Quote from: TracyCakes on May 07, 2015, 03:33:30 PM
Somebody please educate me on why the word "->-bleeped-<-" is bad. Because I haven't been a member for long, is this a term that members avoid using or offensive to some?
(3) creepy ->-bleeped-<- guys that just want a quick encounter in the parking lot with a chick with a .....
^->-bleeped-<-. "->-bleeped-<-s" are those who deliberately seek out non- or pre-op transgender people (especially women) for sex and to fetishize in general. They "get off" on the idea of having sex with someone of the gender they typically swing for but with the sexual anatomy of the sex less often linked with said gender. Straight men are most often the culprits when it comes to women, and gay men are often the culprits when it comes to me. For example, I was in a bookstore, and a (very obviously gay) guy who worked there approached me to recommend books (unsolicited advice...). Within 10 minutes of speaking with me, he point blank told me to my face that he "has a thing for guys with vaginas." I was seriously irritated and disgusted. I'm straight, but I don't care if gay men hit on me. However, viewing someone as their genitals is never, ever OK.
*Several words of caution, that complicate matters: There are people who legitimately prefer to couple with transgender people for various reasons. Some transgender people (honestly, myself included) have slight to absolute preferences for other transgender people because of shared experiences, shared vocabulary, etc. Some people (trans and cis alike) may also prefer to couple with transgender people for reasons such as: 1) being attracted to certain aesthetics that may be more common in transgender people (again, I fall into this category because I don't find really round features, which are more common in cisgender women than in transgender women, attractive - they look childish to me, that's just my aesthetic preference), 2) preferring the often more dynamic experiences with gender and sensitivity to issues of gender (especially common among lesbians), 3) for some people who have been the victims of sexualized violence, they may feel more comfortable with certain sexual anatomy regardless of their gender preference (this definitely affects transgender men who may be seen as less threatening than a male-bodied man), 4) some people, especially younger people who have children and are in low income brackets, may prefer to eliminate the risk of pregnancy by coupling with someone with whom they are reproductively incompatible (most of the cisgender women who express an interest in me fall into this category), and 5) some people are legitimately attracted to a certain gender and a certain sex - that's actually different than being a ->-bleeped-<-, even though the line on this one can be fine and a bit smudgy at times.