There’s this rising narrative going around that if you ask specifically for a CIS partner, you’re a transphobe. That could be true for some people but it’s not fundamentally related to bigotry. Moreover, this narrative, the “if you only want a CIS mate then that is prejudice” is trampling on one of the most important rights a person can have: the right to choose who they want to get intimate with.

First of all, transmen are in fact men and transwomen are in fact women. Let’s get that out of the way. This isn’t a foot in the door for “trans this really isn’t that” narratives. What this is about it is the freedom to choose who you want to be intimate with. That right is sancrosanct, it is absolutely inviolable.

And yes, there’s plenty of issues that make transgender dating a special issue. If someone reveals their TG status they can be open to hate crimes and even deadly violence. However all marginalized groups are special in their own way. As a black man I don’t think it’s racist if a woman says she doesn’t want to date a black man. I face oppression, too. My class is special in its own way. One group isn’t more special than the other. None of us have the right to force ourselves upon those who don’t want to be intimate with us, even by omitting who we really are.

Really, if you have to deceive or hide who you are in order to date someone, do you really want to date them? I wouldn’t. That’s not fair to you and you’re denying them their right to choose who they want. What do you think will happen when the person wants a CIS mate and they discover the truth? They’re going to get pissed and dump you. Now you have to shame them into staying with you: “If you loved me for real this wouldn’t bother you”… that’s not going to convince anyone. They’re either going to leave, or they’ll resent you forever. That’s just how it is. You can be mad at that but that’s about as effective as protesting the rising of the sun. There’s just no way to win once you’ve gone down that road.

“I want a CIS mate” is not the same as “trans women are not women” - one is a preference, the other is harmful prejudice. On the flip side CIS people who do date trans people shouldn’t be shamed for their choices either. A man should be free to date a trans woman and not catch flak about it. Trans people should be able to be openly trans and not face hate speech or threats to their well-being. This, without any exception whatsoever.

The fundamental fact is when you shame or worse abrogate people’s right to choose who they want to get intimate with, it’s not going to end well for you. All you’re going to get is people who resent being coerced or bullied to date people they don’t want to. And that’s not something the country, or the world, will ever put up with. Except that right now, most people don’t imagine they can be labeled a transphobe just for wanting a CIS mate. And unpopular opinion: that should be nipped in the bud.

44 points
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1: not unpopular

2: if this is a scenario you are actually seeing in real life, you should find better people to hang out with.

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16 points

It’s stuff I encounter online. But stuff online festers for years, and then erupts in real life. MAGA and QANON, for instance, was festering from USENET in the 1990s and forums thereafter. I watched it happen. Everyone ignored it, and now look where we are. MAGA of course is a whole different scale of true horror but still. This mentality I’m mentioning is festering. All cancers begin this way.

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11 points

I dunno man, now days more than ever I consider online discourse to be an alternate reality. Sure a lot of what you said is valid in terms of it giving fringe politics an echo chamber and cohesion. That aside I rarely see even common stuff like what you mentioned in the OP manifest meaningfully irl. I’ve seen the “only wanting to date Cis is bigotry” online too and not once irl and thats including discussing similar with trans people.

Just my 2c, I see a lot of frustration from online discourse bleed into irl when it should be left there for the most part.

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2 points

Yes, a lot of what you’re saying is true. Most trans people I know online and IRL aren’t like that. But I just wanted to speak up in case another looney fringe idea catches on. Everyone knew the politics of Trump or DeSantis politics was even loonier by an order of magnitude - and look what’s going on now. I’ll give you this - I hope my fears are overblown. I am not invested in “I told you so” yet again.

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-2 points

I saw some people online saying Nazis were good.

Unpopular opinion: I think Nazis are bad.

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-24 points

You need to go outside and touch grass, holy cow you’re online too much.

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-8 points

As always lemmy’s gotta dogpile. You’re basically right though. Most people on lemmy don’t seem to interact with normal people on a day to day basis. Nobody in the real world talks or gives 2 cents about this shit. (that’s a figurative nobody, not a literal nobody)

If you’re running into people shaming you about “CIS” this or that…you’re lookin’ in the wrong places. Most normal people are male or female, and want the opposite sex partner.

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-2 points
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Deleted by creator
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-3 points

This is the reality of life. The chronically online don’t understand that.

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3 points
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Just put “want to one day have kids” in your profile, then get over it.

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Adoption is a thing…

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-6 points

Truth. But I have to assume if they want someone CIS it’s for the fertility. Otherwise why care?

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People can be CIS but also infertile. So, I mean, if you’re going for a specific meaning it might be better to be as specific as you can if the goal is to filter out what you’re not looking for. “Would like to have kids of my own” is a fairly easy way of being that bit more specific without being crass about it.

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-2 points

Just not a thing most normal people want to resort to.

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10 points

Speaking as one who did adopt a child, hooboy, that is WAY off. Adoption is wildly expensive. Worse yet, remember the movie Constantine where he visited hell? That scene describes the *bureaucracy *that you have to go through to adopt a child. And that’s domestic adoption, let’s not talk about a child from overseas.

https://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2021/10/adopt-baby-cost-process-hard/620258/

“Adoption is a thing” vastly, tragically understates the difficulty involved in adopting a child. If you want kids and are fertile, it’s beyond insanely easier to make a baby of your own.

And that’s before we get into the ethics (or lack thereof) of shaming someone who wants biological kids of their own.

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-3 points

Trans men and AFAB non-binary people are trans and many can have children.

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3 points

With a CIS HET partner? Or…

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2 points
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This post don’t specify the sex or gender of the person seeking a mate.

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83 points

on the flip side, people should be able to say they want a trans partner.

real talk though, no one should be deceiving anyone if they plan to start a healthy relationship with someone, period.

I’m stealth trans in public and don’t feel it’s necessary to come out to every one i meet or even work with. But if I’m flirting with someone or know someone has an interest in me, I respect them enough to let them know.

it all comes back to the idea that you don’t need to know what someone’s genitals look like unless you plan on fucking them.

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42 points

I think I that’s a concept that cis straight people don’t get. You don’t come out once. You have a big coming out, once, to friends and family. Then every new person you meet, you decide whether to tell them outright, whether to subtly tell them, or whether you don’t tell them. Each time, you’re considering if you’ll meet them again, if it serves a purposes of it feels like hiding, your safety, whether it will affect their opinion of you and so be to your disadvantage etc. It’s tiring.

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5 points

Is it not more tiring to come out to someone you’re more emotionally invested in, though?

There’s obviously the safety issues that the OP mentioned, but wouldn’t it be easier to not have to deal with an eventual reveal?

Why invest the time and energy into someone who has that much higher a chance that they’ll deny you when you come out?

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8 points

Yes, but then you would have to come out to everyone first time.

Hi, here’s your coffee. Thanks, I’m trans.

Hi X, meet my friend Y. Hi Y, I’m gay, my name is X, nice to meet you. Umm, I’m not sure I needed to know that.

What about a work colleague that you can’t avoid but they are new and you don’t know how they will react.

That’s the point. The big coming out is for people you are emotionally invested in at that point in time. Then you have to make snap decisions and considered decisions for every new person forever.

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5 points

I have a pretty small sample size, but it feels like the next generation doesn’t feel that way. My 13-year-old daughter is queer and so are some of her friends and it doesn’t occur to them most of the time that her peers might judge them for it. We did have to take my daughter out of school for severe bullying- because they were calling her a furry (she committed the sin of wearing spiked collars) and spreading rumors that she was racist. She got nothing for being queer.

She’s doing an English project right now and she had to pick an event from history and talk about how it impacted today and I suggested Stonewall. She was pretty baffled about the whole thing. She understood conceptually that being queer was so hated and so dangerous in the 1960s, but she really had no idea.

I told her yesterday about how, even when I was in middle school in 1989-1991, there were no kids out of the closet. When I got to high school, there were a handful of very brave kids who were out and they got beaten up a lot. There was one trans girl and that was because she could pass and didn’t let most people know. Same-gendered couples were not allowed at prom. Even kids (and teachers who could get fired for it) who were undeniably queer hid it from everyone. Two people in my friend circle who were so gay they were on fire didn’t admit it until college. Both times, it was a “well, duh” moment when they came out, but that’s how scared they were to come out.

And, of course, if they did come out, they couldn’t get married if they found someone they loved.

She doesn’t know how bad it all was even when I was a kid and I’m so glad of that. I just hope Trump doesn’t turn it all around.

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9 points

on the flip side, people should be able to say they want a trans partner.

Yes, absolutely, I mentioned that part already. Freedom goes both ways. No one should be shamed for choosing to date a trans partner.

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10 points

Chasers suck for trans people big time. This is a logical fallacy. It’s different if a trans person says they’re only doing T4T to a cis person.

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9 points

Can you elaborate on this? Is it the usual fetishism (similar to what Asian women often experience) or is it different?

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4 points

on the flip side, people should be able to say they want a trans partner.

Eh, either or. Depends on user experience and if “What do you want” is going to take less time to fill than “What don’t you want”. But there should definitely be something ensuring people’s time isn’t wasted or feelings hurt because sexual preferences aren’t equally considered.

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5 points

That last sentence really hit the nail on the head.

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-33 points

“I want to announce that I have no intention of allowing myself to get to know a certain type of person”

“Why are people treating me like I’m a certain type of person, who people wouldn’t like to get to know?”

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16 points

Freedom goes both ways.

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8 points

You have to date someone to get to know them? That’s kind of sad.

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11 points
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Not me. I’ll happily get to know and befriend LGBTQ. And go vigilante if I see them being threatened. I have a 12 year old son and if he wants to date a transgirl she’s welcome in my house as his girlfriend.

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10 points
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  1. I respect other people’s expressions of individuality, romantic preferences and unique sexuality.

  2. I apply broad negative labels on people who don’t want all the same things that I want from a partner.

Pick one.

It’s possible to support people without being romantically, physically and/or sexually attracted to them. For example, a straight man might not want a lesbian woman for a partner (and, you know, she probably doesn’t want him either), but they can still support each other, believe in solidarity, be friends and allies to each other and acknowledge each other’s fundamental human rights.

I genuinely don’t know if I would be attracted to a trans woman (I’m happy to keep an open mind but I haven’t been in a situation where it’s come up in my life), but I do believe in trans rights, I love my trans friends, and I want them (and everyone else) to find happiness in their own skin and be able to live as the person they want to be without some asshole politicians in red ties telling them they cannot. I don’t think it’s hard.

In my opinion that’s not a bad thing, it’s a good thing.

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19 points

Getting to know someone and dating them are two very different things.

I know lots of people that I have absolutely no desire to date. That doesn’t mean I’m bigoted against them.

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8 points

Are you purposefully distorting their words? Since when getting to know is the same as possibly having sex, having a baby and get married?

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Unpopular Opinion

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