Nonsense. The cells in your body are replaced every few years, but the underlying biology which determines the new cells can't be rewritten. You can take hormones, but you can't rewrite DNA or swap chromosomes.
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Replying to @unwitod @arthur_affect and
The metaphor works. You can dye your hair, and achieve a simulcra of, for e.g, blonde hair. This can appear to others to be more or less convincing, depending. If you leave it, the natural colour grows back. The biology which produces the brown is unchanged.
5 replies 2 retweets 49 likes -
Replying to @unwitod @arthur_affect and
It’s irrelevant anyway. You are dealing with a windbag who doesn’t really understand metaphors and who will spend the rest of his life googling hair colour in the belief that if your hair colour can change so can your sex.
2 replies 0 retweets 50 likes -
Replying to @Shatterface @arthur_affect and
I was just enjoying the fact that the stupidity on display defending the idea that there is no difference between dyed hair and natural was exactly tracking the stupidity on display elsewhere
1 reply 0 retweets 18 likes -
Replying to @unwitod @Shatterface and
No one said there is no difference between dyed hair and undyed hair, it's just not important
4 replies 3 retweets 79 likes -
Replying to @arthur_affect @Shatterface and
Oh really?pic.twitter.com/XHjgXBd2MA
2 replies 0 retweets 13 likes -
Replying to @unwitod @Shatterface and
Yeah, the color is the color that it is There's a difference between my black hair and dyed black hair that can be determined by analyzing them in a lab They are both, nonetheless, by both the scientific and lay understanding of the term, black
1 reply 3 retweets 109 likes -
Replying to @arthur_affect @Shatterface and
And some TW 'pass'. Hair can be unconvincingly dyed, and some TW do not pass. It would also be rude to point this out in many contexts, but it remains true. In some contexts, the difference will matter.
4 replies 0 retweets 14 likes -
Replying to @unwitod @Shatterface and
Nobody who dyes their hair blue seriously intends anyone to believe the hair came out of the follicles blue thanks to the coding of their DNA It's still, as a matter of physical fact (not any kind of optical illusion), actually blue
3 replies 3 retweets 92 likes -
Replying to @arthur_affect @Shatterface and
You're hilarious, as I said. And to pursue the metaphor: secondary sex characteristics can be altered to look like the opposite sex. As a matter of fact they have this new appearance. But no fundamental biological shift has occurred; sex remains unchanged.
3 replies 0 retweets 2 likes
Hey what color is a flamingo, naturally
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Replying to @arthur_affect @Shatterface and
Grey I believe? You realise this makes the opposite point you wanted to right? I also think it's extremely rude to flamingos for you to even ask this question. Shame on you!
1 reply 0 retweets 3 likes -
Replying to @unwitod @Shatterface and
The point of asking this question is that in nature flamingos are always on the spectrum of pink to bright red If you see a flamingo that is gray or white, it is a sign that the flamingo is malnourished and dying
3 replies 1 retweet 15 likes - Show replies
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