It's a bit like white people saying "If everyone is supposed to be equal, why can't I use the n-word." They can't because there is a complicated history behind the word and it has modern social implication. There is nothing stopping them from using the word. In the US, it's not even illegal. The only reason they "can't" is because there will be repercussions. So what they are really saying is "I want to say a certain thing but without any repercussions." It's not about equality at all. Ignoring the very real social implications is dismissing their experiences and dehumanizing them.
That's a good response, and I am beginning to get the idea of how I differ from you.
See, I can use "the n-word" (and I'm only using that because I think that spelling out the anagram of "ginger" would get me a warning). I used it today, and I used it yesterday, in the company of three lovers. One of them has very dark skin. The others have light skin. However, the latter two are also Jewish, though neither is theistic. (I also used the k-word and a few other *-words, but I ran out.)
Lenny Bruce once said, "I want to say (the n-word) over and over again until it loses all of it's meaning." I agree with him. Yeah, it can be risky--didn't he wind up in jail a few times? Still, I think we live in a better world because he did.
So there is no reason that you can't treat a women the same way that you would treat a man. You just can't do it without repercussions because men and women have a different history and events have different social impact. By ignoring all the social implications, you are dismissing their experiences and dehumanizing them.
Right.
So there are a couple of things here. One might as well be termed pragmatic. Of course, if I treat a woman the same way I treat a man, there is a chance that she won't like it. It is my responsibility, and my responsibility alone, to handle that if it happens, and to ensure that it doesn't happen in the first place if I don't want it to. Here, I am treating women the same way that I am treating men, in that I am assuming that they are rational agents who can talk about things, even challenging and unpleasant things. I'm really not about to stop doing that. Still, in-person relationships are different, and though you may not credit it, I'm pretty good at doing it.
The other is moral, suggested by your "you are dismissing their experiences and dehumanizing them" language. That's where I balk, rather severely. I cannot tell the difference between those things you tell me that I have to accept (or if I don't, I'm dehumanizing people, bad me.) During my lifetime, segregation was the norm. "That's the way it's always been and how it's gotta be" from a song in
Purlie, a Broadway musical my parents took me to when I was young.
So as far as I can tell, the current wave of gender essentialism is simply a reflection of the Status Quo. Of course, that's Holy and Correct. Still, I've lived a quarter century, and there seem to have been people arguing about how the Status Quo is Holy and Correct all my life.
Furthermore, I've seen a lot of things in the atheist communities where one woman got offended, but fifty women thought it was just fine or great. Then when the one woman's offense gets made into an internet drama, there are all these admonitions to consider her representative of all women and ignore the fifty. This does not seem to me to be a plea to treat women the way women want but rather a plea to accept the viewpoint of a minority of women as to how all women should be treated.