Even as I joined it I was kinda surprised that this subculture existed. In the queer scene we treated radical feminism as something that was dying out, that only older women still believed in but here were all this younger people leaving the queer scene for radical feminism.
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A lot of these younger rad fems keep their politics a secret from most people because many of their peers would turn against them if they found out. Many young rad fems still hang out in queer spaces and try to influence and shift the culture.
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Younger rad fems are eager to recruit. Working to convert more people to radical feminism is a central part of that subculture and many of them are quite good at it. They might read the work of older gender crits/rad fems and some are friends with older rad fems but many...
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...younger rad fems hang out and organize largely with each other. Probably a lot of older gender crits don't even know much or have much contact with the younger ex-queer rad fem community. They have their own particular version of radical feminism that's defined against...
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...the queer/trans communities they left behind. They're reacting to the culture of queer and trans people who are their peers. They probably know a lot more about trans people than most older gender crits, they've had more real life contact with trans people, they might have...
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...even identified as trans themselves at one point. They can make arguments drawing from their past experiences and knowledge of the queer/trans communities they're trying to recruit from. Their arguments can be far more compelling and dangerous because of their familiarity...
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...with what they're trying to combat and criticize. This is the next generation of transphobic feminists. They're not on their way to dying out. They're young, they're committed, they know how to organize and make effective propaganda. They're activists to watch out for.
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Replying to @reclaimingtrans
What are their other politics? Because it strikes me that there's going to end up being something of a clash there sooner or later.
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Replying to @RozKaveney
The younger rad fems tend to hold more leftist views, anti-capitalist, anti-racist, anti-imperialist, etc. They're way more likely to have read actual radical feminist books but they tend to lean heavier into the cultural feminist strains of radical feminism.
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Replying to @reclaimingtrans
So, a tendency to stigmatise trans women based more on books than life? In practical terms... Do they support eg toilet laws? Attacks on health care? Are they exclusionist/eliminationists? Or is their disapproval more theoretical than policy oriented?
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No, many have had direct contact with trans women. Some were in abusive relationships with trans women or otherwise hurt by individual trans women and were then radicalized to think that all trans women are abusive. Others pick up transmisogyny after consuming lots of propaganda.
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Replying to @reclaimingtrans @RozKaveney
They do tend to support laws restricting trans women's access to bathrooms, etc. Tend to be really into protecting "female-only" spaces, think Michfest. Some are more exclusionist, some more eliminationist, there are degrees of extremism and some get more extreme over time.
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Replying to @reclaimingtrans @RozKaveney
And they do tend to want to restrict access to healthcare, definitely pediatric transition. There are moderates who are alright with "true transsexuals" transitioning but think most other trans people are following a trend. Many see transition as inherently harmful.
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