Rolfe
Adult human female
That graph doesn't have an x-axis. It's made-up nonsense.
Utterly wrong. One cannot change sex or develop into another sex.
I am asserting that in a career spanning over forty years I never found an animal I couldn't tell which sex it was. Easily and almost instantly.
I'm asserting that telling the exact age of the animal is impossible.
Gender is one of three things. (1) A "polite" synonym for sex. Which we don't really need in this thread. Or (2) a grammatical term describing how nouns function within sentences. Or (3) a description of something that really boils down to "personality".
I assume you mean that it's easier for the physician attending a birth to remember the date than it is for them to check whether the newborn child has a wang or not.Putting aside for the moment that date of birth is a lot more easily determined than sex
let a lone gender id
That graph doesn't have an x-axis. It's made-up nonsense.

But the foregoing emphasizes that anyone can be more masculine on some traits, on some axes of that multi-dimensional gender spectrum, while being more feminine on other traits. For example, a person, of either sex, who is very agreeable and 6 ft. 1 in. tall (185. cm) is therefore hyper-feminine AND hyper-masculine, although on entirely different axes. So a great deal of justification to argue that gender is in fact a spectrum, but it’s a seriously problematic misperception to suggest that it’s only one-dimensional. Quite an illuminating article - Gender Similarities and Differences - by Janet Hyde on that perspective:
Moreover, this difference or distance is along a dimension in multivariate space that is a linear combination of the original variables, but this dimension is uninterpretable. What does it mean to say that there are large differences in personality, lumping together distinct aspects such as emotional stability, dominance, and vigilance? Certainly contemporary personality theorists do not argue that there is a single dimension to personality.
A great many sources and credible researchers - Malone & Hyde in particular - endorse the view that gender is more or less synonymous with personalities and personality types. However, even limiting gender to what are called The Big Five personality traits means at least 5 dimensions to gender. But one might reasonably argue that any trait that shows some differences - on average - between males and females - like heights for example - also constitutes another entirely different dimension, another axis in that multi-dimensional gender spectrum.
Of course it has an x-axis. You're just not paying attention, or you refuse to look at the evidence.
...
Of course it has an x-axis. You're just not paying attention, or you refuse to look at the evidence.
For example, look at this graph for "agreeableness":
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/vbimghost.php?do=displayimg&imgid=35886http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/imagehosting/thum_771276328fbd909088.jpg
As I - and others have argued - "agreeableness" is just one axis on a "multi-dimensional gender spectrum":
https://humanuseofhumanbeings.substack.com/i/64264079/rationalized-gender
The Fourth Wave Now article has mashed a whole bunch of those axes into one, but the principle is still the same.
You are missing my point. Here is my point:
Birth ID
Do you think such an article would be written about people born with 11 toes as opposed to 10?
Then why is number of appendages equivalent to sex?
If gender has a biological basis, that throws a monkey wrench into the justification for self ID.
You use this expression regularly. Please don't, it just makes you sound self-important, verging on pompous.
It's arbitrary and about as scientific as you'd expect. "Agreeableness." God give me strength.
There are more carefully-constructed charts like that where "mashing" is not a feature and they have some interesting features, but that pink-and-blue symmetry is a fantasy.
And if it's true? As seems the case ...
No, self-ID is intended tomato things easier for people, kind of like mail-in voting.
Do you believe there is no biological basis for gender?
That's not the point. You said it was more difficult to tell an animal's SEX than the date it was born.
This is such complete and utter nonsense that I hardly know how to process it.
Putting aside for the moment that date of birth is a lot more easily determined than sex let a lone gender id...I agree that there can be potential downsides. My position is that we should be careful to support blanket discrimination against a group based on fear of those downsides. <... snip pointless analogy ...>
Only if someone thinks that Caster Semenya was once female and "developed" into a male, which would be quite sad and indicative of a complete lack of understanding.
That's not the point. You said it was more difficult to tell an animal's SEX than the date it was born.
This is such complete and utter nonsense that I hardly know how to process it.