This is what I'm saying about your level of ignorance.
The fact that you need "evidence" for this is shocking to me.
Really. How old are you? If you are a teen I do apologize. But animal and human consciousness are entirely different. If you consider examples of feral children you will learn that language development is an essential cornerstone of what humans consider consciousness. Since aniimals (with the exception of whales) have no language it is very unlikely that they do have consciousness and self awareness to the degree that humans do. Therefore comparing their consciousness and awareness of gender to humans is a complete waste of time. I do not know of a single educated person that would suggest examining animals to determine human psychological issues. Since Transgender is Gender Identity Disorder and is recognized as a mental issue, the idea that you think looking at animals as a way to better understand this issue, is, to say the least, frightening.
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/consciousness-animal/
The highlighted bit is Stundie-nomworthy, standalone. I actually debated nomming it.
No matter how you feel about the subject,
this is a skeptics' forum and evidence is usually required rather than taking blanket assertions from anyone, no matter how highly they think of themselves.
For a subject like this, it can also be helpful with personal anecdotes as many of us aren't and/or don't know anyone transgendered*.
Seriously - I come down on the same general side as you on the subject but I wouldn't side with you on
anything on the strength of your argument, because you have none. Only assertions. The mechanics of topical discussions is not constant repetition of "I'm right because I say I am". Frankly, it bores the living **** out of me.
I'd rather see the arguments of those skeptical addressed with some - you know - facts and thought through arguments.
I don't find comparisons to the animal kingdom in and of themself to be offensive, because humans are part of the animal kingdom and some of our behaviours have equivalents in other animals, while others don't. It might not be relevant to this particular argument but it also is not offensive in and of itself. The way to decide that is to provide evidence. Not name calling.
Assertions - bad.
Evidence - good.
Someone mentioned the Swedish Tittmyran "experiment" and there are a couple of confusions around it. It is not located in Stockholm and it is not countrywide. The original Tittmyran is actually a daycare/preschool in my old hometown and the thinking behind that was not to raise gender neutral kids but to make paedagogs more aware of how _they_ interact with boys and girls differently. It started with teachers being filmed over time, interacting with the kids. When they saw themselves on the videos they were shocked at to what degree the gender of the child they interacted with changed their attitude. Among other things they found that while they spent a disproportionate amount of time on the boys the amount of negative feedback the boys got was generally higher than that of the girls. They also found they reinforced use of gender specific toys simply by the feedback they gave when the children played with them. The Tittmyran project (not an experiment) is aimed at addressing teacher behaviour - not child behaviour. ("Titt" means "Look", "Gawk" or "Look-in", "myran" means "the ant". It's a nonsense name that literally translates to "The Gawking Ant". Very typical Swedish preschool name. My former work place used department names like Sharks, Tigers and The Castle. Which is more fun than when I was a kid and we used only colours.)
The project has been going for, I think, some 14-15 years now and is being continuously evaluated. So far no kids show signs of being harmed by having teachers who try their best not to stereotype them.
* I sometimes hang on a Swedish language site which has a profile of "Any kind of alternative lifestyle." (This attracts all walks of life, including mainstream and vanilla. The point being that everyone is welcome, but must be willing to welcome everyone else. It is now past its popularity peak but has worked surprisingly well.) The site has a forum with subforums for almost everything under the sun, including HBT and Queer issues, which has an incredibly helpful sticky called FASQ (Frequently Asked Stupid Questions). It isn't as snarky as it sounds, but a venue where people unaware of the issues are allowed to ask all the stupid questions they want and the questions are answered by people who feel they are up for it. This means that only those who feel they have the energy and the patience to answer a stupid, but ernest, question nicely do so - and those who feel they can't take anymore stupid questions don't. The friendly people who are willing to answer questions also post questions they get in real life, which frustrate them because it gives them a chance to blow off some steam and at the same time maybe answer that question for someone who wondered, but hadn't gotten around to ask or suspected it was a stupid question and didn't dare ask anyone. Sometimes people share stories about social mishaps that they themselves find funny, poignant or explanatory. And just as no one blows up over the perceived stupidity of some questions - those participating because they are trying to learn, do not engage in "Well of course he was confused, you're clearly a guy!" posting as a response to anecdotes.
The main thing with that thread is that everyone participates in good faith. Obvious trolls are sometimes deleted, but even when the question isn't asked in good fatih, whoever can be arsed will answer it in good faith because a stupid question could have a really important answer. Anyone frustrated or angered by the questions choose not to anwer them which makes the thread friendly and sometimes quite silly. People make friends in it.
This little sticky on a little corner of the internet has proved very useful in dispelling myths and giving an open friendly face to transgender people and issues in Sweden. Because the stupid questions are permitted and those responding aren't patient Uncle Tom educators - just people who have the time and inclination. That thread is extremely helpful and no one is calling anyone an asshat. Somehow that seems to work better.