You still haven't presented any solution for the problem of the female-presenting person with a penis risking their life by going into a men's room in redneck territory.
Let me know when penis presenting humans are in more danger in the male restrooms than humans with vaginas are with males in the restroom.
Males are far more dangerous to females than females are to males.
Are you really unable to understand that?
Tom
I don't have any good answer for male-presenting with vaginas. That's a problem either way.
What you're not catching is the clever conflation from "sperms" to "penis". One of these poses a risk of creating pregnancies. One of these things poses no more risk to any person than a person with hands that have fingers on them.
The point is, people SHOULD be able to decide "I'm not going to take my pants off in a room where people with sperms may be".
That's never going to be an unreasonable thing to say.
It is almost certainly acceptable to say "I do not care if sperms may pose a risk of getting up in me", which covers "presenting with vagina".
What is being said instead is "I don't want to take my pants off in a room where people with PENISES are".
At that point the question becomes "do you produce sperms?"
The problem is that this gives them no weapon that they can point at trans people in general, and at the atypical, so as to treat them like a DaNgEr.
In some ways I think it's part of the same machine that makes it so hard to get long term birth control: some social mechanism around the deep seated fear that if people are not tricked into becoming pregnant that not enough people would do it.
No. Men who have had vasectomies or prostatectomies are incapable of impregnating anyone, at least without a lot of medical intervention. Men who have had testicular cancer may not still produce sperm. A person does not have to produce ce sperm to be a threat or to be perceived as a threat. They can still be capable of rape. With or without a penis.
Pregnancy is not the primary concern. Rape and sexual assault is more of a concern. It’s certainly a concern from the standpoint of the flight/fight response that exists in all of us.
The argument here seems to be that trans women are real women and should be able to use the facilities they feel safe and comfortable using. I do not disagree with that at all.
I think that ALL women should be able to use the facilities they feel safe and comfortable using.
I think that all people should be able to use the facilities they feel safe and comfortable using so long as they do not cause distress or fear in other users. Skin color/race nor sexual orientation should never be considered a factor that excludes someone from using any facility because skin color/race or sexual orientation are not correlated with sexual assault of persons of a different sex or gender. Unfortunately being male IS correlated with increase in perpetrating sexual assaults.
Bullies/assailants should not be allowed in facilities with their victims.
I don’t know how women are supposed to evaluate whether or not a stranger in the dressing room is a threat to their safety if male appearing persons are in the facility. That has never been addressed except to the extent that I have insisted that handwaving that transwomen are not a risk is not any assurance. I also believe that trans women. are not a threat.
The question is how we are supposed to know that person is not a threat. I have never been in any situation where I should have ‘known better’ or ‘been more careful’ and yet I have been assaulted multiple times in situations where I thought I would be safe.
I just have no idea how women are supposed to instantaneously recognize that the person next to them is a trans woman and no threat.