I read posts like that and think this person can’t be serious, and then I look at *gestures at this thread* — a “skeptics” forum where people are refusing to define their terms because they don’t like the logical implications of doing so,; where people appear to be in earnest claiming men should use women’s facilities etc.; and I realize this person is in all likelihood serious.
Hmmmm.
Who's "refusing to define their terms because they don't like the logical implications of doing so"?
I hope you're not referring to me, because 1) I've defined my terms more than once within these threads already; 2) I take significant umbrage about practically being ordered to do so in a most bizarre and authoritarian manner, in an online forum; 3) in any event, I provided a link to a definition of terms which chimes precisely to my own definition; and, not least, 4) they're not "my" terms (in the sense that they're somehow unique to me) - they're the generally-accepted terms that are used within the likes of DSM5, the wider medical community, legislatures, and serious commentators the World over.*
If you were not referring to me, then all this is moot of course.
And I'm not sure who you're referring to when you say that some within these threads "appear to be in earnest claiming men should use women’s facilities etc". For a start, "some" here (including me) are claiming that certain
males (specifically transgender males, ie transwomen) should use women's facilities.
But I presume that's what you meant, even though you misused the word "men", right? And that being the case, seeing as you appear to treat that idea as either wrong or ridiculous (or both), I'd have to ask where
you would have transwomen change when using communal changing facilities in sports centres etc? In the men's changing rooms? In the disabled changing rooms? In their car or at home? Or should transwomen be effectively prohibited from using sportscentres like these?
* And frankly, if regular participants to this thread are not conversant with the standard definitions of terms (which are precisely the definitions which I myself have adopted and used), then I might suggest that the proverbial shoe should be on the other foot: it is perhaps
I who should be asking of others what their definitions are, if they're going to be different from the generally-accepted definitions as used for debate/diagnosis/understanding/legislating around gender dysphoria and transgender identity....