AProudLefty
The remora of JPP
Sex and gender are related but distinct concepts, often conflated in casual use. Here's the breakdown:No, I mean biological gender. I'm not like that dem SCOTUS who couldn't define a woman. No, a biological woman has
a vagina, and a biological man has a penis.
Sex refers to biological and physiological characteristics, primarily determined by chromosomes (XX for female, XY for male, with rare intersex variations like XXY or XO). It encompasses traits like reproductive organs, hormones, and secondary sexual characteristics (e.g., breasts, facial hair). Sex is typically assigned at birth based on visible anatomy, though intersex conditions—where anatomy or genetics don't fit neatly into male or female—occur in roughly 0.05% to 1.7% of the population, depending on the criteria used. Sex is rooted in measurable biology, but it’s not always binary or static (e.g., hormone therapy or surgical interventions can alter traits).
Gender is a social and psychological construct, encompassing roles, behaviors, identities, and expectations societies assign to individuals. It’s how someone perceives themselves (gender identity, e.g., man, woman, nonbinary) and how they’re perceived within cultural norms (gender roles, like "men are providers" or "women are nurturing"). Gender varies across cultures and history—what’s "masculine" in one society (e.g., wearing skirts in ancient Rome) might be "feminine" in another. It’s fluid, shaped by personal experience, expression (e.g., clothing, pronouns), and societal pressures, not strictly tied to biology.
@Grok