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Notes -
I'm not talking the modern real world, I'm responding to the hypothetical you're proposing.
Yes, trans people do have most relevant rights today in real-world USA, the world in which they used the tactics I'm outlining (and which I think you're objecting to? Kind of hard to parse) to get them.
They never didn't have rights. These tactics have done nothing to advance them.
???
Regional court cases about people wanting to change their sex (or just change their name to one common for the other gender) didn't start to get won until the mid-70s, and most federal agencies didn't update their policies to officially allow these changes until the 2010s.
Unless your point is the trite 'gay men and straight men had the same rights in the 1980s, they were both free to marry women' thing.
These were not the tactics used in the mid 70s, this is an extremely new phenomenon.
Ok, sounds like we agree your previous 'they never didn't have rights' claim was incorrect?
They didn't have rights under the crown either. You were describing rights gained by tactics.
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