Even if that were true, which it is not, I am a non binary person. I have gender dysphoria. I have been treated for gender dysphoria for several years now. I am therefore, by your definition, trans. That was kind of my point, a lot of non-binary people are, by your definition, trans. They just tend not to be the non-binary people who show up on cis people's radars.Sorry to go all truscum here but Trans is related to gender dysphoria while Non binary is being presented as gender non association or non conformation.
Gender dysphoria kind of is an intense feeling of non-association, and I'm sure many binary trans people who have experienced it would describe it in similar terms. It is not all positive desire. It is not this disney princess thing where you lie around pining to be a woman because that you think it would be neat. It is a powerful, visceral feeling that your body is wrong, that the way people perceive you does not reflect your own sense of self, or that you are uncomfortable within the social role that you inhabit. It is a powerful feeling that these things are intolerable and you need to get away from them. Non-binary people can absolutely experience those things without coming to the conclusion that they need have the body or adopt the role of a man or a woman.
Furthermore, the underlying logic of transmedicalism/truscum is fundamentally nonsensical. There is a very real difference between a person who experiences clinically significant distress and a person who does not, but ultimately gender dysphoria is still a subjective feeling. It is a powerful and painful feeling, but it is not a physiological reality. I have never had my brain scanned to determine whether or not I had gender dysphoria, I was diagnosed on the basis of a clinical assessment in which I talked about my individual subjective experiences.
This is a stock TERF argument, and like all TERF arguments it's nonsense.Had I been told growing up I wasn't a girl because I didn't behave like "Girls are supposed to" or whatever I'd probably be quite messed up now.
For one, it's one half of a Schrodinger's argument, in which non-binary people are simultaneously androgynous freaks who will seize on any evidence of gender non-conformity to force everyone to be trans, and on the other hand performative hipsters who are just trying to make themselves feel special.
Most non-binary people I know are not gender non-conforming. A lot of non-binary people in the public eye are not gender non-conforming. Cis people get really annoyed by this. Like, to be non-binary you have to be some kind of androgynous waif who prances through the forest riding unicorns all day. It's silly. Gender expression is not gender identity.
Secondly, the idea that people become non-binary to escape the shame or stigma of being gender non-conforming. Having lived as a gender non-conforming man for many years prior to coming out as non-binary, it is so, so much easier. I cannot even begin to tell you how much less accepting people are of non-binary people than they are of gender non-conforming people. The fact that anyone can believe, with a straight face, that coming out as non-binary makes things easier for GNC people actually offends me with its stupidity.
That's all the credence I'm giving this bad argument.
I'm not sure what you're trying to say here.Also generally absent was research suggesting a middle step could be harmful to actual trans people embracing or accepting their new gender identity if transitioning from one binary to another.
Who cares?Doctor Verma's research on it hasn't found such things which is so far some of the most advanced stuff proving gender identity can have a biological component.
Again, the whole "gender identity has a biological component" thing, in addition to being profoundly methodologically flawed, is an absolute irrelevance because we don't measure gender identity on the basis of biology. If binary transgender identity is loosely associated with particular biological features, that's at best an irrelevant curiosity and at worst completely meaningless to the actual social and clinical reality of gender identity.
It's cool to try and understand the relationship between neurology and cognitive features like identity, but it's also kind of abstract because we can only perceive and experience the cognitive features. People don't actually experience or feel insignificant differences in the size of microscopic features of their hypothalamus.
So, from what little I can gather from this incredibly unintuitive name drop, you expect me to rate the opinion of a single practitioner who did conversion therapy on children over the thousands of practitioners in diverse disciplines treating trans and gender variant people today.No just the research of Dr Kenneth J. Zucker who was one of the leading experts and researchers on gender identity conditions and how to help people transition or understand expression of Gender identity.
Yeah, no.
Literally didn't happen.Well when idiots are pushing for it to be a criminal offense to use the wrong ones it does become a little important.
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