, is it OK to have a group that focuses exclusively on the concerns of biological women? Is it ok to have a group that only focuses on sexuality (lg or lgb) issues? If not, why is it unacceptable for an organization to have a narrow focus?
Evidence of this usually seems to boil down to screenshots of nobodies on Twitter. The "receipts" linked in this thread seems to be just a bunch of Twitter cranks. Social media is chock full of extremely noisy fringe groups, including TERFs and anti-lebsian trans people like you describe.
So...the bigots on one side are insignificant and the things they say should be ignored, but the bigots on the other side are significant and meaningful?

What you seem to not understand is that it's a matter of perspective. It doesn't matter what the issue is, one always considers the fringe nutjobs near their own side to be harmless cranks and not worth discussing, while at the same time thinking that the fringe nutjobs on the other side are problematic and the other side needs to address/disavow/ or do...something...about them.
Generally I wouldn't consider many of them worth much consideration. Unless I overlooked something, these fringe trans activists don't seem to have anything near the organization or reach of the TERF extremists. In the case of the Canadian TERF-run women's shelter, the group controlled a charity and was leading a campaign to challenge the now-passed pro-trans addition to Canadian civil rights law. They allowed their shelter to shut down rather than comply with trans-inclusive law. Or the more recent case of the UK TERFs advocating, successfully, for the state to prohibit trans-affirming medical care for consenting, under 16 year old patients. I'm not really seeing anything close to that level of power being wielded by the anti-lesbian trans extremists.
You don't watch YouTube much do you? There are a lot of channels devoted to this issue on YouTube, and they are very influential in influencing people's opinions. Unfortunately reasonable people don't draw hits. Novelty does. Outrageousness does. It's a world defined by shock jocks. Rational people are boring. (This is true for both sides.)

Even the mainstream media is tabloid media. Jessica Yaniv is a crank who gets attention because she's over the top outrageous. She's another sort of fringe in the trans community. The things she does make her visible and that visibility affects peoples opinions of the trans community (negatively).

My point is that loud voices, fringe or not, get heard and have influence. You can't really dismiss them without addressing them.
Is there anything equivalent from the anti-lebsian trans extremists you describe, or do they have little reach beyond their twitter screeds? You can see why I don't treat them as equally alarming, even if both are quite clearly bigoted in their ideology.


That's why I push back at the attempts for others on this thread to nutpick and try to smear all trans people by this fringe which, to my estimation, doesn't seem to amount to much more than twitter cranks harassing people on the web. That's repugnant, but doesn't really rise much above the general background level of bigotry that exists on social media and the wider web.

I wouldn't be surprised if many of the screenshotted examples are from accounts that are now banned from social media for violating anti-harassment policies. You won't see me bemoaning their absence, but there's no shortage of TERF defenders crying when bigoted trolls like Graham Linehan get the boot.





I don't think I've ever stated that anyone weighing in on the sex-segregated sports issue is a TERF. In fact, it's an issue that I'm still quite undecided myself and one that is quite tricky.

It is an issue in which the TERFs are very animated, as one small subset of those weighing in. I suspect they intend to use it as a wedge issue for the larger anti-trans agenda. Not all people opposing trans inclusion in sports are TERFs, but the TERFs are definitely very vocal on the issue.

People who want to engage on that issue is good faith should probably make it clear that bigots on their side are not welcome as allies. I would no sooner ally with a TERF on an issue than I would some fascist who happens to overlap in ideology about the evils of corporate power or whatever. Common cause with bigots always backfires.
Ok. But only if the reverse is also true.

If people who push back on some points of trans-activism must disavow their fringe, then those who argue for the trans positions should also have to make it clear that the bigots on their side are unwelcome allies as well.

I mean, you wouldn't want to ally or make common cause with anti-lesbian bigots, would you?
Even if you think the TERFs hold the correct view on a certain issue, their broader, unwarranted animus towards trans people should be a dealbreaker.
And animus against lesbians who do not want to have sex with women with penises should also be a dealbreaker.

If one side must ostracize its bigots, then so must the other.
With all that said, notice that none of this position will be received and interpreted in good faith by some here, specifically Emily Cat, who will insist with this blatantly bad faith claims of "men trying to silence women". I have yet to receive a meaningful response to my point that queer people, including lesbian women, are supportive of trans rights. EC will try to claim trans women are just men trying to silence "real" women, meanwhile lesbian women vehemently disagree with these TERFs extremists trying to advocate bigotry in their name.

Emily has, in the course of these threads, made the observation that men and women are treated differently when they question some of the trans positions. I haven't been keeping score, so I can't say if she's right or wrong. But I recall she and I making essentially the same argument at one point where my point was addressed and hers dismissed. So I see where her viewpoint comes from.

The mistake you are making here is that you hear "women's opinions are dismissed," think it's absurd and dismiss it when you should be asking "Why does she feel that way?" That doesn't mean you have to agree with her points, but it does mean you should give them the respect of addressing them.

If she says "we need sex-segregated spaces," dismissing that as a bigoted position is not productive. What would be productive is why you believe they should be gender-segregated instead and listen, consider, and try to understand why she holds her position. (On that particular issue, you'll find that the reason has little to do with trans and everything to do with men. Arguing that trans-women aren't a threat isn't even addressing the issue. Find a way to include trans-women while addressing women's need of safety/privacy from men.)
 
Well... As far as I can tell, Elliot Paige can still pass as a woman, right down to the sexual apparatus. So he can still foster a lesbian attraction from his girlfriend, if he wants.

But that puts Elliot in an awkward position. Having come out as a man, he'd have to start intentionally misgendering himself in order to support his girlfriend's sex life.

So it's pretty much awkward positions everywhere. Not just for Elliot and his girlfriend, but for all of us expecting some sort of sensical and consistent position on transsexuality from the trans-activist community.

This is why I'm betting the next target is going to be binary sexual preferences. Because it looks like the only coherent response to criticisms of the form "your position on transsexuality is not stable within the current framework of human sexuality" is to smash the framework.

I think you may be misinterpreting Page's current stated gender identity.

https://edition.cnn.com/2020/12/01/entertainment/elliot-page-trnd/index.html

On Tuesday, the Oscar-nominated star of movies like "Juno" and "X-Men: Days of Future Past" shared with fans that they are transgender and identify as non-binary, a term used to describe a person whose gender identity is neither man nor woman.

Page said their pronouns are "he" and "they."
 
How does it work to have two pronouns?

I think it means that you can choose either one.

(I can't seem to find that Page claimed anywhere to be a "man" although the male pronoun might imply that. However, since they also identify as "non-binary" it seems like they didn't go quite that far.)
 
I think it means that you can choose either one.

(I can't seem to find that Page claimed anywhere to be a "man" although the male pronoun might imply that. However, since they also identify as "non-binary" it seems like they didn't go quite that far.)

I'm only seeing him refer to himself as "trans" and "queer", not "non-binary".
 
No, I don't believe I have done so. If any of my statements read that way, it's by error on my part.

Some of the linked organizations I've been talking about are about as explicitly TERF as they get, places like LGB (no T, intentionally) alliance. They take an explicitly TERF viewpoint, in that they are feminist, pro-queer people that specifically exclude trans people in that ideology that is otherwise very accepting. I refer to them as TERFs. Again, TERFs are only a small subset of the larger anti-trans community, and a rather small subset at that. The largest group of anti trans people is probably your run of the mill reactionary conservative, the type of person who is also likely anti-gay and anti-abortion, etc.





Evidence of this usually seems to boil down to screenshots of nobodies on Twitter. The "receipts" linked in this thread seems to be just a bunch of Twitter cranks. Social media is chock full of extremely noisy fringe groups, including TERFs and anti-lebsian trans people like you describe.

Generally I wouldn't consider many of them worth much consideration. Unless I overlooked something, these fringe trans activists don't seem to have anything near the organization or reach of the TERF extremists. In the case of the Canadian TERF-run women's shelter, the group controlled a charity and was leading a campaign to challenge the now-passed pro-trans addition to Canadian civil rights law. They allowed their shelter to shut down rather than comply with trans-inclusive law. Or the more recent case of the UK TERFs advocating, successfully, for the state to prohibit trans-affirming medical care for consenting, under 16 year old patients. I'm not really seeing anything close to that level of power being wielded by the anti-lesbian trans extremists.

Is there anything equivalent from the anti-lebsian trans extremists you describe, or do they have little reach beyond their twitter screeds? You can see why I don't treat them as equally alarming, even if both are quite clearly bigoted in their ideology.


That's why I push back at the attempts for others on this thread to nutpick and try to smear all trans people by this fringe which, to my estimation, doesn't seem to amount to much more than twitter cranks harassing people on the web. That's repugnant, but doesn't really rise much above the general background level of bigotry that exists on social media and the wider web.

I wouldn't be surprised if many of the screenshotted examples are from accounts that are now banned from social media for violating anti-harassment policies. You won't see me bemoaning their absence, but there's no shortage of TERF defenders crying when bigoted trolls like Graham Linehan get the boot.





I don't think I've ever stated that anyone weighing in on the sex-segregated sports issue is a TERF. In fact, it's an issue that I'm still quite undecided myself and one that is quite tricky.

It is an issue in which the TERFs are very animated, as one small subset of those weighing in. I suspect they intend to use it as a wedge issue for the larger anti-trans agenda. Not all people opposing trans inclusion in sports are TERFs, but the TERFs are definitely very vocal on the issue.

People who want to engage on that issue is good faith should probably make it clear that bigots on their side are not welcome as allies. I would no sooner ally with a TERF on an issue than I would some fascist who happens to overlap in ideology about the evils of corporate power or whatever. Common cause with bigots always backfires.

Even if you think the TERFs hold the correct view on a certain issue, their broader, unwarranted animus towards trans people should be a dealbreaker.

With all that said, notice that none of this position will be received and interpreted in good faith by some here, specifically Emily Cat, who will insist with this blatantly bad faith claims of "men trying to silence women". I have yet to receive a meaningful response to my point that queer people, including lesbian women, are supportive of trans rights. EC will try to claim trans women are just men trying to silence "real" women, meanwhile lesbian women vehemently disagree with these TERFs extremists trying to advocate bigotry in their name.

Radical feminists exclude men not trans people. Transmen are welcome in women-only spaces.

The word "TERF" has been recognised in a British court as equivalent to "c***" and "bitch". Be proud of your progressive misogyny, bigot!
 
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I'm only seeing him refer to himself as "trans" and "queer", not "non-binary".

Indeed. Maybe their statement was a little bit vague. CNN reports that they are "non-binary" but I cannot find that word in Page's own written statement, and he hasn't said much publicly since then, as far as I can tell. However, the "they" pronoun sort of implies "non-binary" I think. Whereas the name Elliot and the "he" pronoun implies man.
 
Indeed. Maybe their statement was a little bit vague. CNN reports that they are "non-binary" but I cannot find that word in Page's own written statement, and he hasn't said much publicly since then, as far as I can tell. However, the "they" pronoun sort of implies "non-binary" I think. Whereas the name Elliot and the "he" pronoun implies man.

She's a lesbian.
 
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