Patine
Deity
- Joined
- Feb 14, 2011
- Messages
- 12,060
Cis/trans is the proper "us vs them", dualistic, confrontational, "black and white", absolutist, biformal, twofolded, bipolar neo manichean term
In the Dual Monarchy of Austria-Hungary from 1867-1918, if you lived in the Austrian Crownlands (also including what is now the Czech Republic, most of Slovenia, part of Croatia, Voivodina, part of Southeastern Poland, the Southwestern corner of Ukraine, and parts of the Northeast corner of Italy), and voted for the Imperial Council in Vienna, you lived in Cisleithania, whereas if you lived in the Crownlands of St. Stephen (which included what are now Hungary, Slovakia, more than half of Romania, and the rest of Slovenia and Croatia), and voted for the Diet in Budapest, you lived in Transleithania. Fun fact...
1. It's merely one aspect of transphobia, and one of the easiest and most recent to prove. The whole example came out of people demanding proof from a trans poster, in this thread.
2. Plenty of people better-informed than me on the American military's impact on someone's life have pointed out that this isn't actually the case. Being a member of the armed forces comes with a bunch of benefits, and people frequently enlist for those benefits.
3. I never claimed it was a fundamental right. That doesn't mean it's not discrimination. There are plenty of other things that aren't "fundamental human rights", like the ability to donate blood (that gay people are prevented from), but still are examples of discrimination in society.
I consider severity to not just be relevant to the scale and impact of a particular type of activity, but also the demographic it affects. A demographic that is arguably one of the worst off (like trans people frequently are, in various aspects of society) is more at threat from measures like these, which is why I class it as more severe, than, say, unfair medical rules that exempt people who want to serve. Despite being the same kind of thing, the demographic being unpunished is already worse-off, which makes the lack of support created by this ban more devastating to anyone who was considering it (or already serving!).
The most disturbing aspect of this, for me, is the fact it came from the federal government. I honestly thought this would be a good example for conservative, libertarian, or other anti "big-government" (sorry for the quotes, it's a bit different here in the UK to in the States) position that I know folks on CFC can hold.
Good old-fashioned behaviour from you here, so, whatever. Remember this the next time you're complaining at anyone on here for being unfairly maligned for what they presume your behaviour to be, because my good faith in your return is exhausted.
Are gay men still banned from donating blood in the UK and/or U.S., there? That ban was lifted in Canada long ago by Trudeau - and I mean Pierre Elliott, not Justin.