TERF Battles - How radical lesbian feminists created a transphobic culture in the U.S. and provided anti-trans fuel for Right-Wing fundamentalist hate groups

Posted by Maphesdus 11 years ago to Culture
58 comments | Share | Flag

This is one of the primary reasons why I support anti-discrimination legislation. Without explicit laws declaring discrimination to be illegal, hate groups like this gain dominance and ruin thousands of people's lives. Legislation provides persecuted minorities with a legal means of defending themselves against these kind of groups.

Anyway, it's good to see that this group is finally losing traction after having such a dominating influence for so long. Hopefully the LGBT community will decide to start excluding THEM for a change.
SOURCE URL: http://outsmartmagazine.com/2013/12/terf-battles/


Add Comment

FORMATTING HELP

All Comments Hide marked as read Mark all as read

  • Posted by Rocky_Road 11 years ago
    I just Googled "transgender + cosmic joke"...and your bio came up Number 1 on the charts.

    You are making the Gulch almost too toxic to visit, Mapmysexuality...how about a respite?
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
    • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
    • Posted by $ 11 years ago
      I've noticed that Objectivists have a strong tendency to misunderstand the issues of discrimination and civil rights (probably because Ayn Rand herself misunderstood them), so I'm just trying to do what little I can to help correct that. ;)

      Though this thread has been pretty exhausting to me, so I may take a break for a while (unless something big happens).
      Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Posted by LetsShrug 11 years ago
    Hmmm sounds like you hate them.
    I've never heard of this group and what 'dominate influence' have they had? Why give them the time of day even..if they really exist.
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
    • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
    • -1
      Posted by $ 11 years ago
      Did you read the article? The influence they had was clearly spelled out.
      Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
      • Posted by LetsShrug 11 years ago
        Not all of it...it was too unbelievable. Life is short...I gotta be choosey about what I spend time reading.
        Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
        • Posted by LetsShrug 11 years ago
          TERF: He has a prick! That makes him a man.

          Feminist: That’s bullshit! Anatomy is not destiny!

          Who spends their time having this argument? And has anyone heard of the TERF 'movement'? It sounds made up to me, Maph.

          Maybe I'm out of touch...if so.. good!
          Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
          • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
          • Posted by $ 11 years ago
            The argument of biological determinism is a central aspect of both feminist and transgender theory. And the TERF movement is extremely well known in feminist and LGBT circles...

            Just google the names of the people listed in the article. Heck, just google the word "terf." These people are very real, I assure you.
            Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
            • Posted by LetsShrug 11 years ago
              What's their purpose? To force others to behave in a way they see fit? No wonder they clash. (I'm not saying that to be snarky...that's really how I see it. Seems both sides are trying to force the other to behave a certain way...a way THEY deem acceptable. Why not just stay off each others' toes and find a better use of time?)
              Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
              • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
              • Posted by $ 11 years ago
                The trans movement isn't trying to force the TERF movement to do anything except stop persecuting them. A group that fights against discrimination is not on the same level as a group that perpetuates and engages in it. Seriously, that's like saying that the KKK and African Americans both have equally legitimate arguments regarding racism.
                Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                • Posted by LetsShrug 11 years ago
                  I don't understand why they're trying to force others to behave a certain way or why they're engaging with each other period. Freedom of speech doesn't mean you have to listen or acknowledge what is being said. Define persecuting.
                  Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                  • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                  • Posted by $ 11 years ago
                    I'm not talking about them saying hateful things. If it was just speech, there would be no problem. But simply saying hateful things about a particular group isn't persecution. Persecution is taking actions which deny a particular group of their basic human rights which are granted without question to the rest of society.

                    From the article:
                    ---
                    Until Raymond’s NCHCT position paper, the federal government supported trans care as medically necessary. This meant that poor trans people could access psychological and medical care because public and private insurers had no official basis upon which to reject coverage for trans care. Raymond asserted that trans medical care was a new and unethical phenomenon, and that legislation should block trans medical care and instead institute a national program of reparative therapy.

                    It was only after the NCHCT pushed Raymond’s bigotry in 1980 that the government reversed course in 1981 and took up Raymond’s views and rhetoric. Raymond’s bigotry became the government’s stance. This official anti-trans policy soon spread to private insurers, and the American trans population soon found itself without access to medically necessary health care.

                    During a time when employment discrimination against trans people became legal due to an appeals court ruling that trans people were not covered by Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, Raymond helped dismantle the trans community’s ability to access trans health care through public and private insurance. Raymond ushered in the era in which trans people (many if not most of whom were unemployed) had to pay out-of-pocket or go without. In essence, Raymond helped ensure the future of a medical system that was unresponsive to the needs of the trans community at every turn.

                    [...]

                    In the past few years, TERFs have tried to make their anti-trans movement a bit more personal. TERFs have acted to out trans people to their employers and to intervene in legal name/gender changes and medical care. Moreover, they’ve shown that they’re willing to go after trans kids, too. Recently, Cathy Brennan, an attorney who heads a particularly hateful TERF group, outed a trans youth at school and even went so far as to work with the ex-gay group Pacific Justice Institute (PJI) in targeting a sixteen-year-old trans girl. Brennan’s group acted as PJI’s mouthpiece, joined them in misgendering her, and promoted PJI’s bullying. The girl was pushed to the brink of suicide and was placed on suicide watch.
                    Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                    • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                    • Posted by Hiraghm 11 years ago
                      "deny a particular group of their basic human rights"

                      GROUPS DO NOT HAVE RIGHTS. ONLY INDIVIDUALS HAVE RIGHTS.

                      And forcing others to embrace one's mental/emotional issues is not a right.
                      Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                      • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                      • Posted by $ 11 years ago
                        I'm not arguing against a reductionist approach to human rights. The idea that a group cannot posses any rights which are not also possessed by the individual is a perfectly valid theory, and a sound approach to dealing with the issue of rights.

                        However, the fact remains that discrimination is an act which denies individual rights to members of particular groups.

                        And I'm not saying people should be forced to embrace anyone, merely that they should be forced to stop persecuting minorities. If you're attacking someone, and I tell you to stop, that doesn't mean I want you to embrace that person or like them, just that I want you to stop actively hurting them.
                        Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                        • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                        • Posted by Hiraghm 11 years ago
                          Perhaps I wasn't clear enough....

                          GROUPS DO NOT HAVE RIGHTS. PERIOD.
                          No conditionals. Only individuals have rights.

                          Discrimination is an act which attempts to discern superior quality, based upon whatever criteria matter to the individual required to discriminate.

                          It is not persecution to behave as if a nut is a nut. YOU are the one hurting people, by pretending they're healthy when they need help.
                          Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                          • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                          • Posted by $ 11 years ago
                            Individuals have rights, certainly, but those rights can absolutely be revoked on a group basis. To deny this is to deny reality.

                            And no, simply making a decision is not the only definition of discrimination. That is one definition, yes, but it is not the only definition.

                            From dictionary.com:

                            dis·crim·i·na·tion
                            noun
                            1. an act or instance of discriminating, or of making a distinction.
                            2. treatment or consideration of, or making a distinction in favor of or against, a person or thing based on the group, class, or category to which that person or thing belongs rather than on individual merit: racial and religious intolerance and discrimination.
                            3. the power of making fine distinctions; discriminating judgment: She chose the colors with great discrimination.
                            4. Archaic. something that serves to differentiate.

                            It seems to me, Hiraghm, like you're trying to say that only definition #3 is valid, and that definition #2 is not. Unfortunately, that's not how language works. Words can and do have multiple meanings, and all of the definitions are valid. In this case, the one I'm talking about is definition #2. But thank you for demonstrating your lack of understanding about the English language.
                            Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                    • Posted by LetsShrug 11 years ago
                      Is bocare the answer that you're looking for? I don't think any of this should fall on the tax payers to fund and I don't think forcing employers to hire, insure, etc ANYone they don't want to hire (for whatever reason) is the answer either.
                      Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                      • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                      • Posted by $ 11 years ago
                        No, I don't think the Affordable Care Act is a workable solution. Healthcare in the U.S. certainly needed some kind of reform, but the ACA isn't it.

                        In the case of the LGBT community (especially the trans* community), all that was really needed was anti-discrimination legislation.

                        As for the general population, I think a more effective solution would have been to try and figure out why healthcare costs are so horribly inflated in the U.S. (the price of healthcare is significantly lower in other countries), and see what can be done to bring those costs down. Instead, the Affordable Care Act essentially leaves healthcare costs where they are, and attempts to enable people to afford the higher cost by making it a legal requirement to have health insurance, and then increasing everyone's premiums so we all have to pay even more. Apparently the word "affordable" was meant ironically...

                        But anyway, to get back on topic, I would say that no, employers should not be able to make hiring or firing decisions on absolutely any criteria they want. There are (and should be) legal limitations. Unfortunately, those limitations rarely include protections for the LGBT community (unless of course ENDA passes in the House, but that's still up in the air).

                        The LGBT community is faced with discrimination in a unique way because their status as minorities might not be discovered until after they've been working at the company for a while, meaning that an employer can unknowingly hire an LGBT person thinking they're just a regular straight, cisgender person, and then fire them after they come out of the closet. That sort of thing can destroy people's lives, and it should not be legal.

                        Same thing goes for insurance companies.
                        Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                        • Posted by LetsShrug 11 years ago
                          Employers are NOT beholden to employees personal lives and they do not owe them a living. They are hired to do a job for an agreed upon wage....not a lifelong, no matter what, permanent guarantee. I got hired once by a large company for what I thought was going to be a permanent job that I would retire comfortably from....then they completely changed my job...changed it to included doing things I believe are pushy and immoral actions towards other...but that was my job like it or not, take it or leave it....so I left it because they didn't OWE me anything and I wasn't going to work for a company who expected something from me that I wasn't okay with.
                          Maph...we are never going to agree on this topic....passing laws (MORE laws) to take over the business choices of business owners and using FORCE is never okay. Let the free market decide the winners and losers.
                          Medical rates are a completely different topic, but it again stems from government requirements that require many man hours to comply with and raise costs for everyone. So...health savings accounts is where it should be...make people responsible for their own decisions and expenses and open up the topic of costs and necessities instead of other parties making decisions and deciding costs and what THEY deem necessary for individuals (NOT THEIR BUSINESS)... If a tranny can haggle a sex change op down to what THEY can afford then more power to 'em.
                          Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                          • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                          • Posted by $ 11 years ago
                            I'm fine with letting the free market decide the winners and losers when it comes to issues of production and pricing (in fact that's the only way to have a successful economy), but what I'm trying to help you understand is that the free market does absolutely nothing to deter or discourage discrimination or persecution of minorities, precisely because the free market only caters to the will of the majority. If the majority is perfectly fine with minorities being persecuted, then the free market will do nothing to stop it. Discrimination can and often does destroy people's lives, and there needs to be some kind of legal process to allow minorities to protect and defend themselves against it.
                            Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                            • Posted by LetsShrug 11 years ago
                              You can't have it both ways. Freedom means you're free to do business with whomever or NOT to do business with whomever. The patrons (people...individuals) will decide if a business survives...NOT laws. There are business who survive without catering to the majority... plenty of businesses have a small niche they cater too. I still think you just want to force people to change their opinions.... we have a right to form our own opinions and decide who we want to deal with.
                              Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                              • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                              • -1
                                Posted by $ 11 years ago
                                You misunderstand. I am not saying that the government should determine which businesses survive and which don't. I fully agree with you that government should leave businesses free to determine what they want to produce and in what market. However, they should still be required to abide by certain regulations to ensure health and safety, as well as prevent them from violating the basic human rights of customers and employees. When discussing the issue of economic freedom, it's important to distinguish between regulation and manipulation. The first is necessary and productive, while the second is destructive.
                                Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                                • Posted by LetsShrug 11 years ago
                                  But by regulating business to force certain behaviors ie: who a business has to hire (or consider hiring) is not freedom. A business owner is a risk taker...and they should be left alone to take that risk...THEIR risk, on their own...no one elses. Their business belongs to THEM. A basic human right to own your own business and run it whatever way you want...the market and customers will decide it's success. Stop trying to regulate forced business transactions. If I don't want to do business with you I shouldn't be forced to to save your feelings. If someone doesn't want to do business with me they are free to NOT do business with me. I will take my money elsewhere, thank you very much.
                                  Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                            • Posted by $ stargeezer 11 years ago
                              I hope you understand a couple things about this entire "confused gender thing. It was all settled millennia ago. You know, that pesky evolution thing, where male/female problems were all worked out. If you generate sperm, you're a male. I you generate a egg, you're a female.

                              Deciding that your body is not what you really are is called psychosis. Not too long ago homosexuality was classed as a disease in that thick book of diagnostic medicine doctors use. Then the AMA (I think) bowed to political correctness

                              People involved in that movement don't want to be classed as being sick, BUT the simple truth is that two men or two women, or whatever combination you want to select cannot reproduce. ONLY male/female pairing will. Therefor, the solution is medical treatment for the disease OR live with the impairment.

                              And before anybody jumps on me saying I don't have a clue, remember that I live in a wheelchair. I could decide that living in this chair is a violation of my civil rights and that somebody HAS to pay whatever it costs to "fix" me into a cyborg that can walk. Stupid, oh yeah, but no more so than saying the things all these groups are saying.

                              Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                              • Posted by Macro 11 years ago
                                Stargeezer,

                                There's apparently no way of 'correcting' homosexuality. That has been tried for centuries by religious organizations and psychologists. Many young kids ended up killing themselves thanks to the pressure for results... But you say it's curable? Could you please provide me your source for that claim?

                                As an objectivist gay man, I actually spent most of my life trying to 'convert' myself haha. It didn't work. I suppose it's practically impossible, in the same way you can't make a straight man feel sexual attraction for other men, no matter how much you try to prepare him for that. That's just denying reality, isn't it?

                                If gay people are really unable to change, then the natural rules for straight males do not apply to them. Our genes must have a different function in nature, I suppose, since we didn't go extinct after so long, and we're not exactly as rare as most genetic mutations. Who knows, maybe increasing the chances of our sibling's offspring of surviving by providing them with an extra layer of protection is actually our real purpose in nature? If that's the case, we're not deviants at all. We're excelling at that function, apparently.

                                Now, I may be wrong, as I'm not well-versed in this field, but isn't something considered a disease only if it brings distress to the person? Additionally, would you allow some sort of treatment to your own son if you found out he had homosexual tendencies? Is that something that you, as an objectivist, would do?

                                And now the last one: do you think that homosexuality and objectivism are actually irreconcilable? Can't a person be both without being rationally inconsistent?

                                -X-

                                Sorry for the amount of questions, sir. It's just that I never had the opportunity to ask another fellow objectivist what he thinks about this particular subject.

                                Take care.
                                Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                              • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                              • Posted by $ 11 years ago
                                Evolution still allows for diversity. In fact, that is the very principle on which evolution relies. The fact that there are two genders does not mean it's impossible for the biology to ever get mixed up. Quite the contrary, every aspect of biology, including gender, is subject to mutation and deviation. That's how evolution works.

                                Please read this article:

                                Intersexes in Humans: An Introductory Exploration, by Duane E. Jeffery:
                                http://www.dialoguejournal.com/wp-conten...

                                And I'm fully aware of the fact that homosexuality used to be classified as a mental illness, but that was only because of the biased view that researches and scientists previously held on the subject prior to more modern studies which proved that sexual orientation was genetic and controlled by biology.

                                As for the transgender community, seeking medical treatment is exactly what they do when they transition.

                                Your comparison of gender transition being akin to a wheelchair user becoming a cyborg is rather silly. A better and more accurate analogy would be if there was some kind of medical procedure which could repair your spinal cord. If such a treatment existed, wouldn't you want to take advantage of it?
                                Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                                • Posted by $ stargeezer 11 years ago

                                  It's a choice to correct or not to correct a deviancy from the successful norm. Declaring that I have no option is not validation for demanding the service be provided. The comparison is valid.

                                  As for the link you supplied, I really don't consider data from a position oriented lobby group as being untarnished in their point of view. Hardly a source that would stand up to pier review.

                                  Apart from you personal obsession on this subject, from which I deduct you are involved personally at some level, I remain uninfluenced from my opinion that like sex pairing will not result in reproduction. Therefore I maintain it is deviancy, and curable - but I don't think I should be forced to pay for it.
                                  Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                        • Posted by Zenphamy 11 years ago
                          >>"As for the general population, I think a more effective solution would have been to try and figure out why healthcare costs are so horribly inflated in the U.S. (the price of healthcare is significantly lower in other countries), and see what can be done to bring those costs down."<<

                          Healthcare costs in the US started inflating with Medicare and Medicaid, now they're going even higher. Get the government and imbecilic bureaucrats out of the hospital room.
                          Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                        • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                        • Posted by Hiraghm 11 years ago
                          LGBT is not a minority, any more than diabetic.

                          What destroys the lives is not an employer expecting a mentally healthy employee, but people with mental illness not seeking appropriate help.
                          Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                    • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                    • -1
                      Posted by Hiraghm 11 years ago
                      I'm all for going after trans, kids, too. Actually, I'm in favor of putting their parents in jail for child abuse.
                      Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                      • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                      • Posted by $ 11 years ago
                        You're a monster. How in the world can it possibly be considered child abuse to allow a child to express their inner self? If anything, the REAL child abuse would be to not do so. Transsexuality is a genetic condition, and the parents who truly love their child are going to support them in being who they are.

                        I suppose you'd also say that parents of gay kids who allow their children to freely express who they are are also engaging in child abuse?
                        Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                        • Posted by Zenphamy 11 years ago
                          >>"Transsexuality is a genetic condition, and the parents who truly love their child are going to support them in being who they are."<<

                          This is truly a 'give-me-a-break moment.' Hair color and feet size are genetic conditions. I suppose you can dye your hair a different color, but that's not permanent or mutilating. Feet size surgical correction strikes me as mutilating, ie. Chinese feet binding.
                          Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                          • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                          • Posted by $ 11 years ago
                            Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                            • Posted by Zenphamy 11 years ago
                              May surprise you, but I happen to understand and agree with the professor. It's been fairly well studied in Europe for a number of years, that the hormonal environment in-utero results in these changes and differences. And the resulting defects cause further errors in sex hormone generated developments at least twice more during child-hood development including puberty. Politically, it was not acceptable for discussion or publication in the US until sometime in the 80's, much as the red wine-heart disease findings from France.

                              But all of that reinforces my statement above that it is not a genetic condition. It is a pre-natal defect that affects many areas of normal human development. i still don't see any justification for medical mutilation.
                              Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                              • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                              • Posted by $ 11 years ago
                                There are several different intersex conditions. Some of them are genetic, and some of them are simply caused by irregular hormone environments during fetal development. Either way, it's still being controlled by biology, and thus cannot be changed through therapy. Therefore, the best approach is always to allow the child to live as whichever gender they desire. To do otherwise would be abusive.
                                Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                        • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                        • Posted by Hiraghm 11 years ago
                          It's child abuse to get your child cut on when s/he needs psychiatric help.

                          Would it be child abuse to not let your child express his liberated spirit... by going to school nude? Would it be child abuse to not let your child express his inner self if that inner self was a mass-murderer?

                          Parents of children suffering from homosexuality are negligent if they don't attempt to get the child psychological help.

                          Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                          • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                          • Posted by $ 11 years ago
                            You obviously haven't done the slightest bit of research on the topic, because you clearly don't understand what transition for kids involves. Transgender kids aren't even allowed to get surgery until they're 18. Until then, transition merely involves dressing in the clothing of the desired gender, and then puberty blockers at age 10 or 12, and cross-gender hormone medication at age 14 or so. That's plenty of time for the kids to work who they want to be.

                            Homosexuality and transsexuality cannot be changed by psychotherapy. They are genetic conditions, controlled and predetermined by unchangeable biological factors. Talking to a counselor isn't going to change a person's biology, and quite often LGBT children are not provided with genuine, helpful therapy, but rather are subjected to inhumane techniques known as conversion therapy, which has actually been incredibly harmful to the children who are forced to endure it. So much so that several states are seriously considering outlawing conversion therapy entirely.

                            Now of course trans* kids and their parents should certainly seek the help of professional psychologists, but that help should be aimed at assisting the child in figuring out which way they want to go, and not trying to "fix" them or coerce them into taking any one particular path, and certainly not with the intention of forcing them to conform to some misguided and faulty notion that only heteronormative behavior is acceptable, because THAT would be the real child abuse.

                            Here, watch this:
                            http://katiecouric.com/videos/exclusive-...
                            Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                            • Posted by Zenphamy 11 years ago
                              >>"Until then, transition merely involves dressing in the clothing of the desired gender, and then puberty blockers at age 10 or 12, and cross-gender hormone medication at age 14 or so. That's plenty of time for the kids to work who they want to be."<<

                              Do you seriously not understand the effects of puberty blockers and cross gender sex hormones on the development, not only physically, but also within the brain of a teen ager and the selective expression of genes.? For someone criticizing someone else's understanding, you've got a little way to go yourself.
                              Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                              • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
                              • Posted by $ 11 years ago
                                I'm well aware of the physical changes that these medications have on a person's body. The whole point of taking them in the first place is to induce such physical changes. As for potential impacts on brain development, there have been studies done on that as well, and it doesn't appear as though hormone medications have any impact on the development of the brain at all.

                                Please see this post:

                                http://www.galtsgulchonline.com/posts/27...
                                Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
                                • Posted by Zenphamy 11 years ago
                                  Have you watched the lesson you refer me to?

                                  >>"I'm well aware of the physical changes that these medications have on a person's body. The whole point of taking them in the first place is to induce such physical changes."<<

                                  So you're saying it's OK to begin the physical and neuro-physical changes in the child at 10 or 12 until age 18 or so giving "plenty of time for the kids to work out(sic) who they want to be." Starting the changes in a 10 to 12 year old, chemically, before (s)he's had time to 'work out who they want to be' without informed consent (which a 10 to 12 year old can't possible give) sounds pretty abusive to me.

                                  Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Posted by $ stargeezer 11 years ago
    It's his personal boogy man gang. Nothing to see here except an attempt to covince people that a deviancy is "normal" because he says it is.

    Asking any true believer whether or not their pet deviance is "normal" will result in the same result.

    I'm special, I am normal, because I've found people who think like me who say I'm normal.

    Good grief. What a waste of electrons.
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
  • Posted by $ 11 years ago in reply to this comment.
    Puberty blockers don't actually start the process of transition. They just delay puberty.

    It's the hormone replacement therapy (HRT), which doesn't begin until around age 14 or so, that actually induces the changes. If the child hasn't grown out of the whole transgender thing by then, they're not ever going to, and prohibiting transition would be cruel.

    And yes, I have watched the lesson. Why do you ask?
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
    • Posted by Zenphamy 11 years ago
      >>"Puberty blockers don't actually start the process of transition. They just delay puberty."<<

      And that isn't chemical treatment affecting the normal physical and mental development?

      >>"It's the hormone replacement therapy (HRT), which doesn't begin until around age 14 or so, that actually induces the changes. If the child hasn't grown out of the whole transgender thing by then, they're not ever going to, and prohibiting transition would be cruel."<<

      It still begs the point, how do you justify the induced changes before the age of self determination of 18?

      >>"And yes, I have watched the lesson. Why do you ask?"<<

      Because you keep trying to go back to genetic causes. The only causes identified to date are errors in the sex hormone triggers pre-natal. Genetic conditions that last through out several generations implies inheritability. I don't buy that.



      Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
  • Posted by Hiraghm 11 years ago
    "Transgender" is not a minority, any more than "baseball card collector" is a minority, or "diabetic" is a minority. Stop trying to feed at the trough of victimization.

    "Radical Right groups", in this context, is an oxymoron. The Right groups want things to remain as they have for thousands of years. Rightly or wrongly, that's not "radical", it's "reactionary".

    Secondly, the quoted statement is right on the money. It is insane, and a violation of the Hippocratic oath in my opinion, to mutilate someone's body to match what his/her mind thinks, rather than helping him to get his mind right.

    This is a total rejection of objectivism. As I understand it, Objectivism declares that there is a real, objective world, measurable and testable. Modifying the body to match the 'feelings' is contrary to this.

    You can't have it both ways. You want to modify your body, go for it. But, don't require other people to accept your delusions. Be grateful that other people tolerate them.
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  
    • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
    • Posted by $ 11 years ago
      LGBT people are absolutely minorities. Gender identity and sexual orientation are controlled by biology, and are just as immutable and irrevocable as race.

      And you clearly don't understand the scientific aspects of this issue. Every single medical association in the United States, Canada, and most of Europe disagrees with your stance. Transsexuality is absolutely based on biological factors which are scientifically measurable and testable. It not based purely on feelings.

      Here's a quote from a professor of Human Sexual Behavior at Stanford University:

      "Another region of the brain that shows a sex difference in its average size, don't even worry about the name of this, it's called the bed nucleus of the stria-terminalis. It's where the amygdala beings to send its projection into the hypothalamus. Another one of those gender differences, there's one type of neuron in there with a certain type of neurotransmitter, where very, very reliably it is about twice the size in males than in females. Sufficiently so that even in human brains you could very confidently determine the sex of somebody by seeing the number of these neurons. [...] It's just another one of those differences, a dimorphism in a region of the brain, a really, really reliable one. And this was a study done by some superb neuroanatomists looking at transsexuals. And what they showed was very interesting, which was very, very reliably, and a very powerful effect, what you would see in their large sample size of transsexuals' brains postmortem was people would have this part of the brain the size not of their sex they were born with, but rather of the sex they insisted they always actually were."

      You can watch the video of the actual class here:

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LOY3QH_jO...
      Now the above video is an hour and forty minutes long, so I don't expect you to watch the entire thing, but you should at least watch the parts where he talks about homosexuality and transsexuality, which are at the following time-points in the video:

      Homosexuality:
      1:13:27 - 1:24:40

      Transsexuality:
      1:24:40 - 1:29:45

      There's also a paper on the topic which you should read:

      Intersexes in Humans: An Introductory Exploration, by Duane E. Jeffery:
      http://www.dialoguejournal.com/wp-conten...

      The real, objective, scientific evidence, which is measurable and testable, does not support your argument, Hiraghm. It refutes it.
      Reply | Mark as read | Parent | Best of... | Permalink  
  • Comment hidden by post owner or admin, or due to low comment or member score. View Comment
  • -1
    Posted by $ 11 years ago in reply to this comment.
    A business which engages in detrimental practices can severly harm the public. Even if the business fails, the harm is still done. Therefore, it is a legitimate function of government to impose regulations for the health and safety of the employees and general public.

    You wouldn't say that it's a violation of a restaurant owner's property rights for a health inspector to come in and inspect the resauraunt, now would you?
    Reply | Mark as read | Best of... | Permalink  

FORMATTING HELP

  • Comment hidden. Undo