Transgender does use Transphobic as a slur to put down biological women and biological men who do not subscribe to woke ideology.
The word 'transphobic' is thrown around too loosely nowadays.
People who generally have no problem with trans people and can co-exist with them in society get told they're transphobic because they do not agree with every transgender issue.
Calling someone a 'transphobe' is quite a strong word; it means they have hate/fear/aversion towards transgender people. But in reality, most people getting called transphobic these days have no such problems and can get along with transgender people.
If someone doesn't want to be called cisgender - you are Transphobic
If someone is against transgender women being in women's sports -you are Transphobic
If anyone calls Jeffery March out on his grooming behaviour - you are Transphobic
If you don't want to be called a chestfeeding - you are Transphobic
If you don't want to be called a birthing person - you are Transphobic
if you don't want to be called pregnant partner - you are Transphobic
if you want to be called a mother- you are Transphobic
2239👍 98👎
Transgender does use cisgender as a slur to put down biological women and biological men.
Itâs a label imposed by Transgender rather than one adopted from within. Such terms are rarely welcome.
Thus, people who do not subscribe to woke ideology are called 'Transphobic'.
If you disagree, you are cisgender; you are transphobic.
27👍 27👎
This Notion Called Reverse Sexism Cannot and Does Not Exist.
Reverse Sexism is a power play card by feminism because it promotes reverse sexism or that movement is âsexist towards men.â.
In 2009, several academics made statements that indicate or may indicate, a belief that reverse sexism did not exist.
For example, in the preamble of a study on internalised sexism, Steve Bearman, Neill Korobov and Avril Thorne stated that reverse sexism was not a "meaningful phrase" because "while individual women or women as a whole may enact prejudicial biases towards specific men or toward men as a group, this is done without the backing of a societal system of institutional power.".
The same year, two assistant professors, Ãzlem Sensoy and Robin DiAngelo, wrote in an open letter to their faculty that reverse sexism does not exist because the word "sexism" refers to "power relations that are historical and embedded, and these relations do not flip back and forth" and because "the same groups who have historically held systemic power in the US and Canada continue to do so."
David Benatar's 2012 book, Second Sexism: Discrimination Against Men and Boys, expounded the theory that discrimination against males is often unnoticed and considered less critical than discrimination against females.
Itâs not âreverse sexismâ when women are just trying to level the playing field after centuries of oppression and discrimination. - Dr Charlotte Proudman
3👍 3👎