I love you. |
| Sometimes observations are biased by what you find uncomfortable. I really can’t think of a single reason I’d need to know what you asked, OP. Even if 99.9% of non-binary teens were assigned female at birth, how does it matter? |
People aren't "assigned" male or female at birth, any more than they are "assigned" ten fingers and ten toes. |
Ever look at a birth certificate? Until recently, only M or F was allowed and a judgment was made based on external genitalia, even if ambiguous. |
Gender is observed at birth, not assigned. |
OK - if you really don't know, a non-binary person does not feel comfortable identifying as either one of the two (hence, "binary") traditional genders: male and female. |
Thank you. |
I kinda love you too. |
| We used to call them androgynous. There was a whole CK campaign, and a fragrance. |
Sex is observed at birth. Gender is a construct. |
And even sex is legally determined at the point in a visual generalization that may not match chromosomes. Over this many cm is a penis. Under is a clitoris. |
| Well non-binary doesn’t exist so... |
+1. You cannot really change sex, but you can change gender as many times as you want. #ScientificFact |
Yes, but looking androgynous was just an aesthetic. They weren't denying that they were actually women. |
Not true. They just weren’t telling you. |