Quote from: Ms Grace on December 12, 2014, 04:01:59 PM
Seriously I don't care. If they had the chance to chose a label for themselves they would probably go with "normal". Cis gender is hardly offensive just a scientific reality, if they want to get their nickers in a knot about it that's their problem.
Yep. In a way I agree with this. It seems to me that those who most object to "cisgender" are those who most object to ->-bleeped-<-, as was the case with the fellow I mentioned in my OP. Also, one thing that makes me mad is that they're OK with calling us "->-bleeped-<-", "pervert", "freak", "sexual predators", etc., but when we come up with a scientific term that is purely neutral, not the least bit derogatory, they object to that.
However, I also look at this: the fellow mentioned in my OP wanted to call himself "gender-happy". Now that suggests a negative for us: "gender-unhappy"--just as "straight" for heterosexual people might suggest a negative for homosexual people: "crooked", "bent", "twisted". However gay people got their shot in first, by calling themselves "gay", so that if heterosexual people wanted to choose the opposite of that, what would it leave them with? "Unhappy", "wretched", "miserable"? But when they choose a positive for themselves--"straight"--it still doesn't negate the positive "gay".
This is why I see an advantage in getting our shot in first by choosing a positive for ourselves. I'm not seriously proposing "adventurous/adventurer". Surely there's something better than that. I just can't think of anything. But I think it would be something like that that we'd want (if we decided we wanted something).
If we're "adventurers" and cispeople want to be the opposite, what does that leave them with? "Dull", "plodding", "vanilla", "unimaginative"? If they want to call themselves "normal", that's OK. Who'd want to be normal when they could be an adventurer? Or if they want to be "gender-happy", that's OK, too. We're still adventurers. Whatever positive they came up with, it wouldn't negate our positive.
This is why I see an advantage in our having an informal term such as "gay". "Transgender" in itself is neutral. But there would be an advantage in having a positive term. Cispeople won't like it, just as straight people didn't like the term "gay", when gay people first started using it. And Kate is right in saying that no matter what term we chose, people would abuse it, just like they say, "That's so gay." They abuse the term "transgender", too (--> "->-bleeped-<-"), but a positive term would still be a positive.
Anyway, that's why I've been thinking about finding such a term. But obviously there's considerable doubt as to whether trans people in general see a need for one.