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Michal Osier's avatar

“…the phrase forced feminization is redundant: the female is always the product of force, and force is invariably feminizing.”

This caught my attention - all of your article did, but this quote did so to a particular degree.

To clarify its significance to me, I’ll rephrase it as: “the use of male force against another person, of either sex, feminizes them;” and, contextually (and reductively, as Chu’s work is), this becomes something along the lines of “to be male is to dominate; to dominate is to meld the two essential elements of masculinity, which are power-over, and sexual violence; and the person so aggressed against and forced against their will is, by that male’s triumph, *made female,* which, to masculinity, means subject-to, overcome, and (specifically) sexually debased - which is the lesson essential to knowing what being female is.

Despite my utter contempt for Chu and for his theories, this way of defining what being feminine is, therefore what being female should and must be, while not new, resonated newly. I felt that my understanding of the male sex-and-dominance paradigm - the “why” of *why* do men, almost universally, sexually threaten and rape, why do men make and use porn, why do men harass women and feel free to demand our time and attention, why do man want harems, why do men fight, why do men make war against each other and claim their victor’s right to the conquered side’s women, girls, and (other) belongings - was made clearer. To win, to force, is in and of itself sexual to them, because it places them at the apex of masculinity - the hero-despot-(successful narcissist) that all men accept as better than they are, and all women, perforce, belong to.

I hope I’m expressing myself clearly. Feminism has been the lens through which I see and analyze the human world - in that sense, this idea isn’t at all new; Dworkin, Daly, Frye, and many other women have articulated it before.

Perhaps I found it so helpful because Chu’s premise - that force is what a man is, that forced is what a woman is, and that within trans ideology, these are the functional definitions of both - that allowed me to make a little more sense of the logic inherent in that ideology.

In any case, thank you for your shedding of light on the impenetrable toxic, woman-hating, -needing , and -fearing sludge that trans/queer theory is.

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