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Of course I'm not forcing you to do anything if you don't want to, but seriously, what have you got to lose? Five seconds of your life?
Pathos, you say you weren't being rude, yet you say you were calling him lazy?
I believe you invalidated your own argument, there.
... What? I think he was being lazy, how is it rude to say that?
It's not so much what you said - it's fine to say that it's already been discussed - but you're being condescending. That doesn't seem to be what you meant to do, but it's how it came across.I don't think I was actually all that rude to him; I simply asked him to read the thread, where the question had been previously asked an answered. I do think it got out of hand. I don't understand why that is not a valid response. Also, I am not/was not calling him a moron, I was calling him lazy; I don't believe he is stupid at all.
what else can Karkat do at this point aside from apologise? I'm not saying that apologies fix everything, but acting like it isn't good enough doesn't accomplish anything. He's telling you that he didn't mean to cause offence. Hopefully from this point he's not going to make the same mistake again and be more conscious of this kind of slip-up. I would hate to think that if I offended you, there wouldn't be anything I could do about it because apologies don't mean anything to you.Also, I really don't think an apology is fix-all for everything; I don't mean to say he committed heinous crimes but apologies don't erase the way people act or think. Apologies mean very little to me, honestly, I care more about what people do.
Yes, it is the right thing to do! However, this is not apparent to everyone: most people aren't educated in feminism and quiltbag ideas and so they don't know it's even an issue most of the time. The world isn't split into people who are feminists and people who are against feminists; most people don't even know about it. People start from the bare minimum, and asking questions.Because it's the right thing to do. That's like saying 'why should people support freedom' or 'why should people support having food' or 'why should people support air'. Not supporting it is wrong.
"They should be allies because, you know, it's the right thing. If they are dissuaded because someone is bitter? Then they were not allies to begin with. So if Karkat decides he does not want to be an ally because he dislikes my attitude? I don't think that is a big loss."I'm not sure I understand what you're saying here...? Karkat didn't even say he doesn't like my attitude, Hawke did, and Hawke insinuated that I'd lost an ally. But I'm still not sure what you're saying...
You do have a place in this thread - but everyone else does, too. I want this thread to be educational, instead of a giant argument between people who aren't as informed on this stuff and people who are. I myself am not an expert on these issues and I wanted to learn more - hence, thread. I think it's generally agreed upon that this forum should be a more inclusive space, and I think this would be at least one way to accomplish that. People who don't know much about this stuff should be able to learn about it without feeling like they aren't welcome.I'm really sorry I made you feel that way. Honestly, I am. Please realize that I felt that way too. When people say that masculinity/femininity = male/female, it is honestly infuriating to me. Honestly, I'm angry now, and I feel like my anger has no place in this forum, or this thread; I feel like this is a thread about gender, and I felt like I had a place in this thread, but now I don't because someone who has no idea what gender even is stepped in.
It's rude to call someone something negative.
It's not so much what you said - it's fine to say that it's already been discussed - but you're being condescending. That doesn't seem to be what you meant to do, but it's how it came across.
what else can Karkat do at this point aside from apologise? I'm not saying that apologies fix everything, but acting like it isn't good enough doesn't accomplish anything. He's telling you that he didn't mean to cause offence. Hopefully from this point he's not going to make the same mistake again and be more conscious of this kind of slip-up. I would hate to think that if I offended you, there wouldn't be anything I could do about it because apologies don't mean anything to you.
Yes, it is the right thing to do! However, this is not apparent to everyone: most people aren't educated in feminism and quiltbag ideas and so they don't know it's even an issue most of the time. The world isn't split into people who are feminists and people who are against feminists; most people don't even know about it. People start from the bare minimum, and asking questions.
"They should be allies because, you know, it's the right thing. If they are dissuaded because someone is bitter? Then they were not allies to begin with. So if Karkat decides he does not want to be an ally because he dislikes my attitude? I don't think that is a big loss."
This is what I am referring to! It's completely unfair to say that they weren't an ally to begin with, just because they're dissuaded like that. I would be (and often am) dissuaded in the same way, because there's so much hostility that follows these threads. I also consider myself an ally. It's really hurtful to try and help to understand these things to be met with hostility. It feels like it doesn't matter if I care about these things or not if people I like/respect are going to be hostile about it when I do care. Most of the issues in this thread do not affect me whatsoever (in fact, most stuff that feminism discusses doesn't). But I want to know about these things so I can make it easier for people I know who are affected by this stuff.
You do have a place in this thread - but everyone else does, too. I want this thread to be educational, instead of a giant argument between people who aren't as informed on this stuff and people who are. I myself am not an expert on these issues and I wanted to learn more - hence, thread. I think it's generally agreed upon that this forum should be a more inclusive space, and I think this would be at least one way to accomplish that. People who don't know much about this stuff should be able to learn about it without feeling like they aren't welcome.
in any case maybe I'm just stressed and making a big deal out of this, but I would really like it if we could have much less hostility in this thread.
Okay, I'm kind of still confused about this whole gender identity thing. I mean, I understand why people are transsexual* (if you look at your bits and feel an urge to yank it out and it makes you depressed because you hate it, etc etc), but since I view gender as a total socially-induced thing, I don't really understand the difference between transgender people and the people who are just breaking social norms to do whatever they want. So, a question:
Assuming that all gender conceptions don't exist and all male and female and whatever people are treated equally (dresses aren't a female-only thing, males can have long hair tied up in pretty ribbons, females are viewed as just as competent in engineering and computer science, both males and females have equal responsibility in asking their significant other to the prom, etc.), would transgender people still exist?
*By transsexual, I mean people who would like to change their bits, hormones, etc. They don't necessarily need to have changed their bits or are planning to change their bits (maybe they can't afford it or they don't think the operation is good enough). By transgender, I mean people who are guys but have female bits and girls who have male bits who have no plan to change them/would not change them if they can do so. Just a clarification so we don't end up arguing over words.
In an attempt to go back on topic, I will rephrase and repost my question which kinda got drowned in all the drama.
I understand that gender identity is important to a lot of people. What I don't understand is why. This could be because I view gender as a completely socially induced thing. Thus, I'm trying to clarify the whole concept of gender so I can actually understand it.
So a question for everyone: Do you think that gender is a completely socially induced thing? If not, then what makes transgender people transgender?
Gender is just what you feel you are. It's a marker for yourself. I am this. I am not that. It does not mean I can't do laundry or something. It just means I am this. It's like a name. If you were assigned a name at birth and you hate it, you would want to change it. You'd feel pretty crap with that old, terrible name that you hate until you got to change it.
I don't understand why gender identity and gender roles have to be interconnected. Gender identity would be tied to sex. Connection to gender roles is societal; gender identity is just, it's just who you are. Honestly, if we got rid of gender roles, we'd still have gender because we still have bodies.
I mean that, to a certain extent, people are male-bodied and female-bodied, and obviously there are those that do not fit those categories. But there will always be people who are male-bodied and female-bodied, and that creates gender; like how can you have a sex without thinking about it at all? Someone would eventually realize hey, I'm female. Or male. Or agender or gender-neutral or something. Because it works with or against their body.
If gender as we know it did not exist and everyone was free to do whatever they wanted without anyone giving a sod, I myself would still transition because I would still be stuck with boobs and a voice that I despise to death and looking like a little kid. And I'd still hate all of it.
So I guess people who transition largely due to body dysphoria would still do so, whereas people who don't intend to get hormone treatment/SRS/etc... if there's no such thing as gender, then what would be the point??
We are sort of getting at the same point here. Gender identity is related to body dysphoria and the realization that (well this was my realization I don't mean to put words into other trans* peoples mouths) you were born wrong. It would exist without gender constructs because it has nothing to do with it; it is, in my eyes, simply a body deformity. Again, I can't speak for trans* folk who believe their body is male because they are male, etc. and do not wish to transition; I can only speak for myself. But to me it is basically like I was born with a tumour and I need to have it removed because it is cancerous, and it would still be cancerous if society did not have negative connotations connected to cancer (beyond the idea that if you have it you die, you know).
I think someone made a post earlier about transgender and transsexual meaning pretty much the same thing, just that transgender is becoming more commonly used or somethingUnless I'm confusing gender with sex here. As I far as I know, gender is what you identify as, and sex is what your bits are, am I correct? So a transsexual person would have their bits corrected (or at least would want their bits corrected), but a transgender won't.
Also re: transexual/transgender, it is mostly just a personal preference, however some people prefer transexual because they are changing their sex and not their gender. I prefer transgender just because I prefer how it sounds, but I don't particularly mind either.
The official meaning is that transgender is when do not identify with the gender assigned to you at birth but you are, at least for now, not transitioning physically. Transexual means you are transitioning physically. But again, the working definition is just personal preference.
Please don't use the official definition, Linoone, no one will understand you. Also never ever use transexual as a verb.
I think someone made a post earlier about transgender and transsexual meaning pretty much the same thing, just that transgender is becoming more commonly used or something
Also never ever use transexual as a verb.
Mrf. Here's my inability to phrase anything properly coming to bite me in the butt again.
I suppose the question will now boil down to: what is the thought process of the people who are okay with their body but not okay with the gender most people think of when they see a person of that sort of body?
Hopefully I didn't phrase anything wrong this time...
STOCKHOLM—At the “Egalia” preschool, staff avoid using words like “him” or “her” and address the 33 kids as “friends” rather than girls and boys.
From the colour and placement of toys to the choice of books, every detail has been carefully planned to make sure the children don’t fall into gender stereotypes.
“Society expects girls to be girly, nice and pretty and boys to be manly, rough and outgoing,” says Jenny Johnsson, a 31-year-old teacher. “Egalia gives them a fantastic opportunity to be whoever they want to be.”
The taxpayer-funded preschool which opened last year in the liberal Sodermalm district of Stockholm for kids aged one to six is among the most radical examples of Sweden’s efforts to engineer equality between the sexes from childhood onward.
Breaking down gender roles is a core mission in the national curriculum for preschools, underpinned by the theory that even in highly egalitarian-minded Sweden, society gives boys an unfair edge.
To even things out, many preschools have hired “gender pedagogues” to help staff identify language and behaviour that risk reinforcing stereotypes.
Some parents worry things have gone too far. An obsession with obliterating gender roles, they say, could make the children confused and ill-prepared to face the world outside kindergarten.
“Different gender roles aren’t problematic as long as they are equally valued,” says Tanja Bergkvist, a 37-year-old blogger and a leading voice against what she calls “gender madness” in Sweden.
Those bent on shattering gender roles “say there’s a hierarchy where everything that boys do is given higher value, but I wonder who decides that it has higher value,” she says. “Why is there higher value in playing with cars?”
At Egalia — the title connotes “equality” — boys and girls play together with a toy kitchen, waving plastic utensils and pretending to cook. One boy hides inside the toy stove, his head popping out through a hole.
Lego bricks and other building blocks are intentionally placed next to the kitchen, to make sure the children draw no mental barriers between cooking and construction.
Director Lotta Rajalin notes that Egalia places a special emphasis on fostering an environment tolerant of gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender people. From a bookcase she pulls out a story about two male giraffes who are sad to be childless — until they come across an abandoned crocodile egg.
Nearly all the children’s books deal with homosexual couples, single parents or adopted children. There are no “Snow White,” “Cinderella” or other classic fairy tales seen as cementing stereotypes.
Rajalin, 52, says the staff also try to help the children discover new ideas when they play.
“A concrete example could be when they’re playing ‘house’ and the role of the mom already is taken and they start to squabble,” she says. “Then we suggest two moms or three moms and so on.”
Egalia’s methods are controversial; some say they amount to mind control. Rajalin says the staff have received threats from racists apparently upset about the preschool’s use of black dolls.
But she says that there’s a long waiting list for admission to Egalia, and that only one couple has pulled a child out of the school.
Jukka Korpi, 44, says he and his wife chose Egalia “to give our children all the possibilities based on who they are and not on their gender.”
Sweden has promoted women’s rights for decades, and more recently was a pioneer among European countries in allowing gay and lesbian couples to legalize their partnerships and adopt children.
Gender studies permeate academic life in Sweden. Bergkvist noted on her blog that the state-funded Swedish Science Council had granted $80,000 for a postdoctoral fellowship aimed at analyzing “the trumpet as a symbol of gender.”
Jay Belsky, a child psychologist at the University of California, Davis, said he’s not aware of any other school like Egalia, and he questioned whether it was the right way to go.
“The kind of things that boys like to do — run around and turn sticks into swords — will soon be disapproved of,” he said. “So gender neutrality at its worst is emasculating maleness.”
Egalia is unusual even for Sweden. Staff try to shed masculine and feminine references from their speech, including the pronouns him or her — “han” or “hon” in Swedish. Instead, they’ve have adopted the genderless “hen,” a word that doesn’t exist in Swedish but is used in some feminist and gay circles.
“We use the word ‘hen’ for example when a doctor, police, electrician or plumber or such is coming to the kindergarten,” Rajalin says. “We don’t know if it’s a he or a she so we just say ‘Hen is coming around 2 p.m.’ Then the children can imagine both a man or a woman. This widens their view.”
Egalia doesn’t deny the biological differences between boys and girls — the dolls the children play with are anatomically correct.
What matters is that children understand that their biological differences “don’t mean boys and girls have different interests and abilities,” Rajalin says. “This is about democracy. About human equality.”