I hope you meant "in the West" there. Still not true across the board even if so but less glaringly wrong, seeing as there are plenty of places in the world where one can be literally executed for the wrong religious beliefs.
Sure. And that is a legal issue, not a material basis for class antagonism.
I would have understood that if you had said "If a man and a woman are wrestling...", but when they're "talking"? If I were a woman, I'd certainly be insulted by this.
In fact, even as a man I feel insulted by how you think of women as the inferior gender.
I don't care what you think. Men use their superior place in society to dominate all interactions with women. Hell, they use them to dominate other men, too. But men aren't oppressed
as men, so there's no privilege to be checked in interactions between them.
cis and trans are Latin prefixes. Cis means "on this side" and Trans means "on the opposite side." Cisapline Gaul was on the side of the Alps closer to Rome, and Transapline Gaul was on the far side of the Alps. Cis-Jordan was the older name for what is today Israel and Palestine, and Trans-Jordan the older name for what is today Jordan (both being described in relation to the River Jordan and Europe). Likewise, cisgender is someone "on the same side" as the gender they were assigned at birth, and transgender is someone "on the opposite side" as the gender they were assigned at birth; so to speak.
cisgender = the gender you identify with matches the one society imposes on you. Society calls you a man (because you have a penis) and you identify with the same label.
As opposed to transgender, which is when your gender identity does not match the one society imposes on you.
A much more eloquent way of putting it!
And there's also genderqueer which is, broadly speaking, when you subscribe to an identity which doesn't grok with the established gender binary.
To be clear to other readers, us genderqueer people are pretty generally covered under the trans umbrella. No one was assigned non-binary genders at birth.
He's a follower of Sam Harris, Hitchens, Dawkins and Dennett and seems to believe he's an "activist" for atheism. Apparently if everyone in the world were atheist things would be so much better.
Whether or not that's true, New Atheists aren't going to be the ones who make it happen.
EDIT: But I do have a question for you Cheezy. If things like LGBT can be an "axis of oppression", why wouldn't religious affiliation (or lack there of) be one as well?
LGBT oppression ultimately ties back to the material-based oppression of women under capitalism. Capitalism demands a certain amount of control over the reproduction of labor value, both in the immediate sense (rest, sleep, eating, household keeping, all the stuff that enables a worker to return to work again) and the generational sense (ensuring that enough children are being born to guarantee a reliable supply of workers in the future, both to man the machines and also to sustain the pool of unemployed labor), and these together constitute the material basis for the oppression of women under capitalism. But what this also means is a fairly stable identity for men and women, and how they relate to one another in terms of the ability to renew labor-value. The most reliable way is the atomic family: have women be primarily responsible for it, and have men labor. Women are the ones who get pregnant (transmen notwithstanding) and this by itself is a risk for any employer who will lose labor from his workers not working either during pregnancy or after. Also, this tradition already existed in European society (as did the gender binary), and so it was easy and natural for this relationship to morph into one capitalism could use effectively to sustain itself.
LGBT people's existence upsets this cozy arrangement. Homosexual couples generally don't have kids; if it's two men, then they both work, or inevitably one or both have to be responsible for reproducing labor value at home anyway, which is lost productivity. If it's two women, then where is the man to dominate their household? Plus all the other problems with gay couples exist: either one works and one doesn't (lost productivity), both work less (lost productivity), or both work and that's too empowering of an example for other women, to whom they will appear as rebels against patriarchy. Bisexuals fit to this same mold. And transgender people screw around with the generational level of labor-value reproduction: transmen probably don't want to have kids, transwomen can't have kids, etc. And then where do non-binary people fit in this male-female atomic family? Layered on top of this is a very heavy ideological apparatus that guarantees that people stick to their gender binary and their heterosexual relationships, so that the system continues to run smoothly. As with other superstructures, most of the cultural battles happen here, but the material base is the origin of all superstructural cathexes.