Showing posts with label gender identity. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gender identity. Show all posts

Sunday, March 17, 2019

The Week That Was

Because so many things have happened this week - and because I can't decide which topic I should address - this post is going to be composed of many parts. Use the links below to navigate to the section that interests you. (Note: If you're on the main page for the blog, click the title of this post first.)

A Brief Statement on Christchurch
Don't Listen to SJW's: There's No Excuse for Poor Writing
What to Do About the Dysfunctional College Admissions Process
Historical Cross-Dressers Are Not Necessarily Trans



A Brief Statement on Christchurch

I condemn, without equivocation, violence against innocent Muslims. If you have reservations about Islam or unchecked immigration, the proper manner to address those concerns is through discourse, not mass murder.

I also condemn, without equivocation, all attempts to make political hay over this massacre before the bodies are cold. The correct time to discuss how the psychopathic shooter was radicalized - and what we should do about it - is after the time of mourning has passed. And the correct time to blame our political opponents? Well, that would be never. The shooter was trying to foment civil war; don't give him what he wanted.

The end.



Don't Listen to SJW's: There's No Excuse for Poor Writing

This week, a certain maleducated writer dreamed up a most remarkable rationalization for her complete lack of subtlety on racial issues. According to said author, the fact that, in her view, our society - and geekdom in particular - is still shot through with -ist and -ism proves that tackling racism through analogy "doesn't work" and that she's therefore justified in calling out bigotry directly in her books.

I feel a little sorry for this author, truth be told. A while back, I read an early novel of hers and found her to be an okay talent. If she had been guided by mentors who actually cared for her professional development, she might have overcome the damage of her post-secondary education (remind me to explain one day why I'd rather cover myself in paper cuts and jump in a vat of lemon juice than get my M.Ed.) and become a fantastic storyteller. Unfortunately, she was discovered by our Red Guards instead -- those toxic "diversifiers" I covered last week who encourage creatives from "marginalized" groups to sell their victimhood in lieu of developing their skill. Now, having been feted endlessly by these white flagellants, she's essentially stuck.

My sympathy for this individual, however, doesn't change the fact that she is wrong in almost every way.

There are racists in the US. There are also disparities that cut across racial lines. It does not follow from either of these realities that our society is therefore irredeemably racist and must be dismantled root and branch. Indeed, the US ranks among the world's LEAST racist countries. Since the 1960's, the white majority's support for integration and interracial marriage has climbed to commanding, near-universal majorities, and the share of African American families that live below the poverty line has declined from more than half at the start of the civil rights era to less than a quarter today. Once again, I'm not claiming that we have completely overcome the legacy of slavery and Jim Crow, but tremendous progress towards that goal HAS been made and will likely continue to be made so long as we cleave to our fundamental liberal values.

And whatever can be said about the US as a whole can also be said about geekdom. We have our bigoted cranks, sure, but they certainly can't be found "everywhere." On the contrary, geeks are probably among the most accepting of difference. If this were not the case, the author under discussion - and other SJW's of her stripe - would not have become so powerful and so celebrated. (It's quite despicable, actually, to leverage the geek's natural politeness, desperation to be liked, and sympathy for the downtrodden to berate a community that has showered you with accolades for its supposed depravity on matters of race. But this is generally how SJW's fight; they attack and then colonize soft targets.)

So the baseline premise of this writer's argument is pure delusion: we are not living in a racial hellscape, and we don't need a revolution. What this means, then, is that the sub rosa anti-racist storytelling of the past several decades likely did work -- that it did change minds over time. It wasn't the only factor driving the shift in white America's racial attitudes, to be sure, but it wasn't utterly inefficacious.

What this ideologically-possessed author is proposing we do instead of analogical storytelling, however, will categorically fail. Apparently, she was sleeping the day her psychology professors discussed the boomerang effect. To put it simply, people can't be insulted into agreement; upon encountering a hostile opponent, people in fact become more wedded to their original worldview. So if we scrap subtlety and subterfuge and start openly scolding readers for their prejudices, we will close minds, not open them.

How do we fight racism successfully? Non-threatening exposure helps -- which is why I'm not against healthy, non-toxic representation. Relationships of trust are also key; musician Daryl Davis, for example, has successfully persuaded people to renounce the KKK by befriending them and gently challenging their beliefs. And lastly, we must understand and grapple with racism's evolutionary roots in disgust and fears of contamination; indeed, ensuring bodily security and economic prosperity through liberal democratic capitalism may be our most powerful weapon of all.

Abandoning craft in favor of didacticism, on the other hand, is a profoundly unsound strategy that will lead to resentment and further division. Americans are some of the most tolerant people in the world; they don't need to be lectured by authors seeking short cuts to critical prestige.



What to Do About the Dysfunctional College Admissions Process

As regular readers no doubt know already, a big part of my day job involves shepherding students through the college admissions process. So when the Varsity Blues cheating scandal hit the news, it also hit me where I live. Here I am trying to get my predominantly minority and/or foreign-born clientele into college through the honest method of developing their academic chops -- and at the same time, some richie-riches are bribing coaches to get their mediocre kids in through the back door? I was spitting nails!

Of course, as other writers have correctly noted, criminal fraud isn't the only way to cheat the system. If you're an athlete, a legacy, an approved political activist, a child of a major donor, or a member of a sought-after minority group, you often get admitted under lower standards than the rest of the student population. This isn't fair to the students who were denied admission despite excellent credentials -- but it also isn't fair to those admitted under those preferences, who will likely find themselves at the bottom of their classes and struggling to keep up.

The focus needs to return to academic accomplishment alone. Each school needs to determine what sort of educational preparation is required for real success in their various programs and then mandate that preparation for all prospective students regardless of their extra-curricular resume, family connections, "personal qualities," or demographic identity. If a university is concerned about recruiting "whole men," then fair enough: that university should make its prerequisite curriculum wide-ranging. But we need to get out of the subjective business of assessing each student's ability to "contribute to the campus community" and get back to the objective business of assessing a student's ability to handle college-level coursework.

Obviously, this is the sort of change that would have to be phased in gradually. I doubt anyone would agree to the evisceration of certain popular college athletics programs -- and we'd have to establish an infrastructure to help needier students develop their intellectual bona fides so they can compete with their more affluent peers. But I think, in the long run, making college admissions standards purely academic will have positive knock-on effects. Imagine how much better off our young athletes would be if they were told they had to buckle down in school to play for their top-choice college. And I bet we'd finally kill off - or at least critically wound - the damaging anti-intellectualism I sometimes encounter when dealing with students who know they're being held to lower standards and therefore don't feel the need to do their very best.

What's eminently clear is that our current college admissions system is not a meritocracy -- nor is it sustainable.



Historical Cross-Dressers Are Not Necessarily Trans

Last on the docket this week is another bit of news from the literary world:
Shakespeare was never a 16th-century Moorish general in ­Vienna, but he had the temerity to write about one in “Othello.” George Eliot was never a crabbed and megalomaniacal mythologist, but she dared to create the gloriously appalling Mr. Casaubon in “Middlemarch.” And Leo Tolstoy wasn’t an adulterous woman — ­indeed, he was a man — yet he gave the world one of the most compelling and memorable portraits of female adultery in “Anna Karenina.”
Are such feats of imaginative creation and habitation now to be scrutinized by the gender police and social justice warriors?
The case of the American novelist E.J. Levy, celebrated author of “Love, In Theory” and “Tasting Life Twice,” an anthology of lesbian fiction, makes me wonder.
Levy has also written a forthcoming historical novel titled “The Cape Doctor.” At least, I hope it’s forthcoming. The book is about a real-life character, James Barry, née Margaret Ann Bulkley, a 19th-century, Irish-born army surgeon who practiced in Cape Town and lived as a man.
It’s that last fact, of course, that gives Barry’s story its dash of hot sauce.
What do you suppose the problem is here? I'll give you one guess.

Yep: The author referred to her title character as a "she" and attracted the ire of the crazy trans-activist set.

A simple headdesk won't suffice for this nonsense. Do these people not realize that in the 19th century, women were pretty limited in their career choices? That in order to circumvent these strictures, ambitious women had to either fight or use subterfuge? How do we know that Barry was indeed transgender and not just a woman who put on men's clothing so she could pursue an occupation that would otherwise have been closed to her? Are we going to argue now that Disney's Mulan is a transgender princess because she impersonated a man to save her ailing father?

Please stop transgendering every historical figure who ever bucked gender norms. What those of us who don't quite fit the feminine mold really need is reassurance that our Oddness can still fit under the umbrella of "female." By booting people like us out of the "female" category, you're only reinforcing regressive stereotypes.

There are many ways to be a woman. There are many ways to be a man. Maybe, in certain edge cases, someone's internal sense of self really doesn't fit the outer equipment. But not everyone who's ever chafed at a social expectation for his or her sex is trans. Insisting otherwise is confusing our kids.

Saturday, September 8, 2018

Grumpy Thoughts, 5th Edition


  • While at Dragon Con this year, I learned of a conspiracy that has been busily dragging said con for its decision to remain apolitical. Apparently, Dragon Con is the "con of choice for Nazis"  now simply because it won't deplatform popular libertarian authors who've made the mistake of being outspoken about their beliefs. The conspirators claim, of course, that they just want to protect people from "harassers," but aside from a salty comment one of their targets made on a panel twelve years ago, they have zero evidence that said authors are genuine threats to con attendees. No: What this is really about is power. The ringleader of this conspiracy and her followers want the power to shut down anyone who might contradict the SJW worldview. Hopefully, Dragon Con continues to tell them to pound sand.
  • In the world of comics, meanwhile, Peter Simeti of Alterna Comics is being relentlessly bullied for being pleasant to all of his paying customers, including those who follow the leading voices of #Comicsgate. How dare he! Clearly, we should punish the guy by buying a crap ton of Alterna titles. They're only $1.50 each, so acquiring the entire catalog wouldn't actually hurt your pocketbook all that much.
  • What the two situations above have in common is this: Screaming social justice harpies have decided that anyone who is connected six-degrees-of-Kevin-Bacon style to critics of identity politics should be punished until they bend the knee. Well, screw that fascistic nonsense, I say. If anyone tries to shame you just because you won't unperson people who aren't radical leftists, raise two middle fingers in proud defiance and tell that individual to go straight to hell.
  • Speaking of leftists trying to control us, that's the problem I have with militant trans activists and their pronoun obsession. He/him and she/her are used when you're talking about someone, not when you're talking to him or her. So basically, when a special snowflake demands to be referred to as e/eir or whatever, that person is trying to dictate how we all should converse even when he or she is not in the room. That's not okay. You have a right not to be mistreated based on how you choose to express yourself, but you do not have a right to impose your preferred mode of expression on others.
  • You also don't have a right to silence researchers who are asking questions that challenge your ideology, nor do you have a right to cover up uncomfortable truths that do the same. Indeed, stopping such conversations before they even get off the ground is incredibly dangerous. People who have been denied the opportunity to discuss what they see right in front of their eyes will latch on to anyone who is willing to tell the truth. Do you want those truth tellers to be dispassionate scientists and thoughtful intellectuals? Then I suggest not pushing certain subjects out of the realm of "respectable" debate. Otherwise, people will gravitate to any crackpot who's willing to give voice to their resentments. 
Okay, so that was a bit disjointed. I may expand the above into lengthier posts at a later date once I get back into the writing groove. In the meantime, I hope you've enjoyed that little hodgepodge of things that have occupied my mind this week.

It's great to be back!

Friday, April 7, 2017

An Intellectual Crush

Since I discovered him, I've been mainlining a lot of Jordan Peterson. I know I've mentioned him twice before in recent days, but I just can't help sharing more of his oeuvre because I think he's saying things that desperately need to be said.


Here, for example, Peterson questions the radical left's gender ideology, citing its utter lack of objectivity. If the scientific evidence is presented to me, I can accept that a very small number of people have disorders of gender identity that are best treated through medical transition. But trans activists aren't interested in evidence or in careful diagnosis; they just want to force other people to turn off their skepticism and grant self-declared trans folks unearned power and moral standing. Like Peterson, I'm not down with that.


Here, Peterson avers that unfettered free speech is vital because free speech is how we think. I understand and appreciate this argument on a gut level because I grew up with a father who regularly encouraged me to say whatever was on my mind so that he could play devil's advocate and tear me down. At the time, it drove me crazy -- but as an adult, I now recognize how brilliant a teacher Dad actually was. We reason better when we're not endlessly affirmed in our beliefs; we have to butt up against people with whom we disagree or else we'll lose the ability to articulate, defend, and - when necessary - correct our worldviews. Plus, as Peterson points out, driving certain speech underground because it is "hateful" or whatever doesn't actually cure bigotry. No: Suppression of "hate speech" enhances its allure. If suppression of "hate speech" actually worked, Trump would not be president. Alas, "build a wall" is now a motto of the new punk.


This video is longer, but it's also worth a listen. I actually cheer when Peterson declares that flying flags emblazoned with the hammer and sickle is tantamount to waving flags emblazoned with the swastika. Because yeah: Compared to the communists, Hitler was just a piker.

Oh, and if you're interested in academic psychology at all, I also highly recommend visiting Peterson's personal YouTube channel, which is loaded with free lectures on the science of personality and ideological formation. Go and watch!

Monday, March 20, 2017

Thoughts on Trans Activism

Reading Lindsay Bentley's excellent post just now has reminded me that I should probably share my own viewpoint on the whole transgender issue:

The primary beef I - and other conservatives - have with trans activism and its demand that we 1) open up bathrooms, locker rooms, sports leagues, etc. to people who "identify" as a particular gender and 2) use everyone's "proper pronouns" or else be subject to legal penalties is that absolutely no objective standards of accommodation have been offered beyond a person's say-so. And yes, it is entirely reasonable to worry that these new licences will be abused -- not by actual trans individuals, but by other skeezy - or power-hungry - folks who find it convenient to take advantage.

Regarding the above, I have a sneaking suspicion that no objective standards have been offered because no objective standards exist. Seriously, think about this: How do you know you are a particular gender? In reply to this question, what trans activists have offered me is a contradictory muddle. On the one hand, "Clothes have no gender, and I can wear whatever I want!" On the other, "Johnny likes dolls and dresses, so Johnny must want to be Joanne."

Speaking of which: The article I linked above resonated very strongly with me -- and it probably resonates very strongly with other women who also happen to be Odd. I definitely remember wishing I could be a boy. Mind you, I did have some girly interests. I did like caring for my baby dolls, and I loved Strawberry Shortcake. But while other girls were often inscrutable to me, boys were perfectly sensible, and I often preferred their company. Back in my childhood, this was called being a tomboy; today, I'd probably be encouraged by activists to identify as "gender fluid" or "neuter" or something else in their Baskin-Robbins-style menu of gender flavors.

Personally, I think many trans activists confuse gender identity with gender expression a whole hell of a lot. Why can't a little boy who likes Barbies just be considered a boy who likes Barbies? Why do we have to slap new labels on everybody when we can just accept that kids are individuals and are going to express their genders in different ways?

But I digress. The second big issue I have with trans activism is the same issue I have with all other forms of hard-left activism: its embrace of cognitive distortions that are elsewhere found among the mentally ill. Mind-reading? Yep: If someone uses the wrong pronoun, they are automatically assumed to be transphobic instead of sincerely mistaken. Catastrophizing and fortune telling? Yep: Trans activists obviously believe that allowing a thoughtful dissenter like Jordan Peterson to speak on campus will result in - oh, I don't know - a massacre of the gender nonconforming? Whatever they think is going to happen, it must be terrible; nothing less than the threat of death would justify their behavior. Blaming? Yep: If a trans activist doesn't feel good about herself/himself/themselves, it must be the fault of Others. There is no recognition whatsoever that you can in fact control your own emotional state and not allow every asshole in the world to get you down.

I myself am a fairly liberal person (in the classical sense). As such, while I have doubts about sex-reassignment, I have sympathy for those who genuinely feel they've been born in the wrong gender, and I'm willing to accommodate quite a bit. But the best way to sort this out, I feel, is through two-way dialogue, not categorical demands. We have to be allowed to be skeptical and to ask questions. We have to be allowed to demand proof. And we have to be allowed to say no sometimes when a person who's very clearly a dude wants to enter the ladies room. Otherwise, suspicion and resentment will only grow -- making the lives of trans individuals who just want to pass and be left alone even more difficult.