Quote from: Valeriedances on May 25, 2011, 08:56:10 AM
Yes, I do. This case is very upsetting.
The problem for me is how are we going to reconcile the transgender umbrella concept with how we determine Male/Female. The advocates pushing for Same Sex marriage (which I am for, but for different reasons) tie this with the umbrella concept, which deconstructs gender. As long as the community goes in this direction, I cant advocate for it.
The secondary problem I can see coming very quickly from holdings like we see in Nikki's case is that there could be a reticence by Court's to be willing to change a sex marker via Court Order in the absence of actual surgical intervention. While this tends to be the case with birth certificates, the backlash would come with other ID such as driver's licenses and voters registration.
At the moment, Texas law allows the DL to be the ID used to prove identity for a marriage license. The birth certificate IS NOT required under the Family Code. BUT, a court order changing the little letter on the DL without surgical intervention can give a result that mirrors what is at issue in cases such as Nikki's (and 15 years ago with the background in
Littleton).
The blurring of the 'gender' lines that exist vis a vis the 'transgender' umbrella push creates a legislative conundrum in cases of marriage. The ruling has the potential practical impact of saying legal /= physical appearance and given the increase in people changing documents prior to surgical intervention, of having a asterisk in the databases of various ID files. Do you really want the cop who stops you at the side of the road to be able to look at the computer and see that there was a change made to your DL to correct a birth defect? Do you really want to risk being booked into a jail under a former name just because it existed in a database even though it also ignores a legal name change?
QuoteThe 'umbrela' as it were, is just a political construct that seeks to bring togather various disimilar groups, who are for similar reasons disenfrancised from the mainstream of society.
Disenfranchising from societal mainstream of some groups does NOT mean that those of us who subscribe to a binary concept WANT to share space under an umbrella. I remember in the early days of 'transgender' being forced upon the community as a replacement of 'transsexual' that the TG concept was to incorporate EVERY person who did not present as their birth gender. I'm sorry but I don't have a damned thing in common with a heterosexual cross-dresser or a drag queen or, to be honest, someone who will never have surgical intervention to remedy a medical condition present from birth. But because that 'umbrella' political construct of 'transgender' exists, we now see the media continue to describe people like Nikki as a 'transgendered widow' instead of just as a 'grieving widow' who happens to be a transsexual of heterosexual orientation. And if people will recall, her blog of April 26th expressly asked that the media QUIT REFERRING to her as a transgender or as transgendered. She identifies as a heterosexual woman. If pushed on the medical background, she will recognize the transsexual terminology.
Cases such as have a factual situation like we see in Nikki's court battle require, by their very nature, a narrowly defined view, not some giant umbrella construct that encompasses people who have no desire to marry in a heterosexual fashion or who may find the very idea of surgical intervention to be completely abhorrent.
While politics can make for strange bedfellows, there are some fellows I do not want to share a bed with...