When influential organizations and individuals promote “sex assigned at birth,” they are encouraging a culture in which citizens can be shamed for using words like “sex,” “male” and “female” that are familiar to everyone in society, as well as necessary to discuss the implications of sex. This is not the usual kind of censoriousness, which discourages the public endorsement of certain opinions. It is more subtle, repressing the very vocabulary needed to discuss the opinions in the first place.
As you may have noticed, “sex” is out, and “sex assigned at birth” is in. Instead of asking for a person’s sex, some medical and camp forms these days ask for “sex assigned at birth” or “assigned sex” (often in addition to gender identity). The American Medical Association and the American Psychological Association endorse this terminology; its use has also exploded in academic articles. The Cleveland Clinic’s online glossary of diseases and conditions tells us that the “inability to achieve or maintain an erection” is a symptom of sexual dysfunction, not in “males,” but in “people assigned male at birth.”
This trend began around a decade ago, part of an increasing emphasis in society on emotional comfort and insulation from offense — what some have called “safetyism.” “Sex” is now often seen as a biased or insensitive word because it may fail to reflect how people identify themselves. One reason…
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In your opinion, can changing the language around sex and gender identity improve societal acceptance and support of nonbinary and transgender people, or does it simply complicate understanding?
@9LC29PN1yr1Y
I think it is a news story that asks important questions
@9LBWT4X1yr1Y
i think it usually confuses people more than anything, but its still an important topic to discuss to spread awareness and acceptance.
@9LBVY361yr1Y
To normalize gender issues is to make it less complicated. To children and seniors, new things are going to be complicated but that doesn’t mean we shouldn’t talk about them. Before stonewall, police brutality against the queer community was at an all time high. We are now at a point where more people are listening, and talking about these things in schools and having more correct information out there will help de stigmatize it.
@ISIDEWITH1yr1Y
If you had to explain to someone younger why 'sex assigned at birth' is being used instead of 'male' or 'female,' how would you distinguish between respecting personal feelings and acknowledging biological differences?
@9LBV9TX1yr1Y
everyone should be able to decide what they wan to be, shouldn't be the parents choice
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