Nemra

Member
  • Content count

    2,987
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Nemra

  1. The following documentaries are produced by the BBC: Trump Shooting: Back to the Scene Trump: The Criminal Conspiracy Case Trump: A Second Chance? Short description of Trump and his allies' actions from "Trump: The Criminal Conspiracy Case" documentary: They lost Georgia, Trump got caught on tape asking to "find" exactly enough votes to win, made up lies about election fraud, bullied innocent people, and even though some of Trump's allies admitted lying in court, Trump used his money to delay justice.
  2. Comedians' jobs will be at even greater risk if Trump gets reelected.
  3. The U.S. Department of Justice alleges that Trump: willfully retained 32 highly classified documents primarily relating to foreign countries and U.S military capabilities for a year and a half. and his henchmen conspired to hide the documents from investigators. and the henchmen lied to the FBI about their efforts to locate the documents the National Archives were asking for. and the henchmen attempted to delete CCTV footage of them hiding documents from Trump's own lawyer.
  4. Sheryl Guy was the Republican county clerk in Antrim County, Michigan, who had voted for Trump herself. She forgot to update the vote-counting machines after adding new candidates to the ballot, causing them to count votes for the wrong people before she caught and fixed her mistake. But Trump supporters used it to spread false claims that voting machines were rigged to flip votes from Trump to Biden all across Michigan and America. The irony is that Trump supporters used a Trump-voting Republican's mistake as "proof" that Democrats were stealing the election.
  5. How Trump and his allies conned the people in the previous presidential election:
  6. @Yimpa, I'm happy for you. Keeping secrets of such things has saved my life, although it comes with a cost.
  7. @Yimpa, keeping secrets is important.
  8. There's awareness that others are part of the household. Although my example is limited, for the reason you gave and also because, in reality, family members can't or don't accept each other completely for different reasons.
  9. @Yimpa, having long hair isn't considered something that a man should have where I'm from. A lot of men are disgusted or get nervous by that. Few of them wanted to harass me. My clothing style isn't typical in my culture. People think I'm either Russian or European. Lol. Gender isn't even a thing where I'm from! If they accept it, they would have to admit that a lot of the things about "sexes" are social constructions, which is the very thing that they are afraid of.
  10. Isn't it interesting that in our houses no one has a problem going to the same bathroom?
  11. JD Vance: woke, woke, woke, ... .
  12. Gender isn't only biological. The culture defines gender. Male or female as a gender identity is as biological as other gender identities.
  13. By Claude AI. Sex (Biological Facts): Physical characteristics: chromosomes, hormones, anatomy Measurable through medical tests Exists on a spectrum (not just binary) due to natural variations Gender (Social Reality): Society's expectations and roles Changes across cultures and time periods Includes clothing, behavior, social norms Varies significantly worldwide Gender Identity (Personal Reality): Internal sense of self Shows up early in life (around ages 3-5) Backed by brain studies Can't be changed through external pressure Independent of body or social roles Key Scientific Points: Biology plays a role (genes, hormones, brain structure) Environment has influence (culture, society) Neither completely determines the other All three aspects can align or differ Each person's experience is valid and real Primary Dependencies: Sex → Gender Identity Some biological influence shown through: Brain structure studies Hormone effects during development Twin studies showing genetic components BUT cannot fully predict gender identity Gender → Sex Minimal to no influence Social ideas don't change biological characteristics Cultural views don't affect chromosomes or basic anatomy Gender Identity → Gender Strong influence Shapes how people relate to social roles Often leads to challenging or rejecting cultural norms Can drive social change over time Gender → Gender Identity Limited influence Social pressure rarely changes core identity Historical attempts to force change have failed Cultural expectations don't determine internal sense of self Most Supported by Evidence: Sex has some influence on gender identity (but doesn't determine it) Gender identity strongly influences how people relate to gender roles Social gender constructs have least influence on both sex and core identity Key Point: While these systems interact, research shows gender identity is remarkably stable against external pressure, suggesting it's more fundamental than social gender constructs but not entirely determined by biological sex.
  14. @Princess Arabia, I don't agree with him.
  15. He was saying that only two genders exist, and the other ones are mental illnesses. Also, intersex is not a gender.
  16. It's ironic that the people who don't want other genders to exist don't recognize what they are clinging to is mostly socially constructed compaired to gender identities. 😏
  17. Claude AI. Biology has a great influence on our gender identity, based on what science has observed: Shows up early in childhood Brain development patterns exist Hormones play a role Genetic factors seen in twin studies Can't be changed by social pressure Not a conscious choice Similar patterns across different cultures Think of it like handedness - while environment might have some effect, there's clearly a strong biological component to whether someone's naturally right or left-handed. But we should note: Exact mechanisms aren't fully understood Environment plays some role Research is still ongoing Individual experiences vary The evidence points to biology having a significant influence on how we internally experience our gender identity, even though we're still learning exactly how this works. And this makes gender identity more fundamental because: Comes from biology/brain development Internal sense of self Not chosen or learned Can't be changed Exists regardless of society While gender (social categories) is: Created by societies Can change over time Varies between cultures Based on social needs Can be reformed/redefined It's like: Gender identity is the internal reality (like having brown eyes) Gender categories are how society tries to organize these realities (like how we label eye colors) This explains why: People can have gender identities that don't match social categories Different cultures create different gender systems Gender categories often change to better reflect identities You can change gender systems but not gender identities So yes, gender identity is more fundamental - it's part of who we are, while gender is how society tries to categorize and organize those identities.
  18. In which countries are you looking to draw that conclusion?
  19. New genders are constructed for or by people who have a gender identity that isn't limited to the recognized or established genders.