Glorianny
Apparently I haven't said what rights transpeople are denied.
Well read the thread
Transmen have to comply with any designation you decide. The fact that they have cervixes but don't want to be called women can't be recognised. The fact that they bleed can't be recognised. The fact that they give birth can't be recognised.
But you have not indicated what rights are denied to transpeople - what you have done is suggest what rights you think people on this thread would refuse them.
And, as Rosie51 indicated - transmen will know that they are women regardless of how they identify.
Medical information brochures / leaflets, etc, containing general information for public consumption, are generic and therefore not aimed specifically at the individual - therefore there is no need to be sensitive about gender identity if the subject matter is related to biological sex.
As far as the medical profession is concerned - once you are admitted on a personal level into the system, one of the first questions you will be asked is, "how do you like to be addressed", and it is then that you can indicate how you identify, which will be respected, because it will be written on your medical notes. At that point you become an individual. And it is at that point that the medical 'language' can be accommodated to your specific gender need / identity.
You say, frequently, that we view transwomen as the wrong sort of women an accusation which is somewhat meaningless in the context of what we are debating, but it suits your purpose in attempting to paint us as bigots. If we do not accept that transwomen are women, then they cannot be the 'wrong sort' because we do not accept that they are women. That is the logic.
And again, as Rosie51 points out, the descriptive, women, will cease to have any meaning whatsoever if any man - at any time - based on whatever motivates him to do so, decides that he is one. The word, woman will be so mobile that it really will be meaningless. And this will be because a minority of men have appropriated it to accommodate their feelings.