Atelier3 said:
I am unclear on whether you believe that transwoman are delusional or mentally ill.
I hesitate to say my true feelings about trans people because I don't want to offend people and I don't want to lose friends. If you are clinically female in every way, it is delusional to perceive yourself as male. They used to call it gender dysphoria and it was listed in the DSM-5.
If you're skinny and you think you're fat, that's body dysmorphia. I don't really differentiate between gender dysmorphia and body dysmorphia, in terms of which one is more/less delusional. I am not even slightly convinced that being a man in a woman's body (or vice versa) is really a thing.
Mental illness is not craziness. I don't like the term crazy. It's not a helpful term. If there's an illness, we can understand it and treat it. Calling someone crazy is a way of writing them off. I also don't believe in the word evil, for the same reasons.
Depression is a form of mental illness. Statistically people who are trans are way more likely to experience depression and many other forms of mental illness. The counter argument is (typically) to blame cis people and systemic transphobia, in the same way that we - as a society - tend to blame white people for issues experienced by minority groups.
I tend towards the belief that people like Ellen Page are confused.
50 year ago, cutting off your breasts and calling yourself a man would have been universally perceived as "crazy". Like I said, I don't like that word. It is a word people use when they fail to understand the underlying issues of particular mental illnesses. I'm not saying I understand the core of psychosis or bipolar or gender dysmorphia, but I assume there is a core.
Admittedly, some of my attitude towards the transgender movement is influenced by religion. I wasn't raised Christian, but I like Christianity. I think man/woman is perfect. I don't believe people need to change gender. I think materialism is a dead end. I think capitalism is a dead end. People have unhealthy addictions to film and television. This (all of it) is a sickness. Part of that sickness is the transgender movement.
If I deconstruct gender, I end up with this statement: gender is meaningless. Therefore, it makes no sense to me to change gender. Instead, people should renounce gender and be free from it.
Wearing a dress isn't inherently female. Just look at the Scots. Wearing make-up isn't inherently female either. Look at 18th century France.
When David Bowie wore a dress, that was part of a movement to break down gender barriers. Men and women should be able to wear whatever they want; clothes are irrelevant.
I've thought about this stuff a lot. If you take out all the superficial stuff like clothing and socially dictated behaviours, you aren't left with a lot at the core.
What does it mean to be male?
What does it mean to be female?
These are valid questions.
They should be explored.
Atelier3 said:
On the question of should language be legislated. Generally not, however in order for legislation to be effective its terms must be clearly defined. The legal meaning of dozens of terms is legislated, and legislated meanings tend to seep into common usage.
I take it you cannot give me an example of legislated speech that is dictated? When (in the modern Western world) have people been forced to say something that they don't believe? Where is the precedent you mentioned?
I'm not suggesting it hasn't happened, but it tends to occur in unfavourable situations like dictatorships.
So, if the government intended that all the legislated benefits enjoyed by cis-women should also be enjoyed by trans-women, it may be simpler legislatively to pass one bill saying trans-women are legally women than to amend every single other piece of legislation that contains the word ‘woman’.
Whether or not it is simpler to treat trans women as women, legally, is a different argument. I'm not convinced that it will save enough time/money to justify blurring the legal definition of a woman... but perhaps (ideally / theoretically) we should take gender out of law and treat everyone as people?
None of that has any bearing on whether or not people should be pressured into saying something that they don't want to say.
There is freedom of speech, which must be limited to some extent.
Then, there is the freedom to not speak which is unlimited.
Also, do you disagree with my argument that language is fluid and dynamic and that over time meanings of words change?
I agree that language is fluid.
If you do accept that, why do you not accept that such a process is occurring with historically gender-nominating words like man and woman.
As I said, it's not really occurring beyond a small group of people. Most countries in the world aren't changing the definition of man and woman. I've met very few people who want to change the definitions.
Man/woman - these words aren't interchangeable with spastic or nigger. They are words that have existed since the beginning of language and they represent things that exist in the world. As you said, the definitions (according to the trans community) are becoming muddied already.
Is a trans man a man?
Most people say no, but you can't say they're
not men.
So, now we have cis-man and trans-man, both of whom are men.
This is bad mathematics.
The referand for ‘man’ can be related to sex (which is biological) but it can also be related to gender (which is at least partially socially constructed and performative).
One of the big problems with the separation of sex and gender is the selectivity involved when people separate them for political purposes.
I still don't understand the difference.
You said gender is "at least partially socially constructed".
Surely it is entirely socially constructed?
They way gender is defined changes according to culture/country. Like I said earlier, if you deconstruct gender and break down all the superficial shit... what are you left with?
Gender doesn't exist. It is meaningless. There is only sex.
If gender isn't sex, then why do trans people have surgery?
Can you split the two concepts and deal with then seperarately?
A progressive attitude towards gender, in my mind, involves discarding gender stereotypes. Men and women can be doctors. Men and women can go to war. Men can wear dresses. Women can wear pants.
Ellen Page isn't more male somehow because she has short hair or wears hoodies. That is completely meaningless. She is a woman with short hair who wears hoodies and had her breasts removed.