Quote from: Stephe on April 13, 2012, 09:15:26 PM
And that if you look like a man to someone else, they aren't going to give you the same treatment they give other men? And somehow know you're really a woman inside that they can't see, so they don't extend this special treatment reserved for men because you don't want it?
I think the only important point of this is that they don't aggressively hit on you (usually--I have had some strange incidents, as well as of course occasionally passing as female while presenting male).
Men "palling around" with me always made me really anxious and uncomfortable. I avoided men for that reason. When I went to school for a couple semesters, I ended up in a night class full of men. They would just tell grotesquely misogynistic jokes and stories with each other and rather than be present for that "special treatment" I would go for walks on breaks. It does even out a bit though, because I had the privilege of at least not being the target of their misogyny. The other girl in that class did, as well as the female teacher. Though it was behind their back.
Still, I think that just because you have male privilege doesn't mean it benefits you. Or at least not to a useful degree. If you're in some masculine industry, yeah. If you never leave your house, not really. If all your friends are girls, not really. If you shy away from men, again, not really.
And I think, for a trans woman, it's hard to think of male privilege as much more than just icing on a vomit-inducing cake. It's like, "yeah, you hate being male and it's awful, but here's a couple little advantages for you to ponder!" When at the same time, there is an underside of male privilege that you notice most when you don't have a masculine personality.
So my real point here is that I think talking about this issue with trans women is a bit divisive. It doesn't really matter what we think of male privilege because it's just a part of the bundle that we would happily trade off to set things right

. That is not an endorsement of the existence of male privilege, it is what it is. But again, it doesn't matter because whether it exists or not it doesn't change who we are.