Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I gauge from your cryptic tone that you think this is a problem.
I do not. And I think you're a bad person if you do.
You can't be serious?
I'm quite serious. Anyone who has a problem with this law, which is rooted in basic human rights and decency, is fundamentally a bad person.
Actually, anyone who doesn't have a problem with this, is crazy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get that the fines seem extreme but, really, is it that hard to address someone how they wish to be addressed? Is it any skin off your nose? It may seem silly to some but... So what?
NP here. This.
This isn't about bumping into someone on the street and accidentally saying "excuse me, sir" instead of "excuse me, madam" or something.
This is so that people can't be harassed at work and stuff.
OP wants to histrionically and irrationally pretend this is a bad thing and it's not. In my experience, the people who are the most against this sort of thing are the people who internally feel a lot of anguish about their own gender identity but felt they didn't have a choice but to pretend to be straight for life. Then they police others' gender identities and rail against any progress in society that would allow others the fluidity they felt they were denied.
OP, it's not too late to reach out to someone to get help for yourself.
Yeah, but is there a real need to invent new pronouns? Once the transition takes place, the person assumes an existing gender. Sort of.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I gauge from your cryptic tone that you think this is a problem.
I do not. And I think you're a bad person if you do.
You can't be serious?
I'm quite serious. Anyone who has a problem with this law, which is rooted in basic human rights and decency, is fundamentally a bad person.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I gauge from your cryptic tone that you think this is a problem.
I do not. And I think you're a bad person if you do.
You can't be serious?
Anonymous wrote:
I could care less what people are called. But I don't the rabidness of laws like this or posts like yours that seek to crucify people who don't bend over backwards to accommodate rapidly changing preferences, or who don't walk on eggshells to avoid offending people with the most delicate sensitivities.
Anonymous wrote:I'm as liberal as they come and I think this is mind-bogglingly ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:I gauge from your cryptic tone that you think this is a problem.
I do not. And I think you're a bad person if you do.
Anonymous wrote:This is not op
But why is the fine so high? Can't people make mistakes without costing so much? Honestly curious!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is not op
But why is the fine so high? Can't people make mistakes without costing so much? Honestly curious!
It's not about mistakes. It's about illegal discrimination by "covered entities." i.e., you cannot deny housing or employment to someone because s/h/ze is transgendered. Same protection as race, sex, etc. There's nothing wrong with this.
Anonymous wrote:Is calling someone "it" an option?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I get that the fines seem extreme but, really, is it that hard to address someone how they wish to be addressed? Is it any skin off your nose? It may seem silly to some but... So what?
NP here. This.
This isn't about bumping into someone on the street and accidentally saying "excuse me, sir" instead of "excuse me, madam" or something.
This is so that people can't be harassed at work and stuff.
OP wants to histrionically and irrationally pretend this is a bad thing and it's not. In my experience, the people who are the most against this sort of thing are the people who internally feel a lot of anguish about their own gender identity but felt they didn't have a choice but to pretend to be straight for life. Then they police others' gender identities and rail against any progress in society that would allow others the fluidity they felt they were denied.
OP, it's not too late to reach out to someone to get help for yourself.