originally posted in:Secular Sevens
Let's test the people who are feeling strongly about this issue:
This person, would you let this person go into the girl's locker room of your school?
English
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Clearly that male pig is just pretending to be a girl today for the purpose of being a perv and probably a sex offender /obvious tr7th
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It's a trap!
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NO. SHE IS NOT ALLOWED. NOOOOOOO. WE WILL NOT LET SUCH AN ATROCITY OCCUR. Just kidding, anyways I have a feeling that this is some trick, I know it.
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Edited by Section Ratio General: 1/2/2014 7:59:55 PMThis girl is now officially considered a female. She's been a female longer than I've been alive, but originally born a male. This girl is Harisu, the very first transgendered South Korean entertainer. She does not possess any male parts at all, and she underwent surgery around the age of 15. She is legally and physically considered a female now, especially in South Korea, where gay marriage is not legal, like America in many states. However, she married a [u]male[/u] Korean star, and she gets full benefits that a heterosexual couple gets. edit: [url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/LGBT_rights_in_South_Korea]I'll change the around the age of 15 thing because under South Korean law, a transgendered person can get a sex change after age 20[/url]. To also change, Harisu has been a female for a very, very big majority of my life, so I identify her as female, even though she was born male.
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[quote]female[/quote]You mean woman/girl/etc gender term. And it's hard to call anything like this official.
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Edited by Section Ratio General: 1/2/2014 9:19:44 PM[url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harisu]Harisu is officially a female in the eyes of the South Korean law, and in South Korea, where she lives.[/url] It may not be official to people outside of South Korea, but in South Korea, it's official. Edit: [quote][url=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Legal_aspects_of_transsexualism] In South Korea, it is possible for transgender individuals to change their legal gender, although it depends on the decision of the judge for each case. Since the 1990s, however, it has been approved in most of the cases. The legal system in Korea does not prevent marriage once a person has changed their legal gender. In 2006, the Supreme Court of Korea ruled that transsexuals have the right to alter their legal papers to reflect their reassigned sex. A trans woman can be registered, not only as female, but also as being 'born as a woman'. While same-sex marriage is not approved by South Korean law, a transsexual woman obtains the marital status of 'female' automatically when she marries to a man, even if she has previously been a 'male' on paper. In 2013 a court ruled that transsexuals can change their legal sex without undergoing genital surgery.[/url][/quote] That is an explanation of South Korea's law on transexuals. In South Korean Law, if you get married as a woman, even though you were born a man, your gender and sex becomes female, as mentioned in the last paragraph.
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So they have a mishmash of gender and sex? So she's legally female but biologically male and then legally a woman?
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Not my call to say, since I don't live in South Korea. I'm not going to argue semantics with South Korean officials, I'm just informing people that in South Korea, you can be considered born as a female even if you were born a male under the eyes of South Korean law. I didn't make the laws.
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What an odd bunch.