OK.Broomstick wrote:Ray is from Singapore and very much a product of his native culture. English is his second language. Because of those two factors he regularly asks questions in such a manner as to come across as rude (he's recently stumbled a bit in some of the US election and politics threads, too).La Maupin wrote:"Political correctness" in my experience and opinion does not exist save as an inverse cover for blatant rudeness. And you are being blatantly rude.ray245 wrote:By that definition, if you can call a eunuch a castrated male, then that means you are allowed to call a female who undergo sex change a transgendered female as well, right? A man who is straight, but choose to be feminine will simply be called a feminine male as well. I still can't see the logical reasoning behind calling a transgendered person a opposite sex.
Sorry if I am asking a politically incorrect question.
I think he's sincerely asking to be enlightened, but he's have some difficulty communicating in a polished manner. I'd cut him a little slack in this case, at least for now.
It's just... my coming out thread got very heavily derailed by a conversation that started with a comment very much like the above. And frankly, like many if not most trans women in the early part of transition, I am still to a great extent dealing with the fact and existence of a life that while it is not mine, was constructed by me in order to get along with and survive in a world that perceived me as having a gender the same as my birth sex. That fact tends to make me - and I know I'm not alone - rather touchy about people being perceived to try negate my identity.
"I had to reconcile the fact that I knew I was a girl with my ambition to be a major league baseball player when I grew up." - Julia Serano
That reconciliation is never easy, never complete, and leaves scars.