Because people are people, and they do not view the world with such clinical eyes.
And this is why they need separate toilets too: in case one of those filthy pragmatists tries to go to the bathroom like they're people or something.
/s
Too true. It is a great shame when the sub-humans attempt to act like real people. Ecce homo!
So would you say that your criterion of women versus men is what they pass for in public? Would a particularly effeminate man trigger your bathroom danger sense just as much as you imply trans men would? Is there some kind of Freudian element to people's hangups about sharing their bathroom space with people they deem to be not sufficiently like themselves, or is it merely a question of finding trans people inherently uncomfortable and choosing the public bathroom as their battleground of choice to humiliate them?
The battleground of choice (shall we call it Water loo?) is chosen not in an attempt to humiliate trans people. Nor is there an issue with effeminate men or masculine women using the appropriate facilities. In the end, it comes down to the application of social mores and rules - namely, that a man in the men's room expects to find men, no matter their dress or their beliefs. Women in the women's room do not expect to find men. Nor want them. Water loo is chosen because it is where these social mores are challenged by trans-self-identification as opposed to societal identification. The individual says one thing, society another. This is fine in most venues, places, etc. But where the self-identifier ignores this rule in a place where it is important, namely "Water loo", they are taking into consideration only themselves and not the general public. It is true - perhaps even sad - that a trans-woman is not wanted in the woman's room, because societal perception indicates that this is a fox in the chicken coop, as it were.
I'm not being facetious about the introspection part. It's vitally important that we examine our seemingly instinctual prejudices and think about whether they're valuable and worth keeping.
Indeed. But that is a two edged blade if ever there was one. I do not argue that society shouldn't be scrutinised, held to account for its petty laws and mores. But while those laws are in effect and as firmly as sex-based toilet systems are, it is fruitless to change them. It creates tension, annoyance, discomfort and aye - even hatred. For both the trans and straight people. First, challenge the mores. Change the mores. Then implement the practical implications. Do not implement the practical implications and expect the mores to change to suit.
To provide an example, by recognizing trans people's actual gender as opposed to pedantically adhering to their genetic sex or coming up with further qualifiers for what they ought to be, you're legitimately helping a vulnerable minority transcend a dysfunctional dichotomy imposed upon people for no good reason, and that to me seems like as good a reason to let people do what they want as any even before you get into the less obvious benefits of questioning the system that has produced the world we live in and all of its many miseries.
See previous point. Questioning the system is essential before change is imposed - society wants to have the answer before it accepts its solution. I freely admit that I am part of the "problem" (which strikes me as not being so serious as many of the aforementioned miseries). It is not that I do not want transpeople to share bathroom space with me, it is that I do not want physically women to share bathroom space with me while, for instance, I use the urinal. It is a very uncomfortable idea for me and many others. A woman does not want to see, to use the Big Bang Theory as an example, this
while she is in the middle of her toilette. Perhaps - just perhaps - trans people should respect others' sensitivities rather than imposing the individual view as superior to the more universal law. If society changes or is changed in such a way as it becomes acceptable, then fine. Until then, is it not possible that imposing yourself in such a way as to make people uncomfortable is.... well, rude?
I'm not sure why I bother arguing this here, to be quite honest. I understand your point on introspection and laud it, but I've had negative experiences on Bay12 concerning topics similar to this in the past.