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Feminism: Sex and gender discussions

Germany allowing opted out of sex ID...

55 replies

ChristmasSprite · 01/01/2019 03:07

Now gone a step further, and allow to self ID as gender diverse. The first country to do this (according to BBC news)

OP posts:
Childrenofthestones · 01/01/2019 07:39

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OhHolyJesus · 01/01/2019 08:09

Wait what? Click link?
Does this mean Self ID is all that is needed or they are including it as part of the process to legally translation?

Igneococcus · 01/01/2019 08:27

Found this:
www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-46727611

I'm not sure this is reported quite right. The problem lies with the BBC using the term gender whereas I'm pretty sure the German law uses "Geschlecht" which is sex.

R0wantrees · 01/01/2019 08:37

see also New York City announcement this week:

www.mumsnet.com/Talk/womens_rights/3465241-New-York-legalises-changing-birth-certs-to-M-F-or-X

Igneococcus · 01/01/2019 08:44

I just read the Wiki article about "Drittes Geschlecht" and everything seems to come under this term, intersex, transgender, there is even a mention of bisexuality in it.

OhHolyJesus · 01/01/2019 09:19

Right so it refers to intersex people which is a tiny tiny number and as it is a physical medical condition to register requires a doc certificate. Fair enough.

The BBC needs to use the right language, FFS, appalling editorial standards!

Igneococcus · 01/01/2019 09:30

It started out as an amendment of the law in 2013 to allow midwifes/doctors to not enter a sex into birth certificates if there was ambiguity and in one article that I found from that time there was a warning that this will open a can of worms. Now there is another law, written in 2017, passed by the Bundestag before the Christmas break, becoming law in 2019, that talks of Drittes Geschlecht as an option in official documents, like a passport, which translates to third sex, but if the wiki article is right throws a whole lot of other things in than intersex and mixes them all up, including people with "diverser Geschlechtsidentitaet" where Geschlechtsidentitaet means gender.
I'm trying to find reports in the German media but there barely are any, many are behind paywalls, I keep looking.
There is no discussion in a German parenting forum where I used to be a member, none at all.

Igneococcus · 01/01/2019 09:34

So the BBC isn't wrong as such, but the German terms are very unclear and I bet even most Germans struggle with them.

Qcng · 01/01/2019 09:39

Germany have had the option of X on a birth certificate for some time, for cases of rare intersex babies with ambiguous genitalia. They also have their own version of the GRA, ability to change the sex on your birth certificate.
But you'd have thought trans people generally will change from MtF or FtM on their documents and won't want to identify as intersex.
I'm not sure German identity politics is as extreme as it is in the Anglosphere, so eg non-binary people thinking they're actually intersex? And changing their birth certificate to have it legally recognised? Unlikely. You'd think.

Qcng · 01/01/2019 09:42

I think the BBC is wrong.
They're just pushing their gender ideology making it look as though Germany has embraced it, therefore it is law, when it hasn't and it isn't.

Igneococcus · 01/01/2019 09:50

Changing sex required counseling, hormones and surgery in Germany, I don't think this has changed. I have a friend who is a ftm transexual who needed to see a psychologist several times over a certain period, is on hormones and had mastectomies and a hysterectomy (for cancer risk) and is now legally a man and married to a woman.
I don't know how having the option of being registered as a drittes Geschlecht will impact on that law if it still stands. I also don't think that this is really what many transgender people want.

heresyandwitchcraft · 01/01/2019 09:54

The BBC link makes it look like you need a Drs certificate, and that it’s different from gender identity.

However, this passage jumped out at me:

while gender activists think the need for a doctor's certificate will make proof harder for intersex people without physical characteristics

Firstly, don’t all intersex variations of a person’s reproductive anatomy have a biological/physical basis which should be verifiable? Who are the intersex people without any physical features (genuine question, would love to know the answer)? What about people who are in the medical system for treatment of “gender dysphoria” (however that is diagnosed), would they be able to get a doctor (such as a German equivalent of a private gender clinic of GPs) to change their certificate to X if they have (for example) a double mastectomy to “affirm their non-binary identity” which is a “physical intervention”? If so, what does that mean for bodily integrity in young people? Regarding the “confusion” between sex and gender that seems to be happening even in Germany, is this situation really another way of trying to say non-binary people are somehow the same as intersex people? Trans activists’ strategy of blurring sex and gender to the detriment of actual biological reality seems to be a pattern, so this wouldn’t surprise me in the least.

R0wantrees · 01/01/2019 10:14

But you'd have thought trans people generally will change from MtF or FtM on their documents and won't want to identify as intersex.
I'm not sure German identity politics is as extreme as it is in the Anglosphere, so eg non-binary people thinking they're actually intersex? And changing their birth certificate to have it legally recognised?

There are many within the trans community who are advocating for the 'X' & some prominant TRAs who identify as transwomen/men also identify as non-binary.
'Smashing the binary' intention is to end sex-based rights, spaces, descriptions etc.
A designation of 'Non-Binary' means access all areas. People can assert they are neither and/or both genders/sex.

R0wantrees · 01/01/2019 10:28

In North America, some young people identifying as Non-Binary (& other gender identities) are accessing medical interventions:

'The Uncharted Territories of Medically Transitioning Children'
recent article by Donna Reynolds
(extract)
"Who’s Leading Whom—and Where?

A January 2018 Washington Post piece highlighted the services provided by the UCSF Child and Adolescent Gender Center:

The type of services being requested has also changed. Clinicians say they are no longer taken aback by youths seeking some kind of boutique treatment — often “just a touch of testosterone” for an androgynous, nonbinary identity.

“It’s the children who are now leading us,” said Diane Ehrensaft, the director of mental health for the clinic. “They’re coming in and telling us, ‘I’m no gender.’ Or they’re saying, ‘I identify as gender nonbinary.’ Or ‘I’m a little bit of this and a little bit of that. I’m a unique gender, I’m transgender. I’m a rainbow kid, I’m boy-girl, I’m everything.’”

Dr Ehrensaft is wrong. Children aren’t leading the charge in this field, and limitless gender fluidity isn’t an idea that springs unbidden from the minds of adolescents. These are post-modern gender concepts developed by academics and released into the infosphere where they can be absorbed by kids who are bored, troubled, or seeking new and creative ways to freak out their parents.

The boutique response to adolescent gender games is likely a small part of what the UCSF Child and Adolescent Gender Center does, but that they indulge them at all seems frivolous and unworthy of the children and adults who genuinely suffer. And as the long-term effects of such interventions are unclear, it also seems risky.

Gender dysphoria isn’t new, but the treatment options and the evolving demographics are. Clinicians are in the unenviable position of having to make Solomonic judgments about how best to treat a changing patient population. And given the response by academics and activists to conservative treatment approaches, some practitioners may feel pressured to approve transitional therapies that are safe from professional censure but inappropriate for the patient. They may remember that an Ohio couple lost custody of their child for refusing to authorize hormone therapy, and that Kenneth Zucker’s clinic was shuttered, and that Lisa Littman’s research was sandbagged." (continues)
quillette.com/2018/12/29/the-uncharted-territories-of-medically-transitioning-children/

sanluca · 01/01/2019 10:32

As far as I know this is only for intersex people who are really between male and female. It has nothing to do with transgender or gender identity. The idea is that the person can change it later to male and female if they want to. I don't think you can change your birth registration in Germany otherwise.

R0wantrees · 01/01/2019 10:39

As far as I know this is only for intersex people who are really between male and female. It has nothing to do with transgender or gender identity. The idea is that the person can change it later to male and female if they want to. I don't think you can change your birth registration in Germany otherwise.

There is a consistant precedent set by TRAs to appropriate the experiences/supportive structures for people who have intersex conditions.
People who are intersex are not 'between male and female'

Skyzalimit · 01/01/2019 10:39

Childrenofthestones

Your suggestion:

Dont worry, when Islam becomes a large cultural and political force there, as it shall, this guff will all be reversed.

...is peculiar and worrying. It's both Islamophobically alarmist, and anti trans.

vesuvia · 01/01/2019 12:14

Igneococcus wrote - "people with "diverser Geschlechtsidentitae" where Geschlechtsidentitaet means gender."

I would translate Geschlechtsidentitaet as "gender identity" rather than gender (Geschlecht) or gender role (Geschlechterrolle).

Igneococcus · 01/01/2019 13:25

Geschlecht is sex not gender

TakenForSlanted · 01/01/2019 15:06

Geschlecht is actually both sex and gender - German doesn't differentiate the way English does. Kind of the way that people in English will say gender but mean sex because they're prudish about the latter.

If you want to say gender specifically, you'd have so say something along the lines of social sex or sex role or identity. In academia, the English word gender is used quite frequently, too.

Dragon3 · 01/01/2019 15:12

Igneococcus did I understand correctly that there is no word for 'gender' as in 'sexist stereotype' in German?

Dragon3 · 01/01/2019 15:13

Sorry, cross posted with TakenforSlanted.

Igneococcus · 01/01/2019 15:29

I disagree that Geschlecht means both sex and gender. It doesn't for me (native speaker). This is why they come up with the awkward term Geschlechtsidentitaet. Gender is not a term used outside a specific demographic of youngish, university- educated people. The majority of Germans wouldn't know what it means except maybe as a grammar term.

DrHeidi · 01/01/2019 18:59

Here is an article (written by a very 'woke' columnist, Margarete Stokowski), criticising the 'restrictive' approach taken in Germany.

www.spiegel.de/kultur/gesellschaft/dritte-geschlechtsoption-der-staat-als-spanner-a-1232264.html

It seems to me that intersex conditions have been very successfully co-opted by the TRAs in Germany. This serves to confuse a very uninformed public.

Apparently, the state (always a bogeyman in post-war Germany) brutally forces people into the categories of male and female - this is a 'hellish imposition'. And silly me thought that it was good old evolution that had imposed sexual reproduction on the human species. Now I learn it was the German government!

The very few gender critical voices in Germany seem to be disorganised and cut off from funding. Wonder if deepwatersolo knows more about this?

vagender · 01/01/2019 20:16

Geschlecht means sex, not gender. German doesn’t have a word for gender beyond Geschlechtsidentität, literally “sex identity”. It’s why, in an academic - or “woke” - context, the English word gender is used. And as PP have said, the third sex option was designed for intersex babies with ambiguous genitalia.