I may have missed the argument that what makes pronouns right or wrong is how someone feels about them. Did anyone happen to answer my hypothetical
upthread?
Your pretending to ignore the basic elements of people's arguments aside, your hypothetical is a truly facile attempt at a gotcha that fails once realized that there is no evidence non-human animals have concepts of gender and can't communicate if they did.
No, you're moving the goalposts again. I have said slowly, clearly, and dear God repeatedly that I think I can identify a person's sex north of 95% of the time by sight, which is a pretty damned reliable standard. I have not claimed that I am observing their sex. Are you following now?
Do you follow that this speaks
against your argument that you're assigning pronouns based on sex? The entire point was to get you to value the target person's input on their what their correct pronouns are
because for either sex or gender they know more about themselves than you do.
Of the hundreds and hundreds of people I have met, maybe a half dozen were genuinely androgynous and I couldn't accurately identify which sex they were by sight alone. Those are the ones I am radically inflating in my <5% guesstimate for error. Realistically it would be less than 1%.
Might I have guessed wrong and was not aware of it? Sure. But I have no reason to believe I have.
Ok, you not knowing how many people you saw were trans and passing is kind of inherent in them
passing. Please say you understand that.
More to the broader point, even if you, personally, were 99% accurate (so only 2/3rds of the people you thought were trans were actually cis) the general public likely isn't that good 'in the field' as it were.
I know a
lot of transgender people. I have several who are family.
I get misgendered more than either of my trans nephews, and I'll remind everyone that I'm a six foot tall 265 lbs broad shouldered blacksmith. But I also have wonderful hair and deeply blue eyes, which even with all the rest (and otherwise traditionally masculine facial features) is enough to be called 'miss' quite a lot until fivish years ago. The most classically beautiful cis woman I've ever known got called a man many times purely because she's six foot tall and her hands are proportional to that. The person who I know who gets 'clocked' as being a trans woman more than any person I know is my cousin. She's a cis woman who has borne two children, but she's fat, not great looking, and has a bit of (very light and thin) facial hair.
No, both you and he are rebuilding the argument on the fly to make it easier to attack, rather than addressing the argument as presented.
You're simply not connecting all the dots of your own argument. Seeing that what you're saying has inconsistencies and holes isn't changing it.
The discussions here are pretty casual and conversational in nature. At no point in meatspace does a third party excommunicate a participant for changing the subject or addressing the speaker. Or hotlinking. Or using mild profanity. Or mentioning personally identifying names. There is far less in common with the rules here than shared social rules with meatspace interactions. If you applied forum rules to everyday discourse you would quickly be alone, as brothers would generally be avoiding your weirdo ass like the plague.
...The rules we were talking about were not 'no hotlinking' or anything like it. Did you think that goalpost moving wasn't going to get noticed? What the heck?
No, you are extrapolating by using the parameters very wrongly. My claim is that I think you can generally identify someone's sex using your senses north of 95% of the time, in contrast to the rather silly claim that you can't, like ever (see the wisdom of Upchurch upthread). Might a fully or cosmetically transitioned person slip by? Sure. In fact, kudos to those who appear to be the sex they identify as that convincingly. I'll happily refer to them as the sex they are living as.
But the discussion is about whether visual ID is reliable at all, which is the Boulder guideline, too (remember the Boulder UC guidelines? Seems so long ago). Upchurch is down with this too, saying you cannot assume gender/sex at all, ever. I say this is painfully stupid, and yes you damn well can upwards of 95% of the time, making it more reliable than many assumptions we use daily.
You can't assume
you're correct when someone tells you you're not using your proxies for sex. That's the point being proven and you're doing a lot of dancing around to try to avoid the painfully obvious. The idea you're advancing to a lesser degree than theprestige and d4m10n is that your proxy for sex is more reliable than what people say for either sex or gender. Getting you to see that you're using proxy data that
can be wrong is like pulling teeth because it pulls down one of the basis for trying to use sex rather than gender in the first place.