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Reason: None provided.

Words do have power. Using the enemy's terms empowers them by helping them define the narrative. Using the enemy's terms gives them the advantage straight out of the gates.

My advice is fight back by not using their terms like "trans+gender", but the words that were used by our parents and forefathers. I call them 'transvestites' and 'cross-dressers' because that is precisely what they are.

transvestite (n.) "person with a strong desire to dress in clothing of the opposite sex," 1922, from German Transvestit (1910), coined from Latin trans "across, beyond" (see trans-) + vestire "to dress, to clothe" (from PIE *wes- (2) "to clothe," extended form of root *eu- "to dress"). Dressing to be something other is the same as a clown dresses to appear as a fool or as an actor/actress does to portray a certain character role. Dressing to appear like a girl is not ever changing the biological fact of their sex. So the word gender, from Latin gener- (stem of genus ) which means 'kind'; 'sort' is used erroneously, falsely, and is a lie. We are really talking in terms of 'to dress'.

As an adjective from 1925. Transvestism is first attested 1928. Also see travesty, which is the same word, older, and passed through French and Italian; it generally has a figurative use in English, but has been used in the literal sense of "wearing of the clothes of the opposite sex" (often as a means of concealment or disguise) at least since 1823, and travestiment "wearing of the dress of the opposite sex" is recorded by 1832. Among the older clinical words for it was Eonism "transvestism, especially of a man" (1913), from Chevalier Charles d'Eon, French adventurer and diplomat (1728-1810) who was anatomically male but later in life lived and dressed as a woman (and claimed to be one).

1 year ago
1 score
Reason: Original

Words do have power. Using the enemy's terms empowers them by helping them define the narrative. Using the enemy's terms gives them the advantage straight out of the gates.

My advice is fight back by not using their terms like "trans+gender", but the words that were used by our parents and forefathers. I call them 'transvestites' and 'cross-dressers' because that is precisely what they are.

transvestite (n.) "person with a strong desire to dress in clothing of the opposite sex," 1922, from German Transvestit (1910), coined from Latin trans "across, beyond" (see trans-) + vestire "to dress, to clothe" (from PIE *wes- (2) "to clothe," extended form of root *eu- "to dress").

As an adjective from 1925. Transvestism is first attested 1928. Also see travesty, which is the same word, older, and passed through French and Italian; it generally has a figurative use in English, but has been used in the literal sense of "wearing of the clothes of the opposite sex" (often as a means of concealment or disguise) at least since 1823, and travestiment "wearing of the dress of the opposite sex" is recorded by 1832. Among the older clinical words for it was Eonism "transvestism, especially of a man" (1913), from Chevalier Charles d'Eon, French adventurer and diplomat (1728-1810) who was anatomically male but later in life lived and dressed as a woman (and claimed to be one).

1 year ago
1 score