“Transgender non binary”. “They go by different pronouns”? What does all that even mean? It just sounds weird and made up mumbo jumbo to rationalize and accept the weirdness. Hey I’m all for weird or queer but such terms or life choices will never become normal. I’m sorry if that offends you and him/her/it. See, I don’t even know what the whole pronoun thing is. As a transgender non binary what pronoun do I use? This is all just rediculous. If he/her/it wants to do their thing so be it, great, more power to them/him/her. Government is doing what they can to protect their freedoms but they/it will never be part of normal society or what 90% (using your own analytics) of the rest of us are willing to tolerate.
Let me "mansplain" it to you.
Our society has developed a social mindset that "all people are special"-- even if they aren't.
If you look around and realize you aren't truly "special"---- examples-- run really fast, are super smart, incredibly handsome or beautiful, can throw a football 75 yards, can sing like Adele or play and instrument like Slash, then people start trying to find OTHER ways to be special. Some write books or poetry. Some become Navy SEALs. Some start companies or invent things. You see where I'm going?
Then some appeal to a niche in society. Like "the island of misfit toys" so to speak. They do this on social media.
See, the misfit toys used to be called "outsider" or "odd duck" or just "different"-- and they thought they were alone in the world. Then social media came around and linked all the misfit tiys together-- forming their own club. This is why stupid fvcking games like cornhole and pickleball got popular..... (it's OK to like stupid games).
Somewhere in there, we began giving status points to people. The SUPER achievers were given status. Then the marginalized groups were given status.
So if you weren't SUPER talented or apecial in some way, or you couldn't claim membership into a marginalized group- then you weren't given status. There was no board meeting that decided who would be granted this status-- it was just sort of decided by the influencers in our social system.
Marginalized groups like minorities were given status. Then a pecking order was established. A "ladder of hierarchy" so to speak. At the top of that ladder were certain races and religions. At the bottom of the ladder were white, christian males.
Then "marginalized" groups that defined who they were by their sexual orientation piped up and were given status on this ladder. Often times there's intersection confusion as to whom gets to occupy what rung on this ladder at any particular time.
Example-- a white male cop shoots a black assailant. The white cop is immediately questioned, called a racist, and must prove his shoot was beyond any reproach.
VS--
A white hetero woman being beaten by a black trans. Well, we must first ask "what did that white woman do to deserve being beaten?"
Intersectional problems occur on this ladder that rarely make the headlines-
Example- Jewish trans woman shoots black gay male activist. <----- who wins the battle of intersectional victim hood here? The media doesn't know-- so they don't report on it.
Example- White kid buys gun to prove how easy it is, then shoots up a bank. His writings and motive for doing so hits headlines within a few days of the incident.
A trans woman shoots up a private religious school, writes a manifesto, and the FBI refuses to release it, calling is a "roadmap to total destruction".
Now you see how the ladder of social hierarchy works.
Kids know they will get special attention, more attention, and social status as a "victim" if they identify with anything other than their XX or XY chromosome at birth.
Does this help you a little bit Bud?