seemslikeadream » Thu Nov 19, 2015 7:23 pm wrote:The more interesting question for me is what is your perceived gender of another member.
Yeah; especially when I twice mistook a future (chick) partner for a guy.

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seemslikeadream » Thu Nov 19, 2015 7:23 pm wrote:The more interesting question for me is what is your perceived gender of another member.
Some people aren't comfortable in their own bodies and want to change it. Why is that such a big issue?
DrEvil » Thu Nov 19, 2015 3:44 pm wrote:Some people aren't comfortable in their own bodies and want to change it. Why is that such a big issue?
tapitsbo » Thu Nov 19, 2015 8:12 pm wrote:Seems like the trans pendulum is swinging a little far in the opposite direction, in this thread. Clearly these people have always been with us in some form.
Harvey wrote:Next up: Trans-species rights and recognition? Not facetious, merely speculating.
Agent Orange Cooper » Thu Nov 19, 2015 5:08 pm wrote:It's universally recognized as a mental disorder.
guruilla » Thu Nov 19, 2015 8:45 pm wrote: there's the assumption that if we could all agree to embrace each other's differences we'd all get along. But embracing differences erases difference
brainpanhandler » Thu Nov 19, 2015 10:25 pm wrote:guruilla » Thu Nov 19, 2015 8:45 pm wrote: there's the assumption that if we could all agree to embrace each other's differences we'd all get along. But embracing differences erases difference
Really?
guruilla » Thu Nov 19, 2015 9:45 pm wrote:tapitsbo » Thu Nov 19, 2015 8:12 pm wrote:Seems like the trans pendulum is swinging a little far in the opposite direction, in this thread. Clearly these people have always been with us in some form.
Yes. Some of them became shamans. But for every genuine anomaly (and being a shaman was never meant to be a picnic), how many people now are simply overreacting to perfectly natural feelings of confusion and grabbing onto the first self-identifier/social role they can, signing up for surgery or whatever else they can to assuage those feelings?
The whole notion that suffering is something that needs to be alleviated by fixing the externals is what I am objecting to. We all do it. And it creates the sort of messed up culture of exploitation we are seeing, where no one wants to just sit in the distress of being poisoned, but instead rushes to cut off the offending parts, or worse, take it out on/put it into someone else.
Also interesting is the weird homogenization that occurs with the supposed "celebration of difference." It seems as tho everyone wants to exercise their right to be proud of whatever makes them anomalous within the tribe, but only so they can get all the perks and the status of the tribe, and so be absorbed into it.
Brekin pointed out (if i read the cryptic phrases right) how the white male can end up being scapegoated if he speaks too frankly about his feelings in such discussions; there's the assumption that if we could all agree to embrace each other's differences we'd all get along. But embracing differences erases difference, and when there's all a sameness to a community, as Girard writes, mimetic violence spreads like wildfire. Maybe Europe now is an illustration of that?
Also, if we're being conditioned to accept differences without ever understanding them, the acceptance is entirely bogus, and breeds resentment and rage on both sides of what may be a quite necessary and natural divide (like that of the sexes).
Harvey wrote:Next up: Trans-species rights and recognition? Not facetious, merely speculating.
It's a new thing now; I forget what they are called, people who think they were born as the wrong species. They are getting surgery too.
The Day the World Jumped the Shark and No One Noticed...
Joao » Thu Nov 19, 2015 7:22 pm wrote:I'd be careful about that criterion. A brief list of some others that have also been "universally recognized"
The XY sex-determination system is the sex-determination system found in humans, most other mammals, some insects (Drosophila), and some plants (Ginkgo). In this system, the sex of an individual is determined by a pair of sex chromosomes (gonosomes). Females have two of the same kind of sex chromosome (XX), and are called the homogametic sex. Males have two distinct sex chromosomes (XY), and are called the heterogametic sex.
This system is in contrast with the ZW sex-determination system found in birds, some insects, many reptiles, and other animals, in which the heterogametic sex is female.
A temperature-dependent sex determination system is found in some reptiles.
Agent Orange Cooper » Thu Nov 19, 2015 11:56 pm wrote:The fact that many, many transwomen simultaneously suffer from bipolar, manic depression, suicidal behavior, classical narcissism, and (very often) autogynephilia, etc, does not seem to me to be coincidental.
Joao » Fri Nov 20, 2015 12:52 am wrote:Well that's the crux of it, though. Interesting post but wouldn't just one competent, well adjusted transgendered person prove otherwise?
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