Good question, FN.
The whole premise of this 'debate' is that one 'side says that women are adult human females, and the other says that that POV is discriminatory, phobic and so on, and that women are, well, something that people have in their heads and is connected with authentic selves and being in the right body.
The point of language is that it allows people to use otherwise arbitrary signs to discuss concepts that go beyond pointing at things, and for that to work the signs have to be agreed amongst speakers of a common tongue. As soon as that breaks down, discussion is impossible, which is what is happening in the trans 'debate'.* The choice of language (eg the use of terms such as 'ranting') is also indicative of the attitude of the speaker/writer, but that is well-established on here on the whole, so tends to wash over me, other than to scream 'ironic'.
No tactics here. I have nothing to prove, as my position is clear - women are adult human females. As they have always been, and always will be, unless we evolve to the point where we reproduce differently. I think that the corruption of the language is very relevant to the discussion - it is one of my biggest fears about the whole trans situation (is 'situation' acceptable?) We can no longer compare figures about sex differences, as they are collected on the basis of so-called 'gender', and 'facts' don't mean what they did even five years ago. Where this will end is anyone's guess.
*I say 'debate', as any discussion needs to have both sides in a position of willingness to explain the reasons for their viewpoints, preferably backed up by evidence. If one side quotes data (in this case that the number of female paedophiles is 4%) to contradict someone else's figures of 1%, but is unable to say that they have even considered the validity of their source, or whether the two figures are based on research using the same parameters then the evidence is, at best, in doubt.
But yes. Why are you so resistant to answering questions, and in what way are they 'leading'?