Hey, hetero white male asking a question for all of you. In the LGBT community, are people who identify as inhuman things taken seriously? As in hydrogender, where the person's gender has qualiies relating to water. If they are, could somebody explain to me why? Honest question.
>>6254811
>are people who identify as inhuman things taken seriously?
obviously not.
>>6254811
No, and they deserve every bit of ridicule they get.
>>6254811
I think i'd be more polite to them than other people just because I sort of know what they're going through, but no it makes no fucking sense
if i'm communicating with them irl and they tell me that i'll be accepting and call them what they want or whatever the fuck.
but yeah it makes no sense to me.
>>6254867
This. I would be nice to them in person and just keep my mouth shut, but I would want to keep my distance afterwards.
Is this how cis people feel about us trannies?
>>6254901
>Is this how cis people feel about us trannies?
not me. i'm full-blown faggot so i'm not even attracted to MtFs, but i can relate to the feeling of being the opposite gender you were born as. like it feels much closer to normalcy to me. and i don't know how someone can feel like they're a dog if they can't even communicate with them to understand what it feels like to be a dog.
i'm sure plenty of people feel that way about trans people though. maybe i don't because i've had real conversations with a lot of them instead of just shitposting about them here.
>>6254811
No. Nobody other than 14 year olds and crazy leftists takes them seriously.
I mean I love to swim. I own more swim suits than some people own shirts. I could happily live in the water. But I'd never claim to be transdolphin water gender or whatever. They're two unrelated things.
>hydrogender