My feeling is that it is a species of homo-erotic fear. If — unenlightened
Therefore, as Banno suggested, maybe more partitions or something. — Baden
I guess. Or maybe not. "For instance, most studies have shown that men have a greater proportion of fast-twitch muscle fibers, a difference traditionally attributed to genetics." https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/observations/4-myths-about-testosterone/In sports, hormone testing is the way to go, I guess. — Baden
. As for medical treatment of kids, there has to be major safeguards in place. There's a high suicide risk for trans kids so it's about trying to mitigate potential mental health problems in the least invasive way possible. — Baden
As to sports, I find I am discriminated against because I am a wimpy spastic weakling. Why isn't there a category for me? — unenlightened
haven't made any arguments about any of those things. I've only done what you directed us to do in the OP. — Baden
The reason I claim this is there is no evidence-based justification for taking such a position, the main argument for which is the transphobic, sexist, and patriarchal (thank you, unenlightened) lie that trans women are a threat to cis women in women's bathrooms, whereas the truth is that trans women are the ones under threat from stigmatization and verbal and physical abuse, not just in bathrooms, but everywhere. — Baden
Of course I don't think you should have a national or local referendum on every issue of social policy, large and small, as sometimes moral leadership is necessary. — Baden
To sum this up, yes, lies, ignorance, and irrational fears should not lead social policy, regardless of their popularity. Compassion, intelligence, and understanding should. — Baden
Anyhow, I don't hold animus to those of you who disagree. — Baden
I'm not in your 99.5% and neither are a huge number of others who find the idea that a simple thing like a trans woman using the woman's lavatory should not be an issue in any reasonable society. — Baden
The thread's title is 'What is a "Woman"', but it's not about definitions — Banno
No comment as yet on the article. I look forward to your response. — Banno
Really, it's entirely their fault. — BC
the failure to account for real discrepancies in how we categorise stuff, on understanding necessity and kinds and how sometimes it's a family resemblance. — Banno
The relationship between biological description and man/woman designations is not so easy as I once thought — Moliere
This is not about chromosomes or genitalia or societal expectations; but it is about urinals and stalls and keeping people safe. — Banno
What I'd say is recent is that people who thought biology mattered have found out that it doesn't. — Moliere
There's even a paragraph for you, Hanover, explaining who your simplistic xx and xy "solution" ignores. — Banno
Yes. It's an unfortunate fact that few transwomen go undetected. It's usually pretty obvious. — frank
It's the biological definition being strictly applied which is novel. — Moliere
On the issue of slavery, American democracy failed. — frank
For many transgender people their appear is who they are. — Tom Storm
Slavery was made in illegal in the US by a presidential proclamation — frank
A transgender female will likely dress as a woman because that helps to make the transition psychologically effective for them. Should they 'choose' to dress as a male instead? It seems we're back to the word choice being used here in a slightly shady way. — Tom Storm
The correlation between appearance and gender identity is a choice, not a requirement. — Hanover
Don't think for one second your reputation for depravity can be restored that easily. — Srap Tasmaner
The women in Thailand don't seem to be bothered and certainly not all women are bothered. — Baden
I'm talking primarily about MtF access to bathrooms here. I might move on to locker rooms later but the fact that in the latter case or in a case where a woman walks into a male bathroom, opposite genitalia may be exposed creates an issue of modesty and embarrassment that isn't relevant to just washing your hands next to someone in front of a mirror or having them in the next cubicle. — Baden
I think this is the crux of the matter. If I claim that transwomen aren't women, you'd think I'm transphobic? — frank
Should someone who has physically transitioned use the bathroom associated with their sex chromosomes? — Michael
I'm not sure what the relevance of this is. — Tom Storm
The threat of sexual deviance is a threat to the deepest fabric of society, the basis of property and privilege, and heritage itself, including nationality ethnicity etc. The male fear is that another man might have sex with my woman and my child not be mine. Even the women's toilets are not safe, and we must patrol them! — unenlightened
Let's take it step by step. We presumably agree that if there is no evidence trans women are more of a danger then cis women in bathrooms then excluding them on that basis is irrational. What is the next consideration for excluding them then and we can discuss that. — Baden
This seems like a non-sequitur. The purpose of the comparison was simply to make the point that both in a transphobic and racist society, false justifications relating to public health and safely will be used to maintain the status quo. — Baden
not sure why this point was made then. Whatbehaviour are you referring to in relation to trans? — Tom Storm
What about those who’ve physically transitioned? Should an XX person with an artificial penis and testicles use the XX locker room? Should an XY person with artificial breasts and vulva use the XY locker room? How would a third party using the locker room even know that they’re artificial? — Michael
Sounds like a pretty weak argument - the church used to say to gay people (and still does), 'It's ok to be gay, just choose not to love another man or have sex with one." — Tom Storm
But then one might ask, are F to M transsexuals at risk of attack while using men's toilets? I suppose it would depend on the toilet. A F to M could safely urinate in the toilets of the Campaign of Human Rights, but maybe the toilet at Tea Party HQ, or a really rough biker bar would not be a good place to test things out. Is anyone safe in a Tea Party toilet — BC
One of the criticisms we can make of the Cis understanding of the issue is that we often seem to think trans, or being gay for that matter, is a lifestyle choice and people can stop 'doing it' just like they should say 'no' to drugs, etc, etc. — Tom Storm
As Judith Butler said in that video, the important thing now is to nurture a climate where trans people aren't subject to violence. Over zealousness doesn't deescalate tension.
What do you think? — frank
Hmmm. A choice for whom? — Tom Storm
Or is "modesty" a proxy for some other problem, unaddressed? — Banno