What to call this thread?

"... people are no longer punished for being left handed." #621
A problem with left-hand dominance surfaces in grammar school.

When pens looked more like this
1743361410899.jpeg

than this
1743361500741.webp

Southpaws learning to write were confronted with their writing hand smearing the ink they'd just imparted to paper.
Pencil may have helped some. But the Southpaw's gooseneck grip is an imperfect solution.

QWERTY may help some.

"The apparent increase in numbers of trans young people isn't because it's trendy either. It's because there is more support for trans people to be themselves." TA #FAT
Not uncommon in such social statistics.
The statistical% change reflects a change in ratio between those in the closet, vs those out. (Is that what it's called?)

In a population of hundreds of millions, the actual ratios are likely to be fairly stable over time.

- I'd be the world's worst woman.
Women have an entire subculture men witness, but are often oblivious to.
Our culture expects women to not be stupid,
but not be smarter than him, unless she can make it look like her good ideas were his.
Attractive, but passive. A woman forward enough to invite a man to date is often perceived as undesirable, less valued as a candidate.
Too many etc. Too many men sneer at women, for carrying a purse. Guys! Ever see cargo pockets on an evening dress?

Let the maelstrom continue. No human living today is likely ever to see the end of it.
 
Written over a year ago so it's already out of date but Governor Cox of Utah explains why he vetoed the anti-trans sports bill:

480142424_10173048458507037_6011724770560968367_n.jpg
 
Governor Cox of Utah explains why he vetoed the anti-trans sports bill:
"1 transgender student playing girls sports." Utah Governor Cox #623
So it's not just the lake that's full of brine governor?

#623 demonstrates the adversity of leaving public policy decisions to elected officials.
We've tried circumventing this problem by for example giving some law judges life tenure. Such job security isolates precedent-setting justices from the social repercussions of their rulings. BUT ! That's a two-edged sword. Roe v. Wade in 1973, Dobbs v. Jackson in 2022.

I'm not endorsing Governor Cox' decision. But:
when opposing sides of a dispute more closely approximate parity, an elected official policy decision-maker may be less vulnerable to that decision determining, terminating his tenure at the next election.
It's a long-recognized binary: the difference between an elected official doing the job, vs keeping the job.

#623 may be the most extreme possible example, the interest of one, vs the interest of the entire population of Utah minus one. That's an oversimplification, but it's also an illustration.

We can wag our finger of righteous indignation in accusatory tone. Or we can seek a more constructive approach, find a sensible way to split the baby. What benefit to justice to be a career ender for the bureaucrats that dispense it?
 
But he's absolutely correct.
I may have been entangled by a double-negative here.
If the governor supported the rights of the minority of one, it should be recognized
even if I didn't
at first.

"the science" Clymer #627
In eras past, the final authority may have been the patriarch, the shaman, the clan leader ...
In our Western 3rd millennium the criterion of truth is science. BUT !!

In the United States of America with the Founding principle that "all men are created equal",
and that we are entitled to "equal protection of the laws" (14th Amendment)
what ostensible reality would render legitimate discrimination?

If instead of law or principle we prefer to adhere to ostensibly divinely inspired ancient texts, then
"Do unto others as you would have them do unto you" can suffice.

Science informs us males are a minority in the human population. That does not justify discrimination against them.
If a man wants to seek the U.S. presidency, he should not be automatically excluded. Give the men a break ladies.
 
Imagine actually believing that ....

"Why would trans people need more rights? They're already the most protected group of people on the planet." #630
Let us hope children are institutionally more protected.

That aside, such ignorance as depicted in frame 1 of 4 in #630 is rarely glamorous.

"There is no trans debate ..." #631
By now the issue, the artificial adversity may be elucidated to a practical minimum.

Is there a practical way in a few short, declarative sentences to designate the dazzling bright light of enlightenment, viewed from here as merely a nearly imperceptible glint on the horizon?
 
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