Sir-Charlie
You said in #47 that all these practices come from the same line of reasoning. I don’t think that’s right, and the distinction matters.
When someone says they have gender dysphoria and seeks treatment, that’s a clinical diagnosis with specific criteria. There’s documented distress, assessment, treatment protocols, follow-ups, outcomes. When someone online says they “identify as a fox,” that’s… not that. Different claims, different categories.
Bundling them as “one ideology” doesn’t help anyone understand what’s happening. It flattens everything into culture-war noise and makes it impossible to judge specific policies on their own merits.
You’ve said more than once that people shouldn’t be institutionalized or banned from transitioning. That’s a real policy position. The “greater ideological threat” framing erases it by turning the whole thing into a binary: accept all of it or reject all of it. Which side of that do you actually want to be on?
The bathroom point from #35 is a clean example. You said you’re worried about predators exploiting policies, not about trans people themselves. Fine. That’s an implementation question. But where trans-inclusive bathroom policies exist, the predicted spike in assaults hasn’t shown up. The hypothesis didn’t match the data.
I’m not asking you to find this normal or to celebrate it. I’m asking you, if your stated position is “I oppose banning it,” to separate that from the people here who do want bans and are using the ideology frame to justify them.
Because “this is all connected to foxes and absurdity” is the argument people use right before “therefore we need laws against it.” And you’ve already said you oppose those laws. So what, exactly, are you defending?