Briton is recognised as world's first officially genderless person
A British expat who claims to have no gender is thought to have become the first person to be officially recognised as neither male or female.
(..."claims to"? I would think xe'd be the authority on the subject.)
A British expat who claims to have no gender is thought to have become the first person to be officially recognised as neither male or female.
(..."claims to"? I would think xe'd be the authority on the subject.)
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Date: Mar. 16th, 2010 06:54 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: Mar. 16th, 2010 07:11 pm (UTC)From:So I see, but they seem to be talking of born nationality (is xe naturalized as an Australian?) and it's a British agency involved, isn't it?
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Date: Mar. 17th, 2010 01:02 am (UTC)From:And I think zie is an Australian citizen now, yes.
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Date: Mar. 17th, 2010 01:24 am (UTC)From:And then there's a mention of "UK’s Gender Trust", which erm, I assumed was in the UK?
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Date: Mar. 17th, 2010 01:30 am (UTC)From:no subject
Date: Mar. 17th, 2010 11:14 pm (UTC)From:I still find it a little odd, all this having to produce doctor evidence and things. I mean, a signed letter is one thing, but an MTF acquaintance of mine was trying to get her sex changed on her passport, and was confronted with bizarre and privacy-invading things like a request for photographs of her genitalia to prove she was no longer male!
I'm amused by the pronoun phrase " 'blah blah', neither he nor she said." I feel like it should be hyphenated, heh. They should have just said "zie" and then followed it with the clarifying statement that it was Norrie's preference. (I like the ones formed with "x" myself, xe/xir, since it conveys more of that "neither/variable" quality visually.)
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Date: Mar. 17th, 2010 05:18 pm (UTC)From:no subject
Date: Mar. 17th, 2010 06:14 pm (UTC)From: