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Can We Discuss Sex & Gender / Transgender People?

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At some point in Emily's mind "fix the prison system using examples such as we have elsewhere in the world to apply, and expand on them meaningfully to generate meaningful reforms through time in prison" transmuted (hah, she is the real wizard between us with magic like that!) Into "let any prisoner of any bearing and demeanor and size class intermingle willy-nilly".
WTH? Dude, I'm happy to fix the prison system, and have it be more reasonable and humane. What you seem to be missing is that the thing you're showing as sarcastic is ACTUALLY REALLY HAPPENING. Prisoners in Canada, parts of the UK & Ireland, and some states, prisoners are requesting and being moved to female facilities solely on the basis of their self-declared gender identity. It's actually really already happening. So while I agree with your ideal state of fixing things, I'd like to halt what's going on right now. It's not a transmutation of a hypothetical, it's current reality.
Tell me Emily, would you share a prison cell with an assertive but nonviolent person slight of frame with no balls, perhaps guilty of some technological crime, that would do their best to never actually look at your body even if they were forced to share a space with you, excepting odd requests such as "look at this mole"? Would you, throwing up your hands saying "alas what else can we do," throw this smallish nonviolent person with no balls in prison with a bunch of large people with balls and violent histories which include rape, and violent current tense activities that also involve rape?

With no balls? Sure. I generally say "no penis", but a penis and no balls would probably be fine.
 
Asking the question, "What's the difference between men and women?" might be a better way for you to look at it as well. It is basically impossible to answer this question to include trans men and trans women.
This seems quite contrary to reality because Trans-men and Trans-women couldn't actually exist if there wasn't an answer to "What's the difference between men and women?" The trouble becomes, some people want the answer to that question to have easily identifiable traits, when the truth is much harder to explain physiologically and behaviorally. It is a bit like quantum tunneling. The people wanting to be uber-labelers will say it isn't possible, despite the observations showing very definitively that it does. Just because we can't understand wholly doesn't negate it's reality.

We know there are trans-genders. So this desire to define them out of existence is stupid. Just because a question is hard to answer, doesn't mean it doesn't have an answer that satisfies the constraints.

It's because we need a definition for the words to have meaning. As I said a few pages ago if I say, "I am a tratofont" we would have to establish a definition of a tratofont or else it is meaningless to say you are a tratofont.

We are also told that some trans women grew up playing with dolls and liked skirts and say "that's how I knew I was a girl" but we are told by gender theory that playing with dolls and liking skirts doesn't make you a woman. We have a person in this very thread who says that she is 38 and a trans woman and hates skirts. Can you see why this is confusing when analyzing it logically?
 
I think I need to be a teensy bit more explicit. Destroy gender, but acknowledge sex.
The trans activists and gender ideologists will never allow that. They want gender to supplant sex and get more prominence, not less. Instead of abolishing gender, they want an ever-increasing list of genders and their associated neopronouns to dominate discourse, to take over ordinary dialogue between humans.
Wow, talk about scaremongering.

When was the last time the invention of a new term or further refinement of an old one dominated discourse for more than a day or so?

What is so dogdarned scary about the loss of thee , thou, and thine and the expanded role of they and their? What conversational crisis do you expect to follow the adoption of gender neutral pronouns for use when/where gender is irrelevant?
 
@Emily Lake I do think that deconstruction is not necessarily the best route. Finland actually conquered inequality by acknowledging the inherent neurobiological advantages and disadvantages of both genders, and they tailored their mathematical education more toward the ways that girls (and presumably gay boys, too, considering their underlying neurological similarity) tend to approach problem-solving. They still have some of the world's most secure engineering firms, but they just have more proportionate representation of the genders. The problem was that the old methods of instruction were designed around the natural inclinations of boys. They were not bad methods of instruction, but it turned out that girls could do just as well as boys when the methods of instruction were based more on their own natural behavior.

Also, Nick Haslam's research on essentialism regarding social categories actually suggests that we are better off acknowledging our natural differences but also being reasonable in regard to variations and overlaps. He discovered that entitativity was a more serious problem.

Good reading:


For instance, "Women are statistically more likely than men to be _________" is occasionally (but not always) helpful.

However, "Women must _________ or they are not really women and don't count" is actually harmful. This is assumed entativity. It harbors the assumption that ALL women must adhere to a certain set of characteristics, and if they don't, they are not really considered to count toward how people perceive women.

Same with trans-women. It would be harmful if people said that I only counted as a trans-woman if I wore a dress, wore ruby-red lipstick, and demanded to use the ladies' room, regardless of my local culture and social circumstances. I actually dress unisex, though, and I really just avoid locations that don't have all-gender bathrooms, simply because I don't like feeling self-conscious. I'm still a trans-woman, though. I actually count in the tally. We can be any kinds of people, and there are thousands of different kinds of people.
I think I need to be a teensy bit more explicit. Destroy gender, but acknowledge sex. And if that includes flexibility for different thinking styles, that's wonderful. Education should be adaptive.

We aren't blank slates. Society has a lot of impact, in terms of conditioning behavior... but at least some of our behavioral tendencies are innate. We're a sexually dimorphic species, and behaviors are part of that. We absolutely know that some behaviors are genetically influenced - terriers dig, hounds bay, they've been bred for those behavioral traits.

What I'm really after is tearing down the confining and limiting aspects of external gender roles. Be adaptive and flexible with respect to tendencies... but don't use them to reinforce limitations.

The one thing I identify as the most is as a person. Of all things that I believe I am, I am the most sure about that one.

The coolest sign I ever saw on a bathroom door said "people room."
 
When was the last time the invention of a new term or further refinement of an old one dominated discourse for more than a day or so?
The invention of a new term isn't a problem. Neither is refinement of an old one. That is, when it happens organically. Of course, new words that are in current widespread usage (like 'selfie') didn't require the State to enforce them by punishing people who it deems to have used it incorrectly. Contrast with the State punishing her own citizens by enforcing its ideological beliefs about pronouns.

What is so dogdarned scary about the loss of thee , thou, and thine and the expanded role of they and their? What conversational crisis do you expect to follow the adoption of gender neutral pronouns for use when/where gender is irrelevant?
I have already said, many times over many threads, that not only do I accept the use of 'they' singular, I will even engage in the polite fiction of using the wrong-sex pronoun for transgender people who want that pronoun. But I absolutely will not concede that an infinite number of 'genders' (thoughts in heads) is appropriate to replace sex (of which there are two in mammals, and thus humans have a sex binary). I absolutely do not care if you call yourself 'non-binary' or a 'demiboi' or 'demongender' or 'faegender' or any other mental illness you want validation for, and I will not learn or use your neopronouns like 'bug' or 'demonself' or 'xir', and it is unethical and nakedly narcissitic of you to ask.
 
@Metaphor I have told you, the neopronouns that some of my friends occasionally use go back to the 1990's, and we originally appropriated them from science fiction literature that all of us, at the time, were reading or had already read, not as adults but as preteens that enjoyed reading sci-fi and who were just forming their first ideas about everything.

The idea must have spread to other communities, at some point, and we are just as surprised as anybody that the idea spread. It was only really popular on a handful of IRC chat servers and MUCKS, and you could have fit everybody that had heard about the idea in a single large executive conference room.

Weirdly, this idea that my friends and I used as a part of a geeky kid game is catching on with today's youth culture, and they are taking it substantially more seriously than we did. Well...kids...what are you gonna do?

It's not as new as you are making it out to be, though.

At least my friends and I didn't play with explosives :D.
 
@Metaphor I have told you, the neopronouns that some of my friends occasionally use go back to the 1990's, and we originally appropriated them from science fiction literature that all of us, at the time, were reading or had already read, not as adults but as preteens that enjoyed reading sci-fi and who were just forming their first ideas about everything.

The idea must have spread to other communities, at some point, and we are just as surprised as anybody that the idea spread. It was only really popular on a handful of IRC chat servers and MUCKS, and you could have fit everybody that had heard about the idea in a single large executive conference room.

Weirdly, this idea that my friends and I used as a part of a geeky kid game is catching on with today's youth culture, and they are taking it substantially more seriously than we did. Well...kids...what are you gonna do?

It's not as new as you are making it out to be, though.

At least my friends and I didn't play with explosives :D.
Neopronouns between friends is like nicknames between friends. If you and your friends want to do it, go for your life. But don't expect outsiders to want to, or worse, expect them to use them and punish them if they don't.
 
I would just like to interject that I usually use they and them when referring to someone of unknown sex/gender and have used they/them for years. I know I did not invent that usage. I have no idea how/where I picked it up but I’ve done it, as I said, for years. On this forum. Without remark from other posters.

It ain’t no big deal.
 
So, I see discussion on the idea that words need definitions to mean things... Though I can't help but think about a very special episode of South Park, wherein a single undefined word, when used in a particular intonation, manages to serve as a replacement for every noun and verb for several paragraphs of text.

Somehow, I managed to understand the whole speech, and could translate it to English for anyone who wishes.
 
@Metaphor I have told you, the neopronouns that some of my friends occasionally use go back to the 1990's, and we originally appropriated them from science fiction literature that all of us, at the time, were reading or had already read, not as adults but as preteens that enjoyed reading sci-fi and who were just forming their first ideas about everything.

The idea must have spread to other communities, at some point, and we are just as surprised as anybody that the idea spread. It was only really popular on a handful of IRC chat servers and MUCKS, and you could have fit everybody that had heard about the idea in a single large executive conference room.

Weirdly, this idea that my friends and I used as a part of a geeky kid game is catching on with today's youth culture, and they are taking it substantially more seriously than we did. Well...kids...what are you gonna do?

It's not as new as you are making it out to be, though.

At least my friends and I didn't play with explosives :D.
Neopronouns between friends is like nicknames between friends. If you and your friends want to do it, go for your life. But don't expect outsiders to want to, or worse, expect them to use them and punish them if they don't.
Well, that was back in the 1990's. It's had a lot of time to catch on in the youth culture, and it's been spreading a little farther than we expected.
 
I would just like to interject that I usually use they and them when referring to someone of unknown sex/gender and have used they/them for years. I know I did not invent that usage. I have no idea how/where I picked it up but I’ve done it, as I said, for years. On this forum. Without remark from other posters.

It ain’t no big deal.
I refer to my cat as "they/them" on here.

My friends and I, back in the 1990's, used the sie/hir set, for the most part.
 
So, I see discussion on the idea that words need definitions to mean things... Though I can't help but think about a very special episode of South Park, wherein a single undefined word, when used in a particular intonation, manages to serve as a replacement for every noun and verb for several paragraphs of text.
Smurfs did it first.
 
Smurfs makes so much more sense on shrooms.
 
Tell me Emily, would you share a prison cell with an assertive but nonviolent person slight of frame with no balls, perhaps guilty of some technological crime, that would do their best to never actually look at your body even if they were forced to share a space with you, excepting odd requests such as "look at this mole"? Would you, throwing up your hands saying "alas what else can we do," throw this smallish nonviolent person with no balls in prison with a bunch of large people with balls and violent histories which include rape, and violent current tense activities that also involve rape?

With no balls? Sure. I generally say "no penis", but a penis and no balls would probably be fine.
Now, let's imagine this person identifies as a "man". Or at the very least does not identify as a woman at all.

Can you hold by this principle still? Does how they identity change how you interact socially with this person?

Edit: I fully admit I have a destination with this line. That destination is, hopefully, you understanding my position in the way I understand it. You can do with it what you want after that. I am going to be uncharacteristically kind, even, within this framework.
 
Asking the question, "What's the difference between men and women?" might be a better way for you to look at it as well. It is basically impossible to answer this question to include trans men and trans women.
This seems quite contrary to reality because Trans-men and Trans-women couldn't actually exist if there wasn't an answer to "What's the difference between men and women?" The trouble becomes, some people want the answer to that question to have easily identifiable traits, when the truth is much harder to explain physiologically and behaviorally. It is a bit like quantum tunneling. The people wanting to be uber-labelers will say it isn't possible, despite the observations showing very definitively that it does. Just because we can't understand wholly doesn't negate it's reality.

We know there are trans-genders. So this desire to define them out of existence is stupid. Just because a question is hard to answer, doesn't mean it doesn't have an answer that satisfies the constraints.

It's because we need a definition for the words to have meaning.
Is light a wave or a particle? What we call it isn't nearly as important as its behavior. All you are doing is complaining about labels labels labels.
As I said a few pages ago if I say, "I am a tratofont" we would have to establish a definition of a tratofont or else it is meaningless to say you are a tratofont.
You aren't asking anything, you are demanding that male and female labels remain rigid, when in reality, they aren't as rigid or as convenient as we'd prefer.
We are also told that some trans women grew up playing with dolls and liked skirts and say "that's how I knew I was a girl" but we are told by gender theory that playing with dolls and liking skirts doesn't make you a woman. We have a person in this very thread who says that she is 38 and a trans woman and hates skirts. Can you see why this is confusing when analyzing it logically?
I'm not exactly certain why you think anecdotal information is particularly important.
 
I would just like to interject that I usually use they and them when referring to someone of unknown sex/gender and have used they/them for years. I know I did not invent that usage. I have no idea how/where I picked it up but I’ve done it, as I said, for years. On this forum. Without remark from other posters.

It ain’t no big deal.
I'm not certain, but I think it was forums that drove me to that, because you don't know automatically which users are what gender or sex or whatever.
 
It's because we need a definition for the words to have meaning.
Why? Why does crystal clarity of definition matter on this subject? Lots of words, especially important words, aren't totally clear. Some words have multiple meanings. Some are only vaguely defined. Some words have more connotation than actual definition.

If someone asked me on my mobile phone, "Where are you?" and I answered "At my house", would my being an apartment dweller make my answer unintelligible? Not for competent people, who are familiar with the vernacular language. In the context, the important information is perfectly clear.

Same here. A person wearing a dress, beardless chin, and feminine comportment is a woman. Might be 6'3", with linebacker shoulders and bulging biceps and a tight waist, but if all you need to do is use female pronouns what's hard about that? I agree, there's a handful of situations where sex matters, like public restrooms and prisons. But those are the exception, not the norm.

I simply do not believe that you find this sort of civil behavior all that difficult, unless there's something wrong with you. There might be, maybe you're aspie or something. If so, sorry for your luck. You're going to find this very difficult terrain to negotiate. Maybe that'll give you some empathy, maybe not.
Tom
 
I am neurodivergent, myself. I have deep inhibitions against saying anything I believe is inaccurate. However, words can have multiple definitions. For example, "woman" can be a foreshortening of "trans-woman," or it can be a foreshortening of "cis-woman." Either way, "woman" is an accurate term.
 
For example, "woman" can be a foreshortening of "trans-woman," or it can be a foreshortening of "cis-woman." Either way, "woman" is an accurate term.

Accurate all the time under any circumstances and in all contexts? I don't think so.

Frankly, I find your casual dismissal of cis-female issues so stereotypically masculine I sometimes have trouble perceiving you as particularly female.

Something else you posted I found very masculine was your assertion that gay men have no clue about women's issues. That's just such a guy attitude. The way that your assertion read is "Men don't have a clue about women's issues, because I don't and I know what is real." Maybe you didn't mean that, but that's how it came across. And it's a very masculine attitude.

Then there's your walls of text. You might just see this as explanations of why you're right, but it sure looks like mansplaining to some of us.

I hope you don't take this too personally. But that is how I'm seeing you here on the forum, which is all I know about you.
Tom
 
@TomC I have openly acknowledged that I am in substantially less of a position than even heterosexual men to have an intuitive understanding of cis-women's issues. If I had ever been in a long-term relationship with a woman, then I would have had a substantial amount of exposure, but I have not. Trans-women and cis-women might have some overlapping issues, but I can never be sure how far that overlap goes.

For example, some trans-women have had problems with sexual assault, but I have not. I look androgynous even months after starting HRT, and I am 6' tall. I do not dress or make my face up to be overtly feminine. I am confident in my physical strength, even months into HRT. My chances of ever being sexually assaulted are minimal. I cannot relate on this issue, then, even as much as the majority of trans-women.

Because of that, I have been open to seeking middle-ground and points of accord. This is something I consider to be a substantially wiser strategy than a more all-or-nothing strategy. I have made substantial progress by doing so.

Therefore, I am not sure where you are coming from.
 
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