theprestige
Penultimate Amazing
The only reason they're saying sex is complicated is because we finally started pointing out that they can complicate gender all they want, but sex is actually dead simple.
"They want it more" isn't an argument that they don't have the same rights. All males (both trans women and cis men) are denied the same right. The fact that cis men don't, in general, want that right doesn't change that.Cisgender men being denied the right to enter female designated spaces is not "the exact same extent" of a denial as transgender women being denied the right to enter female designated spaces, for obvious reasons. The former group does not want to be accepted in female spaces as a matter of personal affirmation and does not claim that a lack of acceptance will negatively impact their mental health.
Do you really believe they are impacted by these denials in the same way?
There are people out there who are working to provide the 'Scientific Evidence' needed and they publish in 'Peer Reviewed' journals. Here's an abstract from a recent paper on 'Deconstructing Sex', the full text is linked to below the abstract.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0018506X23001393?via=ihub
“Hormones” and “female” have long been synonymous outside our field
The "male-or-female sex" sense of the word is attested in English from early 15c. As sex (n.) took on erotic qualities in 20c., gender came to be the usual English word for "sex of a human being," in which use it was at first regarded as colloquial or humorous. Later often in feminist writing with reference to social attributes as much as biological qualities; this sense first attested 1963. Gender-bender is from 1977, popularized from 1980, with reference to pop star David Bowie.
There are people out there who are working to provide the 'Scientific Evidence' needed
Here's an abstract from a recent paper on 'Deconstructing Sex', the full text is linked to below the abstract.
The only reason they're saying sex is complicated is because we finally started pointing out that they can complicate gender all they want, but sex is actually dead simple.
No, but I believe all women are impacted by these acceptances in the same way.Do you really believe they are impacted by these denials in the same way?
If cisgender women say "We have a right to female-only changing rooms!" and transgender women say "We have a right to use changing rooms which match our gender!" only one of them can be correct in any given jurisdiction at any given time. It's not a question which can be settled by appeal to abstract moral reasoning.
You do realize that that paper is just an opinion piece, right? There's no actual science in it. And its agenda is purely and explicitly political. I also don't see what this has to do with the AAP and their fraudulent position paper.
Perhaps the AAP should have waited for some of that evidence to come in before claiming they already had it.
You do realize that that paper is just an opinion piece, right? There's no actual science in it. And its agenda is purely and explicitly political. I also don't see what this has to do with the AAP and their fraudulent position paper.
No, your perception is wrong.
The pushback started when people who were obviously male, weren't even trying, and were no longer being considerate of the females in female spaces started demanding that they have the *right* to invade our spaces and to violate our boundaries. The pushback started when the adult male with a dangling dick decided that it was more important for them to have a *right* to be in the showers at the same time as the female middle school swim team... and that the young females were the ones with the problem if they didn't like seeing a penis in the female showers. The pushback started when the state took the side of the adult male who had been parading their genitals around in front of minor females and told the females they needed to find somewhere else to shower if they were uncomfortable with penises.
There are people out there who are working to provide the 'Scientific Evidence' needed and they publish in 'Peer Reviewed' journals. Here's an abstract from a recent paper on 'Deconstructing Sex', the full text is linked to below the abstract.
In human-oriented biomedical research, the use of simplistic (and often binary) models of sex ignores the existence of intersex, trans, non-binary, and gender non-conforming people and contributes to a medical paradigm that neglects their needs and interests.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0018506X23001393?via=ihub
The only reason they're saying sex is complicated is because we finally started pointing out that they can complicate gender all they want, but sex is actually dead simple.
Sex in mammals and birds is very simple. Sex in the overwhelming majority of vertebrates is simple.
It's not always easily observable in some individuals... but sex is still straightforward.
No offense, and you're not the only one who does this, but please stop doing this.
We all know what we're discussing here. There's absolutely no reason to pollute the conversation with irrelevant tangents that everyone knows are irrelevant.
No offense, and you're not the only one who does this, but please stop doing this.
We all know what we're discussing here. There's absolutely no reason to pollute the conversation with irrelevant tangents that everyone knows are irrelevant.
I don't know what you think is irrelevant or why. Please elaborate?
I have to agree with Emily, but I also admit I have not read the vast majority of the thousands of posts made in this thread, so may be a bit ignorant. Rather than just guess, would you please be specific regarding what your issue(s) is(are) with her post as well as what you perceive to be the boundaries for the topic of discussion?
ETA: I guess I should have said I agree with Emily's Cat, as I do not know if Emily alone is considered appropriate.
If you don't see that the complexity of biological sex in non-mammals is totally irrelevant to a discussion of trans rights in public policy, then I owe you both an apology for my ableism and exercise of neurotypical privilege. I'm very sorry. Please forgive my previous remarks.
Request denied. I need some way to differentiate between transgender women (born male, do not identify as such) and cisgender women (born female, do identify as such) and you have not provided alternative nomenclature which would be more widely understood.Please don't refer to females as "cisgender". It relegates us to the sidelines of our own sex class. And that's extremely insulting and offensive.
If I'm going to keep playing devil's advocate here, the answer is obvious: Consult your nearest progressive stack.But before we even get there... why are the desires of the males in question being granted precedence in the first place? Why on earth should the desires of males - regardless of whether they're honest or not - be granted a higher priority in policy than the desires, safety, and dignity of females?
It has been pointed out multiple times upthread that females are generally more accepting than males on various questions about deferring to gender rather than sex. See the crosstabs on basically any social survey on point for details.It centers the desires of males as the most important thing, and it relegates all female perspectives to a secondary or tertiary role.
Because most of them want to do so, and they live in a democratic society.This is all a long winded way to circle back to "Why the **** should females be expected to have their mental health negatively impacted in order to positively impact the mental health of some males"?
Request denied. I need some way to differentiate between transgender women (born male, do not identify as such) and cisgender women (born female, do identify as such) and you have not provided alternative nomenclature which would be more widely understood.
If I'm going to keep playing devil's advocate here, the answer is obvious: Consult your nearest progressive stack.
It has been pointed out multiple times upthread that females are generally more accepting than males on various questions about deferring to gender rather than sex. See the crosstabs on basically any social survey on point for details.
Because most of them want to do so, and they live in a democratic society.