November 23, 2025

It's a good question, but it's easy to answer.

I think the answer is in this logic:


Identity is in your feelings.

From that 1967 Clairol ad: "Why don't you try saying this out loud: 'If I've only one life, let me live it as a blonde.' If you get a surge when you say the words, you're a blonde at heart." And you are free to bleach your hair blonde so it affirms your inner feelings.

And by the way, the blondest blondes in American culture — Marilyn Monroe, Madonna, Debbie Harry — had to bleach their way to blondeness, and some classy writers have argued that they are more truly blonde — whatever that means! — than the natural blondes. 

75 comments:

Peachy said...

because gender affirming care (genital and hormonal mutilation thru pharmaceuticals) is just like dying your hair?

Peachy said...

Thank you for this topic. It pairs well with this Amala video.

robother said...

Removing genitals would at least provide some reality test for the sincerity of the supposed trans-woman. Before permitting them to occupy a jail cell, shower or swimming lane next to real women.

Ann Althouse said...

I know that surgical rearrangement of the genitals is a more drastic step than bleaching your hair, but I am trying to answer the question asked on that sign. Please don't change the subject. I agree that surgery needs stronger justification, but don't take that side road here. This post is about answering the question posed by the sign.

Eric the Fruit Bat said...

Is that creepy narrator supposed to be some sort of hypnotist or something?

steppin' razor said...

I had an acquaintance. Her identity was that she was too fat, that she was overweight. So she stopped eating and eventually died of malnutrition. The doctors called it anorexia nervous but we could call it “body-affirming identity behavior”.

steppin' razor said...

“nervousa”.

n.n said...

Gender is defined by sex-correlated attributes (e.g. sexual orientation). Corruption can simulate and force transition (e.g. homosexual) in the womb. Some people believe the latter can also be achieved through grooming or medical therapy.

Kai Akker said...

If it's an easy answer, it's probably wrong. Hair color, easy to change, no permanent damage unless grossly abused, is not the analogue to the massive changes involved with genital removal and reconstruction, plus the chemical onslaught of hormonal suppression and transfer?

Ann Althouse said...

If you take the off-ramp, I will count it as evidence that I nailed the answer to the question asked.

Kai Akker said...

Oh, now I see the AA comment. The answer to the question on the sign is "Correct, removing the genitals does not 'affirm' gender."

Quaestor said...

"It's a good question, but easy to answer."


We used to deal with those classy writers and their facile answers to morally unanswerable questions by turning our backs in disgust. How have we become so passive that the sophists can get away with their desecrations of decency scot free?

Sebastian said...

The Althouse analogy is instructive. Artificial hair color that matches your feelings makes you the blonde you know yourself to be and compels recognition as such. Similarly, under the currrent prog regime, artificial body parts that match your feelings make you a real man/woman, genes/chromosomes/eggs/ sperm be damned, and compel recognition as such.

But the sign is incomplete. Full transition involves not just removal of genitals but also the construction of new "genitals" from other body parts. Transition may start with "feelings" but trans identity also depends to some extent on actual body modification. Even if there is an "easy" answer to the question, trans ideology has not fully worked out to what extent subjectively claimed identity also requires a physical complement. Does the mere claim suffice, or the claim plus some removal, or the claim plus removal plus reconstruction? If more is needed, does that cramp the unfettered subjectivity at the heart of the trans craze?

steppin' razor said...

Also I resist the concept of being guided in wisdom or insight by a marketing phrase dreamed up by an ad agency. Blond hair dyes, goth eye shadow, ruby lipstick, fingernails painted teal…these women don’t use this presentation because they think that in essence they’re “really” blonde or whatever. They choose to present themselves to the world that way for whatever reason. Transgenders, to the contrary, believe or are advised that they are “really” the opposite sex and need to conform their physical body to that reality, just as anorexics truly believe that they are fat. Mental illness, rather than an ad jingle, is a better paradigm.

ThreeSheets said...

I don't think the hair dying is the answer to the question. The sign questions why changing your genitals matters if genitals don't define gender. He's positing there is no reason to change your genitals and the proffered reason that it "affirms" gender is therefore erroneous. Hair dying in the commercial is not the same. The hair dye people aren't saying hair color doesn't define a person. In fact, they are probably saying the opposite. Blonds are different than brunettes. That's not what the "women can have a penis" crowd says.

mezzrow said...

Because it's not about the "me" YOU see, it about the "me" that is in MY mind. I am taking control of MY life, and YOU will not stand in MY way. It doesn't matter that you are rendered speechless by my Gingery splendor, cause that's not really me.

Me to HS Althouse: "My Mom has an opening Wednesday afternoon, and she says she can work you in for a touch up."

Kai Akker said...

If the genitals do not define gender (the false premise), then removing them similarly cannot affirm gender. But making a mousy Norma Jean blonde did affirm her gender. it made it just a bit more obvious and eye-catching.

Mason G said...

'If I've only one life, let me live it as a blonde.'

or, maybe...

'If I've only one life, let me live it pretending to be a blonde.'

bagoh20 said...

I don't get the analogy. The two things could not be more different. Like a glass of water and the ocean. There is something in common, but missing the difference is a serious mistake.

NT Dave said...

The whole gender argument is a lie/misdirection. It's biological sex that matters. They weren't asking for feelings on IDs before this crap came up.

bagoh20 said...

If blondes had special rights, expectations, and responsibilities relative to the rest of us? Then maybe we get in the same galaxy here.

Quaestor said...

"Correct, removing the genitals does not 'affirm' gender."

The problem with the sign is not the affirm/does not affirm contradiction. Its fundamental problem is that it cedes the ground to those who seek banish biology and replace it with gender, a concept created by grammarians to apply to nouns and adopted by engineers to apply to connection hardware.

Gender is meaningless when applied to mammals, especially Homo sapiens. Slicing off a boy's penis doesn't transform him into a her (nor a single into a plural), it just renders a non-reproductive human male -- a eunuch, gelding, a steer.

bagoh20 said...

Gender affirming care is the lobotomy of our time. Where did you stand, with the "experts"?

Josephbleau said...

Under the assumption that the character of your genitals is irrelevant to your gender, however you change that character does not change your gender. So we go to affirmation, affirmation is dodgy, I can affirm my gender any way I like because affirmation is my statement, true or false. So if I affirm my gender by any act that affirms my gender, there is no restriction.

Genital modification and bleaching your hair are both equally trite affirmations of what ever you want to affirm.

Iman said...

“Yer soaking in it.”

Lem Vibe Bandit said...

The answer is blowing in the album Blond on Blond.

bagoh20 said...

"If you take the off-ramp..."
Like a joke, if you need to explain it, then...

bagoh20 said...

If bleaching your hair affirms your inner blonde, then what are you doing when you dye it back to original?

Wilbur said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Wilbur said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
Smilin' Jack said...

People confuse the two definitions:
af·firm
verb
1. state as a fact; assert strongly and publicly.
2. offer (someone) emotional support or encouragement.

I have no problem with people asserting whatever they want, whether it’s the blonde with the mousy brown roots or the bearded lady. But if you assert that you are Jesus Christ, don’t expect me to bow down and worship you.

Iman said...

All action is reaction
Expansion, contraction
Man the manipulator
Underwater, does it matter?
Antimatter, nuclear reactor
Boom boom boom boom

Who's your mother? Who's your father?
I guess everything's irrelative
Who's your mother? Who's your father?
I guess everything's irrelative
I'm a janitor, oh my genitals
I'm a janitor, oh my genitals
Oh my genitals, I'm a janitor

All action is reaction
Expansion, contraction
Man the manipulator
Underwater, does it matter?
Antimatter, nuclear reactor
Boom boom boom boom

Who's your mother? Who's your father?
I guess everything's irrelative
Who's your mother? Who's your father?
I guess everything's irrelative
I'm a janitor, oh my genitals
I'm a janitor, oh my genitals
Oh my genitals, I'm a janitor

—— Suburban Lawns

Josephbleau said...

There was a cult in Russia in the 19th century where men would stand there and let people cut off their balls. This was to make them pure and untainted. Whatever blows your hair back, man.

Quaestor said...

Castration was fairly common in the 17th and 18th century Europe. People admired the male soprano voice, and musically gifted boys were often pressured to undergo mutilation and the loss of family life to retain their bell-like voices into adulthood. In America, castration was used by the planter class to deal unruly slaves, a practice that persists in Africa to this day.

tcrosse said...

Bleaching hair is a poor analogy, because unlike gender affirmation surgery, the hair will grow back as It was.

n.n said...

Men in feminine clothing. Women in masculine clothing. Same-sex couplets or bigendered union. Gender mocking, perhaps adaptive.

SGT Ted said...

Sex isn't an identity. Different personalities within the 2 sexes aren't "genders".

People who dye their hair blonde know they aren't really blonde. Cutting your hair doesn't change your sex. Neither does cutting off body parts.

Lem Vibe Bandit said...

I’ve never heard of a blonde filing a complaint because someone said she was a bottle blonde, not a real blonde.

Ann Althouse said...

"I don't think the hair dying is the answer to the question. The sign questions why changing your genitals matters if genitals don't define gender."

Natural hair color doesn't define blondeness — in the philosophy of the ad. Blondness is an inner feeling, and, with artificial hair coloring, the true blonde, the person with the blonde inner feeling, can enjoy the fulfilling life of outward blondeness.

You don't have to accept that logic. Just acknowledge that it is the answer to the question on the sign.

Ann Althouse said...

"I’ve never heard of a blonde filing a complaint because someone said she was a bottle blonde, not a real blonde."

That's a different issue. The sign doesn't ask a question related to that.

Ann Althouse said...

"Bleaching hair is a poor analogy, because unlike gender affirmation surgery, the hair will grow back as It was."

I'm not trying to make a perfect analogy. I am addressing the precise question asked on the sign and actively excluding other matters. These other matters are obvious and easily perceived and I'm not trying to argue with them. I'm focused on THE ONE QUESTION asked on the sign.

Josephbleau said...

The answer to the question is, genital modification affirms your gender if you want it to. A George Constanta approach.

Original Mike said...

I prefer black hair.
Just sayin'.

Ann Althouse said...

"People who dye their hair blonde know they aren't really blonde."

That's not the philosophy pushed in the Clairol ad. The Clairol ad, in the wonderful year of 1967, is asserting that you are what you feel.

Here's a Jefferson Airplane song that occurred to me.

Lazarus said...

It's about money and technology, which means it's just about money. It's the "Transsexual Empire" of doctors and clinics that a lesbian feminist warned about over 40 years ago.

Ann Althouse said...

"People who dye their hair blonde know they aren't really blonde."

The ad is brushing aside what you might think you "know" based on what stodgy squares flatly dictate. It has this test: "If you get a surge when you say the words, you're a blonde at heart." The words — "If I've only one life, let me live it as a blonde" — are repeated throughout the ad, and I guarantee that some women, even today, will feel the feeling — the surge. The ad is telling you to cast off your old-time-y "knowledge" of your hair color and embrace the joyful life of the thoughts that thrill you. That is the real truth.

Very similar to religion, by the way. You have a transcendent feeling that is more true than the mundane real world.

Aggie said...

The principle difference being, you still have your hair, and if you change your mind, you can go back to the color you had before.

Ann Althouse said...

"The principle difference being, you still have your hair, and if you change your mind, you can go back to the color you had before."

This is the side road I need you not to take. It is not addressing the question asked. It's an obvious point that no one has any difficulty seeing. Stick to the question asked.

Howard said...

"Does she or doesn't she, only her hairdresser knows for sure"

Is she or isn't she, only her urologist knows for sure

Wince said...

From that 1967 Clairol ad: "Why don't you try saying this out loud: 'If I've only one life, let me live it as a blonde.'

Better yet, how about the 1950s Miss Clairol hair color ad slogan?

"Does she/he... or doesn't she/he? Only their hairdresser knows for sure!"

Josephbleau said...

Our hostess wants us to use the word feel. If you feel like modifying your genitals or being a bottle blond is helpful then it’s good. Like the song, you make me feel like a natural woman, but being sung to your new genitals.

Smilin' Jack said...

“Very similar to religion, by the way. You have a transcendent feeling that is more true than the mundane real world.”

It’s a matter of numbers. It could be a delusion, a shared delusion, or a mass psychosis. Only when the numbers become quite large does it qualify as a religion, but the dividing lines are fuzzy.

Howard said...

I feel as though a seen blogger is leaning on me tostick to the question asked. That provokes me to resistance. I've been commenting this blog for almost 20 years, and the reason it works for me is that I only do what motivates me. I realize that this feeling that you're leaning on me to write about [whatever] must necessarily come from within — It's coming from inside the Howard — but please know that if it were coming from the Althouse, I would be asking you to cut it out.

Ann Althouse said...
"blah blah blah"

This is the side road I need you not to take. It is not addressing the question asked. It's an obvious point that no one has any difficulty seeing. Stick to the question asked.

Howard said...

Jinx

Meade said...

If I’ve but one life, let me live it with the penis I was born with.

Smilin' Jack said...

“That's not the philosophy pushed in the Clairol ad. The Clairol ad, in the wonderful year of 1967, is asserting that you are what you feel.”

That may work for blondeness, but don’t try it for Blackness.

Aggie said...

Yes, reality always bites. While it might be true that Blondes Have More Fun, it's not true that transgenders do, either before or after, almost categorically. If your pursuit of happiness depends on forcing the whole of society to praise your madness, the chances are it's an unhealthy preoccupation for both parties.

SpaceCityGirl said...

Both the new hair color and the new genitals are fake. The woman is still a brunette and the man is still a man.

Mary Beth said...

The Clairol company was trying to sell a product. The doctors and pharmaceutical companies are trying to make sales too. They are all being equally truthful, selling just the sizzle and trying to make the customer think they've gotten the steak.

Rabel said...

Q. - If genitals don't define gender, how does removing them affirm it.

A. - It doesn't.

tcrosse said...

This prompts the question: What does define gender?

MikeD said...

When you're in a hole, you should stop digging is good advice.

Lem Vibe Bandit said...

“I'm focused on THE ONE QUESTION asked on the sign.”

Said no DC court of appeals judge ever.

Mason G said...

"Identity is in your feelings."

How about if you feel that the identity of people born with XY chromosomes is male and those with XX, female?

Christopher B said...

Even if sex reassignment surgery was a simple as coloring your hair, there is a more fundamental difference. To a rough approximation everybody can see your hair color, and it may influence their perception of you. Unless you are walking around naked, nobody can see the results of sex reassignment surgery.

Joe Bar said...

It doesn't. That's my answer.

I have been know to be wrong.

Notned Snamor said...

If it's easy to answer, what is the answer? The only thing I see in your post is, "Identity is in your feelings." But that only answers the question if you accept the framing that hair color doesn't define identity. And if you accept that, then what need have you for affirming care or hair color? You already know/feel who you are. If you say that physical transformation affirms your identity, then you are claiming that hair color does at least to some extent define identity, else why do it? Of course, perhaps you just think you look better as a blonde? Fair enough, but that is no longer a question of identity or affirmation. If someone told me, seriously, her true identity is blonde/ she's blonde at heart, I would gently suggest counseling or therapy. It is different in severity, but delusional all the same.

boatbuilder said...

"Chances are, she'd have gotten that young man anyway."
Wow. Different times.
Brunette?--yeah, sure. Redhead?-Fine. Blue Hair? Maybe. A dick?--WTF? Hell, no!

boatbuilder said...

The Clairol commercial is a stupid (and trivial) commercial (presumably knowingly so?) about hair color.
I'm focused on THE ONE QUESTION asked on the sign
If you are serious (really?), the question on the sign is a conversation starter.
Is life--and gender--really that trivial? Are the people selling gender transformation treating it as trivially as that commercial? Does the weight of things play no role in your analysis?

Ampersand said...

If gender can be determined by cosmetic surgery, there's no reason to attribute much significance to gender. But that's preposterous. So there must be a flaw in the premise that gender can be determined by cosmetic surgery.

Achilles said...

Ann Althouse said...

I'm not trying to make a perfect analogy. I am addressing the precise question asked on the sign and actively excluding other matters. These other matters are obvious and easily perceived and I'm not trying to argue with them. I'm focused on THE ONE QUESTION asked on the sign.

Your problem is that you are conflating mental illness with a desire to be more attractive to men. There is overlap in the extremes but it is not the bullseye you think it is.

The person who wants blond hair realizes that they are a brunette but would rather be blond. Changing your personality in this way is much like losing weight or putting on makeup.

Denying the biological reality of your gender is different from putting on makeup. Putting on makeup is based on reality knowing that you are making yourself look a different way to attract the opposite sex in a way that is likely to work.

A man who "thinks" he is a woman does not know what a woman feels like.

Using the women's bathroom does not make you "feel" like a woman. Dressing like a woman does not make you "feel" like a woman. No person born a man is ever going to know what pregnancy and childbirth are like.

That is unless you want to ascribe mental illness to every man or woman who wants to put on makeup.

You are also ignoring the elephant in the room. The biggest cause of "Gender dysphoria" is fucked up single moms. The massive increase in "transgender identity" is a social contagion driven by evil over educated white women in rich countries.

These poor kids are not trying to free their inner blond. They are trying to get acceptance from some shrieking liberal harpy who gave birth to them pretending to be a mother living their blighted hateful existence seeking victim hood through their children.

Achilles said...

Howard said...

I feel as though a seen blogger is leaning on me tostick to the question asked. That provokes me to resistance. I've been commenting this blog for almost 20 years, and the reason it works for me is that I only do what motivates me. I realize that this feeling that you're leaning on me to write about [whatever] must necessarily come from within — It's coming from inside the Howard — but please know that if it were coming from the Althouse, I would be asking you to cut it out.

Ann Althouse said...
"blah blah blah"

This is the side road I need you not to take. It is not addressing the question asked. It's an obvious point that no one has any difficulty seeing. Stick to the question asked.


Well played.

Peachy said...

If Genitals don't define Gender, how does removing them affirm it.

Genitals do define gender.
Removing them is nuts.

Peachy said...

"Affirming" is just a word used to make the whole process seem like a box of hair color.

Peachy said...

What I like about the vid I posted - it contains a trans who admits it's a mental disorder. But also the same trans has all the respect for privacy that is lacking from the fake men who pretend to be women just to get abuse women and children because they are sickos and pedos.

Post a Comment

Please use the comments forum to respond to the post. Don't fight with each other. Be substantive... or interesting... or funny. Comments should go up immediately... unless you're commenting on a post older than 2 days. Then you have to wait for us to moderate you through. It's also possible to get shunted into spam by the machine. We try to keep an eye on that and release the miscaught good stuff. We do delete some comments, but not for viewpoint... for bad faith.