smartcooky
Penultimate Amazing
I was about to form my own answer, but then I saw this...Please see the excerpt from the wiki in post #9,167 regarding the extent to which CAIS individuals actually go down the Müllerian pathway.
I would argue that people "born without fallopian tubes, a cervix, or a uterus" didn't go far enough down that pathway for a pathway-based binary sorting algorithm to make much sense, especially when they are born with testicular tissue from the other pathway.
I'm not saying you cannot possibly come up with a sorting algorithm to put every individual one box or another; I am saying that just talking about the two pathways won't get you all the way there without adding some more detailed criteria.
I'm also saying—come to think of it—that these probably aren't actually the appropriate criteria to use when sorting people for purposes unrelated to individual health and fertility, which it to say that they won't work for most of the policy questions we've actually discussed in any detail here in this thread,
QFT and in reply...It doesn't ◊◊◊◊◊◊◊ matter. Transpeople don't have DSD's. The question of how to handle people with DSD's has nothing to do with the question of what to do with transpeople. Every attempt to conflate these issues is dishonest.
The debate about DSD has NOTHING WHATEVER to do with the debate about transgender and gender ideology in general. Transgender people are NOT transgender because they have a DSD, and the reverse is also true.
And, as has been repeatedly pointed out in the "Strict Definitions..." thread, ALL humans with DSD can still be classified male or female. Rarely, this has to be by other means, e.g. reproductive architecture or chromosomal make-up (karyotype). It may be difficult to classify them, but they are always going to be classified as either male or female. There is NO THIRD SEX TO CLASSIFY THEM AS...
- There are only TWO gamete types in humans, Large and Small - there is NO third gamete type. The failure of a body to actually produce or to be able to produce gametes does NOT make them a different sex, and does not make them unable to be classified as either male or female
- There are only two sex chromosome types in humans, X and Y - there is NO "Z" sex chromosome in humans. Even if the chromosomes are not strictly XX or XY (for example XXY or XYY or some other combination) does NOT make them a different sex, and does not make them unable to be classified as either male or female
Therefore...
There are only two sexes in humans, female and male - sex is binary!
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