It's about an irreconcilable view of the issue. TERFs would have you believe this is a zero sum scenario, that improvement for trans people unavoidably means a decline for cis-women. I reject this view. In fact, an improvement for trans rights shores up the civil rights of others, including cis-women, leaving everyone better off than before.
It's about an irreconcilable view of the issue. TERFs would have you believe this is a zero sum scenario, that improvement for trans people unavoidably means a decline for cis-women. I reject this view. In fact, an improvement for trans rights shores up the civil rights of others, including cis-women, leaving everyone better off than before.
ETA: The quote above was in response to an argument by Emily's Cat regarding sexual assault statistics and how to classify trans-perpetrators. Upon rereading, the subject and how it relates to my post below is not clear from the text of the quote.It's a real shame the UK has a system where people's official gender recognition is not a reliable reflection of people's identity. Perhaps they should fix this.
You're missing (or handwaving away) the reason those separate awards exist in the first place.
There is no innate difference in acting ability on the basis of sex. But there IS a difference in the number of leading roles available on the basis of sex. There are still many more male leading roles than there are female. And the biggest grossing films are still those that feature a male lead.
Having an award for best actress encourages customers to view more films featuring female characters and also encourages writers and filmmaker to develop female roles to be more representative and less stereotyped.
It's about an irreconcilable view of the issue. TERFs would have you believe this is a zero sum scenario, that improvement for trans people unavoidably means a decline for cis-women. I reject this view. In fact, an improvement for trans rights shores up the civil rights of others, including cis-women, leaving everyone better off than before.
ETA: The quote above was in response to an argument by Emily's Cat regarding sexual assault statistics and how to classify trans-perpetrators. Upon rereading, the subject and how it relates to my post below is not clear from the text of the quote.
I think you (and possibly Emily as well, to an extent) miss the point of data collection and statistics.
Statistics are used to determine association between variables and track trends.
If gender and sex are different, we should not be collecting one or the other, but both. Collecting more data, both about perpetrators and about victims, gives researchers and statisticians more information and allows them to explore trends and relationships with multiple ways of sorting.
There is no one uber-statistic regarding sexual assault to look at. It's valid to develop and look at rates for gender and rates for sex. It's also valid to look at subsets, such as when both align as male, both align as female, non-alignment MF and non-alignment FM.
Exactly! [emoji817]If gender and sex are different, we should not be collecting one or the other, but both.
It is possible that trans women strongly resemble cis women in various patterns of criminality, and that would be fairly useful information to have for those who hope to see the former group treated more like the latter in the criminal justice system.Collecting more data, both about perpetrators and about victims, gives researchers and statisticians more information and allows them to explore trends and relationships with multiple ways of sorting.
I would be inclined to base the categories on the sex of the actor, not the sex or gender identity of the character they are portraying. But I also don't feel particularly strongly about this - pick a schema and stick with it.I actually have mixed feelings about this.
First, what category would you put Jamie Clayton in for her role as Nomi Marks in Sense8? (ETA: I just saw that Jamie Clayton plays Pinhead in the upcoming Hellraiser reboot.)
Or Cate Blanchett in I'm Not There? (Essentially playing Bob Dylan.)
Hillary Swank in Boys Don't Cry?
When you have categories you are going to have edge cases.
In principal I agree with Suburban Turkey that there is no inherent difference in acting ability between the sexes/genders so the categories are, in a sense, not needed.
But I also know that historically, the leads were usually men. I'm not positive that's true any more. At least not to the extent it was. That might depend on genre.
There are a few issues that are kind of (and I don't mean this in a bad way) affirmative action. Things like scholarships or set aside positions for under-represented groups are a good thing. But I think they are meant to be transitory--That is, the goal is to end the under-representation and once that goal is achieved they become anachronistic and should go away.
I'm not saying we are there yet, but at some point, hopefully, the number and quality of leading roles will be equal across the sexes/genders. At that point do we need two categories? Do we need separate categories for trans actors? Are there even enough roles to make a legitimate category?
Both sides see it as a zero sum scenario.
But there is another view which:
- Wants to include trans people.
- Recognizes that including trans people in some circumstances does, in fact negatively affect cis-women.
- Would like to find a way to address 1 while mitigating 2.
- Recognizes that on some issues there is no perfect answer.
There are a whole lot sports fans who see it differently than you. The more they care about winning and losing, the more exciting it is. I know that's true for myself. Are you saying I shouldn't enjoy being a sports fan the way that I currently enjoy them?
And darts would just be an excuse to get to the pub and quaff a few.Without winning and losing, a race is just a bunch of people running laps. And shot put is just people throwing stuff for some reason.
It's about an irreconcilable view of the issue. TERFs would have you believe this is a zero sum scenario, that improvement for trans people unavoidably means a decline for cis-women.
I went nuclear. I took the phone and stripped it of all social media—YouTube, Instagram, Discord, Reddit, Pinterest, Twitter. I even blocked her ability to get to the internet. I deleted all of her contacts and changed her phone number.
I sat next to her while she “attended” school online via Zoom. I deleted YouTube from the smart TVs and locked up the remotes. I took every anime book from her room. I threw away all of her costumes. I banned any friend who was even the slightest bit unsavory.
I involved the police about the porn. I printed out the law and informed her that if anyone sent her porn, I would not hesitate to prosecute.
She hated me like an addict hates the person preventing her drug fix. I held my ground, despite the constant verbal abuse.
After going through seven mental health professionals, I found an out-of-state psychiatrist who was willing to examine the causality for my daughter’s sudden trans identity.
...
After a year and half of utter hell, my daughter is finally returning to her authentic self—a beautiful, artsy, kind and loving daughter.
iTunes says "The item you've requested is not currently available in the U.S. store."Don't know if that can be accessed outside the UK - may have to use a streaming service.
Story of how a parent psychologically battered their trans child into submission shared as a success story:
https://www.dailysignal.com/2021/12/13/what-ive-learned-rescuing-my-daughter-from-her-transgender-fantasy/
No way this is going to backfire in about 10 years.
Story of how a parent psychologically battered their trans child into submission shared as a success story:
https://www.dailysignal.com/2021/12/13/what-ive-learned-rescuing-my-daughter-from-her-transgender-fantasy/
No way this is going to backfire in about 10 years.