I mean, I'll be honest, the idea of removing gender all together is personal for me, because navigating the world without it would suddenly become much, much more difficult, and also reduce the pool of men I am attracted to. Another part of it then to me is, if we don't use gender to differentiate between male-female sex, then what do we use in place of it? Humans are not going to easily function without some sort of distinction, and without one, something will form in it's place.
You are saying something true here. We do not see the things upon which we actually determine sex. Most of the time, you do not see peoples' genitalia. If you use chromosomes as the basis, then you definitely never see those. So when we claim that we see someone's sex, we are actually seeing something we use as a proxy for a sex but is not a part of the definition, like a skirt. This has been referred to as sex category. If you've never read it, I'd suggest reading Doing Gender by West and Zimmerman. It's one of the most influential pieces in the field and it speaks to some of these questions.
So maybe you're saying that unless we're all naked (or in the case of chromosomes, pretty much screwed no matter what), we have you have something like the distinction between wearing a dress and not to quickly tell a part sexes. So, we come up with a set of conventions for things that are not actually a part of the definition of sex or even follow from sex, but will be culturally accepted as the things the sexes are supposed to do to distinguish them. At that point, you pretty much create gender (although you're more progressive in that you, at least, know that you just made all of this up for social purposes instead of believing it's biological). The problem is precisely that it is arbitrary, and it basically segregates behavior. The logic of this is that women should feel obligated to wear dressed, and men are not allowed to. Or maybe it's makeup. Women have to wear it and men can't. There's no particular practical reason these things should be assigned thusly, and it of course fucks over every man and woman who doesn't want to follow those rules perform those roles.
Secondary sex characteristics may not be enough to distinguish sexes alone (I do think voices are very frequently a give away). But what if it's not? Does that mean in a genderless world we wouldn't have those indicators to make it immediately obvious what sex people are? Perhaps not. Is that really so bad vs the alternative?
I'd like to live in a world where it isn't offensive or crazy to ask somebody what their sex is. And if we lived in that world, that would certainly remove a lot of tension. I'd rather be any a society where I was normal to ask, than one where you don't have to ask because we are all caged in bullshit roles. But maybe it's easier for me to say because I had a lot of experience confusing people about my sex.
And for your last point of the paragraph, I'm not sure I understand. Yes, there will be distinctions other than gender. There are already tons of other distinctions to choose from. I don't think taking gender out of the pictures creates some hazardous vacuum. And I'm not so sure that we actually need them.
By not real I mean something as other-kin. I do not believe someone genuinely feels they are actually a cat, or a dragon, or some other animal. That isn't your gender, that's something else, and I think it's unfair to lump that in. Other things such as saying your gender is red. That's not a gender, that's something else. I mean the far extreme examples of things that plainly have no connection to gender whatsoever.
I think other-kin are the logical conclusion of this kind of reasoning. It was inevitable.
I accept sexual dysphoria as a condition. It seems to be neurological in nature, it seems to involve issues of neurology that identifies one kind of physiology working with a body that possesses another kind of physiology. Other-kin are ridiculous in
this regard, because it is impossible to believe that they are neurologically wired to cat physiology, and I've certainly seen no evidence of the kind. However, if someone does not have that kind of neurological issue with their actual sexual physiology, if they have actual issue with their biological sex, I don't think they have any business using the word trans. I emphasize that the distinction is in the feeling, as for various reasons, many people who have sexual dysphoria do not get sex change operations, but they still have that feeling, they still have that neurology. I'm saying that if you don't even
feel like you'd want different sex characteristics, or uncomfortable with your current ones, you're not trans. You are just a person who doesn't want to obey gender roles, which is great! That's what I want to see, but it's not wanting to change from one real thing to another real thing, it's just disregarding one imaginary thing. You have can have no instrinsic, biological basis for wanting to be another
gender as opposed to
sex, then you can have such a desire to be a cat. But just like a desire to do things differently from society's gender norms if you want to, you can do things differently from what are expected of humans. You can cat things if you want to. Knock yourself out.
I'm not quite as versed in this. What's the difference between essentialism, and deconstructionist? When it comes to gender, the whole idea, concept, and things people are pushing for are SO subjective, and have so much emotion tied to them with very little objective fact that I simply don't know what to make of it and get frustrated. My primary concern has been, and always will be, wanting to stop revolutionaries from pushing a revolution for personal gain, in a deamonizing way, or for the sake of having a revolution without considering consequences or thinking it all the way through.
I've already written a lot, but I suspect this is one of the more important parts.
What I mean be essentialist is a couple of ideas. That there are specifically, and distinctly, some genders. More importantly, that the implication of being a gender is that one necessarily must have a bunch of other traits. In the oldest, simplest sense, it would have been that a person is either a man or a woman, a man is aggressive and a woman is passive, a mines hides his emotions and a woman shows them, and so and so forth. The idea that these particular categories exist, they have traits, and this is natural.
Now, the list in this OP is enormous. It's sheer enormity is such that it gives people far more wiggle room to do what they want than a traditional point view would. However, it's just expanding on the same fundamentally flawed idea and kicking the can down the road until it becomes, as I said, pointless. Tell me, what
is the point of mention your gender or anyone else's, unless you think it states something more than a mere label? If you don't think being X means doing Y, if you don't think that having the gender of man means being less emotional, than what is the point of even using such a reference? That's what I meant about the check boxes on forms. It's impossible for me to maintain credulity one someone says "I want to use these boxes, but don't worry, I'm not going to use them to deny or demand traits from anyone". That is literally the only reason to have the box. If you say gender is gender is nothing more than a label you use for yourself, then it's useless. If gender makes assumptions about one's personality, then it is pernicious.
The idea of "be who you want" and "gender doesn't exist" seem wholely incompatible to me.
They strike me as mutually dependent. Gender is a cage. If it means anything at all, then it means removing peoples options for what they can be. No number of genders will ever allow as much freedom as not having them.
I don't see how they can fesably co-exist. How is that solved? I loathe the idea of forcing a solution where there is none. I genuinely, honestly, do not see a fair answer. Personally I want people to be who they want to be, and have no societal requirements for gender, but still allow people to subscribe to a personal gender as they see fit.
What would that actually mean? What would subscribing to a gender, in a world where there are no societal requirements for gender, mean? I cannot see how that would be different from saying your gender is red.
The latter is still a problem though? Then how on earth to we let people be themselves? It's a catch-22. It seems to me like if there is no gender, then subscribing to a gender is therefore bad, even on a basic level. It's why this whole gender debate gets me so riled up. It's trying to mix oil and water, and refuses to add any emulsifer to let them mingle. It's like someone walking up to a broken cart and saying "yes that needs to be fixed, but you can't use wheels anymore".
If you were completely, logically pure about what it means to let anyone do what they want, then technically I'm not letting that happen. But I'm saying is that the only form in which gender is not a restriction one people doing what they want to do, is a form in which it is so superficial that denying people the right to do it changes nothing. And really, if everyone considers gender some label they make up for themselves, like red, or Fheshfhgfsj, then I don't care, because at that point, gender in the practical sense and everything wrong with it would already have to be dead for this state of affairs to even have emerged.
Ah, this is the big distinction for me. I agree, stuff needs to change. I loathe the idea of fast rapid cultural change though. In a perfect world it could happen, but in practice it just doesn't. Move too quickly, and people balk and there is a risk of them taking over. You can't force everyone minds to change overnight, and if you do they NEVER will. It needs to be slow and incremental. To me shifting to remove gender as a concept in our own lifetime would just not work, yet it seems like some people simply don't care and THAT take serious issue with. It's why I avoid cultural revolutionaries (the ones actively leading it). This can be done, it just needs to be incremental.
We're talking about social change through the entire history of humanity. I don't think there's an objective basis for deciding what is incremental. If you say it needs to be taken slow, I can say we've been working on this for about 200,000 years, so I think we've been reasonably patient

.
I don't personally see the use in broadly talking about incremental or expedient, or conservative and radical. I'd rather talk about in the actual details of cause effect. That's why I bring up the technology I was referring to. I've said elsewhere on the forum that the technological ability to completely conceive and gestate humans outside of another human body would do an enormous amount to undermine gender as a concept. If that happens, for whatever reason, it will change things a great deal. Something like that.
***Pardon for typos, and be wary of a missing word or the wrong word. I wrote this fast and I didn't proof read it.