I think we're missing each other here. I was speaking to what I understood to be the intended meaning of the person that originally wrote those words. In following the conversation backwards, the statement below (I included a bit more of it for context) was a response to a statement that seemed to support it as being ok to withhold the information of being trans from someone one is having sex with, because it was not the same as STD's, which was also brought up as information that should be given upfront. My point is, there are some things that are considered a lie if they are important enough to the other person, and withheld so as to not affect that person's decision.
I had quoted that same exact portion when I had previously responded. I spoke to it in a few ways and not just the "sleep with" phrasing. I actually called that out as a rather significant thing within context of the discussion we are having. The OP assertion is:
"some posts stated that a heterosexual man's refusal to date a transgendered person because the latter has a penis is transphobic."
"Refusal to date" is the language I'm primarily operating under. If OP had presented the situation as both partners are now entering into the bedroom after consenting to a sexual encounter, and upon learning that partner is a trans woman, the person refused to have sex with them, I would NOT see that as bigotry.
Which is what much of this thread seems to be getting at, and either dismissing or ignoring what was the exact wording used in OP, regarding 'a date, or dating.'
So, if we are going to follow the conversation backwards, I'd be pleased as punch to go back to what OP stated rather than this notion of "we are only discussing sexual intercourse." From the post you are addressing and that I previously addressed, it said 'date/sleep with' as if those two can't be distinguished between.
I would add to that another point, that of being married. I think if a person is married they ought to be aware that it might really matter, and be devastating to a single person, to find out after the fact they slept with a married person. The point there is that I think it is just reasonable for a person to know there are some things about themselves that might be material to whether or not a person would decide to have sex with you. I know you are making the distinction about dates not necessarily involving sex, but the post you are quoting is definitely talking about sex, not dates with no sex.
I don't think it's moving the goal posts to represent the post as being related to sex, when it is.
I had already spoken to this in my previous post, when I first addressed this post you are addressing.
Regarding the other post about having a questionnaire, of course there is no way to cover everything that may be important to a person on, or before, a date. Again, I'm talking about situations in which sex is expected as an eventuality, and I think it's important to be honest, and reveal what one might expect to be important to another person. I don't think a questionnaire is necessary, especially when there are a few key things about a person they are likely to know someone might want to know -- STDs, if one is a female with a penis, if one is married, etc. To intentionally withhold that information, implies for me, one believes the information may make the other person change their mind -- which does expose one to the possibility of rejection. I understand, and do not take the pain of rejection lightly. It does not make a person guilty of lying if they haven't thought of something that ends up being bothersome to the person, and failed to address it, but STDs, unexpected penises, and married status -- those are things I don't think a person needs a questionnaire to figure out should be revealed upfront.
And IMO, it gets dicey here. Dealing with the goalposts as I see you bringing up, I would say it probably is in best interests of all to bring up the information regarding transsexual information if sex is truly inevitable (moments away, rather than days away). But putting myself in shoes of transsexual (or anyone really), I would think the attraction would be maintained. I would think if getting along famously during a date or over course of several dates, that it wouldn't automatically be a deal breaker. I would like to think a person would accept me for who I am and thus far has given every indication that they do. So, I could understand reluctance to share the information. That doesn't mean I would justify withholding it, but helps explain why someone may not wish to be upfront with certain information. Me, personally, I have enough 'baggage items' that I've been told (many times) by friends, family is best to NEVER bring up. Me, I'd rather bring it up on first dates or no later than say date 5. I feel like I'm slowly getting the notion that it is perhaps better to not bring these things up. Plus, part of it is how it is brought up. Arguably, it could be entirely how it is brought up. Example from what we are talking about is person (male) could be very open to the idea of being physical with trans woman, but has no experience with it. Thinks they are in relationship with female (that is not transsexual) and then that woman expresses with underwhelming sense of confidence and lots of emotions their 'information' about being a transsexual woman. Just from how it was presented, might be what lead the male in this case to run away. And as this is a hypothetical, I'm saying it is the only reason. So, that could be another factor in why not share the information. Person may have not figured out a way to share it when it is not being asked about in a caring manner. But if the attraction is there, mutually felt and mutually expressed as shared, plus the two share a bond that all onlookers say "you two were made for each other" then to me, there are so so so many things that could be 'deal breakers' if people were completely honest with each other about all possible things that could come up later in the relationship. Especially if marriage, long term commitment is on the table. Instead, it seems like healthy relationships are those that are willing to be honest and are able to grow together, continue to find acceptance in or with each other, and make it conducive to notion that there isn't really any deal breakers, just opportunities for the two to overcome as one strong partnership.
But perhaps that's just fanciful imagining on my part.
I am assuming we are not simply talking about friendships and socializing. I am assuming we are talking about dating with the expectation that it lead to sex, or a long-term relationship -- because of how it is presented in the OP. We could go off on a tangent about whether or not dating necessarily implies sex. For me it does not, but I am aware for many people it does. For the purpose of this conversation, there's been so much reference to sex, I'm speaking as though we are talking about dating that includes sex.
I see nothing in OP about 'dating that will lead to sex.' The word sex or sexual intercourse or words synonymous with that are nowhere found in OP. Well other than the word "heterosexual" is that not found. It provides an example of refusing to date a whole group of people, and then asks:
"Is having dating preferences such as the above a form of bigotry or a right?"
Had OP said, "are all dating preferences bigotry?" I would've said no. But it didn't ask that. It asked if the one noted in OP, where refusal of a whole group of people is A FORM OF bigotry.
Had OP said, "going on a date that involves sexual intercourse by the end of that date," would've led me to respond differently than I have. But it wasn't worded that way.
So, if I were to list the thousands of activities that one might do on a date, then it would be arguably and within context of this thread to suggest that if you refuse to date transgendered persons, you would be unaccepting of doing all thousands of those activities with transgendered persons. All based on "preference" and seemingly having nothing to do with the bigotry it takes to rule out an entire group of people from sharing in things you say you enjoy doing.