On February 13th, Facebook added a new feature to its growing customization system; now the user can choose a gender option other than "male" or "female". After all, many people are surprised by this because of what else we can do. Indeed, there are 58 things from agenda to pangenda, and everything in between. There is much debate about the need for these new choices, and some arguments are stronger than others. For many people it is a debate about human rights.
Many social media sites allow users to self-identify as non-binary, but it is very rare to identify non-binary sex within the media. For example, Facebook's new gender option, launched in early 2014, includes various options for non-binary sex individuals. However, allowing self identification is not necessarily equivalent to expression. Because in today's media, individual statements with non-dual gender are very few. In fact, it is not a dual gender, it is a community created mainly by people including self-made content, and there are many non-dual gender media representatives, usually about content creators.
This view thinks that gender and gender identity are fluent and adaptive, do not necessarily need to be dual, and recently they are becoming more prominent in popular culture. An example is a Facebook move in 2014, in addition to male and female selection, including 56 new ways to explain gender. As Facebook explains, this new option allows users to "feel real, real comfort as theirs", the key part of which is "sexual expression." Fluid, gender questions, others, general and dual spirit
Gender identity can be a subtle problem, and it is best to tell others about gender (if you want) rather than making assumptions. The new Facebook gender choice gives people the opportunity to do this and we believe this is a good step for expanding gender dialogue. When reading these gender terms, they are gender, not gender, but gender. They are completely different themes. Androgyne / Androgynous - A man who neither recognizes nor acts, neither a man nor a woman. "Androgynous" means having both male and female qualities. Latin has Latin. Andro - means "male", or "female". Some women may be identified as "gender vendors". In other words, it is intended to "bend" (or challenge / violate) the role of gender intentionally.