41 thoughts on “Gender Critical: Legally Defining Sex

  1. This is your money quote:

    It will be something fascists will keep in their back pocket to use randomly against anyone that disagrees with the administration, same as revoking a visa. The best situations is where they can punish, at their own whim, literally any person they want.

    Though the Whose Line reference is also well played.

    As much as I despise this attempt at social control, why always stickers with me is how much these folks feel they have to twist words to hide intent. It’s like they know they are morally repugnant and don’t want to own that.Report

  2. Shockingly, Trump and his crew didn’t handle this issue competently.

    Big picture we have laws and rules designed to protect women from men. As a class, men are bigger, stronger, and more aggressive. How these rules and laws interact with men who identify as women hasn’t been worked out.Report

    1. Equally not-shockingly all the hullabaloo about protecting women’s spaces heaps insults on women AND defies statistical analysis. It’s also ONLY about trans women – trans men are apparently not a threat.

      Guess you can’t have a Strict Father hierarchical society without cementing who gets to be a father and thus in control.Report

          1. Reality based more like it; I don’t consider reality to be innately transphobic. Trans men are, on average, slighter and more lightly build that their non-trans male compatriots- they simply don’t present a believable threat to non-trans men. The dynamic is reversed for trans women which is why the rights incendiary charges and accusations find some measure of traction.Report

        1. And of course trans men are now going to be sorted with the rest of the biological women.

          I don’t know how to embed an image here, but please just google Chas Bono, now coming to a women’s restroom near you. It’s the law, you know.Report

      1. Phil: trans men are apparently not a threat.

        As a class, men are bigger, stronger, and more aggressive. So yes, trans men aren’t considered a threat.

        Phil: all the hullabaloo about protecting women’s spaces heaps insults on women AND defies statistical analysis

        In athletics, I’d say we’re well past “statistical analysis” and are finding that “men being bigger and stronger” is why we have women’s sports.

        Similarly we’re starting to see reports that trans-women are a lot more violent than women. https://committees.parliament.uk/writtenevidence/18973/pdf/

        https://legislature.maine.gov/testimony/resources/CJPS20210518Gingrich132664242197478414.pdfReport

        1. Hey Dark, you probably should be aware that the UK has been taken over by transphobic assholes, so trying to cite something that the government has said about trans people as proof of anything is kind of ridiculous.Report

          1. Fair enough. But we still have the issue that men are bigger, stronger, and way more violent than women.

            Ergo we should expect that trans-women are too. If there’s some reason we shouldn’t expect that, please put it on the table.Report

    2. Shockingly, Trump and his crew didn’t handle this issue competently.

      As I said, this isn’t bad wording that Trump came up with, this is wording that the Gender Criitical movement has been testing for a literal decade, the only thing it has to do with Trump is that he’s the person who was willing to do it.

      There’s not some better version of this out there that he should have used. Mostly because there’s not actually a good way to do this, exactly like there’s not a good way to determine, under the law, exactly what race someone is.

      Big picture we have laws and rules designed to protect women from men.

      We not only have not decided that, we have decided the exact literal opposite of that. And by we, I mean second wave feminism, AKA what happened in the 1960s and after.

      For those of you who are not aware, one of the foundational premises of second wave feminism is that women should be treated the same as men under the law and by society. Essentially every single feminist law from that era (and beyond) requires women to be treated identically to men. In fact, they don’t even say that, they don’t say women or men at all, they say the people cannot be treated differently based on sex.

      Feminists from that era would be appalled at the idea that the law should do things to protect women, as a class, from men, as a class. It’s literally the opposite of what they were working for, in which the law did not see women or men, and in fact made no determination based on sex whatsoever.

      Even laws that you would think would only apply to women, like abortion laws, are not written that way, very much on purpose.

      This is because feminists were quite aware of the fact that such laws giving rights based on who someone is were very easy to turn against people, by merely redefining the terms used in them so that person isn’t under it anymore. As I mentioned in my first post here, feminists knew this because first wave feminism was like 50% lesbians, and if there is one class of women that historically has been de-womaned and excluded from protections granted to women, it is lesbians.

      This is why the gender critical movement has spent a decade lying to people and propagandizing that we do have such laws. Claiming that the law gives certain privileges to women, thus making the argument that certain people who don’t deserve them should be excluded from those privileges.

      There are no such privileges. Women have no special rights, under the law, whatsoever. It is not feminist to claim that they do and try to defend those rights, it is literally the opposite, that is one of the things that feminists actively worked against because they knew exactly this thing could happen.

      People, have rights under the law, regardless of sex. That is the law in this country, or sort of is, except we never actually (or say we didn’t) passed the ERA…but to the extent that such laws do exist, they do not ‘protect women’, they protect everyone by requiring the law to treat everyone identically.

      And the only reason you need to know who was a woman, under the law, is if you wanted to change that.Report

      1. …women should be treated the same as men under the law and by society.

        We have women’s sports and women’s prisons for good reason. I’ve never heard of “feminists” calling for those to be merged.

        If we do merge them, the instant result is woman won’t be competitive in multiple sports and female prisoners will be raped on a regular basis.

        Further, I don’t remember seeing mixed shower rooms outside of a few SciFi movies and public bathrooms are also segregated.Report

        1. A lot of this comes down to whether or not one believes that womens’ equality depends in some part on separate accommodations for situations where women are particularly vulnerable.

          Always worth remembering that one of the (many) ways that a lot of Muslim countries enforce a second class status on women is simply by not having womens’ accommodations in places where they aren’t wanted or allowed. In light of this debate I’ve found it useful to occasionally ask myself ‘would a woman really be allowed here if there weren’t separate bathrooms’? Sometimes the answer is clearly yes but a lot of times it isn’t so clear cut. Ponder this next time you’re at a big sporting event or a bar or some other place with a lot of drunken or rowdy behavior.Report

          1. A lot of this comes down to whether or not men and women are different. That’s why I keep bringing up “bigger, stronger, and more aggressive” and is also why I get no reply on those points.

            If we pretend that those aren’t issues, then everything has to be motivated by trans-phobia.

            In reality, men are two full standard deviations bigger than women, stronger at the same size, and so violent that men commit the vast majority of violent crimes.Report

          2. A lot of this comes down to whether or not one believes that womens’ equality depends in some part on separate accommodations for situations where women are particularly vulnerable.

            It’s almost the inverse, actually.
            Or, to rephrase: A lot of this comes down to whether or not one believes that we can reach women’s equality by concluding that we cannot actually solve any problems at all. To the extent of being unwilling to stop rape inside _entirely controlled-and-monitored facilities_, so we just have to throw up our hands and make sure that _one_ group doesn’t rape women. (Guards raping women, a much larger problem, totally fine. Likewise, other women, totally fine.)

            That is the totality of effort: In this one specific case, we are willing to physically stop this very particular sort of rape of some women by a certain specific group.

            GO FEMINISM! *raises hands in victory sign* WOO!

            Or, new idea: We should not have rape essentially running wild in prison. We should not have male prisoners raping other male prisoners , we should not have male prisoners raping female prisoners, we should not have male guards raping male or female prisoners, we should not have male prisoners raping trans female prisoners, we should not have female prisoners raping other female prisoners, we should not, in fact, have any of that happening at all.

            Which is a thing we could trivially do.

            Instead, we have built a system where it is happening openly and _encouraged_ by prison staff.

            Hey, InMD, I said it to Dark, but did you happen to google v-coding? Do you know what that is? It’s when prison guards reward a well-behaving prisoner, or just one that bribes them well, with a trans woman cellmate to rape.Report

        2. We have women’s sports and women’s prisons for good reason. I’ve never heard of “feminists” calling for those to be merged.

          Then you have never listened to feminists.

          Let me explain something that a lot of people get very very wrong about sports: The feminist argument was not that women should get their own team. The feminist argument was that women _should be allowed to play_, period. They were not allowed to play sports in any manner whatsoever before that, and if they were, it was absurdly underfunded segregated dumb games.

          The feminist position was, and always has been, that women should be allowed to play with them men. Women’s sports do not exist because of feminists. They exist _despite_ feminists. The regulations in Title IX, when it was created in 1972, originally said in 1972: No person in the United States shall, on the basis of sex, be excluded from participation in, be denied the benefits of, or be subjected to discrimination under any education program or activity receiving Federal financial assistance.

          You may notice that doesn’t say anything about segregating sports. Indeed, the original regulation, as pushed by the national Organization of Women and other feminist groups, would seem to prohibit it. If an educational athletic team does not allow women, it would be illegal.

          Which got a lot of female college potential athletes suing, because they wanted access to sports, to play actual real sports with the men, and still were not allowed to play.

          So, eventually, these Federal regulations were made into law, in 1975. And an amendment was added: A recipient which operates or sponsors interscholastic, intercollegiate,club or intramural athletics shall provide equal athletic opportunity for members of both sexes. In determining whether equal opportunities are available, the Director will consider, among other factors:… Whether the selection of sports and levels of competition effectively accommodate the interests and abilities of members of both sexes …

          You may notice _that_ doesn’t require a separate women’s sports either. But it’s suddenly moved from allowing access to any ‘education program or activity’ without consideration of sex to allowing ‘equal opportunities’ while considering sex. I.e., recreating separate but equal. With a whole bunch of rules about how we would know if something was equal.

          This amendment was added by Senator Jacob Javits, a Republican, although a fairly liberal one who did seem to be pretty much in favor of civil rights. It’s called the Javits Amendment.

          This was not at all what feminism organizations asked for. It wasn’t a step forward, it literally undid some of the existing regulation and created an _exception_ to anti-discrimination law. It was a step _backwards_, designed to fix the new and exciting ‘problem’ of women attempt to try out for college sports and the revenue impact that was perceived to have on sports.

          Or just read this: https://lewisbrisbois.com/blog/category/sports-law/fifty-years-of-progress-the-legal-history-of-title-ix

          The law has certainly seen its fair share of adversity and backlash, particularly in its application to sport. Immediately following its enactment (and in the years thereafter), Title IX faced an onslaught of challenges, whether through subsequent proposed amendments or through lawsuits challenging its legality and attempting to narrow its scope. In 1974, Senator John Tower proposed the “Tower Amendment,” which sought to exempt revenue-generating sports from Title IX’s reach. When that failed, Senator Jacob Javits submitted an amendment directing HEW to issue regulations providing, “with respect to intercollegiate athletic activities, reasonable provisions considering the nature of particular sports.”

          tl;dr – Women’s sports under Title IX do not exist to advance feminism, they exist as an _exception_ to the anti-discrimination rules a school would normally be required to follow, the rules that feminists pushed for. At best, they can be considered as a political compromise made 50 years ago when it became clear that collegiate sports were a particular sticking point for the law.Report

          1. The feminist position was, and always has been, that women should be allowed to play with them men.

            Then they’ll lose in most sports. Badly. The best female tennis player in history (Serena Williams) got crushed by the number #200+ male, so all of the top #100 players would be male. This is also true in track and field, basketball, football, weight lifting, swimming, and so on.

            Why would be a good thing? Who exactly is arguing for this?

            And you totally ignored the result of merging prisons, i.e. the females will get raped.Report

            1. Then they’ll lose in most sports.

              That’s completely irrelevant to the point being made here.

              Your claim was you didn’t think that feminists would like women’s sports going away, not some hypothetical ‘fairness’ argument that _you_ believe but actual feminists do not.

              Feminists don’t care if there are statistical differences. Feminist theory does not, and never have argued that random things should be ‘fair’. I know that’s what the _right_ has pretended, for decades, but that’s not at all true.

              Actual feminists have a lot of things to say on these issues. Here’s what, for example, is said about grade schools sports:

              Grade school athletics are supposed to be _educational_, not ‘a record-defining competition to see who is literally the best’. It is okay and even expected to have differing skill levels. Especially considering that a major factor in ability in grade-school athleticism is literally just ‘who is the oldest’ and ‘who hit their growth spurt first’, and when there is that much variation in a single grade, and that sports are often played across grade, it is pointless to pretend girls are weaker, especially since girls usually hit their growth spurt first.

              Additionally, sports as provided by grade schools are very weighted towards ones that boys appear to be better at. Almost no one is doing sports programs that girls generally dominate in, like gymnastics. This seems…odd. But there’s a reason for that: We have allowed the popularity of sports to be a huge funding source to school, allowing any general societal sexism to dictate what sports exist and demand that teams ‘win’ instead of just having sports as, again, _education_ and general activities for students, which is what it should be.

              To summarize: Claiming that ‘girls will not do as well as boys while playing on a mixed-sex team’ in _grade school_ fundamentally, and somewhat deliberately, misunderstands why we _have_ sports in grade school. It is not to see which school is ‘the best’. It is not to see which individual player is best.

              It is because being part of a sport and a team and competing as such is very good experience.Report

              1. Sure, have some entire books:
                https://academic.oup.com/book/53445

                https://www.amazon.com/Frailty-Myth-Approaching-Physical-Equality/dp/0375502351

                A magazine article:
                https://www.howwegettonext.com/is-gender-segregation-in-sports-necessary/

                One from a legal direction:
                https://openscholarship.wustl.edu/law_lawreview/vol95/iss5/13/

                However, I feel you have misunderstood my response.

                I claim is that feminists _did not want separate sports_. Feminists are not the reason those exist, they were never lobbied for by feminists, they often were enacted in direct opposition to what feminists were trying to do. They were seen as a compromise, one that feminists mostly went along with. (It was way, way, WAY more important to have, for example, bank accounts and laws against spousal rape.)

                These sports are, at this point, pretty entrenched as a compromise, so generally feminists just work with that compromise existing. Spending time and effort trying to change them is pointless.

                Ideally that would be women’s rights groups.

                To be clear here, there is a difference between ‘We are going to work within the law as it is, and if we urge changes, they are minor changes’, which is what mainstream women’s right groups do, and ‘Feminist theory’.

                If we’re going to start listening to women’s right groups like the National Organization of Women, we should probably just, more directly, listen to what they say about laws barring trans athletes from women’s sports. https://now.org/blog/even-if-bigots-insist-it-is-waging-a-hate-campaign-against-trans-people-is-not-feminist/

                Although, NOW is pushing for passage (and was always one of the main backers) of the ERA, and one of the right-wing attacks _on_ the ERA, back in the 70s, is that it would not allow separate ‘women spaces’, exactly like women’s sports, and as a more deciding issue back then, women’s restrooms. (Although then, as is now, it was pointed out we don’t actually have laws about who can use what restrooms!)

                No one has really come up with a reason why that interpretation would be incorrect, how such segregated categories could hypothetically be legal under the ERA. The ERA basically forbids the US government (and, by incorporation, state governments), from taking sex into consideration _at all_, and the government (including, for example, a local high school) would be exactly as unable to make a rule saying ‘Women cannot play on the men’s team, or vis versa’ as they could make a rule saying ‘Blacks cannot play on the white’s team, or vis versa’.

                So NOW is, in fact, lobbying for dissolving women’s sports, and always done so. They just aren’t _saying_ that. Because they rightly realized what a (moronic) hotbutton issue it was to have sex integrated teams, and NOW is doing respectability politics. (And the far-right decided to make it hot button issue about trans people anyway, and NOW, to their credit, pointed out idiotic that is.)Report

              2. I read Playing With The Boys 15 or 16 years ago in a reading group. I think it’s a flawed book, but worth reading. The biggest issue, I think, is that separate but equal always does separate well, but never approaches equal, and it’s difficult to assess the potential of female athletes relative to men when their training, facilities, even diets, are unequal, as is the case in virtually all major sports (and probably the minor ones as well). On top of that, there are likely some women who’d do well in major men’s sports, even if that’s not true for most women in sports, so excluding them entirely on the basis of race starts to look a lot like discrimination on top of the unequal part of separate but equal.

                Anyway, I’d recommend the book to people who are obsessed with trans women in men’s sports, but I think it’s safe to say the vast majority of them don’t read books.Report

              3. NOW is, in fact, lobbying for dissolving women’s sports, and always done so.

                Google’s AI disagrees with you. Your own links supply data showing women would be crushed head to head even though they reach the opposite conclusion through magic thinking.

                laws barring trans athletes from women’s sports.

                When I look at what the International Federation of Sports Medicine actually says, they disagree with themselves.

                FIMS recognizes the importance of fair competition and the need to ensure that transgender athletes do not have a disproportionate advantage over their cisgender peers. Evidence-Based Approach: FIMS supports the use of scientific evidence to inform eligibility criteria and policies for transgender athletes

                If we assume that there are no performance differences between men and women on the field, then there is no reason to discriminate against trans athletes.

                If we recognize there is a 10% overall difference (your link, although it goes from 5% to more than 30% depending on sport), then women will lose and trans-women should be banned.

                That 5% was in 800m free style and ignores how massive 5% is.

                At the last Olympics the top 26 male athletes had times better than the female world record. 28 of them did better than the female gold metal winner. And that’s in the sport your own link claimed was the closest.

                https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_world_records_in_swimmingReport

              4. Google’s AI disagrees with you.

                Google’s AI cannot agree or disagree with anyone. Google’s AI is a computer program that strings plausible-sounding text together in such a way that it is statistically-likely English. But, sure, what part of what I said do randomly sentences that statistically look like real sentences object to?

                Because it is very easy to demonstrate that the National Organization of Women supports the ERA, that’s literally been a focus of theirs from the very start.

                And it’s pretty easy to understand that the ERA would no longer allow segregated sports team. There are plenty of conservative sites I could link to that explain this, as opposition. And…they’re not lying there.

                Of course, NOW will just ignore that. In fact, they very carefully do not say anything on that topic. They do say this, though: https://now.org/era-frequently-asked-questions/

                The general objective of the amendment was to end legal distinctions between men and women as related to divorce, property, employment and other matters where government law and policy is involved.

                Hmm. Also:

                For the first time, sex would be considered suspect classification, as race currently is. Governmental actions that treat males or females differently as a class would be subject to strict judicial scrutiny and would have to meet the highest level of justification – a necessary and compelling state interest – to be upheld as constitutional.

                Weird. It’s almost as if they know it but aren’t saying it.

                Supporting a constitutional amendment that would outlaw the operation of women’s sports teams (at least any governmental school or college) does, in actuality, seem to be ‘against women’s sports existing’.

                If we assume that there are no performance differences between men and women on the field, then there is no reason to discriminate against trans athletes.

                First, again, a lot of feminists argue that suspect that women are not doing as well simply because they are not provided the same support.

                But, and I think I need to make this clear, even if these differences turn out to be inherent instead of support and training: Feminists (Or, at least, NOW, which is hardly some extremist organization) does not want laws to exist that treat men and women differently. Period. End of story.

                They do not want laws that do that both as a matter of principle, and they don’t want them because having such laws is unsafe for women! Those laws create a precedent that can be used against women. Usually under the justification of ‘protecting women’.

                And hey, it is! It’s literally what’s happening here, according to NOW. Not only against trans women, but the policing of all women in sports. Invasive checks and questions and accusations and racism. All because of segregated sports.

                International Federation of Sports Medicine

                What are you talking about? Why do we care about them?Report

              5. International Federation of Sports Medicine

                The link you used to support Trans in sports had them as the original source on what should be done. Their actual opinion is not what was represented and only makes sense if we pretend men aren’t bigger, stronger, and so on.

                Google’s AI cannot agree or disagree with anyone.

                I’ll rephrase. When I search for NOW supporting eliminating women’s sports I get no useful links and an AI saying the opposite. When I asked you for links you gave me individuals who seem to believe men and women aren’t different.

                So please supply a link to NOW supporting the elimination of women’s sports.

                Supporting a constitutional amendment that would outlaw the operation of women’s sports teams…

                That’s your spin on their spin on an amendment that won’t pass.

                even if these differences turn out to be inherent instead of support and training:

                This is like saying, “even if the sun is proven to always rise in the East”. Men being bigger and stronger is a fact.

                Big picture men as a class are 2 full standard deviations bigger than women and are also stronger at the same weight. STD math is grim at the tails.

                In sports were small advantages matter a lot, those are massive advantages.Report

        3. And as for prisons, you _really_ need to talk to some feminists, because most of them have pretty serious problem with the entire carceral system, from top to bottom, especially the level of sexual assault allowed to exist within it.

          Within the existing system, feminism generally operates off a harm migration system, where decisions are made about individual prisoners and the risk.

          And they have much much more a problem with male guards at women’s prisons than trans people. And they also know that v-coding exists, a thing you are about to google and then immediately wish you had not googled.Report

          1. …prisons… have pretty serious problem with the entire carceral system

            Do we agree that these problems would be made much worse merging the female and male prisons?Report

            1. Yes, but more importantly, those problems would be made much worse by hosting prisons inside of active volcanoes.

              However, as neither of those proposals are on the table, I don’t know why we’re talking about them .

              Hey, did you Google v-coding yet?Report

              1. However, as neither of those proposals are on the table, I don’t know why we’re talking about them.

                You have made the claim that there is no legal reason to separate men and women. So yes, you were indeed arguing for intersex prisons.

                If you are agreeing that it’s a bad idea, then the next question is whether we should expect trans-women to have a violence rate roughly equal to men or roughly equal to women.

                Some of my previous links included claims that trans-women who are prison inmates have sex crime rates a lot closer to what we’d expect for men than women.

                Hey, did you Google v-coding yet?

                Yes. It’s heinous.Report

              2. You have made the claim that there is no legal reason to separate men and women. So yes, you were indeed arguing for intersex prisons.

                If you want to know what I’m actually arguing for, it’s not prisons.

                Assuming prisons exist, my next level of argument is: Do not blatantly allow people in prison to commit more crimes while in prison against other people.

                Assuming we cannot stop _that_ in general,for some reason, my argument is for what literally already exists: Making decisions about where individual prisoners belong based on those prisoners.

                Some of my previous links included claims that trans-women who are prison inmates have sex crime rates a lot closer to what we’d expect for men than women.

                Pssst: There is a giant billionaire backed operation that exists solely to produce misleading statistics in this manner. In actual reality, there are almost no meaningful statistics _at all_ on trans people and criminality. No one collects those.

                It is also extremely unclear why we should care about ‘statistical rate of sex crimes’ when deciding where to send people. Do you know where there is gigantic spike in actual reported rapes? It’s when trans women are in men’s prisons. If we’re going to care about anything, maybe the most obvious point?!

                It appears the logic is ‘Send the trans women to men’s prisons, where there is near certainly they will be raped, instead of women’s prisons, where they are not actually likely to rape but could’. (And ignoring all the other rape.)

                Women who raped other women are more likely to rape other women in prison, should we send them to men’s prison?

                What sort of weird logic is all this?

                How about we do everything in our power to reduce rape? Including allowing and even requiring the prison system to make decisions to keep people safe by sending people where it determines, individually, would be in reducing threats both from and to them?

                You know, how the system worked until Trump.Report

              3. Assuming prisons exist…

                Prisons existing is a fact.

                Do not blatantly allow people in prison to commit more crimes while in prison…

                A very good idea, but we shouldn’t insist that we have perfect prisons before we decide that maybe having mixed gender prisons is a bad idea.

                there are almost no meaningful statistics _at all_ on trans people and criminality. No one collects those.

                Or maybe the results aren’t what we’d like to see? I see serious results on trans victimization but there’s nothing on the reverse.

                Trans advocates claim 21% of transgender women have spent time in prison or jail, compared to only 5% of all U.S. adults. Not sure those are meaningful numbers without a further breakdown.

                unclear why we should care about ‘statistical rate of sex crimes’ when deciding where to send people.

                I’d think that’s exactly what we’d be concerned about.

                Send the trans women to… women’s prisons, where they are not actually likely to rape but could’.

                You are assuming trans-women prisoners behave like women and not men. In order to make that assumption you handwaved my various links as “misleading statistics” and didn’t supply any of your own (to be fair I can’t find any either).

                Briefly looking over existing stats, I’d say trans people are horrifically abused in general and especially by the criminal justice system.

                That doesn’t answer the issue on whether they behave more like men or like women as far as aggression is concerned. The sound of crickets chirping from the groups that clearly are gathering data doesn’t suggest good things.

                We have something like 5k trans criminals in state prisons. That seems large enough to have their own prison(s).Report

  3. I have a female friend then went into a changing room for “women” to find a “person with a penis” changing. There was no forewarning, no signage, etc.. She was disturbed. I can understand that. For that reason, she’s got issues with how the current situation is working.Report

  4. If we need to have separate space for women and men – which is fishing ridiculous IMHO – the the MLB team that just called up a woman pitcher from the minors has some splaining to do.Report

      1. Cite? The Ballers play in an MLB partner league, which is not officially any part of the MLB system. (We have a local team in the same league, the Ballers visit regularly.) As I understand it, players in the partner leagues aren’t generally good enough to make any of the four single-A, advanced-A, double-A or triple-A official minor league levels.Report

  5. You know, I deliberately tried to make this discussion not about trans people. Literally did not mention them, just pointed out how regulations trying to define what legal sex someone is can’t really work. That sex actually is a spectrum, and it would be a spectrum even trans people did not exist, and there is no magical dividing line, something which has been pointed out for decades, but the Gender Critical movement always handwaves with ‘That is a very small subset.’.

    As I pointed out, I am fairly certain very small subsets of people need to know what bathroom they can use, or what sports they can play. They have to be sent to a specific prison. We do need to be able to sex literally every human that exists if we have laws based on sex.

    Absolutely no one in this discussion has talked about that. And instead talked about trans people. A group of people I literally didn’t mention.

    People, just a basic observation here: You cannot even start to make the argument about where what prisons someone belong in or what sport teams people should be able to play on, based on sex, until you can demonstrate there is a functional legal method to decide sex. (Besides the current use of ‘Just going with whatever arbitrary thing is written on their documentation’.)

    If you cannot demonstrate that, it doesn’t matter what rules you think different sexes should follow.

    (This is, incidentally, why we generally do not base rights around people’s biology. In fact, the one other place we base rights on biology is people’s age, and that also is just ‘whatever is written on their documentation’.)Report

    1. You cannot even start to make the argument about where what prisons someone belong in or what sport teams people should be able to play on, based on sex, until you can demonstrate there is a functional legal method to decide sex

      And yet we still have women’s prisons and women’s sports. We even have those things for good reason.Report

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