You just want to make their lives hell.
That's a rude thing to say, especially in response to me telling you what's actually on my mind, and inviting you to discuss those things.
Can we try again, please?
I have a doctor friend who is trans. He was born female and now identifies as male. Nobody seems to care if he uses the Men's.
Yeah, because nobody actually wants to make their lives hell.
When this thread first started, I entered with one simple concern: How to make sure transwomen had access to women's restrooms, without either giving all men access, or else resorting to some sort of regressive "papers please" solution.
I was really hoping - and expecting! - someone sympathetic to the plight of transwomen to offer some kind of solution or compromise that I hadn't thought of. Instead I got called a transphobe.
Over time, as the discussion progressed, I came to understand a few things:
- Men and women are biologically different, and significantly so.
- Therefore, sex segregation of certain things makes reallly good sense.
- There is no sound medical basis for social transition to treat gender dysphoria.
- All practical applications of trans identity boil down to overriding sex segregation.
- This goes way beyond restrooms, to shelters, prisons, sports, and even representation.
- Modern trans rights activism has taken a horrifically anti-science approach to diagnosing and treating gender dysphoria.
- The very small cohort of men who insist on being entitled to override sex segregation, whether women like it or not, unfortunately correlate to a small cohort of opportunistic male sexual predators and sex pests, who were previously deterred by conventions prohibiting their access to women's spaces.
None of this is about wanting to make lives hell for transwomen. All of this is about figuring out what's the right thing to do for everyone involved. I was more on the side of transwomen in this, to begin with. I believed that society would have to make some sort of compromise, out of humanitarian concern for people who suffer from gender dysphoria. My position shifted a bit over time, as it became more and more clear to me that the science on gender dysphoria is far from settled. There is no good evidence that social transition is an effective or ethical treatment for gender dysphoria.
Does barring transwomen from women's restrooms make the lives of transwomen more difficult? Maybe, but that's not why I want it. I want this policy because I think, after careful consideration, it's the best compromise for everyone.
I don't think you want to be misogynistic. I don't think you want to make women's lives hell. I think some of the policies you propose do have that effect, though. That's why I'd like to discuss this more with you. But not if all you have are insults and strawmen. I understand if it's not a topic you want to give much thought. But don't take your apathy out on us.