porch
Muse
- Joined
- May 16, 2006
- Messages
- 816
This whole thing is interesting from a sociological perspective. We are living through a radical change in culture. Old people are either dying or getting over "it" while we are still collectively deciding what it is. I don't remember if it was in an early iteration of this thread, or its own separate thread, but I remember talk of "peak trans". We are still defining the boundaries, but I felt a sea change when the CBC published this article a few days ago:
https://www.cbc.ca/news/opinion/opinion-trans-rights-radical-activism-1.6220106
The headline, for now, is "Trans rights? Yes. Toxic, in-your-face activism? No". Then there was an article in The Atlantic from today: https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2021/10/pregnant-women-people-feminism-language/620468/
This one is by a woman who explains why she is down with "pregnant people" sometimes, but thinks that there are times when "pregnant women" is more appropriate. And other interesting points about gender identity and health. My point is that we have here a couple liberalish, mainstream, sometimes leftish outlets that are gently pushing back against the farthest reaches of trans activism. I am curious as to how it is all going to play out.
https://www.cbc.ca/news/opinion/opinion-trans-rights-radical-activism-1.6220106
The headline, for now, is "Trans rights? Yes. Toxic, in-your-face activism? No". Then there was an article in The Atlantic from today: https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2021/10/pregnant-women-people-feminism-language/620468/
This one is by a woman who explains why she is down with "pregnant people" sometimes, but thinks that there are times when "pregnant women" is more appropriate. And other interesting points about gender identity and health. My point is that we have here a couple liberalish, mainstream, sometimes leftish outlets that are gently pushing back against the farthest reaches of trans activism. I am curious as to how it is all going to play out.