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Is this "bigoted" ... or?

PreviouslySeeking...

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In reality, trans folks are a tiny fraction of a percentage of the population- and I don't really think it is increasing. I live in the Seattle area and a co-worker of mine has a 14 yr old son. He has tons of friends who are "something", but it is mostly drama.

Because (at least in some areas) it is ok to be different, these kids change their identities like fashion trends. These kids aren't receiving medical care or transitioning- most of them are posing. Craving attention.

Honestly, I don't get the trans thing either. I identify as a female person now because that is at least specific and not open to interpretation. I have to say- the only time I "feel" like a woman is when I am experiencing things that no surgery or hormones will provide to someone not born with female anatomy.

Honestly, I think the trans issue causes such problems because most people don't feel a strong attachment to their gender. A lot of trans folks seem attracted to gender expressions that are stereotypical. They perform masculinity and femininity in a way that most cisgender folks don't. So when someone says they always felt like a girl and they perform femininity like they walked out of a 50s sitcom- it's almost like someone is being made fun of. I mean, if I'm a woman and you say that it isn't about anatomy, well ok. But it sure isn't about wearing heels, dresses, long hair, make-up, or being pretty either. There is really no definition now for woman that is logically consistent

BTW, LGB gets lots of negativity for being transphobic when lots of us (I'm Bi) don't understand why they hooked themselves to our train. So while straight people might not hear about the arguments (a lot of it is academic or in activist circles) it happens.
 
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DZoolander

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I agree with that. Like, I'm a guy. But I give absolutely 0% thought to my "guyness". I don't worry about what it means to be a "guy". I don't sit back and go "Wow, look at me fulfilling my guyness, doing guy things, just enjoying being a guy. Thank God I identify as a guy, because I like guy clothes, I like this guy thing and that guy thing", etc. I mean, that kind of stuff simply isn't a part of my reality.

Why do I dress the way I do (as a "guy")? Why do I wear dockers? Why do I wear button up dress shirts or polos? Because that's what I've always worn and what gets me social acceptance. That's what people react well to. No more, no less. It's not some deeply affirming expression/thing of my "gender".

As for what it means to "feel like a guy" - I have no idea what anyone is talking about there. Like I said in an earlier post - if you were to somehow be able to temporarily imprint RDKirk's consciousness onto mine - and then imprint MkGal or TropicalWild's consciousness onto mine - I can't say with any degree of certainty that RDKirk's consciousness would somehow be more familiar to me than the ladies'. That I would look at RDKirk's and go "Yeah, that feels more like home than the others".

I have no frame of reference to make that kind of statement or hold any such belief. I have only one experience I'm familiar with, mine. How that compares to the experience of anyone else I have no idea - and how that might relate to "gender" is even more removed.

So a lot of it is exactly as you've described (to me at least) - highly affected behaviors mimicking stereotypes of what they think that "gender" ought embody.

Then you get into the stuff about how they have hooked themselves to the LGB train - and the ever growing list of letters. LGBTQIA+.

I understand the sexual preference stuff (LGB). But I can't help but think that everyone else on that list has a completely separate set of goals than the LGB/sexual orientation folks. The dilution isn't going to help the LGB folks (IMHO) - and eventually the gender folks will end up cannibalizing the movement from the inside.

What started out as sexual orientation stuff has now become "Anything but stereotypically heterosexual". I mean, now they're throwing in things like asexual, "demisexual" (meaning that you have to have an emotional attachment to have sex with someone... really? That's a thing that needs to be thrown into the LGB mix?), etc.. It's like everyone NEEDS to be recognized, no matter what it is. lol
 
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RDKirk

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I think there are some "guy" things and some "gal" things specific to sex. It may not seem so clear with regard to guys, but for sure, there are biological distinctions (organ-based and hormone-based) clearly specific to women that affect how they feel as women.

When your daughter hits puberty, you'll see her going through things you didn't. When your wife was pregnant, she went through things you didn't. When your wife hits menopause, you will see her going through things you aren't.

You'll just have to say, "Well, that's different" and certainly sympathize because you love them, but you won't really know how they feel, and you won't be changed the way they were changed because you didn't go through those same experiences.

And I'm convinced that when biology hits women as a group that hard, we men who don't go through such things are categorically different in certain ways because we as a group lack that experience.

If someone argues that experience doesn't change a person, I'm not going to buy it, and if someone argues that a shared group experience doesn't change people in common ways as group, then I (and I have a family full of men who have combat PTSD) won't buy that either.


Yes, I agree with that.

I find that, seemingly paradoxical--but not paradoxical when you think about it--it's transexuals that prove gender is a real thing, not simply a product of socialization.
 
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DZoolander

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I agree - but I can only sympathize to some degree or other. There may be things thing truly ARE different between the sexes - but yeah - it's outside of the scope of what I or anyone else can *know*. And they are experiential things that you'd have to actually have gone through to go from sympathy to empathy.

Like on the "guy" side of the aisle - I remember going through puberty and a set of feelings that went along with that. There's a point where your body goes from producing small amounts of testosterone - to just a glut of it - and the feelings that come with that. I remember in my early teens always feeling kinda hot, itchy and greasy. A sort of jittery-ness, nervousness, sometimes elevated heartrate, etc.

I've always thought *that* might be something different about the "male" experience. But I have no idea.
 
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PreviouslySeeking...

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Actually, what you are referring to is where my problem lies. All of the "gal" things I have experienced are directly related to biology. I don't feel like a woman without the biology. Transexuals claim the gender without the biology.

What is gender then? A socially acceptable set of behaviors that change according to culture/region/time? Is that really something you can feel?
 
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snoochface

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Is that really something a 5 year old can feel, too? People who say their pre-school child told them they "are" another gender based on those factors - it seems extremely unlikely the child would have any sense of what they are even talking about at that age.
 
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PreviouslySeeking...

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That's something I have always questioned. I think the child just wants to do something/be something that they've been told "belongs" to the other sex. I would much rather have my son wear dresses or have long hair, as a boy, than have him think he necessarily needs to be a girl.

At 5- gender is appearance and activities.
 
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RDKirk

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There have been studies that have discovered a number of highly sex-correlated behaviors from infancy through toddlerhood far earlier than such behaviors could have been observed from parents or other social contacts.

And in a couple of cases, some of those behaviors have even been found to be sex-correlated in other primates. IOW, there are certain stereotypical male behaviors that occur in both humans and apes and certain stereotypical female behaviors that occur in both human and apes.
 
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Albion

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...and that does seem to be the direction that a lot of this is stuff is headed.

I dunno - what do you think?
For one thing, I believe that we have to start saying NO to the relentless demands for everyone to use terms that were just invented by someone or other yesterday.

A few changes were understandable and probably reasonable in prior years, but we have long since passed that point.

(With apologies to my ElgeebeeteecueayI friends everywhere!)
 
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RDKirk

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That will happen.

Grammar does not increase in complexity over time, it decreases.

So one gender-neutralizing change in English grammar will happen: Using "their" as an all-purpose gender neutral pronoun even though it frequently creates confusion, depending heavily on its presumed context.

That was already happening because fewer and fewer people who learned English had firmly learned the additional complexity of using "their" properly. Grammar decreases in complexity, rules fall away.

Deliberate gender-neutralization has only made that happen more quickly, but it was certainly already happening.

But trying to add additional pronouns with complex context-specific rules is not going to happen outside of a very narrow user base (like people who speak Esperanto). Grammar does not increase in complexity.

People learning English as a second language are not going to adopt new grammar complexities that most native users don't even know.
 
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