I'm just going to pick this one bit out, though a similar sentiment runs through many of the posts on the last page:
Quote from: Julie Marie on February 12, 2010, 05:59:30 PM
Well, it's still listed in a book of mental disorders. And
society still creates stigmas for people they think are mentally disordered.
And it still thinks discrimination of the mentally disordered (and anyone else who isn't "normal") is okay. So as long as it remains in the book, it will be that much longer before society begins to accept the physical condition soon to be labeled (maybe) gender incongruence.
[Um ... emphasis mine ...]
Here's a suggestion:
Let's all avoid perpetuaing that kind of bigotry.
Okay, what the hell? Doesn't this seem like the heart of the problem? What the hell is wrong with society -- with some of
us -- that we're so damned prejudiced against people with mental disorders and afraid to be labeled with that awful stigma? One might hope that in realizing that society has problems in the way it tries to force people into gender boxes they don't belong in, one might also realize that society (or at least many segments of our society) has a couple of other problems like, oh, I don't know, racism, sexism, classism, discrimination on the basis of national origin, looks, age, physical or mental disabilities, and even -- what a shock! -- whether someone has a mental disorder, even ones with clear and treatable physical causes,
even ones that are "Due to a General Medical Condition" (according to the DSM).
Instead of saying, "Hey, I'm no freak, I'm not 'mentally ill,'"
[which having a condition listed in the DSM does not imply -- there's a very important, if sometimes hazy, distinction between mental illnesses and mental disorders,] why don't we ask "What the hell is your problem with people with mental disorders?"
As I said in another thread on this subject, many, many people -- as in, closer to half of the population than to one percent -- have or have had diagnosible mental disorders, as listed in the DSM. In fact, it might be a lot higher than that. Depression triggered by really bad times in a person's life is still a mental disorder. It's like being sick: everyone gets sick from time to time; a very large portion of the population will have a serious, even life-threatning, illness or injury at some point in life. It doesn't define them as people, and neither should having or having had a mental disorder. It's simply a condition that causes anguish and loss of functionality, and that might indicate benefit in seeking treatment of a mental health professional, though many times you don't need it.
I'll agree that trans folk of all types often do harm to our own public (though I think it's fairly rare since most people aren't paying attention anyway). But perpetuating bigotry on the basis of mental health issues doesn't solve that problem; it only aggravates it.