What strikes me as offensive is the idea that the only defense of queerness is "it's not my fault, I didn't choose to be like this". Lots of people choose to explore their sexuality and find that their preferences change as a result. That's normal and healthy and good.https://twitter.com/thehill/status/1316223453570228225 …
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Replying to @geekethics
Hard cosign. I'm extremely strongly of the opinion that there is a significant amount of (though certainly not total!) freedom of choice in both gender and sexuality, having exercised such choice myself, and I really resent discourse about it being all innate and immutable.
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Replying to @GeniesLoki @geekethics
There is (= should be!) choice about what you DO, sexually and in terms of your gender presentation. There certainly is around your identity. But choice about your sexual attraction and internal sense of your gender? Not much, if any, of that is.
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Replying to @BiFuriosa @GeniesLoki
I always get confused by this. I've made lots of intentional choices about my attraction and gender. The fact other people haven't seems very strange to me. Frankly if you're certain about your identity it's often because you've not thought about it very much.
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Replying to @geekethics @GeniesLoki
Hmm, both can change - I am not saying they're fixed - but being able to go "I think I will now be attracted to X" or "I think I will now have a Y gender" is not most people's experience. If it was, conversion therapy (sic) would work.
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Replying to @BiFuriosa @GeniesLoki
Maybe my ingroup is unusual. But I've always thought the problem with conversion therapy is that brainwashing someone against their will produces trauma more easily than change. Bihacking seems to work for a decent fraction of people who try it.
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In general, I think people are biased towards thinking evil things are also ineffective. When there's not always a much reason to think they would be.
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I think conversion therapy is ineffective partly because the reasons it's evil also commit them to a broken philosophy of how it should work. I think any effective analogue to conversion therapy would work by opening up choices rather than trying to change someone's orientation
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