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Saturday, April 20, 2024

Ele Ludemann: What is a woman?


What is a woman?

That is a question that few, if any, would have asked, and few, if any, would have had to think about a few years ago.

Now it’s a politically loaded question, and one which some find difficult to answer.

One who doesn’t is J.K. Rowling who nails it in this explanation to her critics:

You’ve asked me several questions on this thread and accused me of avoiding answering, so here goes. I believe a woman is a human being who belongs to the sex class that produces large gametes.

It’s irrelevant whether or not her gametes have ever been fertilised, whether or not she’s carried a baby to term, irrelevant if she was born with a rare difference of sexual development that makes neither of the above possible, or if she’s aged beyond being able to produce viable eggs.

She is a woman and just as much a woman as the others. I don’t believe a woman is more or less of a woman for having sex with men, women, both or not wanting sex at all. I don’t think a woman is more or less of a woman for having a buzz cut and liking suits and ties, or wearing stilettos and mini dresses, for being black, white or brown, for being six feet tall or a little person, for being kind or cruel, angry or sad, loud or retiring.

She isn’t more of a woman for featuring in Playboy or being a surrendered wife, nor less of a woman for designing space rockets or taking up boxing.

What makes her a woman is the fact of being born in a body that, assuming nothing has gone wrong in her physical development (which, as stated above, still doesn’t stop her being a woman), is geared towards producing eggs as opposed to sperm, towards bearing as opposed to begetting children, and irrespective of whether she’s done either of those things, or ever wants to.

Womanhood isn’t a mystical state of being, nor is it measured by how well one apes sex stereotypes. We are not the creatures either porn or the Bible tell you we are. Femaleness is not, as trans woman Andrea Chu Long wrote, ‘an open mouth, an expectant asshole, blank, blank eyes,’ nor are we God’s afterthought, sprung from Adam’s rib.

Women are provably subject to certain experiences because of our female bodies, including different forms of oppression, depending on the cultures in which we live.

When trans activists say ‘I thought you didn’t want to be defined by your biology,’ it’s a feeble and transparent attempt at linguistic sleight of hand.

Women don’t want to be limited, exploited, punished, or subject to other unjust treatment because of their biology, but our being female is indeed defined by our biology. It’s one material fact about us, like having freckles or disliking beetroot, neither of which are representative of our entire beings, either.

Women have billions of different personalities and life stories, which have nothing to do with our bodies, although we are likely to have had experiences men don’t and can’t, because we belong to our sex class.

Some people feel strongly that they should have been, or wish to be seen as, the sex class into which they weren’t born. Gender dysphoria is a real and very painful condition and I feel nothing but sympathy for anyone who suffers from it.

I want them to be free to dress and present themselves however they like and I want them to have exactly the same rights as every other citizen regarding housing, employment and personal safety.

I do not, however, believe that surgeries and cross-sex hormones literally turn a person into the opposite sex, nor do I believe in the idea that each of us has a nebulous ‘gender identity’ that may or might not match our sexed bodies. I believe the ideology that preaches those tenets has caused, and continues to cause, very real harm to vulnerable people.

I am strongly against women’s and girls’ rights and protections being dismantled to accommodate trans-identified men, for the very simple reason that no study has ever demonstrated that trans-identified men don’t have exactly the same pattern of criminality as other men, and because, however they identify, men retain their advantages of speed and strength.

In other words, I think the safety and rights of girls and women are more important than those men’s desire for validation.

I sincerely hope that answers your questions. You may still disagree, but as I hope this shows, I’m more than happy to have this debate.

Standing up for women and girls is not transphobic.

It is possible to do that without fearing, or hating, trans people.

They have a right to dress how they wish and be who they want to be but those rights do’t trump others’ rights to dignity and safety.

People can change their appearance and their names, they can also mangle language by adopting different pronouns, but they can’t change biological reality.



Stating that isn’t hating any individuals or groups, it’s stating facts, as J.K. Rowling has done so well.

Ele Ludemann is a North Otago farmer and journalist, who blogs HERE - where this article was sourced.

8 comments:

Barend Vlaardingerbroek said...

The question posed is more easily answered with reference to genetics. In the higher Vertebrates (birds and Mammals), sex is determined at fertilisation by the sex chromosomes. All female egg cells carry an 'X' while half the sperm cells carry an 'X' and half carry a 'Y'. X + X makes a girl and X + Y a boy.
There are rare instances where this neat system doesn't quite work, e.g. when the fertilised egg has only a single 'X' or when it has two (or even more) X's. However, to claim that these exceptions overturn the X/Y rule is like saying that the appearance of 6 fingers on each hand overturns the rule that humans have 5 fingers on each hand.

Anonymous said...

If you have , or had, a prostate you are male.
Otherwise you are female.
It's that simple.

Martin Hanson said...

Responding to Barend Vlaardingerbroek
At the risk of being nit-picking but in the interest of accuracy, whereas in mammals it is indeed the male that produces 2 kinds of gamete (males are the heterogametic sex), in birds it's the other way round, females being the heterogametic sex. Also in Lepidoptera (butterflies and moths)

Kawena said...


A man can sew the seed, and then walk away, and in some cases does, but a woman is the one who carries the baby (assuming that there is going to be one). We live in a free society, but there is no such thing as complete freedom. There is such a thing as responsibility though, and some in society wish to forget, or ignore. I will believe a man will become a woman post-surgery when he can have a baby. And maybe the next Pope will be a Protestant!
Kevan

Barend Vlaardingerbroek said...

Thanks Martin. I should have started the third sentence, "In Mammals, all female egg cells......." I guess I'd forgotten about birds by then because we ain't birds :)

Anonymous said...

The reality is, this is about the degradation of women. Variations on granny bashing. Invisibility.

In January , driving a family car ,a VW golf, I took myself on an adventure. Self drive around Tasmania. No man involved. Just me, female, late 60s, 163 cm, grey hair, confident driver.
Just as well, as there are a lot of tourists not competent in driving huge SUVs and caravans/trailers /motorhomes in Tas.
At one tourist spot with extremely limited parking, I parked in a vacant, clearly marked, plenty wide enough carpark. The several remaining neighbouring carparks were taken up by a huge stationery vehicle and its accommodation trailer both way bigger in all dimensions than my vehicle.For reasons unknown the driver then reversed into me, his trailer hitting the driver door, me inside. That was terrifying. He stopped only because of the commotion of others.

He had no reversing lights and no spotter. Yet he beĺlowed at me (on repeat) in the car park area, that while he didn't know I was there, it was my fault because I should have known he was going to reverse. He was considerably bigger and younger than me waving his arms around then joined by (dare I say it) a screeching female companion endorsing him.That too was terrifying but I had the presence of mind to photograph his number plates and other details.

Insurance were not interested in pursuing because I did not have his name.

I filed a police report and followed it up twice only to be told by a male polIce officer it was a minor accident and they had filed no action. As all vehicles come into Tasmania on the ferry it would have been easy enough to identify this driver.

Outcome: despite simply parking my car properly to visit a tourist attraction, it was ok for the driver to improperly reverse into me and cause damage in parking a rig that he seemed not able to manage, scare the living daylights out of me, abuse me for his error, and for insurance and police simplyto note and discard.

Granny bashing.

Invisibility.

The degradation of women.




Anonymous said...

No-one has a "right" to dress as they wish. In sacred scripture God himself condemns it: A woman shall not wear a man's garment, nor shall a man put on a woman's cloak, for whoever does these things is an abomination to the Lord your God.

Social roles matter and are part of a healthy society. We are not all meant to be equal, rather we are meant to play complementary roles that bring out the best of us: masculine and feminine aligning with the body we are born into.

We can be equal partners with different roles in the partnership. It is the best thing for society and for the raising of children. For healthy, harmonious relationships.

Anonymous said...

Sweetie, when you know what period pains are then you can call yourself a woman. Not before and count yourself lucky.