The only thing I can imagine is: I don't want to be m'ean, but I'm disturbed to the kor that "identifying as Korean" could be anything than "living there, enjoying the culture and getting the nationality".
Hm yeah. I understand wanting other pronouns than the ones assigned to you at birth, but anything else than he/him, she/her, they/them and it/its is beyond my understanding.
Pretty much. It's gotten past the point of being inclusive and careened into full out ridiculousness. Someone decides to identify as grapefruit/kazoo, and they expect an entire language to be altered to accommodate them.
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"grapefruit has been eating too much lately and now and grapefruit's worried kazoo clothes won't fit"
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.
I honestly object somewhat to they/them because that's typically a plural, and something we don't usually even use to refer to people with multiple personality disorder - who, for all intents and purposes, have a much larger claim to be referred to as "they/them"
But you also use they/them when you're talking about a stranger who's gender you don't know.
Like "i haven't met my neighbor yet, but their dog is always out in the garden" or something.
So those pronouns didn't feel like a huge stretch for me.
I believe his argument is: if you can change your gender, you can change your race
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He claims to be both trans or genderfluid I think, and now claims to be transracial as well
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"grapefruit has been eating too much lately and now and grapefruit's worried kazoo clothes won't fit"
.
.
I honestly object somewhat to they/them because that's typically a plural, and something we don't usually even use to refer to people with multiple personality disorder - who, for all intents and purposes, have a much larger claim to be referred to as "they/them"
Like "i haven't met my neighbor yet, but their dog is always out in the garden" or something.
So those pronouns didn't feel like a huge stretch for me.
.
.
He claims to be both trans or genderfluid I think, and now claims to be transracial as well