Being gender critical or gender identity driven is not about facts, but belief. Which means: 1. We don't have to agree 2. We don't have to understand 3. Our view reflects personal experience 4. Policy should consider both 5. Depending on context, one or other lens matters morehttps://twitter.com/MForstater/status/1181837334729433089 …
Its not so much that it doesn't depend on facts (I am not totally relativist on this!) I would agree with 1 to 3 (like religion, we don't have to agree or understand, just be tolerant of each other).
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I don't think policy should ever assume that everyone has a 'gender identity'. Sometimes it needs to reflect that everyone has a sex (which does not imply they must conform to gender norms) People should have freedom to believe (or not believe) in ideas about gender identity
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Yes! I agree assuming someone has a gender identity is essentially imposing gender identity view on them (aka proselytism). There are still policy contexts where it makes sense to acknowledge gender identity - free speech, privacy, name change for example.
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