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Transwomen are not Women - Part 15

I'm not a transwoman, you're not a transwoman, so even if we use your definition, the word "men" still includes people who are not transwomen.

For accuracy, you should say transwoman when you mean transwomen and save "men" for when you mean to include all men.
Bollocks. All transwomen are men... all of them, without any exceptions.
 
If you delay puberty until adulthood you can change your mind with few consequences. If you force a person to go through puberty when they prefer to transition, you pretty much guarantee a less than optimal result.
Evidence?
I call BS. I don't think this is true.
It is. When I find the study, I will post it
Then the issue is resolving itself, isn't it?
For the future, yes. For now, not so much
 
Evaluation of the approaches to treatment of gender dysphoria in minors is a scientific issue, not a political one. If you want to take part in discussion of a scientific issue on a skeptic's forum, you should at least do some basic research first, and also come prepared to listen to people who are better informed than you if you won't do any research yourself. Suggesting that being ignorant of the evidence is more acceptable when the issues is 'politically charged' is nonsensical. If anything the opposite is true.

What you are actually doing is parroting talking points from your side and then projecting this onto others, assuming that they have also done no research and must be parroting points from the other 'side'. It doesn't seem to occur to you that people disagree because they are not treating this as a political issue and because they have actually examined the primary source evidence independently.

I don't object to doing research but I do object to chasing a needle in a haystack on your say-so. It's there somewhere? Is there a pony too? Yeah?

I don't need a PhD to assert:

Autogynephilia is a ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ issue designed to kink-shame and discredit trans-people.

If we don't need to check pelvic bones, DNA or geneltalia to correctly identify people's gender, then we also don't need to check those things to validate a person's gender dysphoria.

Equating all trans-women with a particular scary trans-person who did something heinous years ago is bigoted fear-mongering which should have no place in civil discussion.

There is such thing as men's/woman's clothing, and attempts to claim otherwise are gaslighting. Seriously, this is really stupid.

Terms such as woman's-face, larping and cosplaying in the context of discussing trans-people is not just disrespectful, but actual hate-speech.

If TERFs can assert excluding transwomen from women's bathrooms as a civil rights issue for cis-women, then we can also talk about how excluding transwomen from women's bathrooms is a civil rights issue for transwomen. Yes, on par with not wanting black people to share your bathrooms.

So yeah, the reading I've done indicates blocking puberty can be reversed. If you think there is a needle in your haystack that says otherwise, then go find it yourself. It's not my job to make your argument for you.
 
Again, one must wonder who that safe space is intended to exclude, if it includes "all women" by design. Given that the goal is clearly not to create a safe space for everyone in the women's space (from context clues) who ought to be excluded from the space and why do you suppose should they be excluded, if at all?

Suppose there are two scruffy-bearded middle-aged siblings, both having typical midlife male body types. One of them ought to be included in the "safe space for all women" because she calls herself Danielle and hopes to physically transition someday, and the other one calls himself Andy and ought to be excluded because he does not think of himself as a woman (at least not at the moment). What is the key difference between these two males which makes it acceptable to exclude Andy from the safe space into which Danielle should be welcomed, and is there any practical way for service users to discern it?
Not directed to me, but;

Does Danielle identify as a woman, or is it kind of a thought bouncing around that has not been acted on (the proposal is a little unclear)? If she does, sure, she should be able to use the ladies room. Andy doesn't, so no-go.

How do other occupants discern the difference? By Danielle's wanting to go there and Andy not wanting to go there. Outside observers are not the Penis Patrol. Ya do ya business, ya clean up and leave, and ya done, and that goes for users and interested occupants. Will Danielle get some stares and perhaps unwanted attention? You better believe it. When you claim to identify that strongly with a given sex, but make no effort to get yourself looking similar, it's going to draw attention. I would expect the same if I walked into a men's room dressed like Darth Vader. Your outward appearance, from your clothing to your hairstyle to your mannerisms, conveys information to others, and you absolutely have to accept responsibility for that. You may not intend to radiate danger, but if your appearance can be forseen to be taken that way by others, that's a 'you' thing. When in Rome and all that.

So yeah, Danielle should be allowed in based on her assertion that she belongs there, and nothing else. She should also do some self reflection if she doesn't feel comfortable with being stared at. She might feel 100% comfortable with her gender representation, but that social role has social cues that she can't ignore if she wants to be seen (literally) as just another woman.

Eta: I typically wear work clothes (I am construction worker identifying) because i am typically working, and I am also 100% hip that it might alarm some people in some circumstances, especially a woman who might run across me on a dark, lonely street. Even though there is nothing 'wrong' with my presentation, imma go out of my way to put them at ease, even if it means briefly crossing the street. Danielle might want to grab a page from that book.
 
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Its about facts; observable, scientific, reality based facts, NONE of which support the TRA side of the debate... none. The meme you quoted from my post is simply a demonstration of how those facts work.

No matter how much you dodge, weave, obfuscate, handwave, ignore and fail to parse the meaning of what you are being told, the facts will never be on your side - at best, your dismissal of them is laughable; at worst, disgusting.
Your heavy reliance on facts which are irrelevant speaks volumes about why you try to hide behind them.
 
Well, that's an interesting reverse ferret.

View attachment 60288

And several other similar posts. You were claiming that we could tell who was a transwoman because he wears women's clothes.

Among other things, yes.

Does that mean they exclusively wear woman's clothes? Nope.

Does that mean they are incapable of wearing gender-neutral or men's clothes? Nope.

So...what's your issue, exactly?

Danny Trejo is just wearing lipstick. Otherwise he's wearing his normal clothes. Which are men's.

Wanna beat this horse some more? I think it's dead.
 
Does Danielle identify as a woman, or is it kind of a thought bouncing around that has not been acted on...?
She chose the name "Danielle" along with new pronouns, so it's safe to assume she identifies as a woman.
If she does, sure, she should be able to use the ladies room. Andy doesn't, so no-go.
What if Andy really wants to use the ladies room, though? It has a comfy couch and his feet are tired.

I'll get to the rest in a bit, but for now I'm really curious why there would any point whatsoever in keeping Andy out given that he doesn't look much different than his trans-identified sibling.
 
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She chose the name "Danielle" along with new pronouns, so it's safe to assume she identifies as a woman.
Safe, sure. Just allowing for the off chance that she was still wallowing around in the not-sure zone.
What if Andy really wants to use the ladies room, though? It has a comfy couch and his feet are tired.
The segregation of the rooms is based on gender identity, not comfort of amenities. Although as I've mentioned before, women walk into the men's room in my bars when the line is too long at the ladies. It's not like getting a swastika tattoo on your forehead. There's plenty of wiggle room.
I'll get to the rest in a bit, but for now I'm really curious why there would any point whatsoever in keeping Andy out given that he doesn't look much different than his trans-identified sibling.
What he looks like is not at issue, much like a guy or gal doesn't have to look suitably butch to use the gents room. It's loosely guys in here, gals in there, but once in a while you get an atypical. It shouldn't create the kind of existential angst that this thread generates.
 
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Well that's ◊◊◊◊◊◊ up. I hope it changes.
We have the same distinction in some US States. Rape, definitionally, requires a penis. The charge is some variety of sexual assault without one. The penalties are often the same, so it does seem a little pedantic.
 
Couldn't care less. The complexity is not the issue.

Your diminutive attitude is. Gender reassignment surgery is not just cutting a penis off.

You put forth a rubric of level of effort as a measure of womanhood. Dylan Mulvaney makes more of an effort to conform to regressive stereotypes of womanhood than Tig Notaro. Thus, by your rubric, Dylan is more of a woman than Tig.

She's also gay, which may have something to do with her non-conforming to regressive stereotypes of womanhood.
 
I always said it would take a long time to reverse this nonsense, and I still think that. Nevertheless, I didn't anticipate that there would be quite such a sudden tipping-point. And that it happened in my country, and was initiated by an organisation I support, have been to meetings of, and wear their badge!

There was what seemed at the time an ominous silence for two days after the judgement. Why were political leaders not commenting on (and welcoming) the clarity provided by the SC? I think now they were just reeling. They'd been told so firmly by Stonewall and the rest that TWAW and that was what the law said, that they genuinely hadn't anticipated such a completely clear and well-reasoned argument to the contrary. Or that it would be quite so wide-ranging.

During the holiday weekend a number of chancers took their chance to come out and try to undermine the judgement. We had that Whatsapp group of Labour also-raners getting together to plot some way to oppose it. We had law firms and organisations putting out advice that transpeople could be included in opposite-sex spaces on a case-by-case basis when proportionate. One legal page (now removed) declared that it would be discriminatory to exclude a transwoman with a GRC from a women's service, because the SC judgement didn't cover GRCs! For a moment it seemed as if the entire establishment simply intended to ignore the whole thing and go on as usual. (FWS, meanwhile, were loading for bear.)

However, back to work and the people in charge have obviously been boning up on the real implications while they were off-duty. The hypocrisy of Keir Starmer and Labour declaring that they always supported single-sex services on the basis of biological sex is breathtaking, as Kemi Badenoch pointed out in the house in embarrassing detail, but as she said at the end, "I welcome it." There have been some extremely clear and extremely welcome statements coming out. Some feet are still going to have to be held to the fire, but those in charge have seen the writing on the wall. Mene, mene tekel upharsin, Keir Starmer.

Some extremely interesting commentary also. This from someone who wasn't really committed either way to start with, and seems sympathetic to the trans cause, but then...


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https://archive.ph/CC1UW (Archive link as the original is paywalled.)

Look around you: you'll see we are in the age of the imbecile​

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This one is advice for employers and service providers from someone who actually knows what the law says, with some very pertinent case-law to back it up. (Yes, it looks as if women will be able to claim sex discrimination if they are forced, by the provision of only mixed-sex facilities, to perform intimate tasks in a facility shared by men, depending on the exact circumstances.)


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I wouldn't get too comfortable in the idea that this only applies to "Terf Island" either. There are inevitable international repercussions, starting with international sporting competitions. Where one prominent international member is fielding strictly sex-segregated teams, others are going to be put under some pressure to conform. But the main effect will take a little while to manifest itself, or at least sufficiently for us to gauge its magnitude.

Some of the enthusiastic TWAW proponents were and are no doubt sincere and committed. However, many probably were not, even of the vocal ones. A huge proportion of the people saying little or nothing about it can be safely assumed to have been keeping their heads down, because the fate of those who raised them above the parapet was clear. Ostracism, cancellation, loss of friends, loss of income, loss of employment, even harassment by the police and the issuing of non-crime hate incident records.

These people are now becoming emboldened. I'm seeing the start even of politicians who have been silent or simply paying lip service coming out and welcoming the SC judgement wholeheartedly. They've been forced to say nothing or even support a proposition which is simply ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ nuts, and it's a relief not to have to do that any more.

People in Australia and Canada are taking heart, because the laws in these former colonies even now are modelled on English law. Their lawmakers take notice. More widely, it's as if the little boy has pointed out that the emperor is absolutely starkers, and the ripple is going round the court. Are we allowed to say so, now?
 
The segregation of the rooms is based on gender identity, not comfort of amenities.
"Gender identity" didn't exist as a scientific concept when these bathrooms were built in the early 1960s, so presumably they were segregated by other characteristics at the time. Do you recall any policymakers (at any level from school board to federal legislature) having an open debate about switching from from the old system to the new one?

What he looks like is not at issue...
Seems to me Andy really should factor in how he looks, given the discomfort and apprehension his appearance would cause in one room but not the other.
 
Exactly. You don't actually know how to handle the transgender access issue. So why do you think you're in a position to lecture people who want to keep him out?

No more than ordinary men should be assumed to be just as wicked as Bryson. They don't all need to be in order to justify sex segregation.
As long as he continues to believe in the Dogma of The Holy Scripture of the TRA faith, ergo that transwomen are not men, he will never understand this.
 
"Gender identity" didn't exist as a scientific concept when these bathrooms were built in the early 1960s, so presumably they were segregated by other characteristics at the time. Do you recall any policymakers (at any level from school board to federal legislature) having an open debate about switching from from the old system to the new one?
How many times do I have to scream this one? Yes, over half the problem is 'gender' kind of slithering into the lexicon and being argued in terms of discrimination law without ever being clearly defined and more importantly, limited.
Seems to me Andy really should factor in how he looks, given the discomfort and apprehension his appearance would cause in one room but not the other.
If Andy does not take it upon himself to enter the one, he has no problem. Kind of like I don't have to worry about my appearance when standing over a sleeping teenage girl in her bed. I just don't do so. If I felt compelled to for whatever reason (say, i was called in to do an emergency repair), the obligation to deal with the alarm I understandably cause is on me.
 
I'm very glad about this, because it makes it far less likely that he'll be motivated to try to undermine the judgement. I suspect his fervour is simply that Stonewall said to him, this is the latest progressive cause, you don't want to be on the wrong side of this one. And he said, oh is it? In that case I'll support it and promote it enthisuastically. Like a lot of brainless people in influential positions.
Surely you mean to use the past tense here? Starmer's spokesman seemed quite clear that he no longer believes transwomen are women. It's striking that he waited a few days before saying anything. It indicates that this pivot is permanent.
 

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