Pinball1970:
I do not think gender is based on a decision.
For the most part, I agree with you. For the vast majority of people, their gender identify follows from their biological sex plus a bunch of social and cultural influences that are rooted in the natural recognition of the fact of sex.
A small minority of people experience "gender dysphoria", for various reasons (many of which interact with their biology). That tends to influence the person's sense of gender identity.
It seems likely, to me, that an even smaller number of people become confused about their own gender identity as a result of social pressures and expectations.
What I
don't believe is that people can flip-flop back and forth between gender identities in the space of a period of hours, or days, or even months, just by making a "decision". Gender, even for trans people, tends to be far more stable than that, in any given individual.
Gender is more like sexuality, intimately related to sex but part of ones development, personality, feeling of self.
I agree.
That sounds like last week there was no issue about being a man, the thought had never arisen about being female, however today after some consideration a person could now identify as a female.
It does not and should not work that way.
Again, I agree.
However, the trans activist line seems to be that it is out of bounds to ever question anybody's self-declared gender. They are what they say they identify as. End of story. If I understand him correctly, this is essentially billvon's position on these matters, too.
Like JK Rowling, I see some potential problems with simply taking a person's self-declared gender-of-the-moment as the be all and end all for determining whether they are a woman, irrespective of their biological and/or phenotypical sex.
I think it is important not to sweep sex under the rug, as the more extreme trans activists want us all to do. Actually, I think that sex
can't be swept under the rug. It is a biological reality, whereas gender is a social construct. The rubber has to meet the road at some point.
I think that the insistence that "Trans women are women" is ultimately an unhelpful and largely misleading slogan. It seeks to deliberately obscure biological facts in the service of pretending that social constructs are the only thing that exists. This, more generally, is a problem with the entire "postmodernist" agenda - that it thinks that there
are actually no facts - that, instead, every "truth" is nothing more than a social construct. A person who believes that is seriously - possibly dangerously - disconnected from reality. If you
really believe that gravity, say, is just a social construct, you're as likely as not to jump off a high building believing you can fly.
It might be possible to coin some new term for the collective that consists of biological female human beings and biological males who self-identify with a female gender, but I am resistant to the notion that the word "woman" should be appropriated to refer to that collective (which the activists would certainly want to expand to include people of other sexes who "decide" they are women).
Now for the necessary disclaimer, because I am sure the culture vultures are honing their sharp beaks and are about to descend on me in numbers:
I am
entirely in favour of all transgender people being able to live their lives without fear of persecution from "transphobic" people. I have no issues with using any transgender person's preferred pronouns when referring to them. I wish all the same happiness and contentment in life for transgender people that I wish for cis-gender people.
None of this means that I am obliged to pretend that a transgender person who identifies as female is identical to a cisgender woman. Nor does it mean that it can never be appropriate for me to note the differences between these two groups and possibly treat them differently in recognition of those differences. (This is the point at which the radical trans activists will all go completely ballistic, since they will assert that once a person decides they are a woman, all differences are erased. Watch.)
I do not think anyone would support a guy suddenly identifying as a woman then demanding to walk into a woman's changing room.
In the UK, as I understand it, that would be
precisely the effect of the proposed law that said that, legally, in effect, any guy identifying as a woman cannot be discriminated against when it comes to walking into womens' changerooms.
Such a law would
specifically support what you say that you don't think anyone would support.
The extremist trans activists are pushing for such laws, so it looks like
some people support this.
To point this out, however, results in an immediate shitstorm from those activists, and from those who don't understand the issues but who want to feel like they are supporting trans people. Those people often don't even realise they are the unknowing puppets of would-be authoritarian extremists. We've seen several examples of such people in this thread already.
Women should not have suddenly absorb that into their world BUT I don't think that is going happen like that.
What is likely to happen is that trans women who have made the painful psychological and physical transition, alienation from their family but finally get recognition as a woman cannot use a woman's facility.
Would women want to deny this already marginalized minority this right?
I think that the majority of women would not want to deny those people this right. But nor would they want to open the floodgates to people of ill intent piggy-backing on their goodwill, I think. Not if they took the time to examine the nuance.