caveman1917
Philosopher
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2015
- Messages
- 8,143
Turns out that it is not just the "cotton ceiling" for lesbians who won't date transwomen but there's a "boxer ceiling" for gay men who won't date transmen too.
It's a form of aposematism.
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But seriously I'm hold enough to remember when liberals said it was toxic to tell gays whom they ought to find sexually attractive.
Thank you for the correction. I apologize for casting aspersions.https://www.ons.gov.uk/economy/envi...isthedifferencebetweensexandgender/2019-02-21
Perhaps your statement should be modified to something like:
This particular thread is foundering because the "anti-TRA side" refuses to accept (or even, apparently, notice) that at least one "TRA side" poster has now repeatedly supplied definitions - the "anti-TRA side" mendaciously pretends instead that no such definitions have been provided, and uses that (entirely incorrect) conclusion as some sort of weapon to attack the "TRA side"
: rolleyes :
Well here's my experience with that, though it might be not be entirely representative given that it was in context of a social-anarchist-liberal setting at the very edge of the trans activist movement. So they wanted me to believe "transwomen are women" to be a true proposition, and after having gone through every fallacy they could muster, without ever producing a sound argument, they said they would "shame" me. At which point I couldn't help myself laughing for like 5 minutes before saying something to the effect of "Like I give a **** about your stupid shaming. If you want me to accept your claim then you have to provide a sound argument, it's that simple." Turns out I was 'cancelled' after at. It was the first time I was 'cancelled' - I got uncancelled and recancelled several times after that.

it seems we agree on using "woman" for the social construct
Effeminate gay men are women? Masculine lesbians are men? Sounds pretty regressive to me.
One thing at a time.
Turns out that it is not just the "cotton ceiling" for lesbians who won't date transwomen but there's a "boxer ceiling" for gay men who won't date transmen too.
Why one thing at a time? If you agree to that definition then you also have to agree to its consequences, they come together in one package and not "one at a time."
Yes, you were like that before I arrived. But what about the few days when you had the opposite persona?
Acceptance is a two-way street. She should have discussed it with them beforehand. Nobody has the right to expect that "you MUST accept who I am". Difficult situations require civil dialogue.
Requiring definite answers to questions too loaded to reasonably answer reduces everyone's rights and safety. When you asked me the question openly, I gave an open answer, which you agreed with. Then someone asked me the same question again, with a lot of strings attached to make sure I had to answer something different. Wasn't there something like that in Shakespeare's play Othello?
I don't believe you've shown how those supposed consequences would indeed follow from some particular defintion of "womanhood" or "manhood."Why one thing at a time? If you agree to that definition then you also have to agree to its consequences, they come together in one package and not "one at a time."
I don't believe you've shown how those supposed consequences would indeed follow from some particular defintion of "womanhood" or "manhood."
At a very, very minimum, there's going to be some different in tailoring simply because we're shaped differently. Boobs and hips make a notable difference in how the clothing is shaped.Total elimination of different fashions for men vs. women (not to mention youths vs. olds, urban vs. rural, white collar vs. blue collar, goths vs. drama kids etc.) strikes me as an unrealistic goal. Given the chance, people will dress to signal things about themselves and the groups with which they identify.
Then you probably shouldn't assume—based solely on my sex—that I've never shaved my armpits and legs.![]()
While I agree with you about LondonJohn's tendency to dismiss female concerns, I'd like to point out that the highlighted is debatable and may not be correct beyond a surface level. Yes, they have a male body. But they may not be treated as "one of the boys" growing up. I'm not positive, but I suspect that a male trans person may feel a bit isolated from thier peer groups growing up. Consequently, I'm not sure they experience the way society treats males in the same way cis-males do.
It would be an interesting question for Boudicca, were she still participating in the thread, assuming she was comfortable talking about it.
The other thing to point out: This statement seems to presume that the bulk of identity or personality results from environmental conditions and experiences. And that may be correct. But it also may be correct that a significant portion may be innate. There is a field called "behavioral genetics" for a reason.
If you consider the experience portion to represent everything significant in gender, you can make a case for lack of commonality between cis and trans women. But if you consider the genetic contribution significant, you can also make the case for significant overlap that is common between cis and trans women but not cis and trans men.
So how do you classify someone who has (in terms of behavior/gender, not sex) biological commonality with women but, due to sex, an environmental component closer to that of men? Could you truly say they are either?
This is just the weirdest ****.
Of course A gay man wouldn't be down with a trans man. This is a contentious thing too? Wtf, guys?
HOMOSEXUAL
This might be considered a more medical term used to describe someone who has a romantic and/or sexual orientation towards someone of the same gender.
GENDER
Often expressed in terms of masculinity and femininity, gender is largely culturally determined and is assumed from the sex assigned at birth.
I'm referring to the possibility of a biological component to gender (and by extension, being trans) that is separate from sex.
If we define sex as the physical body (100% biology), then we define gender a psychological characteristic.
Psychological characteristics, depending on your school of thought, can be a combination of innate and environmental factors.
Emily was speaking of the lived experiences of being a man or woman. She wasn't addressing the possibility of an innate component of that identity.
Consider a biological male, with the innate (biological) characteristics of gender normally linked to female biology, but with the experiences of being male.
Sex is clear: male.
Innate portion of gender: feminine
Experience portion of gender: masculine
So their gender is a combination of female (nature) and male (nurture). What do you call that? It's different from both the typical male and the typical female outcome.