eldanielfire wrote: ↑Sun Sep 06, 2020 8:49 pm
Rather than create another thread, an interesting article about how many companies and actovosts are suddenly scrubbing some pro-Trans articles, social media posts and statements, usually about children being transitioned and the organisation that encouraged that 'Mermaids', from their servers and appear to be taking a different position on the matter now:
https://savageminds.substack.com/p/the- ... -senseless
...
As I said a while ago, a lot of people jumped on the Trans-bandwagon out of fear of "being on the wrong side of history" and thinking (or not thinking on the issue) it would be the new 'civil rights cause' now society is broadly accepting of people of other ethnic backgrounds and sexuality. It shows that many people, especially people in public life, are more about virtue signalling or being seen to be on the right side, rather than thinking about a topic and the evidence and evaluating what the best way forward is because it is the right thing to do.
That's not saying Trans issues are not a bit more tricky to revolve around. But the issue of biologically born men in women's sport and the need for women's safe places are hardly parts of the debate that requires much more than common sense.
I read this article and it makes some fair points on ideology and society in general but kind of ignores that trans and non-binary people are well ... just people and part of our society too. They are somewhere between 0.3-0.6% of the population from the reading I've done ... this might be conservative as it was a historical international meta review of previous research, I'd have to find the paper.
Most trans are not trans activists. And their suicide and suicide attempt rates are horrendous. And different degrees of transition (hormones, blockers, top surgery, bottom surgery etc) helps both binary trans, also some identifications of non-binary.
What we don't know really especially with teenagers and younger -
- Why the huge increase in numbers of people identifying as trans and non-binary and with gender dysphoria? Of course increasing awareness and societal acceptance is part of that but probably not all imo.
- Why the even huger increase in F2M cases, which is now a lot bigger than M2F in the UK?
- The long-term effect of "puberty blockers" on kids. Lupron is mentioned but I'm not sure if that's used much in the UK tbh, I need to check this out as it's a new drug to me.
- Certainly for M2F spironolactone and cyproterone acetate have been prescribed for decades as T(estosterone)-blockers for post-puberty transition and there's lots of research out there including known side effects, like any other drug. Pre-puberty? Again not sure.
Regardless ... it's reasonable to assume a percentage of those increasing numbers with gender dysphoria will be trans, and earlier treatment/intervention (treatment normally falls within international "WPATH" guidelines from memory) for them is beneficial. There are different views on how early that treatment should start, the process, and the extent of gatekeeping. And of course there is a financial cost - to the NHS in the UK. UK waiting lists are huge and growing and trans people who can afford it (or their parents) use private healthcare out of desperation because else they are waiting years at the moment.
These I reckon are the BIG issues and there's a balance to be found - but at the moment between the hysterical twittering of both TERFs and trans-activists, we all end up talking about toilets, and male-rapists-and-perverts going in toilets wearing dresses, and trans athletes. Yes, these are issues... but not the big ones imho.
Discuss ...