When people say “trans rights,” they often smuggle in the conclusion before the argument has even begun. The phrase suggests a class of basic liberties being withheld from a minority population. In most liberal democracies, that is not the real dispute. Trans-identifying people already possess the same ordinary civil rights as everyone else: to vote, work, speak, worship, associate, and live free from assault or arbitrary exclusion. The real conflict begins when contested demands are framed as rights claims in order to place them beyond criticism.
That distinction matters. A right is not the same thing as a demand for access, validation, or institutional compliance. Female sports were not created out of prejudice, but out of recognition that sex differences matter in strength, speed, endurance, and physical risk. Female shelters, prisons, and changing rooms were built on the same logic. They exist because privacy, safety, fairness, and dignity are not imaginary goods. They are concrete protections, won through long struggle, and they do not cease to matter because a new vocabulary has been imposed on the debate.
Once this is seen clearly, much of the rhetoric falls apart. If a male-bodied person demands entry into a female space, the objection is not that he lacks human worth. It is that women have sex-based boundaries, and those boundaries exist for reasons. If a parent objects to gender ideology in schools, that is not the denial of anyone’s basic rights. It is the defense of parental authority in an area of profound moral and developmental consequence. If a citizen resists compelled pronouns or refuses to treat metaphysical claims about sex as binding fact, that is not violence. It is a refusal to surrender conscience and language to activist pressure.
“When one group’s ‘rights’ require another group to surrender privacy, fairness, or conscience, the conflict is no longer about equality. It is about power.”
This is where the phrase “trans rights” does its real work. It pre-loads the moral verdict. It makes disagreement sound like oppression before the argument has even begun. Once that framing is accepted, women’s boundaries become cruelty, parental caution becomes hatred, and democratic disagreement becomes abuse. But this is not a serious use of rights language. It is a way of insulating contested claims from scrutiny by wrapping them in the prestige of civil rights.
None of this means every accommodation is unreasonable, or that every dispute is zero-sum. Ordinary civility and equal treatment in public life are not difficult standards to defend. But when one group’s claimed “rights” require another group to surrender privacy, fairness, language, or the right to maintain sex-based boundaries, the conflict has moved beyond equal citizenship. It has become a struggle over whose moral framework will rule, and whose objections will be permitted to count.
That is why the language matters. “Trans rights” sounds like a plea for equal liberty. In many of the most contentious cases, it is something else: a demand that others yield, affirm, and rearrange long-standing social boundaries on command. When women refuse that erasure, or parents refuse that indoctrination, or citizens refuse that compelled speech, they are not violating rights. They are defending their own.




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March 19, 2026 at 7:08 am
tildeb
rhetorical inversion, or the practice of simply asserting the precise opposite of the truth, is a key component to and a red flag of ‘progressive’ ideology hard at work. This worldview is rooted in the postmodernist conviction that reality is subordinate to language. To make something true, therefore, one need only assert it. And this is precisely what we see in practice all the time.
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March 19, 2026 at 7:52 am
tildeb
Every one of us who uses inverted language, who goes along with the linguistic capture, cedes ground and grants legitimacy to those who wish to capture it for their own ends. For example, those of us calling men who try to present as women ‘trans women’ have already ceded ground to the linguistic capture of the lie, that one really can change sex by using words. (‘Trans women’, by definition, cannot be women, otherwise they would not be ‘trans’.) This inversion is straight out of Orwell’s 1984 (‘War is peace’, ‘Freedom is slavery’, ‘Ignorance is strength’, and so on) and put into practice perhaps unintentionally by those misguided people who believe they are being kind and tolerant doing so but who, in effect, become the tools of promoting and spreading what isn’t true in service of a totalitarian ideology. Those who identify with the lie are themselves tyrants when they attempt to impose the untrue inversion as truth and demand others submit to it.
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March 19, 2026 at 7:56 am
The Arbourist
It’s tough going, a recent management change at my work at the University means that I have a new female boss that goes by he/him pronouns.
I don’t use them, and I won’t use them. No one has the right to make me lie to promulgate their world view.
It’s nerve wracking on one hand and infuriating on the other.
I don’t want to lose this good job, but on the other hand I will not perpetuate a lie that is harmful for all involved.
:(
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