Quote:
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Some people are quick to deny gendered preferences as sexist, but there could be a scientific basis behind them.
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If a young woman is too poor to afford certain hygiene products, so she misses school when she has her period, and her teacher asks something like "if we got you some free hygiene products would you be able to come to school more often?", that's not sexist.
Or if an NGO conducts a legitimate study of poor young women to see what effect their access (or lack thereof) to hygiene products has on their school attendance rate, that's not also sexist.
But when you go up to a group of young women you don't know and ask "so are you girls going to miss school tomorrow because of your periods?" that
is sexist ... even if you were genuinely just curious about whether their differences from you will result in them missing school.
Context matters, and it especially matters when questioning people about their identity and asking them to represent an entire group.