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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

The vast majority of male born transwomen still retain a penis

681 replies

IJustHadToNameChange · 22/07/2018 12:40

fairplayforwomen.com/penis/

Stats for arguing with waiverers.

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Tryingtolisten2 · 22/07/2018 22:17

@littlebrowndog I totally agree with what @hometothehills said to you in reply to your question (apart from the retirement bit... unfortunately not there quite yet)

Bespin · 22/07/2018 22:18

homefromthehills

After that I hope to get back to my (sort of) retirement!

you and me both, I had hoped I'd retired to go live my life away from all this but like the godfather they pulled me back in lol.

trans woman are indeed trans woman they do require most of the same legal rights that other woman do. saying that does not change biology or anything else but we do require those to participate in society. society as choosen to grant us those rights and for that I am grateful but in no way am I complacent in that those can not be taken away again. if you get to change societies view that we should not have those rights then what do you expect me to do? how would you expect me to function productivity in society of those rights were suddenly taken away. I have no choice but to fight what some people on here propose as it effects my very ability to function in society. like the bathroom bills in America we have no choice but to fight for our rights to carry on our lives. now I know some on here are actually looking for a way to preserve that and also define who have those rights. but there are some who want to take them all away and don't care how they effect us. maybe other people can ask them what we should do as all I ever get is its not our problem. I have fought all my life and I'm tired and I would rather not any more that I thought we may have got to a place where we had achieved that. yes sometimes I think people push too far for too much and that society is not yet at that place and may never get there. most of us just want to quite life free from persecution. we are nothing like the picture that is often painted of us.

right bed time night night all

Lougle · 22/07/2018 22:24

I must confess that I'm behind with the acronyms and don't know what TWATW and TWAW mean Confused.

The thing is, noone wants to make life hard for other people, do they? But when one group of people tell another group of people that they have to accept that they are going to have their privacy, rights and freedoms curtailed because any member of another group can claim membership of their group, just by saying 'I feel like I belong to this group', and there will be nothing that anyone can do to check, verify or exclude that person from the group, because the inclusion criterion is "self-identification", then you can understand the feeling that they are being sold out for an ideal.

If 1% of the population is trans identifying, and 50% of those people are trans women, but 50% of the population is male and 48,167 rapes, 70,159 sexual assaults and indecent assaults on girls, and the lists to on, in 2017/2018, that's a lot to open our girls up to. Because you can guarantee that people who have the keenest interest in girls and women will want to self-ID for the wrong reasons.

thebewilderness · 22/07/2018 22:27

You are entitled to the same rights as any other born males.
Transgenders currently have more rights than the rest of the population.
In an effort to strip women of their rights the transgender advocates have opened the door to reducing gender reassigned people's rights to the same level as the rest of us.
I can see where that would upset you.

Voice0fReason · 22/07/2018 22:32

I think it's reasonable to feel 'not male' and identify with being a woman, yet not necessarily want to undergo painful surgery with risks of ongoing health problems
Perfectly reasonable to express your sense of self however you want to, but it must also be accepted that by choosing to retain male genitalia means that you should not be in women's private spaces.

littlbrowndog · 22/07/2018 22:36

But u still never explained none of u wat I ave as a women that makes u want to be me

Wat is it I ave That u want t9 be like

pombear · 22/07/2018 22:40

bespin that was a bit of stream-of-consciousness there, and I think I can imagine why (though I'm not you, so wouldn't dream of putting myself into your shoes). It must be a really difficult time for you right now, when people are shining the light on the trans--agenda, and talking about what Stonewall and others classify as 'trans' (ie, probably not what you idenitfy as). I really do empathise with your position right now.

I'm a bit confused though. (I've had a glass of prosecco in the sun today, so forgive me if this doesn't make huge sense!)

What rights have you garnered through 'living as a woman' that you are so worried about being taken away?

If noone can challenge and ask for a GRC, as it's a 'hidden' document, then it's surely an 'invisible' right?

you say:
trans woman are indeed trans woman they do require most of the same legal rights that other woman do

I don't understand this, and I'm not being disingenous. A female cannot be a transwoman, because a transwoman has, by definition, a male body, otherwise there's nothing to 'transition' from.

So why do transwomen deserve most of the same legal rights that females do? Because they are not the same. The risk of your debate is that any male-bodied person who says they feel 'female' therefore deserves the same legal rights as females. Are you OK with this?

When you say 'most', which rights do you think females deserve that transwomen do not - because otherwise your sentence would be 'all rights that women do'.

Which rights do females retain in your 'most rights' definition?

The right to privacy?

The right to dignity?

The right to laws tht protect females?

littlbrowndog · 22/07/2018 22:41

But voice they never said wat bits of us women they want to be.

Surely if u want to be a women u must know wT it is u want to be?

littlbrowndog · 22/07/2018 22:44

So they got to tell us wat the women part it is that is wanted to be the women surely

thebewilderness · 22/07/2018 22:45

From my perspective, you're doing the same to me by asking me to use the men's room.

All the evidence available so far demonstrates that you would be perfectly safe in the men's room. There is not a shred of evidence to indicate you would be in any danger at all.
Since the men's room is where men are known to drag women to assault them obviously the same cannot be said of us.

Tryingtolisten2 · 22/07/2018 22:46

@blackdoggotmytongueagain

I’m about to go to bed so don’t have time for a full answer to you. If the threads still going tomorrow I’ll have a better think about it.

I agree a potential problem with the GRA act review and self-ID is that it could let a much broader range of people change their birth certificates.

I agree this can cause a threat to female spaces because people who have been abused and have PTSD or similar won’t want to share those spaces with people with male genitalia, no matter how nice or kind they are.

I think medical gatekeeping and counselling and the ‘real life experience’ need to be kept as part of any reform so only those with Gender Dysphoria, who the act was intended for, can make use of it.

I think lower surgery should be a big part of that but I can’t say it should be compulsory to get a birth certificate updated as there will always be exceptions who can’t have surgery for very good reasons.

The problem at the moment, in my opinion, is that the trans umbrella is so bloody large now even I’m confused who is included in it. Any GRA reform to self-ID should be limited to those diagnosed with Gender Dysphoria which would go some way to ensure it was genuine people using the service, not those wishing to encroach on female spaces.

Anyway, I need to go to bed.
Good night all!

littlbrowndog · 22/07/2018 22:50

Still no answer

Tryingtolisten2 · 22/07/2018 23:00

@littlbrowndog

Okay, one my before I go to bed.

I’m not sure I can answer your question fully?

I don’t want to be you. I want to be me. I am a trans woman not a woman.

Transitioning helped me feel better and more productive with my life as pre-transition I had major dysphoria, and knew my body parts (genitalia) were wrong and how my body looked just felt completely and utterly wrong.

Transitioning helped get rid of those feelings. Hormone therapy helped a lot - the mental effect of that in a trans person is profound. It feels like you’ve been running on the wrong fuel all your life and now you’re running on super premium fuel.

I didn’t fully realise how horrible testosterone made me feel before it was gone.

I hope this answers a little bit?

Good night

Mumoftwoyoungkids · 22/07/2018 23:12

This is Fred. Fred is a rapist. Fred is not a woman. Fred has no interest in being a woman. Fred would, however, like access to women’s changing rooms because then he has access to lots of women in a state of vulnerability. All he has to do is hang around for an hour or two until he is alone with one.

Fred loves the idea of gender self id.

Signs like this are Fred’s favourite thing.

www.telegraph.co.uk/education/universityeducation/student-life/11238813/University-trans-awareness-poster-prompts-huge-response.html

Fred definitely thinks that being in the women’s changing room is where he should be. He definitely knows better than some silly cow who objects to him holding her down and violently raping her.

A year or so ago I was a fluffy “live and let live” liberal whose no objection to the average transwoman coming into female changing rooms. But the TRA movement has meant that I can’t distinguish between them and Fred. Because they are determinedly removing the barriers between them and Fred.

I just don’t get how the average transwoman didn’t realise this.

AnyFucker · 22/07/2018 23:14

Good to see no deleted posts on this thread

NaturalBornWoman · 22/07/2018 23:16

trans woman are indeed trans woman they do require most of the same legal rights that other woman do

So now I've fixed that, because we aren't 'other women', why do you need rights that are afforded to women purely on the grounds of their biology when you don't share that biology? You have the same rights as all males, you have rights for transgender people. Why do you need women's rights? Why do you seek to deny women privacy and dignity? Why do you think that your wants override our needs?

LangCleg · 22/07/2018 23:18

Surely if u want to be a women u must know wT it is u want to be?

You will not get an answer my darling. Because there isn't one. If woman has only a circular definition, there's nothing to want to be.

AnyFucker · 22/07/2018 23:18

Yep, Fred is the problem for everyone including trans gender individuals who just want to get on with their life as they always have

Even if Fred is in a tiny minority, it's still too many Freds when we are talking about safeguarding women and girls

Fred can fuck off back to where he came from

Ineedacupofteadesperately · 22/07/2018 23:40

Just popping on to say I agree with Mum and AnyFucker particularly this

Even if Fred is in a tiny minority, it's still too many Freds when we are talking about safeguarding women and girls. Fred can fuck off back to where he came from

Also, as far as I'm concerned (and I believe most of the population would agree with me if asked to be honest) woman means an adult human female and THAT means a human which is genetically XX and a body with all the female bits (ovaries, uterus, vagina, breasts and so on). Unless disease has removed some of them before someone jumps on that particular bandwagon.

So there is no such thing as 'born in the wrong body' you get the body you get. That's biology. If you could self ID out of biology disabled people would be doing it all the time. Old people would be self-IDing as young. It's not REAL to self-ID as something you materially are not. And you can't possibly know what it feels like to be a woman until you've got a female body. Just like I can't possibly know what it feels like to be a man, or disabled, or 6ft 4.

GarlicGrace · 22/07/2018 23:57

I think it's reasonable to feel 'not male' and identify with being a woman

Last night a Twitter user said that transwomen are unusual men.

Women are not unusual men. We are not men who don't identify with current cultural depictions of 'male'. We aren't smaller men, nicer men or prettier men. We are not men AT ALL.

This is why the words 'man' and 'woman' exist in the first place. It's gobsmacking that we have to keep repeating this! Aristotle argued that women are faulty men - 2,400 years later, people (read: men) don't seem to have moved forwards Confused

Transwomen don't belong in women's spaces because they, unlike women, are male. Female isn't a word for 'unusual' or sub-macho men. It's a reproductive sex type: the sex that produces eggs & gestates young. Women are female. Transwomen aren't.

had1234 · 23/07/2018 00:05

Read trying to listen and homefromthehills posts with interest thank you. Yes it is the Freds that need to be safeguarded against, I do not understand how the TRAs don’t get this. Their failure to do so is indicative of something.

Men by and large accept female and male segregated spaces. While we know there are really high rates of male violence against women, we also know that most men don’t actually commit violence. To be clear, I mean that in my country about 20 per cent of women experience domestic violence for example. A crude estimate then is that 20 per cent of men commit dv. So a minority of men therefore. Arguably much higher, taking into account under reporting etc. Yet men generally accept that they need to be segregated from women and that women need safe spaces.

It is really odd to me that TRAs don’t accept that and maintain that fully grown trans women with full genitalia should have full access to women’s spaces. It is really damaging to their cause. Indeed, the attitude of the TRAs generally is putting a lot of people off. If I wanted to lose support for my issue, I would take the approach of the Trans movement. The gay rights struggle couldn’t have been more different. They won hearts and minds first over many many years, then changed laws and policies. It generally doesn’t work the other way round. Even if it is imposed on people, they will accept it for a period of time then rebel against it.

Datun · 23/07/2018 00:35

I just don’t get how the average transwoman didn’t realise this.

They don't realise it because this individual does not have die transwomen scum tattooed on their arm.

In the same way that many male bodied individuals simply did not understand the MeToo campaign. Or found the widespread assault and harassment of women 'difficult to believe'.

The reason why many people with gender dysphoria identify as women, rather than with them, is because their experiences are utterly different.

And it's the same reason why the question littlbrowndog has asked has no answer.

The reason why transwomen cannot describe what it is that makes them want to be, or makes them feel like they are, a woman is because being a woman is not a feeling.

It's a description. Of reproductive function.

Males commit 98% of sexually violent crime, 90% of violent crime and the majority of all other crime. Until that comes down to zero they do not belong in female spaces where women and girls are vulnerable.

Gender dysphoria is not a good enough reason.

It does not alter the crime statistics, and is eminently fakable.

Women everywhere are saying no. Anyone who ignores this should be excluded on that basis.

The vast majority of male born transwomen still retain a penis
L0UISA · 23/07/2018 00:40

Trying to listen - thank you for telling me about your experience . But i still have no idea what it means to “ live as a woman “ .

You say

But for trans people going through the gatekeeping process, as part of our ‘real life experience’ we have to change our name via deed poll to something more feminine (or masculine), have all our documents and ID updated to prove we’re living in role and present as ‘female’ or ‘male’ e.g. wage slips, utility bills, driving license, passport.

So what does this mean for ME to “ live as a woman “?

I already have a name that is used for either sex, so my title, name, utility bills and wage slips don’t tell you anything about my sex.

I don’t see how getting my driving license and passport changed from M to F will make me a woman. That’s literally just one letter on a document .

Getting your driving license changed from Miss Jane Smith to Mrs Jane Brown doesn’t makes you married. It’s just a few words on a page that reflects a social convention.

Lots of women who call themselves Miss or Ms are in fact married. Lots of women who used Mrs are not legally married.

Miss or Mrs has no legal meaning at all, it’s just a courtesy. It may or not matter to the individual, it might say something about how they see themselves.

So can you please tell me how I can live as a woman, given that I already have a unisex name? Is that really all it is - can I live as a woman tomorrow just by changing my name from Jamie to Janie?

Genuine question.

I have yet to see any answer about “ living as a woman “ that doesn’t rely on a set of stereotypes that have no relation to me or my life.

Like you, I’m trying to understand.

Datun · 23/07/2018 00:54

I would also like to add something.

I have nothing against the transwomen posting on this thread. Personally, I mean. This is not about individuals. It never has been.

But, to me, this is a very alienating experience.

Transwomen say either they are like us, or they want to be like us. This is the claim. So much so that laws are changed and rights are ceded, on that basis.

And in the very same breath, they are opposed to us, based exclusively on our differences. There is no affinity because of the difference.

The dichotomy is impossible to avoid.

It's instantly alienating.

I can completely understand the feeling of not wanting to be male. This is the feminist board, it's fairly dur.

But concluding that one must then be female, purely on the basis of a process of elimination, doesn't cut it.

YourFriendlyNeighbourhoodTrans · 23/07/2018 02:41

Woah a lot to respond to here.

Bewilderness
I'm a woman and just as much at risk of violence as any other woman is in those spaces. I know this for a fact because I live my actual life and have to deal with creeps all the time, including times when I've been stalked and sexually assaulted in public.

Datun
The "die cis scum" meme has an interesting story behind it if you're interested?

Char, the woman in the photo, got the tattoo on trans day of Remembrance. The point was to raise awareness about the ignorance towards transphobia motivated violence. The logic goes that people find it easy to ignore trans issues because they aren't trans; so what if people were so cavalier about threatening violence against cis people instead? Would they not feel the same way we do? Would they still find it easy to ignore the problem when they're the target?

I don't agree with the way she went about this, and I don't think you have to either. But to make out it was some kind of genuine threat of violence is misrepresenting her aims entirely. Its like saying Julie Bindel really wanted to murder all the men when she chanted "kill men now, ask me how".

Char seems like a nice person though, I'm not going to post any of her details of course - though they aren't difficult to find online. What I will say is that she's currently doing charity work for HIV, and seems to have stopped with a lot of the edgy and provocative crap like the tattoo.

Also, I don't not want to be male or want to be female. I just have a female sense of self, that's just what it is. I can't control it, I don't choose it. The same way I didn't choose my height or my eye colour. Am I "like you" - in some respects probably yeah. I'm different to you in others too. And this applies to all women ever. So why am I the one you choose to specifically exclude?

Louisa
"have yet to see any answer about “ living as a woman “ that doesn’t rely on a set of stereotypes that have no relation to me or my life."

I don't think the phrase "living as a woman" is all that deep to be honest. It's basically just another way of saying "I transitioned". Ie

"I've been living as a woman for 6 years"
"I transitioned 6 years ago".

The only difference between these two statements is that one informs the audience of the 'direction' of transition.

I think most trans women and cis women have their own opinions on what "living as a woman" is and how best to do it. We're all doing it slightly differently, though admittedly you're right - a lot of what people think "living as a woman" is comes down to stereotypes. But that applies across the board to all women, I know plenty of cis women who act like getting their hair did is affirming of their womanhood.

Myself? I mostly wear dude cut band t-shirts and jeans. I dye my hair red but I'm lazy as heck with the maintenance and upkeep of that. My idea of living as a woman is clearly different to the idea of living as a woman you seem to think most trans women have.

VoiceOfReason
But why? Why does not having surgery matter that much to you? It's not like it's the penis itself that does the harm - it's the person behind the penis who is responsible.

I think the fixation on penises as "weapons" is rather silly - and I'm saying this as a victim my self. My rapist raped me because he was an awful person. And had he been a woman or a eunuch, but still the same person- he would have just found a different way to be an abuser.

I'm genuinely curious about the rationale behind a straight up ban on penises. So please, if you could be extra through when trying to explain it I'd be super greatful!

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