As the U.K. snap elections take place, a British-American trans woman reflects on the painful and lasting impact of the anti-trans movement in the country.
Because it’s reassigning someone’s gender - e.g. making a female body look more like a man’s. We don’t have the technology to change someone’s biological sex, but we can help them by giving them a body that more closely resembles their gender identity.
People can do whatever they need for their identity, but they need to remember it's just an identity. It exists for a reason that does not come from within a person. That's the whole premise of an identity, pursuing a specific treatment from society based on how it identifies you. The happiest people in human history give few fucks about their identity.
So I can see why some people find it sad. But I can see why other people just as caught up and trained by society would be mad, not really understanding it's got nothing to do with them.
Yeah, everyone's got it to a degree. Some will be violent over those sports. Others simply make sure they look professional before going to work. I think people just need to remember what it all is at times though, before harming themselves or others in the process. I get upset at people hating who they are as much as people hating others for who they are, like anyone hada choice in it all lol.
Can't wait until we've passed it on by and socially evolved, but I will be long dead when that happens. Until then, don't let people get ya down and just be you, y'all!
Sex refers to a set of biological attributes in humans and animals. It is primarily associated with physical and physiological features including chromosomes, gene expression, hormone levels and function, and reproductive/sexual anatomy. Sex is usually categorized as female or male but there is variation in the biological attributes that comprise sex and how those attributes are expressed.
Gender refers to the socially constructed roles, behaviours, expressions and identities of girls, women, boys, men, and gender diverse people. It influences how people perceive themselves and each other, how they act and interact, and the distribution of power and resources in society. Gender identity is not confined to a binary (girl/woman, boy/man) nor is it static; it exists along a continuum and can change over time. There is considerable diversity in how individuals and groups understand, experience and express gender through the roles they take on, the expectations placed on them, relations with others and the complex ways that gender is institutionalized in society.
Yeah, sure, a pedant could argue that "gender correction surgery" is the wrong term since gender is a social construct and that's not what's literally done in the operation, because the operation is more about correcting (ie into accordance with whatever that person's gender is) external "markers" of sex and/or genitals, but that doesn't mean sex reassignment is therefore the correct term.
Sex refers to 2 out of the 3 things you've mentioned there. Hormone Levels and Function, and Reproductive/Sexual anatomy.
We can't change chromosomes (and gene expression is essentially the same category here) - so it's literally our closest attempt at altering sexually dimorphic characteristics. I've been told time and time again gender is fluid, can change on a day to day basis, is based on socially constructed roles, and the jury is still out on if it has nothing to do with sex, or has everything to do with sex. I've heard answers from both sides on that one.
So it makes no sense to me why we allow it to be called Gender reassignment.
Yeah I also think it's dumb. I'm not gonna change my gender, I'm going to change my dick into a clit/pussy. That's literally reassigning my primary sex characteristics. Hormones also changed my sex, do people think my boobs are a gender thing?
Because we don't. The old name was "Sex Reassignment Surgery" (SRS), but the new names are "Gender Affirming Surgery" and "Gender Confirmation Surgery".
The whole situation is BS in the first place, back in the days the concept of gender was introduced to allow some flexibility in the social aspects while keeping sex (as in phenotype) a binary which science already knew it wasn't. Bimodal distribution, yes, binary, no. Things get complicated fast once you go past egg cells and sperm, that's the only actual binary that exists.
English in particular uses transsexual because back in the days activists wanted to avoid associations with sexuality, to not get tangled up in people's homophobic sentiments. Other language use precisely that term, transsexual. Hirschfeld coined "transvestite", back then a catch-all term for behaviour not conforming to your sex assigned at birth (and you could get a transvestite pass in Imperial Germany to stop the police harassing you for "inciting public disorder"), Benjamin coined "transsexual", in English, as a diagnosis separate to "just liking to dress up differently", it got replaced later on don't ask me for a source right now.