Poll: How do you personally feel about the term cisgender?

Lightknight

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Nov 26, 2008
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CaitSeith said:
Lightknight said:
Lightspeaker said:
KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:
Lightspeaker said:
I wasn't going to post in this thread at all purely because of the amount of bile going around. But I just had to point this out:

- Thread title is "How do you personally feel about the term cisgender?"

- Thread consists of certain people arguing and trying to tell others how they should feel about it (i.e. that they shouldn't be offended because reasons).
In all honesty I did tell people that debate was okay and encouraged discussion. Obviously I had no idea what I was setting up there.
Its not your fault, you had good intentions. Its just disappointing that these things always seem to come down to "what you think/feel is wrong and this is why it is wrong" rather than people actually discussing things.
Isn't that what a discussion is as long as both sides are listening to the reasons and evaluating them against their own?

Two sides saying what they think/feel and why then responding to one another?

I certainly feel like I've been having discussions in this thread and have learned a lot from the posters here.
Just for curiosity, what have you learned from the posters here?
In this thread specifically? Not a lot. There haven't been that many facts presented. I've learned some minor things like the etymology of the term and some more perspectives on why the word is liked or disliked. There's a lot of general information to be had.

Regarding the transgender topic in general, this week I learned from several of the posters here that I was being selfish for not wanting to let my transgender friends impose their pronouns on me. I had been not using them in discussion to avoid a number of issues (fear of slipping up and using the sex-pronoun I associate with them and hurting them or getting others upset and a desire not to be controlled). They helped me deal with the frustration I had from previous situations in which the backlash for making such a mistake colored my view of the matter pretty strongly.

So I've been able to come to terms with the fact that since they're my friends they've earned the right to impose and that these people aren't the same people who have wronged me in the past and thus don't deserve to be punished for what someone else has done.

That lesson is pretty damn important to me even if my friends won't even notice a difference (they likely had no idea I wasn't using pronouns at all).

Regarding other topics on these message boards? A lot. Even in debates where we never see eye to eye I research my side of the conversation and fact check the other person's. By the end of the conversation I am typically a near-expert on the matter where materials and other resources for research are abundant.
 

Lightknight

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Nov 26, 2008
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Aelinsaar said:
You listen in the same way that a teenager arguing for something they want listens. You don't actually appear to think about the points, only how to fit them back into your pre-existing narrative. I think for many people with less experience with that behavior from intelligent adults, it comes across as simply not listening.
If you provided convincing evidence then you might find out whether or not I am listening to your points.

In the meantime, I'm going to assume you have no further interest in exploring the topic with me in an intellectually honest and genuine way. If you'd devoted some of the time you spent on trying to pretend to know my motivation then I may have actually had the opportunity to learn from you. Instead you assumed that I wasn't listening and ended up wasting yours and my time.

So maybe we can cut the crap and get to just one question.

Considering the citation provided of articles addressing the matter, do you believe that people find the term offensive, even if the term itself is not offensive?
 

CaitSeith

Formely Gone Gonzo
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Lightknight said:
CaitSeith said:
Lightknight said:
Lightspeaker said:
KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:
Lightspeaker said:
I wasn't going to post in this thread at all purely because of the amount of bile going around. But I just had to point this out:

- Thread title is "How do you personally feel about the term cisgender?"

- Thread consists of certain people arguing and trying to tell others how they should feel about it (i.e. that they shouldn't be offended because reasons).
In all honesty I did tell people that debate was okay and encouraged discussion. Obviously I had no idea what I was setting up there.
Its not your fault, you had good intentions. Its just disappointing that these things always seem to come down to "what you think/feel is wrong and this is why it is wrong" rather than people actually discussing things.
Isn't that what a discussion is as long as both sides are listening to the reasons and evaluating them against their own?

Two sides saying what they think/feel and why then responding to one another?

I certainly feel like I've been having discussions in this thread and have learned a lot from the posters here.
Just for curiosity, what have you learned from the posters here?
In this thread specifically? Not a lot. There haven't been that many facts presented. I've learned some minor things like the etymology of the term and some more perspectives on why the word is liked or disliked. There's a lot of general information to be had.

Regarding the transgender topic in general, this week I learned from several of the posters here that I was being selfish for not wanting to let my transgender friends impose their pronouns on me. I had been not using them in discussion to avoid a number of issues (fear of slipping up and using the sex-pronoun I associate with them and hurting them or getting others upset and a desire not to be controlled). They helped me deal with the frustration I had from previous situations in which the backlash for making such a mistake colored my view of the matter pretty strongly.

So I've been able to come to terms with the fact that since they're my friends they've earned the right to impose and that these people aren't the same people who have wronged me in the past and thus don't deserve to be punished for what someone else has done.

That lesson is pretty damn important to me even if my friends won't even notice a difference (they likely had no idea I wasn't using pronouns at all).

Regarding other topics on these message boards? A lot. Even in debates where we never see eye to eye I research my side of the conversation and fact check the other person's. By the end of the conversation I am typically a near-expert on the matter where materials and other resources for research are abundant.
Thank you very much. I appreciate you answered my question.
 

Lightknight

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Nov 26, 2008
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Aelinsaar said:
Let me tell you what there is evidence of...

Lightknight said:
Lightknight said:
Isn't that what a discussion is as long as both sides are listening to the reasons and evaluating them against their own?

Two sides saying what they think/feel and why then responding to one another?

I certainly feel like I've been having discussions in this thread and have learned a lot from the posters here.
Just for curiosity, what have you learned from the posters here?
In this thread specifically? Not a lot.
The posters here (Aka, on the escapist) don't reside solely in this thread. It's a community of posters from a diverse group of people. I've been having two transgender-related topics in two different threads on this site at the same time and some of the posters here have been speaking with me there as well. In this thread in particularly, there has not been that much to learn from. You haven't been presenting facts, just rehashing how the term serves a categorical purpose and how it is irrelevant how people feel about the term because you believe the term itself is not inherently bad.

I mean... what is a person with eyes and a brain supposed to conclude from that instant about-face? Following it with bitter passive-aggression, "....earned their right to impose..." is just... gross.

Following that admission should be nothing... certainly not yet ANOTHER deflection and pivot.
I'm not surprised you would belittle someone learning and changing in a positive way.

FYI, since you weren't around the first time I establish what I mean by "impose" I'll repeat it. I don't mean "impose" as in "force". I mean "Impose" as in "take advantage of someone by demanding their attention or commitment." Like when you offer a friend a place to stay the night and they say, "I don't mean to impose".

It's disappointing to see someone as apparently intelligent as you grab an erroneously preconceived notion of someone and run with it all this distance. You're wrong about me. Sorry. But it's not my job to do anything more to help you see that. That's on you. I'm just unhappy that you and I couldn't have a productive conversation due to your bias of me.
 

Lightknight

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Nov 26, 2008
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Aelinsaar said:
Sure, it's all about you, not the cost of your "betterment" that you place on others. Plus the boredom we've agreed on earlier, remember?

Say, why didn't you start a "Help educate me" thread, instead of what you're doing? No no... sorry, I'll let you get back to that victim role...
I'm sorry you're frustrated that someone learned from a thread on the internet in a discussion in which all parties involved willingly took part. I don't really think there's more you and I should discuss. Good luck.
 

KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime

Lolita Style, The Best Style!
Jan 12, 2010
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Lightknight said:
In this thread specifically? Not a lot. There haven't been that many facts presented. I've learned some minor things like the etymology of the term and some more perspectives on why the word is liked or disliked. There's a lot of general information to be had.

Regarding the transgender topic in general, this week I learned from several of the posters here that I was being selfish for not wanting to let my transgender friends impose their pronouns on me. I had been not using them in discussion to avoid a number of issues (fear of slipping up and using the sex-pronoun I associate with them and hurting them or getting others upset and a desire not to be controlled). They helped me deal with the frustration I had from previous situations in which the backlash for making such a mistake colored my view of the matter pretty strongly.

So I've been able to come to terms with the fact that since they're my friends they've earned the right to impose and that these people aren't the same people who have wronged me in the past and thus don't deserve to be punished for what someone else has done.

That lesson is pretty damn important to me even if my friends won't even notice a difference (they likely had no idea I wasn't using pronouns at all).

Regarding other topics on these message boards? A lot. Even in debates where we never see eye to eye I research my side of the conversation and fact check the other person's. By the end of the conversation I am typically a near-expert on the matter where materials and other resources for research are abundant.
Well I'll say that, if you're the only person who got any value from this thread, no matter the subject, then I'm glad I started it. Even though I still think cisgender is a serviceable word, I'm starting to get the idea that too many people are way too aggrieved by the term for it to have any use, at current. Which is a crying shame. So thank you for your input.
 

Lightknight

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Nov 26, 2008
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KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:
Well I'll say that, if you're the only person who got any value from this thread, no matter the subject, then I'm glad I started it. Even though I still think cisgender is a serviceable word, I'm starting to get the idea that too many people are way too aggrieved by the term for it to have any use, at current. Which is a crying shame. So thank you for your input.
Thanks especially to you for helping me talk through the learning process!

It's possible that the outrage at the term is time-based. For all I know it really is just people overreacting for now and in a few years the outrage may quell and the term could cease to be offensive and then become far more serviceable. There is still the word confusion issue that so many authors point out but at that point I wouldn't care since a lot of technical terms are unnecessarily confusing.

If that doesn't turn out to be the case, do you think non-transgender would be the go-to replacement or do you believe that term has its own negative baggage within the transgendered community (I've seen some criticisms of the term as normative but the way it's phrased would actually make the transgendered community the normal side and the cisgendered "non")? Many of the articles I've read pose it as the legitimate replacement without any reservations. Do you think there would have to be an entirely different term instead? I know that some vocal members of the trans community have issues with Cisgender currently because it supports a binary gender system so this may be a far more complex issue to resolve.
 

KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime

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Jan 12, 2010
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Lightknight said:
KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:
Well I'll say that, if you're the only person who got any value from this thread, no matter the subject, then I'm glad I started it. Even though I still think cisgender is a serviceable word, I'm starting to get the idea that too many people are way too aggrieved by the term for it to have any use, at current. Which is a crying shame. So thank you for your input.
Thanks especially to you for helping me talk through the learning process!

It's possible that the outrage at the term is time-based. For all I know it really is just people overreacting but the feeling towards the term is apparent. In a few years the outrage may quell and the term could cease to be offensive and then become far more serviceable.

If that doesn't turn out to be the case, do you think non-transgender would be a viable replacement or do you believe that has it's own negative feelings within the transgendered community? Many of the articles I've read pose it as the legitimate replacement without any reservations. Do you think there would have to be an entirely different term instead? I know that some vocal members of the trans community have issues with Cisgender currently because it supports a binary gender system so this may be a far more complex issue to resolve.
Now that's the sixty four thousand dollar question. I have a lot of minor issues with the term non-trans, or non-transgender. Aside from being a longer word that is... It's always been a little rough spot with my non-transgender friends in person, especially because they know a lot of my trans friends. Some imes they feel out right excluded at the mere mention of the word non-trans, sometimes they feel like it projects a transgender superiority thing going on. We all know that's not true, but sometimes it can feel that way and it makes me feel bad about it. Sometimes we try to use non-binary, but that gets downright confusing as the general consensus on the meaning doesn't line up person to person, because it's a less used term. In all honesty... I guess non-trans, and/or non-transgender are fine terms to work with even if there is some negative feelings due to perceived exclusion, but it's better than offending random strangers. Though I haven't encountered offending complete strangers with the term cisgender, it's only a matter of time before internet dweller does take offense and attacks my whole group of friends for it verbally... I suppose until more people are educated and accepting of trans people this will continue to be an issue though.
 

Addendum_Forthcoming

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Feb 4, 2009
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Lightknight said:
Look, I'm going to assume this is a misunderstanding and that you really aren't aware of the entire "Die Cis Scum" meme. So I'll help you out:

http://knowyourmeme.com/memes/die-cis-scum

It is associated with individuals who enact physical and lethal violence against transpeople.

It is also becoming increasingly more commonly used as a slur against people who are generally anti-trans. Now, while I agree that anti-trans people deserve a slur and anyone committing violence deserves prison time, it doesn't change the fact that it's THIS word being used.

Essentially, the term is becoming synonymous with hate and violence. Like being called a KKK member.
I've heard that phrase once, online ... and looking at the poll, that obviously not happening. I asked for proof that the word alone is a pejorative. Either put up or stop pretending.

Lightknight said:
Oh, is that why Gender Identity Disorder is now considered taboo and replaced by Gender Dysphoria despite still being an official disorder (which rightfully entitles surgical resolution to the problem)?

You don't have thicker skin, you have the same thickness of skin.
A: Dysphoria was chosen because it has a rightful means of being beyond. Gender dysphoria made more sense as it was a dysphoric feeling. It makes sense and it stops pretending trans people are disordered solely for being trans. Adding to general stigmatization and marginalisation.

There were legitimate, medical reasons why dysphoria was chosen. Dysphoria and a dysphoric state better represents the situation. Because it is no longer a disordered state once a person moves beyond it.

B: Uh huh ... I'm not the one engaging in language policing because of 'feelz' ... enjoy. I'm sorry, I'm not ditching a word because of your feelz. Because that's not what it means. I pick up the oxford dictionary, I see what it means. Plenty of people above? They don't see it as a pejorative.

Until you show me a situation where cis alone is used in a pejorative sense, you'll forgive me if I think ou're reaching. The same cannot be said of 'fag', 'carpet-muncher', etc.

(Edit) As it stands it merely seems to be a case of trying to silence the dialogue trans people might have. As I said before, never seen it as a pejorative. Trans people here don't see it as a pejorative, so far the only ones that do are people who either don't know trans people or have some form of prejudice serving to purposefully try to other them into obscurity.

On that basis alone, why should I drop such a functional word? Given its utility every now and again, I don't feel I need to. If you don't want to use the word, don't. But don't pretend to me that the way I use it correlates to some injustice. It doesn't serve to other cis people, it holds no pejorative value.


Lightknight said:
Now, Cisgender hasn't been around for 25 years. Cissexual has. Cissexual is actually the term that is specific to a person born with a gender identity matching their sex.

cissexual as "people who are not transsexual and who have only ever experienced their mental and physical sexes as being aligned" (Wiki comparing Cisgender with Cissexual)

Cisgender is actually a term merely pertaining to those who do not identify as transgendered
So .... your point being? Cisgender has been around since 1995, cissexual has been around for longer ... so how does this have something to do with the qualifer of 'cis' and its appropriateness? It's been around for a few decades. If you don't like the term, don't use it ... but you'll forgive me if I use it particularly when there is no pejorative value ttached to it.

You yourself tell me what it represents and how you see it. This is different from a word like '******' ... ****** represents no dialectic correlation to heterosexual. It was a word co-opted to attack homosexuals.

Given how many times 'gay' has been dragged through the mud, I don't see 'cis' so afflicted.

Lightknight said:
Not using pronouns is different than using slurs or specifically USING the pronouns which are offensive.
Of which cis isn't a slur ... you actually need to prove that first.

Lightknight said:
Not using words isn't a slur. What I'm doing also isn't offensive. "Oh no, he uses the person's name instead of pronouns out of fear that he'll slip up and use the wrong one and get terrible backlash for it... what a terrible person... Die Cis Scum".
This is idiotic ... why would someone logically say this? Mountains and molehills.

I think you're a tool. I'm allowed to say as such if you try to hurt me. If you accidentally misgender someone then you could be potentially outting them against their will to people who they might not want to do so, or haven't gotten around to yet. Which is why I'd call you a '****' at best (depending whether it was intentional or not). I wouldn't say 'die cis scum' ...

That sounds idiotic to me. It doesn't sound like a slur. It sounds stupid.

'****' serves quite well. I would imagine most people who know what it's like to be intentionally outed against their will would use a whole lot of other words;

"Fuckwit."

"Arsehole."

"Wanker."

"Pig."

And so on ... Guy doesn't look when changing lanes... clips someone. Him getting called a 'shithead' by the person so clipped is not some indelible sin against humanity. Likewise, someone who, intentionally or not, outs someone against their will is not going to be called, "cisgender."

I'm sure there's a whole range of insults that actually function as insults, depending on the level of how douchebag-like the action was. For example ... I've called people a 'dickhead' because they weren't thinking. I've been called a dickhead for doing something I didn't think through. But 'Cis' as an insult? Really? Yeah, going to go out there and say 'no'.

Lightknight said:
Do you get offended when people say your name in conversation instead of using a pronoun whenever possible? I recommend making the case for why your name is a slur or derogatory term.
Only that wasn't the point you brought up .... your point was;

Lightknight said:
If someone is in a forest and calls a transgendered woman a he does the transgendered woman still cry? ...
As in whether it was bad to misgender someone or perhaps insinuate someone was transgender, amongst other people.

I'm telling you that it can be. Once more, why exactly are you talking about that person and why exactly are people not allowed to insult you with the pejorative of 'scumbag' if you're doing something to intentionally harm someone?
 

MikeSee

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Mar 7, 2010
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I say bio. I always used bio.
Cis sounds stupid and artificial.
Cis is very slur like. Like how we call heterosexuals, breeders. ITs a way for gender warriors to have some kind of dissmisive word for people not like them.

Funny how we cater to that 1% mentality. LOL ^_-
 

MikeSee

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Mar 7, 2010
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Deckard Kain said:
Cis gender sounds like a term invented out of pure hatred.
I agree. I never have heard it not used as something dismissive. It's always used to create a divide.
 

Lightknight

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KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:
Lightknight said:
KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:
Well I'll say that, if you're the only person who got any value from this thread, no matter the subject, then I'm glad I started it. Even though I still think cisgender is a serviceable word, I'm starting to get the idea that too many people are way too aggrieved by the term for it to have any use, at current. Which is a crying shame. So thank you for your input.
Thanks especially to you for helping me talk through the learning process!

It's possible that the outrage at the term is time-based. For all I know it really is just people overreacting but the feeling towards the term is apparent. In a few years the outrage may quell and the term could cease to be offensive and then become far more serviceable.

If that doesn't turn out to be the case, do you think non-transgender would be a viable replacement or do you believe that has it's own negative feelings within the transgendered community? Many of the articles I've read pose it as the legitimate replacement without any reservations. Do you think there would have to be an entirely different term instead? I know that some vocal members of the trans community have issues with Cisgender currently because it supports a binary gender system so this may be a far more complex issue to resolve.
Now that's the sixty four thousand dollar question. I have a lot of minor issues with the term non-trans, or non-transgender. Aside from being a longer word that is... It's always been a little rough spot with my non-transgender friends in person, especially because they know a lot of my trans friends. Some imes they feel out right excluded at the mere mention of the word non-trans, sometimes they feel like it projects a transgender superiority thing going on. We all know that's not true, but sometimes it can feel that way and it makes me feel bad about it. Sometimes we try to use non-binary, but that gets downright confusing as the general consensus on the meaning doesn't line up person to person, because it's a less used term. In all honesty... I guess non-trans, and/or non-transgender are fine terms to work with even if there is some negative feelings due to perceived exclusion, but it's better than offending random strangers. Though I haven't encountered offending complete strangers with the term cisgender, it's only a matter of time before internet dweller does take offense and attacks my whole group of friends for it verbally... I suppose until more people are educated and accepting of trans people this will continue to be an issue though.
Hmm, do you think the offense at cisgender is mostly due to not accepting trans people? From what I've read there was frustration at the label and/or the use of it in insults. But I'm sure people create all kinds of excuses to be offended at things just because they're really just upset with something else.

Non-trans appears to be the preferred term. One thing we've got to understand is that nearly any way we cut it, some people will always be upset about the term. If your friends are just upset about feeling excluded with non-trans then that's not really offense, that's just them understanding what labels do. They categorize and in doing so exclude components from other categories. That we are humans excludes us from all the categories which are not human. It's simply the way it works and cisgender is no less exclusionary than non-trans as far as being excluded from transgender as a category in that neither are that term. But if they really feel excluded then that's probably something to consider and try to gauge the scope of it in the overall population that is even conscious of the term.

MikeSee said:
I say bio. I always used bio.
Cis sounds stupid and artificial.
Cis is very slur like. Like how we call heterosexuals, breeders. ITs a way for gender warriors to have some kind of dissmisive word for people not like them.

Funny how we cater to that 1% mentality. LOL ^_-
That's a new one by me. I would assume that biogendered would be offensive in making the claim that transgendered people's condition is not the result of biology. Though I assume the intention is that the gender matches the biological sex.
 

KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime

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Jan 12, 2010
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Lightknight said:
KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:
Lightknight said:
KyuubiNoKitsune-Hime said:
Well I'll say that, if you're the only person who got any value from this thread, no matter the subject, then I'm glad I started it. Even though I still think cisgender is a serviceable word, I'm starting to get the idea that too many people are way too aggrieved by the term for it to have any use, at current. Which is a crying shame. So thank you for your input.
Thanks especially to you for helping me talk through the learning process!

It's possible that the outrage at the term is time-based. For all I know it really is just people overreacting but the feeling towards the term is apparent. In a few years the outrage may quell and the term could cease to be offensive and then become far more serviceable.

If that doesn't turn out to be the case, do you think non-transgender would be a viable replacement or do you believe that has it's own negative feelings within the transgendered community? Many of the articles I've read pose it as the legitimate replacement without any reservations. Do you think there would have to be an entirely different term instead? I know that some vocal members of the trans community have issues with Cisgender currently because it supports a binary gender system so this may be a far more complex issue to resolve.
Now that's the sixty four thousand dollar question. I have a lot of minor issues with the term non-trans, or non-transgender. Aside from being a longer word that is... It's always been a little rough spot with my non-transgender friends in person, especially because they know a lot of my trans friends. Some imes they feel out right excluded at the mere mention of the word non-trans, sometimes they feel like it projects a transgender superiority thing going on. We all know that's not true, but sometimes it can feel that way and it makes me feel bad about it. Sometimes we try to use non-binary, but that gets downright confusing as the general consensus on the meaning doesn't line up person to person, because it's a less used term. In all honesty... I guess non-trans, and/or non-transgender are fine terms to work with even if there is some negative feelings due to perceived exclusion, but it's better than offending random strangers. Though I haven't encountered offending complete strangers with the term cisgender, it's only a matter of time before internet dweller does take offense and attacks my whole group of friends for it verbally... I suppose until more people are educated and accepting of trans people this will continue to be an issue though.
Hmm, do you think the offense at cisgender is mostly due to not accepting trans people? From what I've read there was frustration at the label and/or the use of it in insults. But I'm sure people create all kinds of excuses to be offended at things just because they're really just upset with something else.

Non-trans appears to be the preferred term. One thing we've got to understand is that nearly any way we cut it, some people will always be upset about the term. If your friends are just upset about feeling excluded with non-trans then that's not really offense, that's just them understanding what labels do. They categorize and in doing so exclude components from other categories. That we are humans excludes us from all the categories which are not human. It's simply the way it works and cisgender is no less exclusionary than non-trans as far as being excluded from transgender as a category in that neither are that term. But if they really feel excluded then that's probably something to consider and try to gauge the scope of it in the overall population that is even conscious of the term.
No I think that a few people see cisgneder as an insulting term, in spite of it having a perfectly applicable definition, and despite having the word having been coined from a clinical standpoint. Also using cisgender as an insulting term is seen as a joke amongst trans people. So I'd assume people who find insult in it are looking for insult.

The thing with non-trans for me is that I've seen it used by both sides as an exclusionary term. "Non-trans only", "No non-trans allowed", "Non-trans people are scum", "Being non-trans means there is nothing wrong with me", and so on and so forth. I've seen it used in hostility in person than cisgender used in hostility online. I also avoid twitter and tumblr like the plague so that probably helps. But the big issue with non-trans is it tends to come off as some sort of smug superiority trans people have against cisgender people, because it revolves around the word trans, and kind of elevates one side, or the other. It's just a weird term that way it always seems to favor the side that used it against the side that didn't, at least in my experience.

Also PaulH made some really good points earlier. One reason to my mind "******" isn't comparable to "cisgender" is that "******" wasn't originally a term used to label gay people, then when it did become a label it was never positive, and it was misused for decades as a slur. Most slurs have history and are words co-opted out of context as hate speech. Using cis in a derogatory sense is co-opting a valid word and misusing it as a pejorative term. Other valid terms we use today like "homosexual" and "black" have been used as pejorative, but still are valid terms.

Captcha: Red Queen
What the hell captcha!? Just... Wha... *face-palm*
 

Lightknight

Mugwamp Supreme
Nov 26, 2008
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PaulH said:
Lightknight said:
Look, I'm going to assume this is a misunderstanding and that you really aren't aware of the entire "Die Cis Scum" meme. So I'll help you out:

http://knowyourmeme.com/memes/die-cis-scum

It is associated with individuals who enact physical and lethal violence against transpeople.

It is also becoming increasingly more commonly used as a slur against people who are generally anti-trans. Now, while I agree that anti-trans people deserve a slur and anyone committing violence deserves prison time, it doesn't change the fact that it's THIS word being used.

Essentially, the term is becoming synonymous with hate and violence. Like being called a KKK member.
I've heard that phrase once, online ...
Your anecdotal evidence is irrelevant. I've heard it used offensively multiple times. And my anecdotal evidence is equally irrelevant.

and looking at the poll, that obviously not happening.
More than 50% of the respondents believe that the term is offensive, unnecessary or two unknown of a term to have in place (it would explain why the nearly 8% of respondents don't even know what the term means). Do you really think that your 18% "it's a good term" is a win for your side here? People who think it's offensive are within 5 percentage points of that. If nearly as many people think a term is offensive as those who think it's good then there's a problem.

Regardless, even with the numbers clearly stacked against the term here I don't think the escapist is necessarily a legitimate sample demographic. These kinds of polls are for a local community inquiry and may not even be representative of the community depending on certain factors including sufficient randomization of the sample (people who know and care about the term are more likely to respond which skews the results). Is the escapist representative of the internet community as a whole? Is this poll representative of the Escapist community? Don't know.

I asked for proof that the word alone is a pejorative. Either put up or stop pretending.
You're demanding a red herring be proven. It doesn't matter if the word itself is a pejorative. All that matters is that the term is deemed as offensive. You keep insisting that it has to be offensive itself but all that matters is that it is used in an offensive manner and now people who are aware of the term see it that way. Cis as a term directed at a person is most commonly done negatively. In an academic setting is' most commonly done neutrally. In most cases, it is used to insult a person's bias and specifically as a term to denote bigotry towards trans people when used as an insult in the context of the conversations it is seen in.

You should explain to me how the terms Negro, Marshmellow, or Banana (Asian person who more closely identifies with white culture) are inherently offensive? Hell, Martin Luther King Jr identified his race as Negro in the I Have a Dream speech.

None of the terms are inherently slurs. They are just descriptive terms. Two of them are even more commonly known for being delicious. Yet they are clearly known as slurs and are offensive to use in reference to people.

I need you to prove that a term has to be inherently offensive to be considered offensive. The burden of that proof is on you.

A: Dysphoria was chosen because it has a rightful means of being beyond. Gender dysphoria made more sense as it was a dysphoric feeling. It makes sense and it stops pretending trans people are disordered solely for being trans. Adding to general stigmatization and marginalisation.
Right, so you took offense at the term and it was changed. You also had your reasons for it but don't give me this "thicker skin" crap when it is clearly apparent that we all have the same thickness of skin and offensive terms hurt us one and all.

There were legitimate, medical reasons why dysphoria was chosen. Dysphoria and a dysphoric state better represents the situation. Because it is no longer a disordered state once a person moves beyond it.
? Just like it's no longer a disorder once a person moves past the issue with their gender identity to the point where it no longer controls their life in significant ways? Gender Identity Disorder isn't still listed in the ICD-10 (meaning it's still technically a correct term) because transgendered people automatically have a disorder. They have it when their condition produces so much dysphoria as to qualify as a disorder.

It would make more sense if all transgendered people automatically had dysphoria and were labeled as such. But that just isn't the case.

Gender Identity Disorder and Gender Dysphoria are synonyms. The whole intention of dropping the disorder was to help normalize transgenderism. Now, I quite agree with the decision to change the term. But it was absolutely done out of consideration for the offense it caused and the outspokenness of the community regarding it. Something I'm totally in favor of but is the same sort of thing you're now fighting against for unforeseen reasons.

Until you show me a situation where cis alone is used in a pejorative sense, you'll forgive me if I think ou're reaching. The same cannot be said of 'fag', 'carpet-muncher', etc.
How is carpet-muncher and inherently offensive term? Yeah, lesbians perform oral sex. That's a fact of the matter and not inherently offensive. Instead, it is used in an offensive manner. Humans have the dumbest track record of using things that people actually do and identify with as though it's an insult.

Words don't have to be inherently bad. They just have be used offensively and then perceived that way. Hell, they don't even necessarily have to be used offensively. Perception is the only thing that matters. If you think using the pronoun he or she is offensive the its rude to use the term towards you. Simple as that. They do not have to be bad by themselves. If people take of offense to terms like Cishet because they think it sounds like Cis Shit then that's their prerogative.

(Edit) As it stands it merely seems to be a case of trying to silence the dialogue trans people might have. As I said before, never seen it as a pejorative. Trans people here don't see it as a pejorative, so far the only ones that do are people who either don't know trans people or have some form of prejudice serving to purposefully try to other them into obscurity.
Advocating for the use of non-trans instead of cistrans silences dialogue? Do explain why the substitution of a term stops dialogue?

Are you saying that you believe the people largely against the term are doing so out of bigotry towards transgendered individuals? While I'm absolutely sure there's some truth to that you've got a steep uphill battle of proving that it's true with the majority of the group. It's pretty presumptive on your part.

On that basis alone, why should I drop such a functional word? Given its utility every now and again, I don't feel I need to. If you don't want to use the word, don't. But don't pretend to me that the way I use it correlates to some injustice. It doesn't serve to other cis people, it holds no pejorative value.
If the basis you're holding to is that you believe people are only offended at Cis because trans people can have a dialogue using it then I'd understand you holding to the term and would wield it myself too. If that were true then to continue using "Cis" would be to strike back at bigots which I'm sure most of us here would be perfectly fine with. I mean seriously. Bigot's? Fuck em. I'm not being sarcastic here. So much pain and needless anguish visited upon society and culture due to their ineptness at behaving like decent human beings. If I believed this to be true then I wouldn't be here posting.


So .... your point being? Cisgender has been around since 1995, cissexual has been around for longer ... so how does this have something to do with the qualifer of 'cis' and its appropriateness? It's been around for a few decades. If you don't like the term, don't use it ... but you'll forgive me if I use it particularly when there is no pejorative value ttached to it.
No, cissexual was coined in 1995 by Volkmar Sigusch. Cisgender came later. Supposedly in a 2006 article in the Journal of Lesbian Studies. Anyways, the term Cissexual more correctly categorizes the demographic in relation to transgendered. Unfortunately, it's moreso the use of the term "Cis" that is deemed offensive from what I've read than the full terms it almagamates with, if I may abuse amalgamation that way.

Given how many times 'gay' has been dragged through the mud, I don't see 'cis' so afflicted.
Interestingly enough, the gay community has had significant issues with the term "Cis" as well. They are perhaps the most offended by it even when care is taken to include the orientation with the term.

Of which cis isn't a slur ... you actually need to prove that first.
"******" means black person. How is that inherently offensive except due to context? It is used widely in the rest of the world and if you claim it is inherently a slur then is it offensive to be black? Hell, for a time, black was the offensive term and Negro was OK until those two flipped places.

This is idiotic ... why would someone logically say this? Mountains and molehills.
A lack of language isn't the same as using offensive language. Why do you think the distinction is irrelevant?

I think you're a tool. I'm allowed to say as such if you try to hurt me.
What? Have I offended you?

If you accidentally misgender someone then you could be potentially outting them against their will to people who they might not want to do so, or haven't gotten around to yet. Which is why I'd call you a '****' at best (depending whether it was intentional or not). I wouldn't say 'die cis scum' ...
I think you misunderstood what I meant. Let's give an example:

Let's say I know a transgendered female named Natalie. I do, and she's one of the biggest reasons why I care about the topic of transgenderism. Now, obviously her preferred pronoun is "she" or "her".

Now, I understand this but my dilemma is (or was, I've since changed my mind on the matter thanks to my conversations with people here), I knew and became friends with Natalie when she was Jonathan. I wrestled with him (Jonathan) in Highschool and have quite a masculine foundation of him in my mind. So when I'm talking about Natalie I'm potentially prone to slipping and saying "him" or "he". This slipping would not only cause Natalie pain, but would get me called "****" but others like you just pointed out and least of all, would conflict with my internal semantics view on what pronouns mean. My solution to this was not to use pronouns for anyone in the group. Where necessary, I'd use names like "Natalie said" instead of "She said".

This is NOT outing them. This is the opposite, an active attempt to avoid the possibility by not using any pronouns. If I were to use a pronoun then I would hope to correctly say their preferred pronoun.

What changed my mind on the whole thing to reconsider using pronouns again was in a post where I was talking about Natalie and realized I'd used "she" without even thinking about it. So perhaps it's not as big of a risk as I thought. Now the question is if I'm going to start purposefully using pronouns now since I'm now in a habit of not using them for anyone even when no transgendered people are around. What's interesting is that you could see it as me changing my entire speech process to accommodate them rather than only changing specific pronouns I use only when talking about or with them. But I'm guessing you don't see it that way. You probably just think I was hating on them or something. That I must have disapproved of their "lifestyle choices" or some other insanely bigoted premise for not recognizing them as transgender and with a real condition. But I've never had any kind of issues with the topic. I don't know why since my family was real vanilla in this kind of area but when confronted with it I just found it interesting, not offensive, which just made me want to learn more about it and how it impacts these people's lives. How people get offended at seeing anything different is beyond me.

That sounds idiotic to me. It doesn't sound like a slur. It sounds stupid.
Why not use "Cis fucker" or call them ignorant cis scum? "Die" is a bit much. Die cis scum wasn't meant as a slur to be used against people so much as a concept that became offensive and spun off into using cis as an insult in other ways. Usually to imply bigotry against trans persons.

Only that wasn't the point you brought up .... your point was;
Actually that was the point at the time. That I use their name instead of a pronoun and try to avoid using pronouns for fear of slipping up due to the way I see pronouns (sex-based rather than gender-based). I've since come to the conclusion that my friends are worth me putting the extra effort into using the pronouns properly rather than avoiding them.

I'm telling you that it can be. Once more, why exactly are you talking about that person
? Are we not supposed to talk about transgendered people like we would other people? "Like the other day, Natalie got a fish hook stuck in her thumb." Now, that didn't actually happen but you talk about people when you refer to something they did or said. Since my particular group of friends includes two transgendered individuals (and a third acquaintance that seems to be hanging out more), this sort of thing happens frequently. We're not talking about them because they're transgendered, we're talking about them the same way friends mention something funny the other friend said or whatnot.

However, as stated, I generally avoid pronouns there too. I was only mentioning this as an example.

and why exactly are people not allowed to insult you with the pejorative of 'scumbag' if you're doing something to intentionally harm someone?
If I do something to intentionally harm someone then I certainly deserve to be harmed back. But should a pejorative then be used to apply to anyone with another quality of mine just to get to people like me while offending everyone else regardless of their guilt in the event?

I think not. But hopefully I cleared up the misconception above. You seemed to think I was causing people harm.
 

Erttheking

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Remember when we could talk about things we feel strongly about while also staying civil?

I don't either.