Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Of course they do. All people with disabilities and medical conditions are considered people worthy of equal respect. That doesn't mean their condition says anything other than that they have a genetic anomaly. If you have an anomaly in your heart it doesn't speak to a larger question about whether there is a 'right' kind of heart. There is a right kind of heart that functions in an ideal way for human thriving and survival. The same is true for gender/sex. It doesn't mean there is ANYTHING wrong with people with heart defects or gender dysphoria.
Human beings have two legs! Except for the ones who don't.
Humans are bipedal. The occasional human born with some number other than 2 doesn't automatically become a non-human. They are a human with an anomaly. They are part of a bipedal species, even without having 2 legs.
This is true: The species Homo sapiens is bipedal.
This is not true: Human beings are bipedal. (Most are, some aren't.)
Anonymous wrote:
You talk about transgendered individuals not having their autonomy respected or feeling accepted because they won't be accepted by women. By watering down woman you are also taking some identity from people born as women. I know they have privilege and should be I dunno, understanding etc. But to me it feel like calling an apple an orange. Apples and oranges are fruit, they have a lot in common, but they aren't the same thing.
Anonymous wrote:
Women are less likely to become CEOs than men.
Isn't it important to be able for us to communicate what we mean by "women" and what we mean by "men" in that case?
Although I suppose if we conveniently say that "women" are no longer a category that can exist because it's just too inexact, we no longer have to worry about centuries of abuse and oppression and we have one fewer minority group. Hey, why don't we do that for ALL groups that have been oppressed and disadvantaged?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They would be, like the other person you mentioned, likely a woman for all practical purposes. But as they take rather drastic measures to conform their body and appearance to 'female' or 'male' then I think these definitions that you want to throw out the window mean quite a bit to them as well.
Transwomen aren't women because they don't have XX chromosomes.
But there are people who are women who don't have XX chromosomes.
Well, ok, transwomen aren't women because they didn't grow up as women.
But there are people who are transwomen who are growing up as women.
Well, ok, transwomen aren't women because they undergo medical treatment.
It seems like the ground you're standing on is shrinking -- unless it's multiple posters making the transwomen-aren't-women argument?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:[
It is important in the context of sociology/history/biology, basically all of human history. Women are in many many ways defined by their sex organs and reproductive systems. It is what makes us vulnerable, it is the defining rights that are constantly in danger of being stripped from us. And yes some of that is societal, but societal pressures that are inextricably woven into our biology.
I do not pick on transgendered people at all, I think they should be allowed to live their lives however they want to live their lives. Like I said earlier I have a transgendered relative who I treat exactly the way I treated her before her transition. I don't care if they want to call themselves a woman or a man. But they don't get to change the definition of what a woman is or what a man is to address the plight of a small subset of the population with a medical condition. If there was no real difference between men and women then why on earth do transgendered people feel so intensely focused on identifying as one or the other. The very definition of the transgendered condition speaks to the real differences between the sexes. If it was all a bucket of societal changes, then no one would feel so compelled to change their bodies and appearances so drastically.
Let's stop doing that.
Not that it's particularly on-topic, but I do think it's interesting that most of the angst and horror about transgender people seems to be about transwomen (people who were assigned male at birth and who live (or want to live) their lives as women). Nobody is angsty and horrified about transmen (people who were assigned female at birth and who live (or want to live) their lives as men).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
So, 'dogs have four legs' 'horses have four legs' 'women have a uterus' 'men have a penis' 'chimpanzees have a tail' are all factually incorrect?
Or do we now have to attach the word most/all to any declarative statement?
How do you refer to the qualities of a species globally?
Do you have the faintest idea how common hysterectomies are?
That is kind of my point. Even in cases like that, where there are a significant subset of women who no longer have their uterus, it is still a defining trait of being a woman (or people with an XY chromosome) to have a reproductive system. When you are talking about the human species, how it exists and grows etc etc the two sex structure is essential. And the differences between them are basically all about reproduction when it comes down to it.
So now its not "women have a uterus" but "women have a reproductive system" ? Is a woman with uterus more of a woman than one without? How about a woman who has her uterus removed but keeps her fallopian tubes?
Or how about people just drop this? What is the context where defining who is a woman important? Are you a physician? A statistician? Or are you just trying to justify picking on a group of vulnerable people?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Most intelligent people accept the fact that having 2 legs is the normal condition for humans, and anything else is an anomaly. If you need to point out that this is "factually incorrect" (which it is not), then I don't know what else to say.
We expend considerable time and effort to make life easier for humans with many physical challenges, including not having two legs.
We should also structure our society to be decent and humane towards the large number of people who have are born with the chromosomes and genitals of one sex, but who identify strongly with the other, to the point where denying them their identity is painful to them. That includes allowing them to go the bathroom where they feel comfortable (and certainly not boycotting retailers who choose to allow that). I don't think anything else is seriously at issue for most people, unless you are writing some academic dissertation on gender.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Of course they do. All people with disabilities and medical conditions are considered people worthy of equal respect. That doesn't mean their condition says anything other than that they have a genetic anomaly. If you have an anomaly in your heart it doesn't speak to a larger question about whether there is a 'right' kind of heart. There is a right kind of heart that functions in an ideal way for human thriving and survival. The same is true for gender/sex. It doesn't mean there is ANYTHING wrong with people with heart defects or gender dysphoria.
Human beings have two legs! Except for the ones who don't.
Humans are bipedal. The occasional human born with some number other than 2 doesn't automatically become a non-human. They are a human with an anomaly. They are part of a bipedal species, even without having 2 legs.
This is true: The species Homo sapiens is bipedal.
This is not true: Human beings are bipedal. (Most are, some aren't.)
Anonymous wrote:Here come the social justice warriors![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Of course they do. All people with disabilities and medical conditions are considered people worthy of equal respect. That doesn't mean their condition says anything other than that they have a genetic anomaly. If you have an anomaly in your heart it doesn't speak to a larger question about whether there is a 'right' kind of heart. There is a right kind of heart that functions in an ideal way for human thriving and survival. The same is true for gender/sex. It doesn't mean there is ANYTHING wrong with people with heart defects or gender dysphoria.
Human beings have two legs! Except for the ones who don't.
Humans are bipedal. The occasional human born with some number other than 2 doesn't automatically become a non-human. They are a human with an anomaly. They are part of a bipedal species, even without having 2 legs.
Anonymous wrote:Sex is not a social construction. Gender is.
Similarly, age is not a social construction, but youth/middle-age/old age etc. are. That's why we have sayings like "you're only as old as you feel" or "youth is wasted on the young" or "50 is the new 40" or "if you're 55 or better..."
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They would be, like the other person you mentioned, likely a woman for all practical purposes. But as they take rather drastic measures to conform their body and appearance to 'female' or 'male' then I think these definitions that you want to throw out the window mean quite a bit to them as well.
Transwomen aren't women because they don't have XX chromosomes.
But there are people who are women who don't have XX chromosomes.
No. They aren't women because they have a Y chromosome. If you have a Y chromosome, you are a man even if you cut your nads off, shoot yourself up with crazy industrial-strength female hormones, and suffer from the deeply-held, long-term delusion that you are female.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
Of course they do. All people with disabilities and medical conditions are considered people worthy of equal respect. That doesn't mean their condition says anything other than that they have a genetic anomaly. If you have an anomaly in your heart it doesn't speak to a larger question about whether there is a 'right' kind of heart. There is a right kind of heart that functions in an ideal way for human thriving and survival. The same is true for gender/sex. It doesn't mean there is ANYTHING wrong with people with heart defects or gender dysphoria.
Human beings have two legs! Except for the ones who don't.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:
They would be, like the other person you mentioned, likely a woman for all practical purposes. But as they take rather drastic measures to conform their body and appearance to 'female' or 'male' then I think these definitions that you want to throw out the window mean quite a bit to them as well.
Transwomen aren't women because they don't have XX chromosomes.
But there are people who are women who don't have XX chromosomes.
Anonymous wrote:
They would be, like the other person you mentioned, likely a woman for all practical purposes. But as they take rather drastic measures to conform their body and appearance to 'female' or 'male' then I think these definitions that you want to throw out the window mean quite a bit to them as well.