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RebeccaSJ · 46-50, F
Nor does doing the opposite make you a man.
CopperCicada · M
@RebeccaSJ wicked burn
JackForrester · 26-30, M
Yes, as a matter of fact, it does @RebeccaSJ
CopperCicada · M
@JackForrester not cutting your cock off is what defines a man?
that's a pretty low bar-- manhood doesn't require doing anything.
that could explain a lot.
that's a pretty low bar-- manhood doesn't require doing anything.
that could explain a lot.
JackForrester · 26-30, M
"Nor does doing the opposite make you a man" meaning if you were to chop off the enlarged chest and get an implanted penis, they are saying it does not make you a man. And it actually does. That is why a lot of trans people feel the need to undergo such surgeries. If someone says they are a gender, regardless of what parts they have, they are what they say they are. Your response was off-base and nonsensical. @CopperCicada
CopperCicada · M
@JackForrester I actually see "being a man" as something above and beyond having a God given prick. Something earned and cultivated.
Which was actually my point. If "being a man" is just having a prick, then that explains why there are so many manlets these days.
Which was actually my point. If "being a man" is just having a prick, then that explains why there are so many manlets these days.
JackForrester · 26-30, M
Well that is entirely different conversation of what defines masculinity. Not someone's bullshit opinions on what other people want to do with their bodies. And, as a young tradesman, this whole entire things pisses me off with what they have posted here.
RebeccaSJ · 46-50, F
@JackForrester No, it doesn't.