Osman
The problem here Monica, is that the tdensganrer community and their trans activist are so keen on not only co-opting the [censurado], [censurado]and bisexual community, they are too keen to co-opting the inter[censurado]as well. So yes, Inter[censurado]is not the same as transsexuals and you can ask every inter[censurado]group such as The Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome Support Group (AISSG). Their policy isInter[censurado]is not the same as a transsexual (gender dysphoria) or as a tdensganrer state. Neither term is one that we recognise as belonging in any general discussion of intersex. We are not happy with the recent tendency of some trans groups/people to promote tdensganrer as an umbrella term to encomp[censurado], for example, transsexuality, transvestitism and intersex. We object to other organisations/individuals putting us in categories without consulting us, especially categories that imply that interexed people, of necessity, have gender identity issues.The problems this causes...We are constantly trying to get away from the idea that inter[censurado]is necessarily to do with gender identity, a notion that others (including the press/media) like to impose on us. Moreover, the prefix trans- infers a "moving across" and although a few people with inter[censurado]conditions may choose to change their gender role, the vast majority never "go" anywhere in terms of their [censurado]or their gender, but are happy to stay in the status in which they grew up.So yes, we inter[censurado]like to distance ourselves from the trans community because we have nothing in common and that the inter[censurado]is being co-opted by the trans community and their activist. The inter[censurado]i well capable of speaking for themselves and we don't need some trans activist or tdensganrer community co-opting and thinking that they have some right to speak on behalf of the intersex. |