• MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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      I think the best response that’s always worked for me is:

      “Who cares!” Person riled up about this inclined to agree with me because they think I’m on the two genders “side of the debate”. “Just try your best to call people what they want to be called and move on. If someone’s name is x, try call them x, if they say ‘I am a y’, try calling them a y. If you get it wrong accidentally, oh well, just say sorry and try again. Why are we even still talking about this? It’s such a non-issue”

      Highly effective on those who aren’t super conservative and just been swept up in the (in my opinion) astroturfed outrage.

      • Nuke_the_whales@lemmy.world
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        That’s why I like names, that’s why we have em. When I first meet you, tell me your name and that’s what I’ll call you. The rest we can learn as we go

        • MisterFrog@lemmy.world
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          My response is still the same. Because the more uncommon something is (i.e. not He/she/they) then it’s also reasonable to expect people to get it wrong a bunch. Also, I really feel pointing toward odd pronouns is such a stawman too, because it’s overwhelmingly people asking for he/she/they (male/female/neither).

          If there is someone non-binary out there really getting mad at people who mis-gender them without being told first (again, never met anyone like this, ever), then I’d encourage them to practice some empathy and be realistic.

          I’m betting there is practically no one out there seriously asking to be called master.

          Though smeagol uses it for master. Master is nice to smeagol.

          I really think this “debate” is such a waste of time. Just try to accommodate people if it’s easy.

          And calling someone by the name they choose (and are often legally called), and the gender they identify with, is such low effort, and making mistakes is such a non-issue if your attitude is good.

          What is the fuss all about. (I know the answer, I just think the answer is stupid)

  • GrymEdm@lemmy.world
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    I remember an old 4chan joke from, I think, over a decade ago. It’s an old memory so I hope I don’t butcher it:

    A 4chan user found a genie. He was tired of getting no action, so he told the genie his 1st wish was the ability to turn on sight that would let him see everyone willing to sleep with him. “Your wish is granted”, replied the genie. “You can now close your eyes.”

    In the modern version I’d make it one of these misogynist assholes.

  • vordalack@lemm.ee
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    Sees woman in public

    “Quick! Cover your mouth! That’s how they get inside you to lay their eggs!”

    • CancerMancer@sh.itjust.works
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      I had to drive a friend of a friend to the hospital because some scumfuck drugged his drink. I don’t even like the guy but I obviously wasn’t going to leave him like that.

      When talking to the doctor I was surprised to find out that men also often get drugged and it’s not talked about for some reason.

      • itsprobablyfine@sh.itjust.works
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        I’ve had it happen to friends and I’m pretty sure it happened to me once but at least in my case I think I was collateral damage. That said, without really knowing the strategies of that sort of thing hitting the wrong target seems like something that would happen fairly often if you don’t care about other people which, presumably, you don’t.

        • cafeinux@infosec.pub
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          Had it happen to my wife-to-be when we started dating (like one week in).

          We were at a party in a field, with tents and all that, and she was sat on my lap. She complained she was feeling a bit tired, stood up and after a few steps, she just collapsed on the ground. I just had the time to launch myself and catch her before she hurt herself, because she really fell like a lifeless doll.

          I brought her in our tent, checked her heart rate, breath, all was normal, she was just really asleep. I was young and didn’t think it was more than alcohol, but thought that she maybe had a condition, or didn’t eat enough that day or something, so just decided to bid everyone goodnight to stay with her instead off calling the hospital. I stayed awake a few hours with her to make sure her vital sign didn’t degrade and after some time she woke up and threw out (outside of the tent, luckily), before telling me she was okay and I could sleep.

          The next morning she told me she hadn’t any prior condition, had eaten correctly, hadn’t drank that much, and after she collapsed she was fully conscious, just unable to move any muscle. So she heard everything I said and did, and she wanted to tell me she feels ok, but just couldn’t.

          It’s years later that it clicked for both of us: that night, a guy at the party wanted to get some action with one of our lady friends and was very vocal about it. At one point, my girlfriend jokingly took said girl’s beer from her hands and drank it, and I remember her mentioning that she must already be drunk because it tasted funny. And the said guy was a known drugs user (not a junkie, but still).

          Our group of friends was pretty respectful and basically were just decent human beings overall, so we didn’t think, at the time, that one of us could pull something like this out. In insight, if it had to happen, this guy was the best candidate, as an alpha male apologist and insane enough to have been fired from the army.

          The irony is that he indeed ended up smashing with our friend, in the morning, when she had sobered up and consenting. And trust me, she was conscious and consenting, as we all heard, so good for her I guess.

          Unfortunately we don’t have any contact with both of them anymore and wouldn’t know how to find them again. But this story stays in my mind forever. I cannot fathom how our friend could have lived with a rape that horrible, while still perfectly conscious and unable to even cry for help. And I cannot imagine how we would all have lived with the fact that it happened under our nose, separated by a thin layer of tent fabric.

          I’m glad it didn’t happen this time, but unfortunately I’m sure if he tried it that time, he tried it again with someone else, possibly wasn’t his first time. And it horrifies me that we didn’t think about the obvious explanation at the time so we could have warned other girls and involve the police.

      • Mango@lemmy.world
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        Nobody is getting laid for talking about men’s problems except maybe the dadvocate on YouTube. It’s all a game to a huge portion of the population.

  • daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    Idk who is that, and probably is a moron.

    But it is a genuinely good question: “what’s a woman?” “what’s a man?” “what’s gender?”

    Not an easy question, with not universally accepted answer.

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      Honestly I think, as a cis man, cis people are probably very bad at answering the question.

      humans tend ignore “harmony”. When you walk through the field, do you look each blade of grass or at the cow? Do you feel “non-pain”? How could you possibly explain someone pain that doesn’t know pain? Do you remember the last time, you sat next to your friend watching a show on tv, in the same detail, you remember the conflict/discussion that you had with them?

      Generally we will remember and pay attention to the things that are “wrong”.

      If your gender is right for you, why would you pay attention? What would you even pay attention to?

      If it is wrong for you, you feel the “pain”, see the cow and remember the conflict.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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      Outside of a philosophy discussion, it’s not a genuinely good question because it is irrelevant to our daily lives. In any way that matters to society, a woman is a person who says they are a woman. It’s that complicated.

      • Mesa@programming.dev
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        “Is irrelevant” and “should be irrelevant” are two different things. Fighting by saying the issues are not there—regardless of your actual opinion—has rarely, if ever, worked. It’s the same as the “I don’t see color” argument.

        Also, why would we exclude philosophical discussion? The point is to make you think. I also don’t know who this particular person is in the OP, but the question itself has no bias. Maybe this highlights our philosophical differences, but I firmly believe that understanding a system is the most crucial step to revolutionizing it.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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          Would you say skin color is relevant in our daily lives just because some people think it is?

          I also said nothing about excluding philosophy discussions. Please do not put words in my mouth.

          • Mesa@programming.dev
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            Would you say skin color is relevant in our daily lives just because some people think it is?

            Yes. That was my point. Check your privilege. You don’t have to be a flagrant racist to subconsciously make decisions and judgements based on race (and gender).

            I’m not going to explain how inherent and human biases work. If you care to start making a difference, then it’s up to you to understand that you’re not perfect and learn how to start changing how you see and affect the world beyond your idealist rose-colored glasses.

            I also said nothing about excluding philosophy discussions. Please do not put words in my mouth.

            I don’t have to.

            • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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              I’m just going to ignore you implying I’m a racist and focus on the second part.

              Saying “outside of a philosophy discussion” doesn’t mean “we can’t talk about philosophy,” it means it is generally not relevant in terms of the way it is necessary to live our lives.

              People make unnecessary things important to them all the time- skin color, religion, ethnicity, etc.

              But if you just ignore those things as irrelevant, the only thing that changes is that some people are treated less like shit. Which is my point.

              On the other hand, treating people like shit seems like something you’re interested in, at least on a one-to-one level.

              • Mesa@programming.dev
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                You think you’re perfect. You are not. No one is. I am not saying you are a racist. You are a human with human biases.

                What you’ve just told me is that you have no interest in discovering and changing yourself to help make a difference. Not to be on any sort of moral high-ground, but I have a really tough time with people that have no desire to learn and improve.

                What I’m going to ignore is your assertion that philosophy is not relevant to daily life. That is the stupidest claim in this thread, and it is at the very core of your (subconscious) bigotry. If you can’t see that, then there is no next step.

                • HeuristicAlgorithm9@feddit.uk
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                  I mean it kinda makes sense, someone who doesn’t think that the process of thought is useful not thinking they could make any kind of error.

                • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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                  You think you’re perfect.

                  You know nothing about me or how far from the truth this is. You are miles closer to perfection than I will ever be.

                  What you’ve just told me is that you have no interest in discovering and changing yourself to help make a difference.

                  This is a lie.

                  I have a really tough time with people that have no desire to learn and improve.

                  I have a really tough time with liars who make assumptions about me and put words in my mouth, so I guess we are both having a really tough time.

                  What I’m going to ignore is your assertion that philosophy is not relevant to daily life.

                  And more lies.

                  But thank you for proving my point about you wanting to treat people like shit so well.

                  Also, I like how you say both “I am not saying you are a racist” and “your (subconscious) bigotry” as if those aren’t total contradictions.

          • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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            It is somewhat relevant, though. For example, it’s relevant for designing stuff so that everyone regardless of their phenotypical makeup is equally able to function in society. For example, if it didn’t matter at all if a lot of people have no penises, we could have urinals everywhere, or conversely for the opposite, we would have no need for urologists. Or if it really didn’t matter what colour someone’s skin is, we wouldn’t have to have differentiated medical care for people of different phenotypes, or we wouldn’t need to think about calibrating sensors for different skin colours for detectors so that every device functions for everyone.

            But I get your point, a lot of the reasons people think biological differences matter are all made up and mostly bullshit.

            • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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              Okay, those are all fair points. I do think you could probably describe those things in terms that do not involve gender or race, but it would probably be with some difficulty.

              • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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                IMO, the whole topic is nothing but a political tool, and most people wouldn’t care either way.

                So there is this one playbook that the Russian-aligned right likes to play, which is: take an issue nobody but a very small minority of people care about, but it has to be something they can’t just let go. For example, the rights of trans people in the US, but in Hungary it has been the existence of one particular university at one point.

                Then start bombarding your base with misinformation about how this thing is bad for society and has to be opposed, and introduce legislation. Finally, watch the small minority protest continuously and very fiercely for the issue that is existential for them, and lay back while this issue occupies public discourse for months and years, precluding other serious issues being discussed as you can comfortably be in a majority position while doing whatever you want without public attention.

                The insidiousness is that the issue is really existential for the people affected, so you can’t tell them to let it go, and a lot of very loud people would demonize you for letting it go as well since it is existential for them.

                So you have three options:

                • Take up the fight in the issue and let it be the deciding issue for elections, driving turnout for your opponent - see gay and trans rights
                • Try to take the opposite side and leave the minority group to fend for themselves, and lose them as voters - see funding the Gaza genocide
                • Be a stereotypical politician and change the topic each time it comes up, which will blunt the first effect, but you will still get some of the second - this is unfortunately usually the good choice

                But to actually win, what you have to do is:

                • Use the tactic to your advantage and make your own attacks, keeping the topics on your talking points

                Just off the top off my head, here are a few ideas the Dems could have done the same to the Reps, and I’m not a genius:

                • Declare the KKK to be a terrorist organization
                • Make it illegal to fly the Confederate flag on public buildings
                • Institute a federal ban on child marriages

                I know each of these would rile up some small segment of the Republican base, but that’s the point! You want to make them fiercely defend points that not all of them care about, as not all of them will turn out for all of these issues. You want the Mormons out in arms on the streets protesting the child marriage ban so you can be “tough on crime” and “crack down on the rioting Mormon paedophiles”.

      • calcopiritus@lemmy.world
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        If the question is so irrelevant, why do you even try to answer it in the same comment? Not only answering it, but also making it a fact. As if your opinion is the only one that matters and suddenly it’s irrelevant when there’s a different opinion.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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          My opinion is not the only one that matters. I’m not sure where you got that impression unless you think people should automatically agree with you for no reason other than you want them to when they do not.

          I base my opinion on my observations on how the world works. I could be wrong, so feel free explain to me how it negatively affects in our society in any significant way if you don’t define a woman as someone who calls themselves a woman.

          • calcopiritus@lemmy.world
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            If other opinions matter, then it is not an irrelevant question. Since it prompts people to tell their opinions.

            • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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              You did not explain to me what I asked you to explain to me. I think you just want someone to fight with since you’re clearly not discussing this in good faith and I’m not particularly interested.

              • calcopiritus@lemmy.world
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                I didn’t answer your “request” because that has nothing to do with what I originally said.

                If I wanted to get into an hours long conversation about gender I would’ve said something completely different. Got better things to waste my time on.

                • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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                  Then I have no idea even what your issue is? That I dare to think my opinion on something is correct? Isn’t that how opinions work?

                  Can you tell me about one of your incorrect opinions?

      • Bgugi@lemmy.world
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        So long as society feels it necessary to provide protections for women, the distinction has real consequences. Drawing a line anywhere is a tradeoff between inclusivity and effectiveness.

        Taking the party line “high ground” stance of either conclusive self-determination or dodging the question entirely is why this question is so effective.

        • Walk_blesseD@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          Assuming good faith on the part of those involved, I don’t see how inclusivity comes at the cost of effectiveness. Would you care to elaborate?

          • ℍ𝕂-𝟞𝟝@sopuli.xyz
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            Not the person who you were talking with, but I think it’s nuanced. Short term tradeoffs should be made for effectiveness, while long-term strategies should be relentlessly pursued for inclusivity.

            E.g. as a man, I think that the women-only carriages in a lot of SEA countries are a necessary thing, but it has to be a short term solution with a healthier society should be always consistently pursued, for example with educational measures.

          • Bgugi@lemmy.world
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            Honestly? I think that equal treatment should be afforded regardless of gender. I also know that opinion is wildly unpopular, and so long as society expects unequal treatment there has to be hard conversations and hard decisions made to support those structures. You can’t have it both ways, and no amount of party-line fingers in your ears "wouldn’t you like to know"ing makes that go away.

      • daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        I don’t think it is that simple.

        Women are treated different that men in many societies. In my country there are multiple laws that apply different to a person if it is a woman or a man.

        If we are making legislative differentiation because those words, we ought to have them well defined and understand what we are meaning and why we say that a women gets X law applied that a man gets not.

        If it is irrelevant it should be, at least, legislatively irrelevant. If it’s meaningful we should be clear on what we are defining by woman (or any other gender that gets particular legislation applied for all that matters).

        That without talking about the social importance of being a gendered society. I don’t know any single society that is not gendered. Once again, if it is irrelevant then we should aim for genderless society. If it is relevant we should know and agree on what it is to be one gender or other.

        • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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          Why do you think such legislation is necessary? In fact, what legislation are you talking about that requires gender to be taken into account?

          • daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            I didn’t say I thought it was necessary. It exists, that’s just it.

            Necessary or not, is, again. A very complex question.

            I’m Spanish, from Spain/Europe. We have some laws made in favour of women. For instance, a special court of law that is only invoke in a case of a man hurting a woman he had a romantic relationship with. It’s called “Juzgados de la mujer”. We have also gender quota por power positions they have historically not being allowed to occupy.

            This may seem logical, as there are thousands of women killed by their male partners

            We also have, recently, a law that allows anyone to change their gender at any time, no questions, no prove requires to being trans to do so. You can just go to the civil office and change your gender.

            This also may seem logical. As trans are usually prosecuted and can get denied a gender change if the civil official didn’t like them.

            But with these two things in place we happened to had a big number of cis males, that are 100% cis, going to change their gender just to get “inmunity” to “Womens court”. Also several cases of cis males changing their gender to get into womens quota required for some positions (for instance here there’s benefits and sometimes is required that half of the directive positions are filled by women).

            So we have a conflict here. At least I see a conflict. I don’t even have the answer on what to do, as two of both things seem right to me (supporting a positive discrimination for a historically discriminated group and helping trans to be what they truly are). But cis males being able to break positive discrimination and mocking trans at the same time feels wrong to me.

            And the ultimate question to this topic is “What it is to be a woman”. For what I do not have the answer, but I would love to know.

            And of course, in my book we all would be genderless, and there would be no discrimination. But my personal utopia is, sadly, not the world we live on.

            • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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              This may seem logical, as there are thousands of women killed by their male partners

              No, it doesn’t seem logical. Men can be killed by their women partners, men can be killed by their men partners, women can be killed by their women partners.

              It’s only “logical” in a heteronormative patriarchal society.

              This also may seem logical. As trans are usually prosecuted and can get denied a gender change if the civil official didn’t like them.

              Again, this does not seem logical. Why do you need a law to allow you to change gender?

              “Womens court”.

              Something else that is not necessary.

              (for instance here there’s benefits and sometimes is required that half of the directive positions are filled by women).

              Benefits should not be gendered, but the quota thing is the closest you have gotten to something being necessary in terms of legal definitions. But even there, all you have to say is that gender discrimination in hiring practices is illegal and it doesn’t have to apply to any specific gender.

              Also, you are acting like ‘man’ and ‘woman’ are it and there is no such thing as a nonbinary gender. You are incorrect.

              • daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                I literally never said anything against non binary, but ok.

                I’m just explaining the legislation you asked me to explain.

                Legislation on my country does not take non-binary as an option. So I didn’t talk about it. We could have talked about it if you asked about that, as I have lots to say as an non-binary person that really does not fit within my country own legislation on gender.

                I feel like you are not really reading me. And I’m feeling more hostility towards my person that I want to feel. So I’m out.

                Have a good day.

                • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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                  Legislation on my country does not take non-binary as an option.

                  Which is also not logical.

                  No one is denying that gendered laws exist. We are talking about what is necessary. I am reading you. You just are not understanding that those laws are not necessary laws the way they are written and can be easily be rewritten to apply to all genders.

        • Walk_blesseD@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          Sure, the anatomical features we use to categorise people into genders have always existed, but the categories themselves are made up and there’s a rather large amount of overlap between them. The more strictly someone attempts to enforce a given set of criteria as the basis for this categorisation, the less practical utility their definition tends to have in terms of everyday use.

            • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              Intersex. And there are more of them than trans people per 100k, I believe. Yet somehow they’re never brought up.

              Many (maybe most?) end up getting some type of gender-affirming surgery very early on, but not always. And who knows, going forward.

              • rotten@lemm.ee
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                It’s an edge case. Does a government form determine reality? They can put down one, both, none.

                • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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                  You cannot put down both or none on any government form that does not consider gender to be a non-biological thing.

                  Laws are not supposed to be selectively applied. If they can put down whichever one they choose, you are admitting your definition of ‘man’ and ‘woman’ do not apply to how society works.

                  I know “the exception that proves the rule” is a fun phrase, but it’s not actually how things work.

    • C126@sh.itjust.works
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      When does the answer actually matter? Maybe in situations where sexual assault is a concern, like bathrooms, etc? In that case, just get rid of gender identity and distinguish based on if the individual has a penis or not.

      • daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 days ago

        I talked in other comments about the legislative implications. But here I would like to give a more personal one.

        For instance, I would love to have the answer for myself. Because I have asked myself plenty of times “Am I a woman?”, and that leads to de subsequent question “What it means to be a Woman?”, “What I want to be is a Woman or is anything else?”. I know that only I can answer that question. But I want to know why I have to make that question to myself. Why society considers “being a Woman” something? Because that question didn’t came out of nowhere. It came because I, as a person who lives in a society with other people, see people who calls themselves man, woman or other things. And while trying to decide what I want to be, or what I already am, need to take what other people are into consideration.

        Idk, if I’m explaining myself. I’ll give a dumb example: Maybe I want to be an Astronaut, but before becoming an Astronaut I need to know what an Astronaut is. Because Astronaut is a profession in our society, and it can be defined. In this context is easy, because I would love to be an Astronaut because I would love to go to space. But, if I love to be a Woman, why is it? What is the “going to space” of being a woman?

      • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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        2 days ago

        Why base it on the existence or nonexistence of a penis? How do you enforce that? You’re in a bathroom, ideally no one is seeing your genitals.

        Just get rid of gendered bathrooms in the first place. A toilet doesn’t care what shape of butthole poops into it

    • BilboBargains@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      Is it a good question though? Even if we set aside the fact that it’s a loaded question, what are we going to do with the information?

      It has a similar character to the question ‘what is a race?’. Information that people look a certain way is not particularly useful, on the other hand we feel it viscerally. If we don’t stop to think we end up making unhelpful judgements.

      Race, gender, nation states, money, the past and future, these are just concepts and if we confine ourselves to the domain of concepts we run the risk of mistaking them for our actual experience, out in the world. We stop listening and start assuming that our internal narrative is infallible, because it is.

      • daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 days ago

        I agree to an extend.

        I would love to live in a word where all of that does not matter.

        But for instance, imagine if we stop taking race into account in the USA (not American but I’m soaked in American culture). How would people know and being able to prove that some race is being discriminated against if the people does not have a definition on some people being part of one or other race.

        I despise racial classification. Seems wrong, it works wrong as races are all mixed. But it can work against racism.

        For instance, in my country, racial classification is ilegal. There cannot exist any registry on anyones race whatsoever. So black people here does not have statistical data to prove they are being discriminated against. They have a harder time fighting against racism somehow because their race is not allow to be recorded anywhere.

        So I don’t really know if, same as gender, I want to know people’s race or not. Feels wrong, but also useful to fight against discrimination.

        • BilboBargains@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          Very interesting and I would not have expected that outcome. In some ways the actions of avowed racists is easier to deal with. If our cards are on the table we can at least have a discussion. The racism that dwells in people and institutions who never admit it is incredibly corrosive.

          Reading historical texts about eras where the concept of race didn’t exist as we know it today is refreshing. I suppose they had other problems but the modern conception of race feels like a political tool and completely artificial. So too with gender, it’s encouraging to see kids abandoning those outdated notions.

      • daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        2 days ago

        Nah. That’s just sex.

        But there’s been long proved that what we call gender is not 100% defined by sex.

        For instance, our traditional gendered bathrooms. The concept does not work if we just take sex into account. As the reasons we have for segregating bathrooms in genders does just not work if people have a different presentation, external sexual characteristics or behavior, that it is traditionally assumed for one sex or the other.

        To put intro crude words. Women that would like to have a women exclusive bathroom would really not be happy if someone walks into that externally looks and behaves, and even have the sexual characteristics of what they perceive as a man. It would not matter if that person would have XX instead of XY.

        • Steak@lemmy.ca
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          2 days ago

          That’s the extreme minority. To keep things simple let’s just say xx one bathroom and xy the other. That encompasses 99.9% of bathroom usage. For the cases you are talking about I’m sure that person can figure out what bathroom to use for themselves and explain it to anyone that asks.

      • InputZero@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Biology isn’t that simple. A person can have one fewer sex chromosome, monosomy, one extra, trisomy, and many extra, polysomy. In fact it’s starting to show that a significant minority of people have trisomy 47 (the name for having one extra sex chromosome) but live perfectly normal lives because those extra genes are suppressed. You could have an extra x chromosome and never know it, does that exclude you from being a man or a woman? Which brings up the topic of gene expression and epigenetics which is even more complicated. If you’re looking at science to give you a certainty about sex and gender you’re in for a long search.

        • Steak@lemmy.ca
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          That’s the extreme minority. To keep things simple let’s just say xx one bathroom and xy the other. That encompasses 99.9% of bathroom usage. For the cases you are talking about I’m sure that person can figure out what bathroom to use for themselves and explain it to anyone that asks.

  • Kusimulkku@lemm.ee
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    2 days ago

    It’s interesting that this question seems to be some sort of gotcha that almost always a posted response is a snarky joke. Just makes me wonder how do those people define a woman.

    • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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      2 days ago

      The actual answer is that a woman is a person who identifies as a woman. What bugs me is that conservatives disagree vehemently, but they don’t seem to have a consistent answer themselves

      • Cethin@lemmy.zip
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        Most of them appeal to “basic biology” but biology is anything but basic. Just because you learned about chromosomes in your high school biology course doesn’t mean you’re actually knowledgeable on the subject. It’s much more complex than that. The best argument against this idea, in my opinion, is to bring up intersex people, which there’s a huge variety of different conditions and always one that will contradict whatever they believe.

        This is all ignoring the fact that none of this matters, so maybe it’s best to not be baited into it at all. Gender is not something that needs some precise thing to point at. It’s whatever we want it to be.

    • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldOP
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      They define it in all sorts of ways where there are immediate exceptions they have to hand wave away. We have someone like that in this thread.

  • mechoman444@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    A woman is a person that adheres to gender roles assigned to them by society. These gender roles are typically attributed but not limited to the female sex.

    Simple.

      • starman2112@sh.itjust.works
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        2 days ago

        No one decides what gender they are. That’s like the entire thing with trans people. You think a trans person getting death threats wouldn’t love to be able to identify as their AGAB?

        • Ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          1 day ago

          You think a trans person getting death threats wouldn’t love to be able to identify as their AGAB?

          No… That person wouldn’t be me, they’d be someone else…

      • mechoman444@lemmy.world
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        No, no they’re not. Genders exist. They haven’t disappeared. They also have meaning, words haven’t lost meaning all of the sudden because of inclusivity.

        It’s idiotic statements like this that continue to fuel Anti trans rhetoric because obviously you yourself can’t even define what the word means.

    • prole@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      2 days ago

      And even biological sex is a bimodal spectrum. People always ignore the existence of intersex people, but I believe it occurs at a higher number per 100k people than trans. I could be misremembering.

      • mechoman444@lemmy.world
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        2 days ago

        Intersex people exist in the same capacity that people that have down syndrome exist.

        People don’t go around going. Oh they’re fine. They’re just intersex. It’s considered generally a birth defect that brings with it a lifetime of medical issues that otherwise would not exist.

        It’s perfectly fine to accept them for who they are or even who they want to be, but has absolutely nothing to do with the idiotic question that anti-trans people pose such as “what is a woman”.

        In the same sense that people don’t say, what is a human being in reference to down syndrome.

        What bothers me is that even talking about this such as my original definition gets me downvoted because I don’t immediately agree or accept the prepositions in this post.

        I have no obligation to blindly accept anything!

        And it’s 1.7% of births in the world which is quite a high number considering.