I'm not sure what "gender is a construct" means, and what is the basis for the moral claim that "people should be able to define it for themselves.", or who the person with the moral obligation would be (given that it's a passive voice moral claim, and the subject of the obligation appears unclear).
Regardless, the fact is that the English words "man" and "woman" have meaning, as nearly all words.
If I say I'm a Vulcan, that's not true. If I say I'm a Jedi, that's not true. If I say I'm an AI, that's not true. If I say I'm a car (say, KITT), that's not true. And if I say I'm a woman, that's not true. This is so regardless of whether I want any of that to be true. .
1. You continue to conflate "gender" and "biological sex"
2. Your entire argument hinges of the definition of the word "woman" yet the meanings of words change all the time.
3. It is not the fault of someone like Danica Roem that our specific society has failed to create additional words to describe additional genders; but that is why the modifier "transgender" is tacked on ahead of the word "woman" in spite of the fact that it causes hoozit to have a hissy-fit
1. No, I do not conflate "gender" and "biological sex". I'm talking about the words "man" and "woman". One theory is that they refer to male human beings, and female human beings, in the usual sense of the terms. But I make no assumptions. I look at the evidence. And the evidence is not supportive of the claim that Roem is a woman.
2. Words don't change the meaning all the time. Sometimes, they change meaning. But many words keep their meaning for a very, very long time, even centuries.
3. This is not a matter of a
fault. Just as the classification of individuals in female and male works for nearly most animal species we encounter and for nearly all intents and purposes, and allows us to predict how an individual will look like, behave, etc., in a wide range of contexts - despite the existence of some abnormal individuals -, the categories of "man" and "woman" do seem to work, and usually match (if not always; that's debatable) those of human males and females.
But regardless, if you think that the classification of humans between men and women is not precise enough to classify someone like Roem, then
it's improper to claim that Roem is a woman. Rather, what you should say is precisely that "woman" and "man" are not precise enough to be used in this context, and provide evidence in support of your claim. Of course, if that is correct and the classification is not precise enough to be used when it comes to people like Roem, it would be also improper to claim that someone
discovered that she was a woman, or something along those lines.
The modified "transgender" tacked ahead of "woman" does not help, because it's a claim that a transgender woman is
a type of woman. Again, it's not a claim that the words "man" and "woman" as traditionally used are not precise enough, so you're changing the meaning of those words, and add more words, like "transgender woman". Rather, you're saying that Roem is a woman. That is obvious from the exchange:
A transgender woman male Democrat beat not just a Republican, but an incumbent Republican in a red state blue district.
Facts matter.
Your reply was not something like 'the words 'man' and 'woman' are not precise enough to be properly used in this context; we need other words, with other meanings, and we picked the term 'transgender woman''.
No, your reply was:
RavenSky said:
And the FACT is that Danica Roem is a woman.
Suck it up Bob Marshall
And the exchange went on further:
Even referring to "her" as a transgender woman betrays the fact that he is a man.
How about we take a look at his birth certificate?
The FACT is that Danica Roem is a woman. That is all that matters.
Again, this is a claim that she's a woman in the ordinary sense of the words, because there is no indication to the contrary. If we're coining new words by the way, instead of "transgender woman" one might as well pick "x-gender man", or whatever.
Moreover, you also said:
RavenSky said:
Gender is a construct, and people should be able to define it for themselves.
Again, I'm not sure whom the obligation allegedly falls upon (the "should be able" is passive voice, and context is not clear enough), but even if the old classification is not precise enough and there is a new one in place, that claim is unwarranted, and does not seem to be in line with the coining of a new category scheme, under which allegedly Roem is a "transgender woman". Does "transgender woman" tracks whether people utter "I'm a woman"?
RavenSky said:
Who are you to decide that binary gender constructs are the "proper" way to do it? Clearly, it isn't. People do exist and have always existed that do not fit into your pre-conceived notion of only two genders. That tells me that it is your notion of words that is in error... not the people themselves.
That's not at all what I said. I said that even if other people classify in 5 categories, that does not mean that the people that fall in those categories can't be properly classified by the usual two in English. Whether they can be properly classified depends on whether the concepts involved are precise enough to make a distinction applicable to the cases in question.
Let me give you an example. Let's say that Alice classifies people in 5 categories: C1 is for people under 1.3 meters tall; C2 is from 1.3 to 1.6 meters; C3 is for people from 1.6 to 1.9 meters, and C5 is for people over 1.9 meters. Even if people can be properly categorized in that fashion, they can also be properly categorized in the "lak" and "ñak" binary categorization system (which applies not only to people).
My point is: even if other societies have other categorization systems, that does not mean that Roem is a woman, and provides no good reason to think Roem is a woman.
RavenSky said:
Because the english language currently only gives her two choices of words, and she lives and breathes her life as a woman - with the modifier of "transgender" to be even more precise.
Evidence of that?
You say "she lives and breathes her life as a woman". What does that mean?
Surely, if we're going with the usual meaning of the words, that Roem wants to be a woman would not make her a woman, or indeed provide any good reason to believe that Roem is a woman. You're back to making a claim that Roem is a woman in the usual sense, or at least Roem is closer to matching the concept of a woman than that of a man.
That I'm asking for evidence of.
RavenSky said:
If you were to insist she is actually a man, you would be both wrong and immoral.
I would not say that the evidence is conclusive, so she might be a woman - but more probably, he's a man.
If someone could provide evidence to the contrary, I would consider it. So far, all I have gotten from the left is irrationality and unjust attacks.