It's not his fault, he needs a Snickers.So, this thread was about Elliot Page. Is it now just another thread of Eacaraxe screaming at everybody?
It's not his fault, he needs a Snickers.So, this thread was about Elliot Page. Is it now just another thread of Eacaraxe screaming at everybody?
I doubt it was trans people.Dare we ask who generated and perpetuated that wave of sentiment for profit.
Sorry, how the hell has anything I've said "pushed trans men out of the conversation"? This is a simplistic deflection."A trans figure in the public eye" is also more likely to live in seven-figure estates in gated neighborhoods, with their own security and security systems, enjoy the privilege of incredibly well-funded and responsive emergency services, and have the megaphone of the press, are they not? You think someone like Page, or post-fame Cox, would be counted among the 60-odd percent of transgender people who report harassment, abuse, or assault from law enforcement when trying to report (hate-based or otherwise) crimes against them?
You think Cox got an article about her on the BBC because she's trans, or because she's famous? Which is odd you want to bring that up, considering Cox was out and an outspoken activist before she hit it big on OITNB.
All of which is rather amazing, considering my point was the erasure of trans men and denial of trans men's issues to begin with, and despite this you still couldn't help but bring yourself to push trans men out of the conversation.
Yet that's the basis of this argument you're putting forward. "We're not in the Stonewall days any more", "the trendline is down".... these statements about it being better now are then used to arrive at a conclusion that amounts to tone-policing LGBTQ people as a method of dealing with homophobia.Feel free to quit putting words in my mouth and trying to poison the well any time.
Yet I doubt the conclusion you've reached is that it's incumbent on the victim to change their behaviour.Come into a BLM thread where I'm posting and say that shit. You'll find out real fuckin' fast how consistent I am in my assertion political movements have to adapt to changing circumstances, legal landscapes, societal values and norms.
I've never seen someone need a Snickers so badly. Maybe Alex Jones when he told that woman to get off the phone.It's not his fault, he needs a Snickers.
To expand on this...I doubt it was trans people..
Well, you're the one who linked a damn article about Laverne Cox as opposed to any number of trans men celebrities. Now, I'm sure you'll happily and merrily handwave this as "but I said in the public eye!". How about Buck Angel, Lucas Silveira, Aydian Dowling, or Ian Harvie? Remember when Chaz Bono was on DWTS?Sorry, how the hell has anything I've said "pushed trans men out of the conversation"?
End of story. Oh, just never mind that little three-word combo word I used, "post-fame Cox". Because you're deliberately trying to skew my argument to turn it into a "right wing trope", thereby poisoning the well. You see, the problem here is we're not talking about "the professional world" writ large, we're talking about celebrity, media presence, media representation, and by far most important, profit motive in media. Because you're still trying to pretend these issues aren't interconnected, interdependent, and symbiotic in terms of fulfilling the self-interest of all associated parties while leaving those without the privilege of celebrity out to dry.Page, and Cox, will have less risk to them than your average trans person.
Yes, they also happen to be statements of fact.Yet that's the basis of this argument you're putting forward. "We're not in the Stonewall days any more", "the trendline is down".... these statements about it being better now are then used to arrive at a conclusion that amounts to tone-policing LGBTQ people as a method of dealing with homophobia.
Pray tell, when in the history of a movement that started with a riot (against corrupt cops, no less), was the last time cops declared a pride parade a riot, kettled, and gassed the hell out of them? Well, that is when they're not also saying "black lives matter".Yet I doubt the conclusion you've reached is that it's incumbent on the victim to change their behaviour.
I used that example because it was very recently in the news, and because my point isn't limited to trans men alone-- coming out increases risk. Obviously.Well, you're the one who linked a damn article about Laverne Cox as opposed to any number of trans men celebrities. Now, I'm sure you'll happily and merrily handwave this as "but I said in the public eye!". How about Buck Angel, Lucas Silveira, Aydian Dowling, or Ian Harvie? Remember when Chaz Bono was on DWTS?
You're the one that apparently can't talk about trans men without bringing trans women up. Great job proving my point about erasure, boyo.
Once again: minimising the issues trans people face. If the only relevant thing to you is that trans people in the public eye are at less risk than average joe-public trans people, then you're either failing to recognise or failing to acknowledge the increased risk that coming out brings onto somebody.End of story.
Firstly, that story isn't relevant to the discussion we're having. Its a little bit gross that you'd invoke it here in an effort to lend your argument emotional weight.Yes, they also happen to be statements of fact.
Has it occurred to that perhaps the LGBTQ community isn't an ideological or behavioral monolith, and there are LGBTQ persons out there who feel put off and excluded by their own supposed community's behavior? I personally know more LGBTQ's that dislike pride parades, festivals, and clubs for the conduct that goes on at some of them yet still feel peer pressured to turn out, than I do that wholeheartedly participate in them. Not to mention the fact they struggle against negative stereotypes the community itself perpetuates, damn near everyday when they just want to live their damn lives. Especially people who are bisexual, who also have to contend with biphobia and gatekeeping within the community that's supposed to be for them.
Has it occurred to you, ever, that shit is harmful to people in their own communities, not from without but from within? But never mind me, saying the quiet part out loud. I'll spare you my story about one of my oldest, good friends who was sexually abused at a pride parade by being pressured into a BDSM scene against his consent (or more specifically, a parade after-party), and then gaslit about it for months because "this is our community, this is what we do, people like us have to stick together".
Oh no, for the sake of maintaining appearances I must just be slinging right-wing tropes to tone police, to blame the LGBTQ community for harms committed upon them by straight people. Because I dare question the status quo, I must be wrongbadthinkman.
Police violence is not the only form of discrimination and prejudice, believe it or not, and there's not a 1-to-1 match up between the issues the two communities face.Pray tell, when in the history of a movement that started with a riot (against corrupt cops, no less), was the last time cops declared a pride parade a riot, kettled, and gassed the hell out of them? Well, that is when they're not also saying "black lives matter".
Okay, you can take that argument, but it needs to be applied consistently as a general anti-prohibition argument, not as an "arbitrary exception for this drug here" argument.This goes right back to what we've been arguing about for two pages and it's why I brought it up. Prohibition doesn't work. Not for alcohol, not for weed, clearly not for opioids, or any other recreational, lifestyle, or performance-enhancing drug. Keeping anabolic steroids scheduled hasn't, and won't, solve the problem, and worse, it leaves individuals who would seek them vulnerable to scams, untested or harmful counterfeit products, or worse.
That's disingenuous. The prescribing system attempts to ensure that potentially dangerous substances aren't left free to float around society, encourage responsible use, and in particular to ensure that users have been educated in appropriate use for their and other people's safety. Usually this is sufficient because people do not have a motivation to take most drugs, because all they're likely to get off them is adverse effects. But clearly some drugs have fun or beneficial effects: benzodiazepines, opioids, amphetamines and related stimulants, ketamine, androgens etc. Thus prohibition.Our current system either works, or it doesn't. If it works as you claim, descheduling androgens should be sufficient to prevent misuse -- and for that matter, black and grey market estrogens, or any number of other pharmaceutical products, wouldn't be an issue either.
The two are not mutually exclusive. You can avoid rejecting them as trans while still rejecting them as a terrible person.We all know he's not trans but is a disgusting, grifting, asshole
There is zero indication they are trans. Or do you have information I don't?The two are not mutually exclusive. You can avoid rejecting them as trans while still rejecting them as a terrible person.
The same identifier as every trans person: their say-so.There is zero indication they are trans. Or do you have information I don't?
You think the majority of people that identify as trans are all mega-celebrities? I mean, that's just nuts. You do know that the majority of them are not super rich, and possibly just work some YT channel, or just publicly identify as trans on social media, without buckets of money. So this puts them at risk, and they don't have the private army of security that you seem to think is synonymous with being a public trans person. "In the public eye" simply means they are open and public about their identity, while still living a regular life, or at least trying to. You know, unless they get hunted down and killed in the street by transphobic assholes, for the crime of simply being alive and daring to breath the same air as them."A trans figure in the public eye" is also more likely to live in seven-figure estates in gated neighborhoods, with their own security and security systems, enjoy the privilege of incredibly well-funded and responsive emergency services, and have the megaphone of the press, are they not? You think someone like Page, or post-fame Cox, would be counted among the 60-odd percent of transgender people who report harassment, abuse, or assault from law enforcement when trying to report (hate-based or otherwise) crimes against them?
And there in lies the entire problem. Thank you.The same identifier as every trans person: their say-so.
It's not like there's trans certification.
Or you could just not be That Guy about it.And there in lies the entire problem. Thank you.
Oh don't think I didn't notice your hypocrite ass throwing Eacaraxe under the bus when he started talking about how capitalism is exploiting the trans movement. Guess socialism doesn't mater as much to you as you claim when it means you have to actually have rules for what makes someone trans or not. No no no, who cares if it leads to molestation of women by a grifter so long as "I got mine!"Or you could just not be That Guy about it.
Just because someone is a socialist doesn't obligate me to like them as a person or approve of everything they do. Where you got the idea otherwise, I'll never know. And if this kind of reversal is the best you can come up with, it's because you're being That Guy.Oh don't think I didn't notice your hypocrite ass throwing Eacaraxe under the bus when he started talking about how capitalism is exploiting the trans movement. Guess socialism doesn't mater as much to you as you claim when it means you have to actually have rules for what makes someone trans or not. No no no, who cares if it leads to molestation of women by a grifter so long as "I got mine!"
Oh yes, you are SO less confrontational by not even having any argument and only being able muster the gradeschool, "You're, That Guy, lul. Owned!" You have nothing to offer. You are intellectually bankrupt.No, I just find him to be a pain because he's more confrontational and arrogant than me at my worst. Just because someone is a socialist doesn't obligate me to like them as a person or approve of everything they do. Where you got the idea otherwise, I'll never know. And if this kind of reversal is the best you can come up with, it's because you're That Guy.
Engage with my question and quit slinging mud: Why are you so opposed to taking Yaniv at her word that she is trans?Oh yes, you are SO less confrontational by not even having any argument and only being able muster the gradeschool, "You're, That Guy, lul. Owned!" You have nothing to offer. You are intellectually bankrupt.
Presumably for the same reason you don't trust Breitbart as a reliable source of information.Engage with my question or quit slinging mud: Why are you so opposed to taking Yaniv at her word that she is trans?
Yes, cultural groups should need government paperwork, certification, and wear public identification for proper designation.And there in lies the entire problem. Thank you.