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Transwomen are not women - X (XY?)

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I'll back off, but given that lots of people believe this stuff who aren't themselves trans, and don't directly benefit from it... I don't find selfishness to be a very satisfying explanation for even the transwomen themselves. Some, sure. It always reads to me as if one is claiming that the selfish people actually agree on all the facts, understand that society works in the way we think it does, agree with us about all the downsides, and are just bad people who don't care. For myself, I think feminism has been a net negative, but I don't think Rolfe is selfish for wanting the things feminism promised. She sees the world very differently to me. Calling them selfish is both reductive, and a conversation killer... if they are just doing it out of selfishness, then what more is there to understand?


It's more complicated than that. Remember, as you seem to keep forgetting, that I was referring to people who are lobbying to make any attempt to counsel teenagers with the aim of reconciling them to their sexed bodies illegal, and also apparently to make it illegal even to inform them of the serious risks of the medical and surgical treatment they are embarking on.

Why are they doing this? If you take only the former, then maybe, just maybe, they believe all that rubbish about how the kids will kill themselves if they don't get blockers and a mastectomy RIGHT NOW. So we can give them a pass on that if we're feeling kind. But what sort of person is screaming mad furious if a youngster is properly informed about the risks of the treatment? The evidence is clear, and if they're claiming the treatment is risk-free then that itself is evidence of a mindset closed to taking on board any negative evidence. Why? Why would anyone want to deprive children of the information they need to give informed consent?

Because they're desperate to promote transition as the only possible solution once someone thinks they're uncomfortable in their body. They're prepared to shove children on to a path leading to great harm, and to close their minds to all the evidence of this harm, because to do otherwise would conflict with their beliefs. I call that selfish.
 
There are also androphilic transwomen who really do want to be 'one of the girls' to ease their gender dysphoria, ...


I'm not at all sure about that. Everything I have seen shows the ones who desperately want to be "one of the girls" to be the raging AGP men. It's part of the syndrome. One of the things they desperately crave is to be a part of the girl-talk, the women's mysteries, that intangible community of human females that seems to transcend time and space and form itself wherever two or three are gathered together.

The sad(dish) thing is that they can never be part of it. The presence of a male immediately causes the community to collapse into some sort of singularity, and even the ones who might pass at first sight don't fit in andthe same thing happens.

The HSTS transwomen don't seem to have the same urge to be one of the girls. Their interest is men. Some of them are pretty OK, understanding how women feel and being sensitive to women's concerns about men in their spaces. Others seem to hate women. I think this is emblematic of two broad classes of gay men - some get on well with women as friends, but others really despise women, apparently because they don't need us and don't want to know us.

By the way, of course I realise there is an intangible community of human males that forms etc etc. (Just not in the Gents' bathrooms, apparently.) I don't think transmen get on all that well when they try to be a part of that either, but I don't really know.
 
If the issues can be debated neutrally, then it's in terms of clashes of rights. Women's spaces segregated by sex have a value of their own. They can be defended on various grounds, which aren't dependent on identifying the motives or identities of all men wishing to enter those spaces.
This, I think, assumes that both sides have the same conception of rights. Do they? You also have the utilitarian calculation problem. You can't actually quantify these values in a neutral way. It comes down to whose claims we feel sympathetic to, and whose we don't. Who has the more appealing victim story.

I'm sure the trans-activists will have some version of the oppression hierarchy to tell them whose interests to prioritise. Rolfe, you, or I will have a different method. The whole thing comes down to that playground game where you go round the circle saying a rhyme to decide who is IT, but if you are in the know who is going to be IT is determined by where you start. Whose rights claim wins depends on which system for deciding rights claims you use. Which system you choose depends on your ideology. There is no neutral way of deciding it.

The very notion of self-ID creates a loophole which can be exploited by a minority of predators who aren't in any realistic sense 'transwomen' or identified as women, but who will simply claim this as a defense when challenged or arrested.
Sure, but does that mean that the trans-activist claim must be denied, or is that something that potentially we try to address in other ways? There are always downsides that one can point to for reorganising society. It's not like feminists would have accepted that feminism be held back because it would lead to the decline of the family, depress birth rates etc (let's just assume these things are bad for the sake of argument), they too would have argued that if those side effects appear we should mitigate them without stopping women living their best life.

There will soon be as many cases where the 'trans defense' is used as the 'sex games gone wrong' defense has been used in the past 10-15 years to get men out of the consequences of strangling women during sex. In most such cases these are not fully trained BDSM masters who 'identify as Dominants', but ordinary ******* men. The same will happen as ordinary ******* men exploit the gender self-ID loophole. There are certainly already as many cases where convicted sex offenders and murderers have decided to identify as trans to seek cushier prison conditions and possible further grounds for appeal (including at least two men on death row in the US).
I don't doubt it. Look, Thomas Sowell has been arguing since at least the 70s that welfare has led to the collapse of the Black family.... if that is the case, is welfare wrong, or should we try to reengineer it to avoid these bad effects? We are hypocritical about these things. The social changes we like, we say "all the possible problems are things that we can deal with as we go, but it is right that this change go ahead". The social changes we don't like, we say "this change will lead to terrible problems and we should not do it".

There is an old saying attributed to Robert Conquest: "Everyone is conservative about what he knows best", I prefer a slightly different version "Everyone is conservative about what he loves best".

The fact that a subset of men identifying as transwomen are very clearly raging narcissists in the grip of AGP, and that trans widows confirm the ultimate selfishness of late-transitioning men in numerous cases, can be true but not immediately relevant to debates over self-ID and single sex spaces. There are also androphilic transwomen who really do want to be 'one of the girls' to ease their gender dysphoria, and there are post-op transsexuals, with or without AGP or self-awareness of their conditions, who are making more effort to pass.
Agreed.

Women can't distinguish between these groups at a glance, nor should that be an issue: modesty and privacy are values worth upholding over and above eliminating the risks of sexual assault.
I'm not arguing that they can determine this stuff. What I'm saying is that for people who are more sympathetic to trans-women than to women, it doesn't matter. It isn't a reason to deny other people basic rights. If we have 10 people in a room and we know one of them is a murderer, but we don't know which... we don't lock all 10 of them up just to be safe. If this is a problem, we will have to find other ways of mitigating it (this isn't my position, I'm speaking for the other side).

In conversations about the paradox of declining female happiness, I've suggested that feminism has made it harder for women to stay home and have kids and that this has created lots of unhappiness. I'm told that those downsides shouldn't stop other women from pursuing their dreams. Now, I'm not necessarily saying these different downsides are equivalent, but equally, I don't get the sense that for social changes we like, a bunch of people having to eat a big downside is a reason not to do it. From where I'm sitting, the differentiating factor in people's thinking is who is eating the downside. Social progress is a lot more palatable when you don't think the downside is going to be eaten by you, or people you identify with.... and when you are on the receiving end of the upside.
 
If we have 10 people in a room and we know one of them is a murderer, but we don't know which... we don't lock all 10 of them up just to be safe.

But this skids down a misleading slippery slope. The logic of single sex spaces is to exclude all members of the opposite sex, not to jail them for entering single sex spaces because they turn out to be registered sex offenders and thus somehow violated their parole.

This principle has been customary worldwide, in diverse societies, for a very long time: changing it to a unisex model is discriminatory at the very least on age grounds, even if one assumed, which is unlikely, that children and teenagers would be genuinely comfortable with overturning this norm.

This, I think, assumes that both sides have the same conception of rights. Do they?

Evidently not, since the trans activists and their allies don't even acknowledge the clash of rights as they claim that 'transwomen are women', which sidesteps the conflict entirely.

You also have the utilitarian calculation problem. You can't actually quantify these values in a neutral way. It comes down to whose claims we feel sympathetic to, and whose we don't. Who has the more appealing victim story.

Of course one can quantify these values: for starters, trans people are still a clear minority in western societies, whereas women make up 51% of the population. The topic is polled repeatedly but the results tend to be ignored by politicians. The disconnect between public opinion and the censorship of voices raising questions about these issues is considerable.

I'm sure the trans-activists will have some version of the oppression hierarchy to tell them whose interests to prioritise. Rolfe, you, or I will have a different method. The whole thing comes down to that playground game where you go round the circle saying a rhyme to decide who is IT, but if you are in the know who is going to be IT is determined by where you start. Whose rights claim wins depends on which system for deciding rights claims you use. Which system you choose depends on your ideology. There is no neutral way of deciding it.

This doesn't even begin to engage with the actual realities of the era. Public opinion is currently against self-ID and associated changes, as measured by numerous polls. There is a clear split in the reporting or lack thereof between right and left leaning media in the US and UK on trans issues. The rightwing press in the UK reports critically and skeptically, the left leaning press passes over many incidents in silence. Politicians in organised parties are shaking out into pro and con positions. The Tories in the UK seemed to think this was an easy win, like gay marriage, and received a shock when they realised it wasn't; all the many prime ministers we've had since July have made statements opposing self-ID.

The centre-left (Democrats in the US, Labour + LibDems + Greens in the UK) seems hellbent on overriding concerns from within their own ranks, and from among their own voters, with the result that many who identified with the left or as liberals on a lifelong basis are questioning this, or finding they don't mind siding with the right on this issue (and usually this issue only). The same has happened in Scotland with the SNP, although this week's vote shows more opposition than some might have expected (33 votes against vs 88 for self-ID). Political tribalism is not as dominant in the UK as it is in the US, one reason we're now known as 'TERF Island'.

Gender identity has become a political issue.

Sure, but does that mean that the trans-activist claim must be denied, or is that something that potentially we try to address in other ways?

Self-ID is already law in some countries (Ireland in the EU for example) and in some US states. It may not become law in some other countries, despite the best efforts of trans activisists. So the claim is already being denied.

This is only one part of a political conflict over trans issues, which we're seeing playing out in different countries. Sweden, Finland, and the UK have come out against rapid gender affirmation and the prescription of puberty blockers or hormones to gender dysphoric children. The same has just happened in the US state of Florida.

There are always downsides that one can point to for reorganising society. It's not like feminists would have accepted that feminism be held back because it would lead to the decline of the family, depress birth rates etc (let's just assume these things are bad for the sake of argument), they too would have argued that if those side effects appear we should mitigate them without stopping women living their best life.

That's a hilariously ignorant caricature of the changes to the position of women in western societies over the past 100 years. What is 'feminism' here? I think you'll find that women's rights were extended long before second-wave feminism - the right to vote mostly coming after 1918 in response to women's participation in WWI on the home front, something with many right wing parties successfully exploited (the British Tories hoovered up a disproportionate share of the 'women's vote' in the 1920s).

Women's participation in the workforce was already a reality 150 years ago - it's called working in agriculture or working in textiles - and there were feminised professions, including nursing, teaching and secretarial work, 120 years ago. Women were being admitted to universities all over the western world 100+ years ago, and there were women policemen in Germany before WWI (the first was Jewish, incidentally). I sometimes have to remind middle-class students that working in factories was the norm for working-class women in the Victorian era, and that common-law marriages were also widespread - not everyone got married back then.

The 'decline of the family' and depressed birth rates are the products of other secular changes, including the sexual revolution of the 1960s.

I don't doubt it. Look, Thomas Sowell has been arguing since at least the 70s that welfare has led to the collapse of the Black family.... if that is the case, is welfare wrong, or should we try to reengineer it to avoid these bad effects? We are hypocritical about these things. The social changes we like, we say "all the possible problems are things that we can deal with as we go, but it is right that this change go ahead". The social changes we don't like, we say "this change will lead to terrible problems and we should not do it".

Thomas Sowell is wrong: African American families were already under strain by 1960, before the Great Society reforms or the Moynihan report, while welfare states elsewhere in the western world did not generate quite the same level of single parent families as seen among African-Americans by the end of the 20th Century. Besides, while African-Americans remain the group in US society most likely to be below the poverty line, this has fallen in the 21st Century, with the majority being in work, even slowly growing a middle class.

Moreover, welfare provision has undergone a dramatic revolution in neoliberal English-speaking societies: it is more often workfare, time-limited, stingier, and less capable of supporting individuals much less families than was once the case. The reforms and cuts have been justified on various grounds, including for sure some attempts to stem the tide of secular change to family structures, rates of marriage and single-parent families.

The greatest beneficiaries of the 'decline of the family' have been men, who find it easier to walk away from unwanted pregnancies and act the cad, avoiding the shotgun weddings they might have been forced into in earlier eras (but not always: working class women were always vulnerable to abandonment in such situations). Feminism has very little to do with this, male entitlement has everything to do with this.

There is an old saying attributed to Robert Conquest: "Everyone is conservative about what he knows best", I prefer a slightly different version "Everyone is conservative about what he loves best".

This makes no sense.

In conversations about the paradox of declining female happiness, I've suggested that feminism has made it harder for women to stay home and have kids and that this has created lots of unhappiness. I'm told that those downsides shouldn't stop other women from pursuing their dreams. Now, I'm not necessarily saying these different downsides are equivalent, but equally, I don't get the sense that for social changes we like, a bunch of people having to eat a big downside is a reason not to do it. From where I'm sitting, the differentiating factor in people's thinking is who is eating the downside. Social progress is a lot more palatable when you don't think the downside is going to be eaten by you, or people you identify with.... and when you are on the receiving end of the upside.

Both you and your interlocutors are evidently extremely ignorant of the actual history of men, women, employment patterns and family patterns in western societies (and make sure not to be so narcissistically USAian, mkay?).

But beyond this, you also seem ignorant of what feminism has been campaigning for and the concerns that arose in the second wave, which go beyond family/career issues that were mostly settled before the 1970s, and instead focused on some unpalatable realities of male violence and entitlement, which are clearly still with us today. Campaigning for rape crisis centres and domestic violence shelters, for marital rape to be criminalised and not excused on some archaic notion of women as property, against sexual harrassment at work, just some examples of issues which feminists have fought over.

I presume you've heard of the concept of 'coercive control' in domestic violence? The term was coined by a male academic IIRC but provided a framework for women's campaigning and assistance to victims of domestic abuse, which falls disproportionately, overwhelmingly on women. Without this discussion of coercive control and the tactics of domestic abusers, the term 'gaslighting' wouldn't have caught on as quickly as it did in the past 10 years. Which is unfortunate for trans activists, as the 'transwomen are women' mantra strikes many as blatant gaslighting.
 
Another point came up this morning as regards downsides of transitioning. A study in Canada showed that only 12% of people would consider dating a trans individual (hypothetically). Lesbians tended to be willing to date transmen, but practically nobody wanted to date a transwoman.

Transgender exclusion from the world of dating: Patterns of acceptance and rejection of hypothetical trans dating partners as a function of sexual and gender identity

Now maybe things would go down a little differently in a real situation, but I'm not even sure that would be to the advantage of the trans population. Trans people are being affirmed that they will be desirable, that they can function in the world of sexual negotiation as if they were members of the sex they're trying to be, and this is simply not true. Some of them may find loving partners, but they're severely limiting their chances by transitioning.

Again, some people may be so mentally ill that transition is the only (or if not the only, the best) solution, but in general, is it not better to help people deal with their mental issues and come to terms with the body they have rather than transitioning?
 
Age-appropriate sex education set to be enforced by Sunak administration
https://web.archive.org/web/2022102...-education-set-enforced-sunak-administration/

The Prime Minister wants to strengthen guidance for teachers on relationships and sex education (RSE) to make sure children are only taught lessons that are age-appropriate.

It comes amid concerns that some schools are contracting sex education out to third-party companies which are exposing youngsters to explicit content and contentious ideas about gender.

Parents would also be given greater rights to request sight of the materials, even if they are provided by a commercial organisation, under the plans.

Current Government guidance on relationships and sex education makes clear that parents should have visibility of what is being taught to their children, such as the books used in lessons.

and

Mr Sunak also intends to look to review the Equality Act to make it clear that sex means biological sex rather than gender.

This would mean that biological males cannot compete in women’s sport and other single-sex facilities such as changing rooms and women’s refuges will be protected.

It would also mean clarifying that self-identification for transgender people does not have legal force, meaning transgender women have no legal right to access women-only facilities.

A Downing Street source said that protecting women and girls is a priority for Mr Sunak’s administration.

This is where we've landed - in my opinion, the Tories have been an utter disaster for the UK over the past 13 years, and I've no intention of voting for them, ever. Most of their attempts at stoking culture wars in recent years (before and during the pandemic) over legacies of empire and other Rees-Moggian nonsense have been ludicrous and offensive. But a stopped clock can be right twice a day. On these issues, the Tories have the benefit of articulating the simpler-to-understand position, although several of their erstwhile frontbenchers (Penny Mordaunt IIRC) have repeated the TWAW mantra in the past.

One pro-trans activist lawyer, Jo Maugham, overinterpreted the second quote on Twitter and advised trans people to consider emigrating from England (to Scotland, was implied, after this week's vote on the GRA in Holyrood).
 
Another point came up this morning as regards downsides of transitioning. A study in Canada showed that only 12% of people would consider dating a trans individual (hypothetically). Lesbians tended to be willing to date transmen, but practically nobody wanted to date a transwoman.

Transgender exclusion from the world of dating: Patterns of acceptance and rejection of hypothetical trans dating partners as a function of sexual and gender identity

Now maybe things would go down a little differently in a real situation, but I'm not even sure that would be to the advantage of the trans population. Trans people are being affirmed that they will be desirable, that they can function in the world of sexual negotiation as if they were members of the sex they're trying to be, and this is simply not true. Some of them may find loving partners, but they're severely limiting their chances by transitioning.

Again, some people may be so mentally ill that transition is the only (or if not the only, the best) solution, but in general, is it not better to help people deal with their mental issues and come to terms with the body they have rather than transitioning?
This is the problem with all visions of a better world sold by social constructivists. Men and women have natures that are rooted in biology. All promises that depend on this being false are will-o'-the-wisps.
 
Age-appropriate sex education set to be enforced by Sunak administration
https://web.archive.org/web/2022102...-education-set-enforced-sunak-administration/



and



This is where we've landed - in my opinion, the Tories have been an utter disaster for the UK over the past 13 years, and I've no intention of voting for them, ever. Most of their attempts at stoking culture wars in recent years (before and during the pandemic) over legacies of empire and other Rees-Moggian nonsense have been ludicrous and offensive. But a stopped clock can be right twice a day. On these issues, the Tories have the benefit of articulating the simpler-to-understand position, although several of their erstwhile frontbenchers (Penny Mordaunt IIRC) have repeated the TWAW mantra in the past.

One pro-trans activist lawyer, Jo Maugham, overinterpreted the second quote on Twitter and advised trans people to consider emigrating from England (to Scotland, was implied, after this week's vote on the GRA in Holyrood).


Loving the fact that you cannot (or will not?) see that transgender animus is in fact the "natural" right-wing reactionary point of view. And that therefore it's actually you - who, on the basis of what you've written, appears to hate everything that the right wing stands for - who seemingly cannot come to terms with the cognitive dissonance that you hold a right-wing reactionary viewpoint on transgender identity issues (while the prevailing progressive left-wing view is very much in favour of transgender rights & protections).

I suppose the Daily Mail (and most of its readership) and the Catholic Church are "stopped clocks that tell the time correctly twice a day" when it comes to transgender animus too, eh? I thought the cherry-picking season started in around June, but it seems to have come early round these parts....
 
One pro-trans activist lawyer, Jo Maugham, overinterpreted the second quote on Twitter and advised trans people to consider emigrating from England (to Scotland, was implied, after this week's vote on the GRA in Holyrood).
Rolfe will be thrilled to hear this. [emoji14]
 
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The very notion of self-ID creates a loophole which can be exploited by a minority of predators who aren't in any realistic sense 'transwomen' or identified as women, but who will simply claim this as a defense when challenged or arrested.

Sure, but does that mean that the trans-activist claim must be denied, or is that something that potentially we try to address in other ways?

I came into this thread with exactly shuttlt's question. I had concerns about the loophole, and I had hopes that someone would be able to offer a solution even if I couldnt' see one. I naively assumed that trans-inclusionism was a good idea, and that if we could figure out a way to close this loophole humanely, it would basically be a done deal.

I know better now. Now I know that yes, it does mean the trans-activist claim must be denied. It must be denied, and for these reasons: Not only do they have no reasonable ideas for how to address it, they also refuse to see a problem that needs addressing, and in fact the loophole is the point.

It's not a small gap they're just as interested as we are in closing off. It's a small tear in the fabric of society that they are working to rip wider and wider until the whole thing is in tatters.
 
I'm sure the trans-activists will have some version of the oppression hierarchy to tell them whose interests to prioritise. Rolfe, you, or I will have a different method. The whole thing comes down to that playground game where you go round the circle saying a rhyme to decide who is IT, but if you are in the know who is going to be IT is determined by where you start. Whose rights claim wins depends on which system for deciding rights claims you use. Which system you choose depends on your ideology. There is no neutral way of deciding it.
Didn't Rawls come up with the neutral way? Adopt a method in which no one knows with whom the rhyme will start when positions are chosen.
 
Loving the fact that you cannot (or will not?) see that transgender animus is in fact the "natural" right-wing reactionary point of view. And that therefore it's actually you - who, on the basis of what you've written, appears to hate everything that the right wing stands for - who seemingly cannot come to terms with the cognitive dissonance that you hold a right-wing reactionary viewpoint on transgender identity issues (while the prevailing progressive left-wing view is very much in favour of transgender rights & protections).
It's only cognitive dissonance if you believe that the other side can never have anything good or correct to say on any issue.
 
If you don't know who the rhyme will start with, then you can just designate whoever the rhyme ends up starting with, and skip the rhyme.
Sure, as long as just designating someone is a neutral process. I'm just following along with the details of shut's analogy.
 
But this skids down a misleading slippery slope. The logic of single sex spaces is to exclude all members of the opposite sex, not to jail them for entering single sex spaces because they turn out to be registered sex offenders and thus somehow violated their parole.
It's not a slippery slope. The question is whether we should deny the rights of one group because of the misbehaviour of another group if the two groups can't be separated. Or should we deny an individual in a group the opportunity to exercise their rights, just because it is a detriment to the group? We believe in universal principles here, don't we? This argument has been made to me in defence of feminism before now.

This principle has been customary worldwide, in diverse societies, for a very long time: changing it to a unisex model is discriminatory at the very least on age grounds, even if one assumed, which is unlikely, that children and teenagers would be genuinely comfortable with overturning this norm.
I agree with these old traditions. I doubt the reasoning of traditional societies in support of this is really that similar to anything most people on the forum would buy in to. I do not think, for example, things being discriminatory is very high in the traditionalist list of reasons. Again, you are making the same argument that the trans-activists make. Both you and they base your arguments on discrimination. That then depends on what ever groups needs your ideology privileges over others. A gender critical feminist ideology will put women at the top, a trans-right ideology will put trans women at the top. Claiming it is "discriminatory" gets you nowhere since the claim always comes from within, and only makes sense from within, an ideology.

Evidently not, since the trans activists and their allies don't even acknowledge the clash of rights as they claim that 'transwomen are women', which sidesteps the conflict entirely.
Kind of, it moves it to a rights question between "women". Their ideology is much more sympathetic to the rights claims of trans-women than natural women. Gender critical feminism is of course far more sympathetic to rights claims from females than from males. Throw a different ideology in there, and you'll get a whole different set of claims about who is being discriminated against. There is no neutral, rational way of deciding this within the frame of the discussion. You just have both groups making functionally the same claims to being discriminated against, and the one we back depends on our ideology.

Of course one can quantify these values: for starters, trans people are still a clear minority in western societies, whereas women make up 51% of the population. The topic is polled repeatedly but the results tend to be ignored by politicians. The disconnect between public opinion and the censorship of voices raising questions about these issues is considerable.
I didn't say you couldn't find out whose position has more political support, or indeed more popular support. That is easy. I thought people were claiming that one or other rights claim was correct, and the other was wrong. Sure, one of them will win politically... that may or may not be the one that has the most public support. Typically if the academy and the media disagree with the public, the public will be overruled and persuaded towards the right opinions. This is the way social progress has been achieved.

This doesn't even begin to engage with the actual realities of the era. Public opinion is currently against self-ID and associated changes, as measured by numerous polls. There is a clear split in the reporting or lack thereof between right and left leaning media in the US and UK on trans issues. The rightwing press in the UK reports critically and skeptically, the left leaning press passes over many incidents in silence. Politicians in organised parties are shaking out into pro and con positions. The Tories in the UK seemed to think this was an easy win, like gay marriage, and received a shock when they realised it wasn't; all the many prime ministers we've had since July have made statements opposing self-ID.
Sure, I know this. They haven't held any previous social lines in the sand, so I have no confidence that they will hold this one, or are even particularly serious about holding it. Talk is cheap. In any case, this is just talking about what is popular, not who is right. If you are telling me that who is right isn't how it will be decided, then I am with you there.

The centre-left (Democrats in the US, Labour + LibDems + Greens in the UK) seems hellbent on overriding concerns from within their own ranks, and from among their own voters, with the result that many who identified with the left or as liberals on a lifelong basis are questioning this, or finding they don't mind siding with the right on this issue (and usually this issue only). The same has happened in Scotland with the SNP, although this week's vote shows more opposition than some might have expected (33 votes against vs 88 for self-ID). Political tribalism is not as dominant in the UK as it is in the US, one reason we're now known as 'TERF Island'.
Sure, they are social constructivists who broadly believe in progressivism.

Gender identity has become a political issue.
It's kind of like Brexit. It may have become a political issue. It may genuinely divide the public. There may be politicians on both sides, but the politics of politicians and the politics of the country are not at all the same thing. In universities, and HR departments, and teacher training colleges etc... this battle was won long ago. Generally the UK public has been strongly in favour of reducing immigration since WW2, while MPs have been in favour.... sure it has become a political issue every once in a while, but it simply hasn't mattered.

Think of the kind of political action that has been taken to push progressive causes in HR departments, in schools, in law etc over the years. How many MPs are actually prepared to do that in favour of holding back the ideology of the trans activists? The best I think you are going to see is some wet little token nothing that will be easily reversed by Labour. Labour has entire academic disciplines generating the theory and ideology and activists their support of the trans-activists sits on. Is there a similar institutional foundation for your side? It seems very one sided to me.

Self-ID is already law in some countries (Ireland in the EU for example) and in some US states. It may not become law in some other countries, despite the best efforts of trans activisists. So the claim is already being denied.
Sure, but in the meantime trans-activist friendly ideology is being taught in schools.

Progress doesn't move forward by persuading people.

This is only one part of a political conflict over trans issues, which we're seeing playing out in different countries. Sweden, Finland, and the UK have come out against rapid gender affirmation and the prescription of puberty blockers or hormones to gender dysphoric children. The same has just happened in the US state of Florida.
Sure, there is no question it is a small victory and I am as pleased about it as anybody.

That's a hilariously ignorant caricature of the changes to the position of women in western societies over the past 100 years. What is 'feminism' here? I think you'll find that women's rights were extended long before second-wave feminism - the right to vote mostly coming after 1918 in response to women's participation in WWI on the home front, something with many right wing parties successfully exploited (the British Tories hoovered up a disproportionate share of the 'women's vote' in the 1920s).
Oh, well.. we could play this game too with the trans activists and find there isn't really a trans-activist movement per se, and this infinite variety that means no general statements can be made. I'm well aware of what you say here in terms of history. I stand by my statement.

Women's participation in the workforce was already a reality 150 years ago - it's called working in agriculture or working in textiles - and there were feminised professions, including nursing, teaching and secretarial work, 120 years ago. Women were being admitted to universities all over the western world 100+ years ago, and there were women policemen in Germany before WWI (the first was Jewish, incidentally). I sometimes have to remind middle-class students that working in factories was the norm for working-class women in the Victorian era, and that common-law marriages were also widespread - not everyone got married back then.
Again, I am aware of this.

The 'decline of the family' and depressed birth rates are the products of other secular changes, including the sexual revolution of the 1960s.
The sexual revolution has nothing to do with feminism? We can't really go deeply into that stuff without starting a new thread, which I don't intend to do. It's not important though, since the argument is not whether feminism is good or bad on balance, but that the feminists would hardly have been any more persuaded that they should give up the battle for their rights because of likely downsides that those rights may cause than the trans-activists would.

Thomas Sowell is wrong: African American families were already under strain by 1960, before the Great Society reforms or the Moynihan report, while welfare states elsewhere in the western world did not generate quite the same level of single parent families as seen among African-Americans by the end of the 20th Century. Besides, while African-Americans remain the group in US society most likely to be below the poverty line, this has fallen in the 21st Century, with the majority being in work, even slowly growing a middle class.
Again, I'm not about to start a thread on this. What I'm saying is that no activist I can think of has ever taken these kinds of implementation difficulties as a reason to abandon a rights claim. The trans activists are the opposite of unique on this. Of course they wave away or deny such difficulties. All progressive movements wave away and deny such difficulties. Some day a future you will point back to prior increases in sexual violence and all sorts of other changes that were going on that mean it's wrong that trans-rights led to any such downside. One can always say that, and the world is always too complicated to prove it for certain.

Moreover, welfare provision has undergone a dramatic revolution in neoliberal English-speaking societies: it is more often workfare, time-limited, stingier, and less capable of supporting individuals much less families than was once the case. The reforms and cuts have been justified on various grounds, including for sure some attempts to stem the tide of secular change to family structures, rates of marriage and single-parent families.
Sure, but that is from within the framework of trying to keep the original assumptions that justified this stuff in the first place. We are well off topic, so I will not say more.

The greatest beneficiaries of the 'decline of the family' have been men, who find it easier to walk away from unwanted pregnancies and act the cad, avoiding the shotgun weddings they might have been forced into in earlier eras (but not always: working class women were always vulnerable to abandonment in such situations). Feminism has very little to do with this, male entitlement has everything to do with this.
No, the greatest beneficiaries has most certainly has not been men. Again, this is a big rabbit hole and certainly off topic.

This makes no sense.
It means that people are keen on tearing things down and imagining they can be rebuilt better until they get to something that they care about. Gender Critical Feminists care about their idea of "woman" and want to conserve it. They want the revolution of deconstruction that they supported when it tore down things that they didn't care about to stop when it gets to something they care about.

Both you and your interlocutors are evidently extremely ignorant of the actual history of men, women, employment patterns and family patterns in western societies (and make sure not to be so narcissistically USAian, mkay?).
I'm not American. Maybe wind in your xenophobia. I'm also interested in social history and, while I am not as well read as I would like to be, you have yet to tell me anything I don't already know.

But beyond this, you also seem ignorant of what feminism has been campaigning for and the concerns that arose in the second wave, which go beyond family/career issues that were mostly settled before the 1970s, and instead focused on some unpalatable realities of male violence and entitlement, which are clearly still with us today. Campaigning for rape crisis centres and domestic violence shelters, for marital rape to be criminalised and not excused on some archaic notion of women as property, against sexual harrassment at work, just some examples of issues which feminists have fought over.
I'm pretty well aware of what feminism is about. Are you really going to use this cheap debate tactic where when I focus on one aspect of something in an example, you act as if I'm completely aware of every other aspect. I wasn't writing an encyclopaedia entry on feminism.

I presume you've heard of the concept of 'coercive control' in domestic violence? The term was coined by a male academic IIRC but provided a framework for women's campaigning and assistance to victims of domestic abuse, which falls disproportionately, overwhelmingly on women. Without this discussion of coercive control and the tactics of domestic abusers, the term 'gaslighting' wouldn't have caught on as quickly as it did in the past 10 years. Which is unfortunate for trans activists, as the 'transwomen are women' mantra strikes many as blatant gaslighting.
Saying trans-women are women isn't an example of gaslighting, any more than quoting the social studies definition of racism is gaslighting. It might become so if people pretend that the definition hasn't changed, or that the previous definition has somehow been rendered obsolete, which I agree goes on. I don't know what any of this has to do with what I said though.
 
Sure, as long as just designating someone is a neutral process. I'm just following along with the details of shut's analogy.
Exactly, somebody must choose. I think to some degree it ends up functioning as a way of avoiding responsibility for the final choice, even though they are in fact choosing just the same.
 
Didn't Rawls come up with the neutral way? Adopt a method in which no one knows with whom the rhyme will start when positions are chosen.
I don't know, but even then... somebody has to assert some notion of what is neutral and decide that it is neutral. This is a bit of an artificial case, but the more real world you get, the more you are just smuggling your own ideological notion of fairness into it so you are just coming back to the same problem. There is a video I like of a Pinker talk being picked apart on this point. If we regard randomly choosing where to start as neutral, then that is only because both of our ideologies agree on the point. The difficulty arises when ideologies disagree, at that point there is no neutral.
 
Loving the fact that you cannot (or will not?) see that transgender animus is in fact the "natural" right-wing reactionary point of view. And that therefore it's actually you - who, on the basis of what you've written, appears to hate everything that the right wing stands for - who seemingly cannot come to terms with the cognitive dissonance that you hold a right-wing reactionary viewpoint on transgender identity issues (while the prevailing progressive left-wing view is very much in favour of transgender rights & protections).

You seem to be assigning anyone who has an opinion on transgenderism (or anything, for that matter) to a "side" that they must belong to, and then based on those assumptions, saying that they have cognitive dissonance if they don't adhere to that "side" 100%.

I always thought that an individual could logically come to their own conclusions on certain matters by a consideration of the facts and their impact on society, but apparently I need to side with a "tribe" and pledge loyalty.

I also take issue with your assumption that "the prevailing progressive left-wing view is very much in favour of transgender rights & protections." I think it's demonstrably untrue, and based more on your own view of how things should be categorized. News and polls like to show everything in black and white, while reality is rarely so tidy.
 
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