TheDarkEricDraven said:
Spy_Guy said:
Personally, I'd rather avoid the problem outright by imposing laws that reconstructed genitals must be marked with a tattoo, or similar.
Or maybe transexuals should wear a badge.
For the good of everyone else, ya?
You seem to have missed the reasoning behind this. I see no reason to ostracize transpeople, however I believe that if they end up in a sexual relationship with a person, then that person has the right to know of their status as such.
If they had been open about it in the first place, this should not come as a surprise or matter to whoever they are with... and if they haven't been open about it, well, shame on them.
However, unlike your example of people being branded for being a certain way [http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pmwiki.php/Main/GodwinsLaw], there is a biological difference between born males/females and FTMs/MTFs.
To quote Wikipedia:
Many people also see "sex change" as factually inaccurate.[3] Sex in humans is usually determined by four factors:
[li]Chromosomes[/li]
[li]Gonads (Ovaries and/or testicles)[/li]
[li]Hormone status[/li]
[li]Primary sex characteristics, sometimes also secondary sex characteristics[/li]
Not all of these factors can be changed, however:
[li]Chromosomes cannot be changed.[/li]
[li]Gonads can be removed, but not replaced[/li]
[li]Hormone status is easily changed[/li]
[li]Existing secondary sex characteristics can to some extent be changed; existing ones mostly through surgery, non-existing ones can be induced to grow through hormones.[/li]
Comparing a relatively non-intrusive marker to the star Jews wore during the Holocaust is shaky at best, especially considering that I'm not proposing we ship them off to camps and gas them. I'm just requesting a bit of honesty, really.
orangeban said:
Spy_Guy said:
-snip-
So, let me ask you a question:
Do you think it's morally sound to enter into a relationship with someone and not telling them that you weren't born as your current gender?
-snip-
And it isn't a shame that the burden to spread this information should fall on your shoulders.
You are the person who doesn't like trans people, it's
your responsibility to inform people of your insecurities. Just because it might be slightly inconvienient for the priviledged majority, doesn't mean you should be able to pass the burden onto a minority, especially when that burden is much greater (revealing you're trans > revealing your insecure)
I took the liberty of fixing the formatting in the above quote, I hope you don't mind.
First of all, let me tell you that I find that condescending attitude rather offensive. I think there are better ways to get your point across than to argue ad hominem, don't you agree?
With that out of the way, I'd like to argue that you
chose to become part of the minority in question and chances are you knew that some things just are never going to be the same as it is for people like me or my girlfriend.
I personally find it distressing that people these days have no way of knowing if someone is a biological male or female and actually have to stoop to asking. I don't think it should be a surprise that a lot of people might overlook asking on account of not having all their bases covered, yet still not want to date a transperson.
In that case, it would fall to you to not waste their time, or yours.
orangeban said:
We live in a world where trans people are judged for not passing as their gender, but then when they do pass as their gender, they are called out for trying to "trick" people.
By looking like someone who might be able to give the person a long-term relationship and the possibility of giving them children, yet knowing from the start that they cannot.
Also by looking like something they are not, I believe they're their biological gender in disguise.
As has previously been mentioned here, it's not possible to turn a man into a woman, or vice versa, but they can be made to look the part (see my quote from Wikipedia above)
...yes, they are trying to "trick" people.
orangeban said:
Look, let's imagine a dating profile. On this dating profile the person says they are interested in women. A MTF transperson should be able to apply to this dating profile without revealing she is trans, because that profile's only specification was that the partner had to be a woman, and MTF people are women.
Sure, an MTF who feels like they could apply can feel free to do so. Then again, if they say that they are MTF and ask if that's alright at some point that could save both parties a lot of headaches and time.
Plus, if the person who put the profile up doesn't mind isn't that the best outcome for the both of these people?
The transperson doesn't have to worry and there's no risk that the one who put up the profile is going to get a nasty surprise one day.
Don't you think it's better to just come out with that sort of thing ASAP, to save both of them the trouble?
It's quite selfish to think "It's very private to me and they don't need to know" because in my mind I interpret that as:
Me getting laid > The other person's feelings.
Is this a misunderstanding on my behalf, and if so, could you explain what it is instead?