
I mean not all women have periods or can get pregnant (for many reasons, not just exclusive to trans women) and some trans men or nonbinary people obviously can. So the main reason those types of terms exist is to be as precise and inclusive as possible. That being said I still think it is valid to refer to issues that predominantly impact women as women's issues. Erasing the term "women" from the conversation entirely runs the risk of missing key social/political context
some of us want to be a mother all of our lives and it’s demeaning to be called a pregnant person or a birth giver as if that’s our whole role. it makes us feel less important or less feminine and just bad about ourselves. i have wanted to be a mom my whole life but being called these things just kind of hurts. it’s like those of us who are women don’t get to be called a mom because other people who don’t identify as one don’t like it. gender affirming is important, even if you are afab woman
if someone is calling you these terms after you’ve specified you prefer other terms, that’s a problem with that person - these are supposed to be umbrella terms to refer to everyone who is capable of or currently in a pregnancy, and should only be used for individuals if you’re unsure of their gender or they have specified they want to be called that. i definitely agree that no one should be referred to using terms they don’t identify with!!
This is not an app for college students. It’s a social media app for anyone, hence why all you need to sign up in a phone number 😌 I literally just did my annual CBTs last week and while we do touch on the importance of diversity in the workplace via the AMA, I can promise you that same standard of practice is not given to gender affirming terms through the AMA or any hospital across America. At a certain point the health of the patient trumps their feelings and you have to assess and treat
That AMA post talks about policies that exclude transgender individuals, yeah? Nothing about calling someone their given biological sex at a time of medical practice is excluding them from a policy standpoint. That policy, again, is talking about bathrooms and shit. Again, I’ve been working in healthcare for a long time now. I know how this all works.