lunes, 16 de octubre de 2017

If you can change your gender, why not your age? | MercatorNet |October 16, 2017|MercatorNet|

If you can change your gender, why not your age?

MercatorNet |October 16, 2017|MercatorNet|







If you can change your gender, why not your age?

And if so, what happens to the age of consent? Behind the ideology of transgenderism is the danger of paedophilia
Daniel Moody | Oct 16 2017 | comment 



Within the space of the past 18 months alone, various articles and essays have shown transgenderism to be anti-psychiatryanti-scienceanti-language and anti-sexual difference. We have read of tomboys heading to jamborees, of athletes and lobotomies. And undergirding these pieces have been those everything-at-once essays best filed under the category: this makes no sense.
Here, I want to add another ingredient to the mix. I want to show the link between “gender identity” and paedophilia. This is not pleasant territory, of course. That’s the point.
Before proceeding, however, it would be imprudent not to offer a couple of in-advance clarifications.
Firstly, this short essay deals in concepts, not people or actions. It is not a comparison between people struggling to accept their God-given sex and people experiencing paedophilic urges.
Secondly, what exactly is “transgenderism”? Well, from the legal angle, the words “male” and “female” no longer signify given, fixed states of body (sexes), and instead signify chosen, fluid states of mind—gender identities. On this view, transgenderism is a mere possibility arising from the fact that our legal identity is now changeable. Anybody can be transgender.
Now, the idea of “trans-ageism” has been touched on before, the claim being that if we can change gender we ought to be able to change age. I will give a subtly different account, observing that if we can deny sex, we ought to be able to deny sexual maturity. And I'll break down the journey from gender identity to paedophilic acts into four stages, with each stage arrived at via a question.
To begin, suppose I tell you I feel like a beer. Ten seconds later I say, “No, I fancy a coffee.” Each of my two statements concerns a drink, and it is true to say I cannot change one drink for another using my mind alone. But I can change “I feel like a beer” to “I fancy a coffee” with my mind alone. How come? Because those things are not drinks. Those are states of mind. As such, the difference between them is also a state of mind—which is precisely why I can change from one to the other using my mind alone.
Transferring this line of thought from drinks to identities, our first question proper is: if male and female are states of mind, what’s the difference between them? The answer must be that the difference too is a state of mind. Good. With this point established, it can be applied to sexual maturity.
Here, our focus shifts from male-and-female to its four sub-identities: boy, man, girl and woman. Question two, then. What is the difference between a boy and a man? Ordinarily, our answer is grounded in sex and goes something like this:
We are conceived sexually immature. In time, we become sexually mature. This happens independent of emotional maturity, hence the possibility of, say, an immature man. The definitional difference between a boy and a man is a physical one.
I am sure the difficulty has not escaped you. Within a post-sex legal environment, we cannot appeal to sexual maturity, as such an appeal would readmit s-e-x. It would be like saying the moon is a myth and Neil Armstrong was the first person to walk on it. It doesn’t work, does it? If sex has left the conversation, sexual maturity has been silenced. What does all this mean? It means that an acceptance that male and female are states of mind necessitates an acceptance that adult-child difference cannot be anything other than a state of mind.
That’s the groundwork taken care of. Here come the inescapable final blows.
Suppose an eight-year old boy, Jimmy, wishes to “transition” from male to female. According to law, he can do so by way of self-declaration (i.e., without physical alteration). Why? Because in the same way I can change “I feel like a beer” to “I fancy a coffee” without doing anything physical, like putting the kettle on, Jimmy can change “male” to “female” without doing anything physical, such as having surgery. With all this in mind, here's question three. Why is Jimmy limited to transitioning to a girl? Why is no boy-to-woman option available?
Remember, we have already prevented ourselves from using the S-word. So? Answer came there none, except for “But that’s not a thing.” And that's not a satisfactory answer. Nothing is “a thing” until somebody makes it a thing. The question remains: why can't boy-to-woman transition be a thing, along with man-to-girl, girl-to-man, woman-to-boy, boy-to-man, man-to-boy, girl-to-woman and woman-to-girl transition? Can I feel like a beer despite having no beer in the house? Yes, I can. Then Jimmy can be a woman despite being neither female (sex) nor sexually mature.
Put another way, if we can move between male and female, and if we can move around withinmale (from boy to man, say) and within female (from woman to girl, say), then Jimmy can move between and within, from boy to woman. With the terms “male” and “female” having been peeled off the body and attached to the mind, all four sub-identities can be accessed by anybody. Indeed, the four are identical.
To be precise, it is not that the category of “child” has been rendered legally unsustainable. Rather, both “adult” and “child” are now legally unintelligible because the difference between them is now unintelligible. Bodies can sexually mature; minds cannot.
I am sure you can sense the direction in which this is heading.
A fourth and final question. How is the state to go about extracting from law these old-fashioned, unstable categories? The easiest way to discover the answer is to turn the question around. How are “adult” and “child” presently demarcated in law? Well, with sexual maturity being the definitional difference between the two categories, it follows that the legal boundary separating them is located within the realm of sexual activity. In short, law recognises children as children by forbidding sexual activity in the absence of sexual maturity. And if that is where law’s bright line is located, adult-child difference is legally collapsed by erasing that line. That is the stark barrel we are staring down.
Adults and children are to be done away with in law by making one of two declarations. Either everybody is effectively declared a child, in which case nobody will be permitted to perform sexual acts, or everybody is effectively declared an adult, in which case...
Which of the two do you think it will be?
Feminist academic Rebecca Tuvel recently posited a logical conceptual link between transgenderism and “transracialism.” But as she discovered to her cost: when invited to an ideology party, it is considered offensive to arrive with facts as your plus one. To be clear, I am not saying transracialism needs to become a thing. No, there is always the option to remain in a state of contradiction. But if that is how it is to be, the party’s host can expect a fair few uninvited guests to turn up and join with transracialism in knocking on the door, demanding entry.
If you look carefully, the distinct outline of paedophilia can be seen on the legal horizon, heading towards the party being thrown by gender. The rat-a-tat-tat is not currently loud enough to keep us awake at night. Expect the volume to rise.
Daniel Moody is a philosopher from Dorset, England.  This essay was originally published on his blog Gentlemind: The body, the mind, language and law


MercatorNet



October 16, 2017



Probably millions of Americans have donated to appeals following recent hurricanes in the United States and Central America. However, there is one group of donors whose generosity is both surpising and touching: Texas prison inmates. The New York Times reported at the weekend:



"In about one month, officials say, 6,663 inmates donated $53,863 for Hurricane Harvey relief — an astonishing sum considering many of the offenders typically have less than $5 in their accounts.



"Some of those who had saved gave more — hundreds of dollars, in some instances, a spokesman for the Criminal Justice Department said."
The effort was led by prisoners who had been involved in an earlier fundraising effort for Hurricane Katrina relief. Twelve years later they insisted that their officials restart the programme. I don't know about you, but I wonder why those guys are still in prison. Isn't it time for parole?



Also: Check out our Russian Revolution movie feature.
















Carolyn Moynihan
Deputy Editor,
MERCATORNET
The Russian Revolution in film



By Carolyn Moynihanand Michael Cook
Three epics about the Revolution and a postscript from the Stalinist era.



Read the full article
If you can change your gender, why not your age?



By Daniel Moody
And if so, what happens to the age of consent? Behind the ideology of transgenderism is the danger of paedophilia



Read the full article
Translation technology is useful, but should not replace learning languages



By Michael Haugh
Learning languages allows us to experience different ways of thinking.



Read the full article
U.S. fertility is at an all time low



By Shannon Roberts
Significant economic consequences may follow.



Read the full article
Why the Nobel Peace Prize brings little peace



By Ronald R. Krebs
The Committee's choices have been noble, but also sometimes naive.



Read the full article
Are we too tolerant of sexual assault?



By Zac Alstin
‘Rape culture’, prudence, and double-standards.



Read the full article
Women need free contraception like Cecile Richards needs a pay rise



By Janet Garcia
What they don’t need are the health issues that come with it.



Read the full article
The Playboy lifestyle and the death of sexual complementarity



By Ashleen Menchaca-Bagnulo
Should conservatives be celebrating Hefner's 'vision'?



Read the full article
5 lessons Harvey Weinstein can teach us about Hollywood



By Michael Cook
The latest scandal shows that root-and-branch reform is needed



Read the full article















MERCATORNET | New Media Foundation
Suite 12A, Level 2, 5 George Street | North Strathfield NSW 2137 | AU | +61 2 8005 8605

No hay comentarios: