@MacklemoreZabe@zaelefty You didnโt answer my question. you show a graph of sorts, declaring it as proof that sex is bimodal. What is it that is bimodal? What specifically are you measuring?
I was horrified to learn that in the 1950's samesex attracted people were told they were criminals and then pumped full of body altering chemicals. Thankfully nowadays these people are told they are trans, and then pumped full of body altering chemicals. We've come so far.
If you mean gender, say gender.
If you mean sex, say sex.
But stop using gender to overwrite sex-based language, rights, boundaries, and reality.
A woman is a female human being. โFemaleโ refers to sex.
If your gender isn't what makes an actual woman, a woman, then it has nothing to do with actual women.
Your gender may matter to you. It does not redefine me or any other woman as somehow derivative of a man's socially constructed perception of women.
I am a woman because I am a female human being.
I am not a woman because I perform a "woman" show in public, feel womanly, use feminine pronouns, or serve as a mirror or absorption layer for someone elseโs sense of self.
If that sounds like you, that ain't me. If he's a woman, that ain't me.
Sex and gender are different, so men who claim to be women and actual women are different categories of human beings. The insult and the danger to women is treating them as if they are the same, when you know they are different. We know sex and gender are different. Stop treating them as if they are the same.
So when you speak about sex and gender issues,speak plainly:
Are you talking about sex?
Or are you talking about gender?
Because if you are talking about gender, then my question is simple:
What does any man's gender have to do with me or any other woman?
If his gender does not define an actual woman, an adult female human being, as a woman, it has nothing to do with any actual women. His gender may define what he thinks about women, but it does not define any woman. His gender may use the word 'woman' as a homonym he uses metaphorically to describe himself, but it does not confer any meaning beyond himself.
Until it is explained what a man's gender has to do with me or any woman, it means nothing to me or any women.