Ah, thanks for explaining! That makes sense.
I am aware that I often spit out posts too quickly and don't make myself clear enough. I appreciate your patience and ensuring clear communication when I drop the ball.
Personally, I come at it from the other direction. Once you concede sports, you've conceded the entire question of overriding sex segregaton:
- Athletic data makes it abundantly and incontrovertibly clear that there are two biological sexes, with substantially disparate physical statistics.
- Therefore, athletic data makes abundantly and incontrovertibly clear that sex segregation in some areas is desirable to civil society and should be upheld.
- No medical justification has been given for overriding sex segregation as a treatment for anything at all.
Once you've made a policy against overriding sex segregation in sports by self-ID, the precedent extrapolates itself automatically and immediately to the entire category of sex-segregated things - including public restrooms.
Ok, I agree that once our precedent-setter is established, we work from there. You want to start from sports. That might work, but I think sports might be viewed as a special case, balancing physical advantages that taking a pee doesn't worry about.
I thought I was clear on this, and it addresses a lot of your questions: first and foremost, we need to clarify the sex and gender definitions. If gender is clearly defined as in your head, and sex in your pants, a lot of the problems solve themselves. There is no more transgender surgery. It's transsexual surgery, or a sex change. Then we have to lobby that our sex segregated sports were always intended to be based on sex, not gender. That clears up who can cross that line, or not, decisively.
Thanks for the correction. I'll adjust my thinking on this.
Not really a correction. We'd have to balance out all the sports to see which groupings prevail. You might be right, but I suspect there are more M/W than W/Open.
In the meantime, consider whether transwomen - who want to be seen and treated as women by society, are interested in competing in Open divisions against a bunch of men, rather than in women's divisions where all the other women are.
Fair point. It gets resolved by that bio distinction I keep harping on. If it's made clear that this is the XX division, not the 'how you see youself' division, all the Lia Thomas tears in the world can be shed, and it doesn't matter. She has an XY body, and the women's league ain't for that.
I know what the problem is. I'm hoping you'll address it, rather than continue to restate it or allude to it. Here's the specific points I was hoping you'd address on this last go-round:
You're begging the question that the desire of person suffering from gender dysphoria has a legitimate desire - an entitlement - override sex segregation.
And/or you're begging the question that a man who has not been diagnosed with dysphoria, and has not been prescribed any kind of sound medicine for anything, has a legitimate desire - an entitlement - to override sex segregation.
Either way, I'd like to see you establish some sort of rational basis for us to agree on, that either of these things represents a legitimate desire to transcend sex segregation.
Again, for avoidance of doubt, I know what the whole idea is. I'm asking for your response to that idea, and how you think it should guide our personal and policy preferences on the subject.
Fair enough. The broad point: gender dysphoria is not the condition of thinking you are the other sex. It's the
distress caused by it (per DSM-5 and elsewhere). No distress, no GD. That's another one of those definitional thingys that ◊◊◊◊ up a lot of our thinking on this.
But my solution, again, is simply clearing up the definitions, and more importantly, don't use them incorrectly. If gender is in your head, it doesn't matter if you are diagnosed with actual GD. You can't swim on the ladies team or hit the showers with them.
Basically, we don't need to transcend sex segregation at all, ever. Gendered courtesies as they apply (miss, ms, pronouns), and sex hard lines as they apply ('can't help but notice you have a cock, there, ma'am. This is the women's team. No-go'.)
I'll get back to this in a subsequent post.
Peer-reviewed research using sound scientific methodology, leading to a consensus of the medical community on sound diagnosis and ethical courses of treatment. You know, the same thing we have for literally every other physical and mental health condition we take seriously in western medicine.
We are not nearly as clear as we think we are in defining mental conditions. Relying on self reporting alone is a virtual deal breaker for objective diagnoses.
I don't know what this means.
I don't know what this means. From my perspective, "The Problem" is that there's a strong push to single out gender dysphoria for special pleading, and a unique freedom to self-ID and claim personalized "treatment" that has no basis in medicine. You don't need to tell me that's the problem. I'm hoping you'll give your thoughts on how to address it.
Actual GD is one thing, and as I said in an earlier post, the distress experienced shouldn't be measured by societal resistance.
I don't think GD needs to be some kind of special case. It's not much more different than say, extreme anxiety. You treat it for what it is to the sufferer. If their suffering is alleviated by social acceptance, they didn't really have GD to start with, if that makes sense? IMO, anyway.
Deluded costumes are still costumes.
Meh. I think their presentation can be as authentic as yours or mine. I don't think of grabbing a t-shirt and boardshorts as a costume. 'Costume', like 'womanface', smacks of deception and mockery. I really don't think a transwoman is presenting as anything more insincere than we are.
Our laws demand no such thing. The legitimacy of giving women leagues of their own, spaces and recognition of their own, is well established.
Not really. That sex/gender blurring is there in how those legues were set up, never really specifying XX, because it was all the same back then. A woman was a bio female, and the gender equivocation kind of slipped in there, and it remains the root problem.
And appealing to the law is a cop-out anyway. If you agree with the law, then you advocate for what the law advocates. You don't just stop thinking for yourself once you find out what the law says. What if you disagreed with the law?
I do, and don't know how to be clearer on that. But that's where we are at. Gender discrimination, for all intents and purposes, is sex discrimination. That's the four corners of the playing field. We can't even talk about 'trangressing sex segregated spaces' if the damned things don't legally exist.
Male vs female is a very solid standard, and already well nailed down.
Casually, yes. Legally, and to some extent even medically, not so much.
Here's a resolution that meets everyone's needs fairly:
- Uphold the current conventions and policies on sex segregation. This meets the needs of women, and does so fairly.
- Research and provide the most humane, ethical, and effective medicine we can, to people suffering from mental health conditions relating to gender dysphoria. This meets the needs of people who suffer from such conditions, and need real relief. It does so fairly.
- Do not persecute or discriminate against anyone for their gender expression, regardless of whether it stems from delusion or playfulness, without taking their expression as a license to override sex segregation. This meets the needs of people who like to self-express as transgender or genderqueer, whether as a personal preference, a self-identification, or even a sociopolitical statement. It does so fairly.
All the points in this resolution are based on the very solid, well nailed down standard of male vs female.
Ok. I still feel there is some wiggle room on 'sex segregated spaces'. Like, a person having undergone the slice and dice I think should be afforded full recognition of a sex change. Sports, as you rely on, would remain pure XX v XY (that's why I didn't want to start with sports; I think it has restrictions beyond everyday experience, much like going to the sex appropriate doctor).
Good luck! It's a tough one.
It's been going strong for a few years now. I think the only sensible exception so far was provided by
@d4m10n: Identifying as a woman in the US military entitles (requires?) you to wear women's uniforms, regardless of your actual sex. Literally the only practical application of gender without sex is the kind of hat you get to wear, and whether a skirt is allowed, in your dress uniform. And the president just put a stop to that.
The military also had lesser physical fitness requirements for females, didn't they? That hearkens back to the sports qualifiers. It matters in physical performance, not so much to take a pee.
The points I raised in this post, specifying that I'd like you to address them (at your convenience, of course), are a good start.
I think i got them all? If I didn't, I'm not evading, please call me out if I missed any.
And once again, you're a ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ gentleman. Much appreciated given how nasty a lot of this has gotten