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Cont: Transwomen are not women - part XI

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That obviously doesn’t count. Because……reasons…

For the very good reason that you, nor I, have any idea what happened. We may even find out in the nearish future if there's a trial, but don't let stop you from jumping to conclusions.
 
For the very good reason that you, nor I, have any idea what happened.
We know that Merager was nude and bepenised on the women's floor of the spa, and you seem to be saying female patrons need to accept this state of affairs on account of civil rights laws which (rightly) protect gender identity.
 
We know that Merager was nude and bepenised on the women's floor of the spa, and you seem to be saying female patrons need to accept this state of affairs on account of civil rights laws which (rightly) protect gender identity.

You think Merager was arrested simply for being nude?
 
You think Merager was arrested simply for being nude?

You are avoiding his question. Do you think females need to accept the presence of nude biological males with male genitalia in nominally sex-segregated spaces? It's a very simple question. Why can't you answer it?
 
You are avoiding his question. Do you think females need to accept the presence of nude biological males with male genitalia in nominally sex-segregated spaces? It's a very simple question. Why can't you answer it?

I thought I had.

Generally speaking I think the California law is fine. Whether or not to allow nudity in these spaces is entirely the prerogative of the business. Requiring patrons to wear towels or shorts in a spa is not discriminatory and a more reasonable rule than trans exclusion.

People going into spaces where nudity is allowed should not be upset when they see nudity. A Korean spa isn't for everyone and sensibilities vary.
 
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I guess we'll have to wait for LondonJohn to clarify who he wasn't talking about.

It's rather essential for believers in gender identity ideology to frame disagreement with gender identity ideology and social policies based on this ideology as 'anti-trans'. If they didn't do this, they would have to produce an argument from scratch explaining the scientific support for and benefits of gender identity ideology, which of course they cannot do.
 
You are avoiding his question. Do you think females need to accept the presence of nude biological males with male genitalia in nominally sex-segregated spaces? It's a very simple question. Why can't you answer it?

I thought I had.

Generally speaking I think the California law is fine. Whether or not to allow nudity in these spaces is entirely the prerogative of the business. Requiring patrons to wear towels or shorts in a spa is not discriminatory and a more reasonable rule than trans exclusion.

People going into spaces where nudity is allowed should not be upset when they see nudity. A Korean spa isn't for everyone and sensibilities vary.

I don't think TG believes spaces should be segregated on a biological sex basis at all, so I'm not sure how they can answer your question.
 
It's rather essential for believers in gender identity ideology to frame disagreement with gender identity ideology and social policies based on this ideology as 'anti-trans'. If they didn't do this, they would have to produce an argument from scratch explaining the scientific support for and benefits of gender identity ideology, which of course they cannot do.

Very well put. It’s extremely irritating and unfair for people who support pro woman policies to be called bigots and transphobes.
 
Why are you OK with gender segregation but not sex segregation? On what basis does that make any sense?

I'm ambivalent about gender segregation as well. If I were building a locker room I'd probably opt for privacy stalls whenever possible rather than communal, gender segregated areas.
 
I'm ambivalent about gender segregation as well. If I were building a locker room I'd probably opt for privacy stalls whenever possible rather than communal, gender segregated areas.

I don't give a crap about your personal preferences. Other people don't want what you want, and a lot of places have locker rooms already built. They cannot install privacy stalls for everyone.

I want to know what you think it's OK for the state to allow, prohibit, or compel, because that's what affects other people. You're apparently OK with allowing gender segregation but prohibiting sex segregation. And that makes no sense.
 
I don't give a crap about your personal preferences. Other people don't want what you want, and a lot of places have locker rooms already built. They cannot install privacy stalls for everyone.

I want to know what you think it's OK for the state to allow, prohibit, or compel, because that's what affects other people. You're apparently OK with allowing gender segregation but prohibiting sex segregation. And that makes no sense.

It that makes no sense to you, the fact that these policies have been adopted in multiple places must be awfully confusing to you.
 
It that makes no sense to you, the fact that these policies have been adopted in multiple places must be awfully confusing to you.

The logic of a policy is separate from the politics. I understand the politics perfectly well.

And you didn't answer, you merely deflected, as usual. I suspect you aren't capable of answering, that you don't actually have any coherent logical reason for why gender segregation is acceptable but sex segregation is not.
 
The logic of a policy is separate from the politics. I understand the politics perfectly well.

And you didn't answer, you merely deflected, as usual. I suspect you aren't capable of answering, that you don't actually have any coherent logical reason for why gender segregation is acceptable but sex segregation is not.

Are you asking a legalistic question or a more general ethical/philosophical question? I'm no constitutional lawyer, so I can't really answer the first beyond an amateur opinion.
 
Are you asking a legalistic question or a more general ethical/philosophical question? I'm no constitutional lawyer, so I can't really answer the first beyond an amateur opinion.

A more general question. You can answer it on philosophical, ethical, practical, or whatever terms you want, but I want to know what you think should be, not what is. And I'm not interested in a constitutional analysis.
 
A more general question. You can answer it on philosophical, ethical, practical, or whatever terms you want, but I want to know what you think should be, not what is. And I'm not interested in a constitutional analysis.

As I said before, I'm ambivalent on the notion that gender segregation is needed nearly as much as it currently is used.

But, so long as that's the system we're going to use, trans exclusion strikes me as discriminatory against trans people in a way that is not justified by the supposed reasons for doing so, and much of those reasons, upon deeper review, seemed more rooted in animus than any other practical or legitimate concern. Animus is not a good reason to make such distinctions within our society and should not be catered to.

More succinctly put, the desire to deprive trans people of being able to exist in public as their stated gender identity is rooted mostly in animus, and that's not a legitimate reason for society to make such discriminations.

Even more briefly, because trans women are women. If you're going to make a "women's" room, that's where trans women belong. Likewise for men and trans men.
 
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As I said before, I'm ambivalent on the notion that gender segregation is needed nearly as much as it currently is used.

That's still not my question.

But, so long as that's the system we're going to use

My entire point is whether or not this SHOULD be the system we use, and why gender segregation is justifiable but sex segregation isn't.

You have once again avoided that question.

Even more briefly, because trans women are women.

Are they?

What is a woman?

If you're going to make a "women's" room, that's where trans women belong. Likewise for men and trans men.

And if we make "female" and "male" restrooms, what then? Or should that be prohibited?
 
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