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Tuesday, September 7, 2021

Peter Klevius to feminists who want "women's human rights": Sharia islam already has it - and most feminists are muslims!

Peter Klevius, the world's foremost expert on sex segregation (sad, isn't it): Why not the original truly anti-fascist and anti-sexist Human Rights (1948) instead of feminism?!

If you want full Human Rights for women, then simply follow the anti-fascist and Universal Human Rights declaration of 1948* (UDHR) which clearly states that sex ought not to be used as a reason for differing Human Rights.

* Fascism is creeping back trying to stab the original UDHR's emphasis on the (negative) rights of the individual no matter of sex etc., by altering and conflating - or in the case of islam just abandoning - UDHR.


 

Peter Klevius, the world's foremost expert on sex segregation (sad isn't it): Stop using the feminist "gender" for sex! It's sexist*, it's against Human Rights, and it hurts many people, especially girls - and spreads hatred against half of the world's population.

* Feminism is fascistoid sexist politics, i.e. unlike most political parties it doesn't rest on an ideology for whomever happens to like it, but for a particular biological class (i.e. sex) of people. In this sense it's even worse than classic fascism, although both rest on similar (i.e. anti-democratic) use of state power.


Peter Klevius drawing from 1979 (do note the metal appearance of the DNA-ladder). 
 

Who is Peter Klevius? What has he achieved?
Anthropology: 'Out-of-Africa' evolution is a similar hoax as 'Piltdown man'. 1) A continent could never achieve human evolution. Africa has no fossil evidence - Homo erectus just suddenly popped up without predecessors - which fact may delight creationists. Moreover, the only Homos (floresiensis, luzoniensis) that bridge the gap are almost as far you can get from Africa. 2) No ancient genetic evidence points to Africa, but rather the opposite, i.e. that the oldest DNA in modern populations in Africa belong to a mongoloid (i.e. cold-adapted) phenotype.
Sex segregation: Violates the original Universat anti-fascist Human Rights of 1948 by classifying humans in categories with differing rights.
Consciousness: Peter Klevius' evolution formula (1981) and 'stone example' (1992) set the foundation for EMAH (1994) which explains how the brain works  with Thalamus as the 'awareness display'.
Social anthropology: In 1981 Peter Klevius introduced the concept 'expanded demand for resources' as an analytical tool for a new classification of human societies which later on was elaborated on in 1992. In this process Peter Klevius was "supervised" by Georg Henrik von Wright (Wittgenstein's personally chosen successor at Cambridge).

Although Google correctly translates the Swedish word 'kön' (from PIE 'gen', but 'kin' in the Swedish creole dialect called English) as 'sex' in a one word search, Google translate anyway keeps translating it as 'gender' (compare Peter Klevius 2000 article Warning for Feminism below).


Some comparison of feminism with classic fascism:


Feminism's origins are complex and include many contradictory viewpoints, ultimately centered around a mythos of feminine (matriarchal) rebirth from oppressive patriarchy.

Feminism is a form of political behavior marked by obsessive preoccupation with victimhood and by compensatory cults of unity, energy, and difference from masculinism, in which a mass-based movement of committed essentialists, working in uneasy but effective collaboration with traditional elites (e.g. universities, religion, state institutions etc.), abandons democratic liberties such as e.g. the views of men and women who don't fit the feminist agenda against what it assigns as "patriarchy".

Although feminism flirts with populism in an attempt to generate mass support, it may also be seen as an elitist ideology (Judith Butler & Co).

Feminism seeks strength through unity.

Like fascism, feminism often manifests a belief in racial (i.e. "womanhood") "purity" or a "master sex", usually synthesized with some variant of sexism or bigotry of a demonized other (the "patriarch"), and the idea of "sex ("gender") purity" (compare Butler's "gender repetitions") against a perceived other.

Regardless of whether negative or positive policies are used, they are susceptible to abuse because the genetic (i.e. gender, which means opposite something else) selection criteria are determined by whichever group has political power at the time.

Like fascism, feminist ideology inevitably opens up for the violatation of basic human rights of the other, i.e. what Peter Klevius calls the lack of an emrgency brake at the point of equality.

Because feminism is about a biological* class of people (with varying definitions from fullblown biological women to "assigned" almost transvestites) it differs entirely from other political ideologies but has a lot in common with oldfashioned racism.

* "Gendered women" occupy a contested borderline.  

Just like islam, feminism can't stand Human Rights, so where islam went for "islamic human rights" (Saudi based and steered OIC) feminism wants "women's human rights".


Why all feminists, but not Peter Klevius, are sexist and some are transphobic


Naomi Cunningham (2020): 'Butler sets up an opposition between “trans-exclusionary feminists” and “a feminist position opposing transphobia.” But that assumes – without troubling to prove – a proposition that neither I nor any other gender critical feminist I’ve ever spoken to would accept: that not accepting that trans women are literally women is necessarily transphobic.  All the GC feminists I know oppose transphobia. We don’t want to exclude trans women from the spaces where we are undressed and vulnerable because they are trans, but because they are biologically male. They are members of the half of humanity that poses a far greater threat to women than the other half. We are taught from early childhood that men are a source of danger. We are told it is our responsibility to keep ourselves safe from the ever-present risk of male violence; with the barely-concealed message that it’s our fault if we fail. We learn to limit our freedoms. We try not to be out alone late at night. We learn to be alert to the possibility of being followed; not to make eye contact; to shut down drunken attempts to chat us up without provoking male rage; to walk in the middle of the road so that it’s harder to ambush us from the shadows; to conduct a lightning risk assessment of every other passenger on the night bus; to clutch our keys in one hand in case we need a weapon; to carry a pepper spray, or a personal alarm. And we learn the hard way that these fears that have been deliberately inculcated in us are justified. We are followed, leered at, flashed, groped, cat-called; and that’s those of us who get off lightly. Every woman has stories of male abuse.'

Peter Klevius, the world's foremost authority on sex segregation (sad, isn't it): Heterosexual attraction is the trigger, and Human Rights is the safety lock. However, neither of these are seriously considered but rather avoided - despite the fact that there is no other logical tools for analyzing and assessing sex segregation. Use the same logic that Butler uses to blur the concept of 'sex' with "gender", to clarify it. I.e. why should it be necessary to call a person with a functioning penis a woman just because the person wants to do "women stuff" if, according to Human Rights, sex shouldn't matter?! Btw, some 30 years ago, after having read 'Gender Trouble', Peter Klevius asked: "Why do you call yourself a feminist, Judith Butler?" OK, she slowly changed her views and became a real feminist. So Peter Klevius now asks Naomi Cunningham and her pals: Why do you call yourself feminist, instead of Humanist (in the meaning every Humans' Rights)?! If we should only have freed "blacks" from slavery, then nothing would have stopped "blacks" from keeping slaves (compare e.g. Haiti), right!

Finlayson et al., 2018: There is clearly a difference between the experience of a child who is treated by others in way that are characteristic of boys
and also feels like a boy, and a child who is treated by others in ways that are characteristic of boys whilst feeling that they are really a girl.

Peter Klevius, the world's foremost authority on sex segregation (sad, isn't it): "Treated by others"?! You mean by Human Rightsphobics, right! Just like homophobics and other -phobics directed towards individuals.


Take the example of the world's number one football woman, Pia Sundhage* from Sweden:

* Pia Sundhage is a Swedish football coach and former professional player. She is the current head coach of the Brazil women's national football team. As a player, Sundhage played most of her career as a forward and retired as the top scorer for her national team, but she also had stints playing as a midfielder and a sweeper. Sundhage was the head coach of the United States women's national team from 2008 to 2012 and led the team to two Olympic gold medals and a silver medal at the World Cup. Pia Sundhage also served as a scout for the United States gold winning football team during the 2004 Olympics. Her success led to her winning the 2012 FIFA World Coach of the Year. Sundhage later became the head coach of her native Sweden women's national football team from 2012 to 2017, winning an Olympic silver medal in 2016. She was voted 6th best player ever in the world so together with her couching career it may be safe to declare her the modern football queen where Lily Parr was the queen of the past.

 


As a girl in the 1960s and 70s Pia Sundhage had to pretend being a boy to be able to play football - not because she wanted to be a boy but because it happened to be boys (due to historical sex segregation) who taught her to love football. And the rules said no girls in a boys team - and there were no girls teams around.

1. First she learned the skills through opportunity structures in a non-sex segregated environment (i.e. home and neighborhood).
2. These skills later on paved the way through a sex segregated environment (i.e. school).
3. If Peter Klevius had relied on any feminist theory or s.c. "gender studies", then the points above and the role of matriarchal sex segregation would never have been revealed.

Pia Sundhage's parents were completely uninterested in football so she had nothing of it from home. It was the neighbor boys - and lack of girls - that introduced her into the magic world of football.

So the reason she turned footballer was a random opportunity structure, i.e. that the neighbor children happened to be boys who loved football and wanted more players.

This is how Pia got her initial football skills which became the opening code that later on helped her crossing the barrier of sex segregation by at school showing off her kicking skills with a baseboll outside the pitch were the boys - but not the girls - played football and one of them observed her and invited her to join in.

At school unlike at home, sex segregation had already segregated the sexes to an extent that made the boys not even thinking of inviting the girls and vice versa. Except when Pia "behaved like a boy".

A feminist approach would have made it impossible to understand Pia Sundhage's problem with sex segregation about playing football - and for Peter Klevius to make his research based on in depth interviews with real life football women. Feminist theory would have eliminated Pia's experience.

Warning for feminism (published in Hufvudstadsbladet 27 September 2000).
by Peter Klevius

For the English reader it may be noted that the original Swedish text uses 'kön' (compare 'gen', 'kin') for sex. In Swedish 'sex' (except for the number 6) only means something sexual and erotic, but in English it also means biological sex .


Despite the currently popular and frenetic feminine 'gender' marking for (biological) sex, we are facing an inevitable and constantly irresistibly progressing global loosening of traditional sex spheres. The sooner we recognize this the better. The simple and obvious idea that sex in the future could mean as little as e.g. skin color today, however, still scares many.

When the assumed difference between the sexes is questioned through the development of society itself, strong counter-reactions arise. Today, this is reflected e.g. in that girls' and women's appearance attributes once again approach the classic transvestite's pursuit of femininity.

Shame on biologism (essentialism) say some feminists, while still asserting (significant) differences This despite the fact that there is a complete lack of longitudinal evidence that man's relatively weak biological sex dimorphism would be necessarily predestining for cultural behavior. The differences within the sexes are significantly greater than between and what is measured in sex comparisons is usually the result of education/lifestyle. The real difference is only statistical and without a definite point of transition.

Although among sexually reproductive organisms there is an evolutionarily implanted attraction that causes males (read sperm) to be attracted by females (read eggs), this does not apply all the time and does not include all males and females. It therefore does not cover what we normally mean by men/women. Erotica is also a vanishingly small or sometimes even absent part of most people's daily lives.


Erotic versatility

Humans can, however, be erotically versatile and exhibit all combinations within and across sex boundaries (is masturbation homosexuality?). This is in fact an example of the declining sex dimorphism of which the most well-known is that humans within their species group have the least size difference between the sexes. And as far as the practical side of reproduction is concerned, today it is almost as easy for a woman to inject sperm alone as for the man to ejaculate them without erotic extravagances. There are also reasons to prepare for the possibility that with the help of genetic engineering in the future we can reproduce asexually. On the other hand, heterosexual attraction is likely to persist as well as the now so underestimated importance of biological kinship. In feminist/socialist rhetoric, it is openly stated that the goal is the death of the patriarch and the dissolution of the family and (paternal?) kinship.

Feminists often point to the white well-to-do middle-aged man as the "patriarchal" norm. However, Martine (you read that right) Rothblatt fits the label, a successful lawyer and satellite contractor involved in the HUGO project. He lives in a typical nuclear family but is a transvestite. In his book The Apartheid of Sex - a Manifesto on the Freedom of Gender, he points out, among other things, the inadequacy of chromosomes and hormone levels for the determination of social gender. More testosterone not only makes a larger proportion of boys but also a smaller proportion of girls more boisterous etc. than all other boys and girls. And why care at all about these types of differences when we do not care about them within the sexes. Gender glasses within e.g. healthcare would effectively exclude those men and women who do not meet the gender norm.


Women prone to violence

One of the biological "truths" that has since been revised over the years is the claim of the man as more aggressive. .That women are clearly more prone to accidents as drivers (Norwegian Road Safety Research) is another little-talked-about fact, but hardly that it depends on biological differences but rather on scanty motor education in youth. the middle-aged white man ... eh, but he had also had to train the most.
The fact that so many men have joined Ferninism can be attributed to the same chauvinism as feminism itself. Men who rely too much on their masculinity may feel fear of an androgynous and gender-insecure world. Logically, different homosexual theories belong to the same backward-looking little save group. Yet a gender-liberated world would also make sexually based sexuality restrictions / prejudices impossible. Note that homosexuality was classified by psychiatrists as a disease as late as the middle of the 20th century.
Where Jean dArc was burned at the stake for dressing in "men's clothes", today's emancipated girl risks falling victim to the psychoanalytically based letter combination GED (gender identity disorder), which in short means that DSM? Diagnostics can declare a girl sick (but not an adult woman) if her gender identity is unclear (sic). No wonder people eat hormones and undergo surgery to meet expectations of pure gender identity.

Today's unusually strong cultural emphasis on supposed gender differences began more than a decade ago with the so-called "Peculiarity?" Feminism "and is reflected i.a. in a completely unique decline in women's athletics results while men improved theirs. Ben Johnson (who was evidently doped) has long ago seen his best times come from at the same time as no one was even close to little Flo? Jos (who was not doped) 100 and 200 m world records. Flo? Jo had few. entered a good points place in the men's 200 m in this year's FM. In the ladies' long jump, you can today win big competitions without even getting close to the 7? Meter limit? something that would hardly have been enough for a medal place in the 80's. The same tendency is repeated in most branches and reflects the culture's view of power performance and femininity and thus also girls' choice of idols and hobbies. When Flo? Jo ran, however, one could imagine how she too tried to mitigate the effect of her muscular body with a plethora of 'female' attributes, ranging from a long (and probably obstructive) hairline to overlong, tightly colored nails.


Feminism as racism

Of all the defensive reactions to gender segregation, feminism is the foremost. Feminism is both racism, ie. essentialist interpretations based on bodily appearance and chauvinism, ie. that the sexes should stick to theirs. A political movement focused on people with first names based mainly on the appearance of the external genitalia. The success of the movement is ultimately determined by how well it suits the state apparatus. Intervention in the family? and family matters have always been on the agenda of the welfare state, and here feminism has provided it with very new intervention material (cf., for example, incest? hysteria, the law on women's peace, etc.). Real feminism, is thus in practice synonymous with state feminism.
Sweden now has a situation where feminism, with the help of the state, further slows down the dissolution of gender segregation. As a result, a painful historical transition period is extended. This is also the reason why Sweden has the world's highest parliamentary representation of women (although no female leader yet? Credit card? Mona came closest »while being last in the OECD when it comes to women in technology? And science. However, this fact is frantically hidden behind" women can ”? core panics and rhetoric about the inadequate man and boys' poorer school performance.
When they advocated quotas for female professors at the Royal Institute of Technology in Stockholm, the only (out of over a hundred!) Female professor flew in the air. And I understand her. She had come there on her own.
Democracy was born in the misogynistic ancient Greece and was refined by the ideal of equality of the revolutions. Women's suffrage was not originally about women but universal suffrage, ie. that all property owners, such as farmhands, workers, etc. was awarded a share in democracy. Finnish women received f.ö. their voting rights three years before Swedish men.


Ultra-reactionary

Feminism is its seemingly progressive appearance, despite being basically an ultra-reactionary. It is the natural reaction of those who, like the GDR residents after the fall of the wall, ended up in a foreign world where previously nurtured skills in an almost totally gender-segregated world were transformed into incompetence in a world where gender no longer guarantees work identity. In contrast to the inhabitants of the GDR, the women in the so-called however, the 'welfare state' has been allocated a sheltered workshop in the public sector.
Wäför e fabor more fun than aunts? ' This authentic and completely spontaneous statement was made by a 4-year-old girl. ? vitamin uptake)? According to the feminist way of looking at it, it is the statistical difference that is interesting. If we further, like feminists, use a so-called qualitative scientific method based on induction, ie. generalization from the small, we need to take the girl seriously and start speculating about the underlying causes.
Do growing up conditions, upbringing and related understandings then remain?

else for the macro? and micro-functions that make up our world. That the number of female students on the lines within the Royal Institute of Technology is the same as the number of girls admitted to closed youth care due to. crime? about 5 out of 100? reflects the development of skills at both ends of the spectrum. Since the boy culture is the most dynamic, it of course also provides more opportunities for cross-border, which explains the higher proportion of criminal boys.
In 1981, I wrote on Hbl / Debatt about the potential for a more resource-efficient society that primarily represented women. Today, feminists no longer demand that men reduce their consumption of resources, but instead that women should have the same consumption of resources.


David vs. Goliath

The image of feminism's Davidic struggle against the patriarch Goliath is today completely misleading. Mention a social science that does not overflow the banks of different and contradictory feminist "perspectives." Like sociobiologists, feminist feminists use cultural traditions to justify their cementing. out them on long-term assignments and life? dangerous wars?

State fernism. is really only a side branch of state socialism. State socialism, through its individual ideology and its bureaucratic self-interest, strengthens the general secularization, which leads to further increased child crime due to diluted parental and family support.


Peter Klevius wrote:

Sunday, September 20, 2020

Peter Klevius*, the world's foremost expert on sex segregation (sad isn't it), obituary over a Jewish female patriarch.


* Why is it that a man seems to be the world's foremost defender of women's rights? The answer is threefold:

1 Only a man can understand biological heterosexual attraction (HSA), i.e. the only thing that essentially segregates the sexes (see below).

2 Only a man feels safe from inferiority complex as long as sex segregation prevails.

3 Only a man can feel a coming inferiority complex in a de-sex segregated world.

Therefore men have all reason to stick to Human Rights equality. As Peter Klevius has always said since his teens: Negative (as opposed to the positive s.c. "Stalin rights") Human Rights for a positive human future.

Do realize the difference between folk feminism which is anti segragation and true feminism which is the very opposite - already from the beginning when resisting the vote etc.

And do realize that while Mills wanted emancipation and Freud didn't. No wonder psychoanalysis became so popular among feminists.

And no feminist seems to be interested in Mary Woolstonecraft's advice on how to not foster daughters to "follies". And the s.c. "glamour feminism" did just that.

In the last chapter in Demand for Resources (1992) called Khoi, San and Bantu, Peter Klevius notes that hunter-gathering societies where the least sexist. With civilization came what Peter Klevius calls classical sex segregation, and with "monotheisms" came religious sexism on top of the classical.


US Supreme Court needs to replace at least half* of its 100% religious members with Atheists so to democratically represent the people

* Even most Jews are Atheists, although orthodox Jew Ruth Bader Ginsburg was certainly not..

Peter Klevius 'Woman' from 1979

 Does the Human Right to 'freedom of religion' really mean freedom to violate Human Rights as e.g. islamic sharia (OIC) does?!

Anna-Karin Wyndham is a Swedish example of the female patriarchy 2020
From a headline February 11, 2020

Precisly because Peter Klevius is a defender of the most basic of Human Right, he is called an "islamophobe" because islam can't stand Human Rights equality.
Peter Klevius is offended by muslims' extreme injustice (sharia), and asks for more fairness.

Islam's schizophrenia

Islam resides between the roof of the Saudi dictator family/OIC, and the floor of Muslim Brotherhood. And the "house of Saud" wants to broom the floor, while MB wants to take down the roof.

Muslims have an overwhelming problem if they want to follow islam while living in a civilized society based on Human
rights equality.

Peter Klevius, the world's foremost expert on sex segregation (sad isn't it), asks for your help because he doesn't see any other biological difference between men and women than the onesided evolutionary heterosexual attraction that Peter Klevius seems to be the only one talking about but everyone knows about. So do you see something that Peter Klevius doesn't?

But don't fall in the usual trap by pointing to non-relational differences. Menstruating, delivering and feeding a baby, etc. are not relational. And although heterosexual attraction is only implanted in the male's brain, it's directly dependent on the female. And it affects all women, incl. prepubertal girls and centenary old ladies, precisely because how it outlines the future of the former and the history of the latter.

As Tertullian, "the founder of Western theology" said to women who wanted to abandon heterosexual attraction by marrying Christ: "It's a sport of nature."  

And if a lesbian woman's body attracts "the male gaze", i.e. heterosexual attraction, she has no other option than covering it in a burqa-like package - but without becoming a muslim because sharia would kill her lesbianism.   

However, if we want to live in a civilized world based on Human Rights equality, i.e. not segregating between humans, then we need to release us from the unnesseccary, stupid and destructive gender prison of sex segregation, and the one sex that lacks sensitivity for heterosexual attraction has to decide whether or when it wants to have anything to do with it. And do remember, we healthy men are always there for you - but not for cheating. So be responsible.

The seemingly seamless connection between heterosexual attraction and reproduction is the mirage that a disastrous sex segregation has been built on.

When will start educating children about heterosexual attraction and sex segregation? 



Google seems not to have a clue about heterosexual attractio. This is Google's first on the subject: There are several types of sexual orientation; for example: Heterosexual. People who are heterosexual are romantically and physically attracted to members of the opposite sex: Heterosexual males are attracted to females, and heterosexual females are attracted to males. Heterosexuals are sometimes called "straight."

Peter Klevius: No wonder girls are confused when they don't get any adequate sex education at all.

Peter Klevius wrote:


Thursday, March 14, 2013

Klevius sex and gender tutorial


Klevius' proposal to bright minded and non-biased readers: Do read EMAH, i.e. how continuous integration in Thalamus of complex neural patterns without the assistance of one or infinite "Homunculus" constitutes the basis for memory and "consciousness".

Klevius quest of the day: What's the difference between the Pope and Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg?


Klevius hint: It's all about 'not sameness' and Human Rights! Human Rights IS 'sameness' stupid!


When God was created he was made like Adam.

When the basic idea of Universal Human Rights was created it was made like Adam AND Eve.

And for you who think heterosexual attraction, i.e. that women are sexier than men, could be (exc)used as a reason for depriving women of legal sameness. Please, do think again!And read Klevius Sex and Gender Tutorial below - if you can!




                           The Plan of God


A Cardinal, a Pope and a Justice "from medieval times"





Keith O'Brien has reiterated the Catholic Church's continued opposition to civil partnerships and suggested that there should be no laws that "facilitate" same-sex relationships, which he claimed were "harmful", arguing that “The empirical evidence is clear, same-sex relationships are demonstrably harmful to the medical, emotional and spiritual wellbeing of those involved, no compassionate society should ever enact legislation to facilitate or promote such relationships, we have failed those who struggle with same-sex attraction and wider society by our actions.”

Four male members of the Scottish Catholic clergy  allegedly claim that Keith O'Brien had abused his position as a member of the church hierarchy by making unwanted homosexual advances towards them in the 1980s.

Keith O'Brien criticized the concept of same-sex marriage saying it would shame the United Kingdom and that promoting such things would degenerate society further.


Pope Francis, aka Jorge Bergoglio: Same-sex is a destructive pretension against the plan of God. We are not talking about a mere bill, but rather a machination of the Father of Lies that seeks to confuse and deceive the children of God." He has also insisted that adoption by gay and lesbian people is a form of discrimination against children. This position received a rebuke from Argentine president Cristina Fernández de Kirchner, who said the church's tone was reminiscent of "medieval times and the Inquisition".




Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg: 'Sex' is a dirty word, so let's use 'gender' instead!


Klevius: Let's not!


As previously and repeatedly pointed out by Klevius, the treacherous use of 'gender' instead of 'sex' is not only confusing but deliberately so. So when Jewish Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg proposed gender' as a synonyme for 'sex' (meaning biological sex) she also helped to shut the door for many a young girl's/woman's possibilities to climb outside the gender cage.

The Universal Human Rights declaration clearly states that your biological sex should not be referred to as an excuse for limiting your rights.







Islam (now represented by OIC and its Sharia declaration) is the worst and most dangerous form of sex segregation - no matter in how modern clothing it's presented!


Klevius Sex and Gender Tutorial

What is 'gender' anyway?


(text randomly extracted from some scientific writings by Klevius)
It might be argued that it is the developing girl, not the grown up woman, who is the most receptive to new experience, but yet is also the most vulnerable. Therefore we need to address the analysis of the tyranny of gender before the point at where it's already too late.  I prefer to use the term ‘female’ instead of ‘woman’, when appropriate in this discussion. I also prefer not to define women in relation to men, i.e. in line with the word 'universal' in the Human Rights Declaration. In short, I propose 'gender blindness' equally as, for example, 'color blindness'.

According to Connell (2003:184), it is an old and disreputable habit to define women mainly on the basis of their relation to men. Moreover, this approach may also constitute a possible cause of confusion when compared to a definition of ‘gender’ which emphasizes social relations on the basis of ‘reproductive differences’.

To really grasp the absurdity of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's and others habit of confusing 'gender' with 'sex' one may consider that “normal” women live in the same gender trap tyranny as do transsexuals.

The definition of ‘acquired gender’ is described in a guidance for/about transsexuals as:

Transsexual people have the deep conviction that the gender to which they were assigned at birth on the basis of their physical anatomy (referred to as their “birth gender”) is incorrect. That conviction will often lead them to take steps to present themselves to the world in the opposite gender. Often, transsexual people will undergo hormonal or surgical treatment to bring their physical identity into line with their preferred gender identity.

This evokes the extinction of the feminine or women as directly dependent on the existence of the masculine or men. Whereas the feminine cannot be defined without the masculine, the same applies to women who cannot be defined - only described - without men.

Female footballers, for example - as opposed to feminine footballers, both male and female - are, just like the target group of feminism, by definition distinguished by sex. Although this classification is a physical segregation – most often based on a delivery room assessment made official and not at all taking into account physical size, strength, skills etc. - other aspects of sex difference, now usually called ‘gender’, seem to be layered on top of this dichotomy. This review departs from the understanding that there are two main categories that distinguish females, i.e. the physical sex belonging, for example, that only biological women may participate in a certain competition, and the cultural sex determination, for example that some sports are less ‘feminine’ than others.

‘Gender’, is synonymous with sex segregation, given that the example of participation on the ground of one’s biological sex is simply a rule for a certain agreed activity and hence not sex segregation in the form of stipulated or assumed separatism. Such sex segregation is still common even in societies which have prescribed to notions of general human freedom regardless of sex and in accordance with Human Rights. This is because of a common consensus that sex segregation is ‘good’ although its effects are bad.

In Durkheim’s (1984: 142) view such ‘organized despotism’ is where the individual and the collective consciousness are almost the same. Then sui generis, a new life may be added on to that of the main body. As a consequence, this freer and more independent state progresses and consolidates itself (Durkheim 1984: 284).

However, consensus may also rest on an imbalance that is upheld and may even strengthen precisely as an effect of the initial imbalance. In such a case ‘organized despotism’ becomes the means for conservation. As a consequence, the only alternative would be to ease restrictions, which is something fundamentally different from proposing how people should live their lives. ‘Organized despotism’ in this meaning may apply to gender and to sex segregation as well.

According to Connell (2003) whose confused view may be closer to that of Justice Ginsburg, gender is neither biology, nor a fixed dichotomy, but it has a special relation to the human body mirrored in a ‘general perception’. Cultural patterns do not only mirror bodily differences. Gender is ‘a structure’ of social relations/practices concentrated to ‘the reproductive arena’, and a series of due practices in social processes. That is, gender describes how society relates to the human body, and has due consequences for our private life and for the future of wo/mankind (Connell 2003:21-22).

Gender is neither biology, nor a fixed dichotomy, but it has a special relation to the human body mirrored in a “general perception.” What is wrong with this view is the thought that cultural patterns only mirror bodily differences. Gender is “a structure” of social relations/practices concentrated to “the reproductive arena”, and a series of due practices in the social processes. I.e. it describes how society relates to the human body, and due consequences to our private life and for the future of wo/mankind (Connell 2003:21-22). The main problem here involves how to talk without gender.

... sex should properly refer to the biological aspects of male and female existence. Sex differences should therefore only be used to refer to physiology, anatomy, genetics, hormones and so forth. Gender should properly be used to refer to all the non‑biological aspects of differences between males and females ‑ clothes, interests, attitudes, behaviours and aptitudes, for example ‑ which separate 'masculine' from 'feminine' life styles (Delamont 1980: 5 in Hargreaves 1994:146).

The distinction between sex and gender implied in these quotations, however, does not seem to resolve the issue precisely because it fails to offer a tool for discriminating biological aspects of differences from non-biological, i.e. cultural. This is also reflected in everyday life “folk categories of sex and gender” which (most?) often appear to be used as if they were the same. Although 'masculine' and 'feminine' are social realities, there is a mystique about their being predetermined by biology” (ibid). Furthermore the very relational meaning of ‘gender’ seems to constitute a too an obvious hiding place for essentialism based on sex. Apart from being ‘structure’, as noted above, gender is, according to Connell, all about relations (2003:20). However, if there are none, or if the relations are excluding, the concept of sex segregation may be even more useful.

It seems that 'masculine' and 'feminine’ in this definition of gender is confusingly close to the ‘mystique about their being predetermined by biology’ when compared to the ‘reproductive arena’ and ‘reproductive differences’ in Connell’s definition of gender. However, although gender, according to Connell (2003: 96), may also be ‘removed’ the crucial issue is whether those who are segregated really want to de-sex segregate? As long as the benefits of a breakout are not clearly assessable, the possible negative effects may undermine such efforts.

According to Connell (2003:20) the very key to the understanding of gender is not to focus on differences, but, instead, to focus on relations. In fact, this distinction is crucial here because relations, contrary to differences, are mutually dependent. Whatever difference existing between the sexes is meaningless unless it is connected via a relation. On the one hand, big male muscles can hardly be of relational use other than in cases of domestic violence, and on the other hand, wage gaps cannot be identified without a comparative relation to the other sex.

Biological determinism is influential in the general discourse of sports academia (Hargreaves 1994:8). However, what remains to analyse is whether ‘gender’ is really a successful concept for dealing with biological determinism?

‘To explain the cultural at the level of the biological encourages the exaggeration and approval of analyses based on distinctions between men and women, and masks the complex relationship between the biological and the cultural’ (Hargreaves 1994:8).

With another example: to explain the cultural (driver) at the level of the technical (type of car) encourages the exaggeration and approval of analyses based on distinctions between cars, and masks the complex relationship between the car and the driver. However, also the contrary seems to hold true;. that the cultural (driver/gender) gets tied to the technical/biological. The ‘complex relationship’ between the car and the driver is easily avoided by using similar1 cars, hence making the driver more visible. In a sex/gender setting the ‘complex relationship’ between sex and gender is easily avoided by distinguishing between sex and culture2, hence making culture more visible. The term ‘culture’, unlike the term ‘gender’ clearly tries to avoid the ‘complex relationship’ between biology and gender. The ‘complex relationship’ makes it, in fact, impossible to distinguish between them. On top of this comes the ‘gender relation’ confusion, which determines people to have ‘gender relations’, i.e. to be opposite or separate.

This kind of gender view is popular, perhaps because it may serve as a convenient way out from directly confronting the biology/culture distinction, and seems to be the prevalent trend, to the extent that ‘gender’ has conceptually replaced ‘sex’, leading to the consequence that the latter has become more or less self-evident and thus almost beyond scrutiny. In other words, by using ‘gender’ as a sign for ‘the complex relationship between the biological and the cultural’, biological determinism becomes more difficult to access analytically.

Gender is neither biology, nor a fixed dichotomy, but it has a special relation to the human body mirrored in a ‘general perception.’ What is problematic with this view is the thought that cultural patterns only mirror bodily differences. Gender is ‘a structure’ of social relations/practices concentrated to ‘the reproductive arena’, and a series of due practices in social processes. That is, it describes how society relates to the human body and has due consequences to our private life and for the future of wo/mankind (Connell 2003: 21-22). The main problem here involves how to talk sex without gender:

‘Sex should properly refer to the biological aspects of male and female existence. Sex differences should therefore only be used to refer to physiology, anatomy, genetics, hormones and so forth. Gender should properly be used to refer to all the nonbiological aspects of differences between males and females clothes, interests, attitudes, behaviours and aptitudes, for example which separate 'masculine' from 'feminine' lifestyles’ (Delamont 1980 quoted in Hargreaves 1994: 146).

The distinction between sex and gender implied in these quotations, however, does not seem to resolve the issue, precisely because it fails to offer a tool for discriminating biological aspects of differences from non-biological ones, i.e. those that are cultural. This is also reflected in everyday life. ‘Folk’ categories of sex and gender often appear to be used as if they were the same thing. Although 'masculine' and 'feminine' are social realities, there is a mystique about their being predetermined by biology. Furthermore the very relational meaning of ‘gender’ seems to constitute a too obvious hiding place for a brand of essentialism based on sex. Apart from being ‘structure’, as noted above, gender is, according to Connell (2003:20), all about relations. However, if there are none - or if the relations are excluding - the concept of sex segregation may be even more useful.

In Connell’s analysis, however, gender may also be removed (Connell 2003:96). In this respect and as a consequence, gender equals sex segregation. In fact it seems that the 'masculine' and 'feminine’, in the definition of gender above, are confusingly close to the ‘mystique about their being predetermined by biology’ when compared to the ‘reproductive arena’ and ‘reproductive differences’ in Connell’s (2003:21) definition of gender. The elusiveness of gender seems to reveal a point of focus rather than a thorough-going conceptualization. So, for example, in traditional Engels/Marx thinking the family’s mediating formation between class and state excludes the politics of gender (Haraway 1991: 131).

What's a Woman?


In What is a Woman? Moi (1999) attacks the concept of gender while still emphasizing the importance of the concept of the feminine and a strong self-conscious (female) subject that combines the personal and the theoretical within it. Moi (1999: 76), hence, seems to propose a loose sex/gender axis resting on a rigid womanhood based on women’s context bound, lived experience outside the realm of men’s experience.

Although I share Moi’s suggestion for abandoning the category of gender, her analysis seems to contribute to a certain confusion and to an almost incalculable theoretical abstraction in the sex/gender distinction because it keeps maintaining sex segregation without offering a convincing defence for it. Although gender, for example, is seen as a nature-culture distinction, something that essentializes non-essential differences between women and men, the same may be said about Moi’s approach if we understand her ‘woman’ as, mainly, the mainstream biological one usually classified (prematurely) in the delivery room. If the sexes live in separate spheres, as Moi’s analysis seems to imply, the lived, contextual experience of women appears as less suitable for pioneering on men’s territory.

This raises the question about whether the opening up of new frontiers for females may demand the lessening or even the absence of femininity (and masculinity). In fact, it is believed here that the ‘liminal state’ where social progression might best occur, is precisely that. Gender as an educated ‘facticity’ then, from this point of view, will inevitably enter into a state of world view that adds itself onto the ‘lived body’ as a constraint.

It is assumed here that we commonly conflate constructs of sex, gender, and sexuality. When sex is defined as the ‘biological’ aspects of male and female, then this conceptualization is here understood as purely descriptive. When gender is said to include social practices organized in relation to biological sex (Connell 1987), and when gender refers to context/time-specific and changeable socially constructed relationships of social attributes and opportunities learned through socialization processes, between women and men, this is also here understood as descriptive. However, when description of gender transforms into active construction of gender, e.g. through secrets about its analytical gain, it subsequently transforms into a compulsory necessity. Gendering hence may blindfold gender-blind opportunities.

In conclusion, if gender is here understood as a social construct, then is not coupled to sex but to context, and dependent on time. Also it is here understood that every person may possess not only one but a variety of genders. Even if we consider gender to be locked together with the life history of a single individual the above conceptualization makes a single, personal gender impossible, longitudinally as well as contemporaneously. Whereas gender is constructive and deterministic, sex is descriptive and non-deterministic. In this sense, gender as an analytical tool leaves little room for the Tomboy.

The Tomboy - a threat to "femininity"


Noncompliance with what is assumed ‘feminine’ threatens established or presumed sex segregation. What is perceived as ‘masculinity’ or ‘maleness’ in women, as a consequence, may only in second place, target homosexuality. In accordance with this line of thought, the Tomboy embodies both the threat and the possibilities for gendered respectively gender-blind opportunity structures.

The Tomboy is the loophole out of gender relations. Desires revealed through sport may have been with females under the guise of a different identity, such as that of the Tomboy (Kotarba & Held 2007: 163). Girls throw balls ‘like girls’ and do not tackle like boys because of a female perception of their bodies as objects of action (Young 2000:150 cited in Kotarba & Held 2007: 155).

However, when women lacking experience of how to act in an effective manner in sport are taught about how to do, they have no problem performing, quite contrary to explaining shortcomings as due to innate causes (Kotarba & Held 2007: 157). This is also opposite to the experiences of male-to-female transsexuals who through thorough exercise learn how to feminisize their movements (Schrock & Boyd 2006:53-55). Although, according to Hargreaves (1994), most separatist sports philosophies have been a reaction to dominant ideas about the biological and psychological predispositions of men and women, supposedly rendering men 'naturally suited to sports, and women, by comparison, essentially less suited (Hargreaves 1994:29-30), the opposite may also hold true. Separatism per definition needs to separate and this separation is often based on biological differences, be it skin colour, sex or something else.

From this perspective, the Tomboy would constitute a theoretical anomaly in a feminine separatist setting. Although her physical body would possibly qualify what makes her a Tomboy would not.

The observation that in mixed playgrounds, and in other areas of the school environment, boys monopolize the physical space (Hargreaves 1994:151) may lack the additional notion that certain boys dominate and certain boys do not. Sports feminists have 'politicized' these kinds of experience by drawing connections between ideas and practice (Hargreaves 1994:3) but because of a separatist approach may exclude similar experience among parts of the boys. Moreover, a separatist approach is never waterproof and may hence leak Tomboy girls without a notion.

Femininity and feminism


Feminism and psychoanalysis as oppressors

According to Collier and Yanagisako (1987), Henrietta Moore (1994) and other feminist anthropologists, patriarchal dominance is an inseparable socially inherited part of the conventional family system. This implicit suggestion of radical surgery does not, however, count on unwanted secondary effects neither on the problem with segregated or non-segregated sex-worlds. If, in other words, oppression is related to gender segregation rather than patriarchy, or perhaps that patriarchy is a product of sex segregation, then there seems to be a serious problem of intellectual survival facing feminists themselves. If feminism1 is to be understood as an approach and/or analytical tool for separatism2, those feminists and others who propose not only analytical segregation but also practical segregation, face the problem of possible oppression inherent in this very segregation (Klevius 1994, 1996). In this sense oppression is related to sex segregation in two ways:

1. As a means for naming it (feminism) for an analytical purpose.
2. As a social consequence or political strategy (e.g. negative bias against female football or a separatist strategy for female football).

It is notable that the psychoanalytic movement has not only been contemporary with feminism, but it has also followed (or led) the same pattern of concern and proposed warnings and corrections that has marked the history of ‘feminism’ in the 20th century. According to S. Freud, the essence of the analytic profession is feminine and the psychoanalyst ‘a woman in love’ (L. Appignanesi & J. Forrester 1992:189). But psychoanalytically speaking, formalized sex and sex segregation also seem to have been troublesome components in the lives of female psychoanalysts struggling under a variety of assumed, but irreconcilable femininities and professional expectations.

In studying the history of feminism one inevitably encounters what is called ‘the women’s movement’. While there is a variety of different feminisms, and because the borders between them, as well as to what is interpreted as the women’s rights movement, some historians, incl. Klevius, question the distinction and/or methods in use for this distinction.
However, it could also be argued that whereas the women’s right movement may be distinguished by its lack of active separatism within the proposed objectives of the movement, feminism ought to be distinguished as a multifaceted separatist movement based on what is considered feminine values, i.e. what is implied by the very word ‘feminism’3. From this perspective the use of the term ‘feminism’ before the last decades of the 19th century has to be re-evaluated, as has every such usage that does not take into account the separatist nature underpinning all feminisms. Here it is understood that the concept ‘feminism’, and its derivatives, in every usage implies a distinction based on separating the sexes - e.g. addressing inequality or inequity - between male and female (see discussion above). So although ’feminism’ and ‘feminisms’ would be meaningless without such a separation, the ‘women’s rights movement’, seen as based on a distinct aim for equality with men in certain legal respects, e.g. the right to vote, could be described as the opposite, i.e. de-segregation, ‘gender blindness’ etc.

As a consequence the use of the word feminism in a context where it seems inappropriate is here excepted when the authors referred to have decided to do so. The feminist movement went back to Mary Wollstonecraft and to some French revolutionaries of the end of the eighteenth century, but it had developed slowly. In the period 1880 to 1900, however, the struggle was taken up again with renewed vigour, even though most contemporaries viewed it as idealistic and hopeless. Nevertheless, it resulted in ideological discussions about the natural equality or non-equality of the sexes, and the psychology of women. (Ellenberger 1970: 291-292).

Not only feminist gynocentrists, but also anti-feminist misogynists contributed with their own pronouncements on the woman issue. In 1901, for example, the German psychiatrist Moebius published a treatise, On the Physiological Imbecility of Woman, according to which, woman is physically and mentally intermediate between the child and man (see Ellenberger 1970:292). However, according to the underlying presumption of this thesis, i.e. that the borders between gynocentrism and misogyny are not well understood, these two approaches are seen as more or less synonymous. Such a view also confirms with a multitude of points in common between psychoanalysis and feminism. As was argued earlier, the main quality of separatism and ‘complementarism’ is an insurmountable border, sometimes contained under the titles: love, desire etc.




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