I can't pretend to understand this phenomenon experientially but I can support people and wish them the best. — Tom Storm
Would you refer to someone with XX male syndrome using "he" or "she" (or both or neither)? — Michael
What are these "necessary" attributes? — Michael
Every little thing comes down to money. Companies scramble to present a PC image so as to avoid losing their share of the market. That's why I, a healthcare worker, have been trained to be sensitive to trans issues.
Sniff all you want. There's nothing you can do about it. — frank
It isn't from a scientific perspective. How has it become so accepted as a concept? — Andrew4Handel
You support thousands of young women including teenage girls having healthy breasts removed, the indoctrination of children, undermining women's rights, the existence of 100 genders and so on.
So there is nothing noble about your position — Andrew4Handel
There are factual distinctions that make a difference between males and females, which is why we make the scientifically interesting distinction between the two. — Cobra
This person is intersex, as it says on the wiki. People with abnormal or mixed-sex characteristics/traits have always been "intersex". Intersex is uncommon and a fact. Just like male and female. There are males, females and then intersex. This is the only time the 'they/them' pronoun makes any form of sense outside of arbitrary made-up identities. I respect the intersex and they must be protected. The other arbitrary trivial identities are just that. — Cobra
There are many, many cases of post-operation regret but for some reason that part never gets highlighted. — emancipate
In a 2015 survey of nearly 28,000 people conducted by the U.S.-based National Center for Transgender Equality, only 8 percent of respondents reported detransitioning, and 62 percent of those people said they only detransitioned temporarily. The most common reason for detransitioning, according to the survey, was pressure from a parent, while only 0.4 percent of respondents said they detransitioned after realizing transitioning wasn’t right for them.
The results of a 50-year survey published in 2010 of a cohort of 767 transgender people in Sweden found that about 2 percent of participants expressed regret after undergoing gender-affirming surgery.
The numbers are even lower for nonsurgical transition methods, like taking puberty blockers. According to a 2018 study of a cohort of transgender young adults at the largest gender-identity clinic in the Netherlands, 1.9 percent of adolescents who started puberty suppressants did not go on to pursue hormone therapy, typically the next step in the transition process.
The survey in 2015 was conducted by national center for transgender equality. — emancipate
I would present you a non-bias source but unfortunately the entire western media is pumping out pro trans propaganda
A therapist says he is "astonished" by a university's decision to stop him studying people who decide to reverse gender reassignment operations.
James Caspian wanted to write a thesis on "detransition" as part of his master's degree in counselling and psychotherapy at Bath Spa University.
He said it was rejected by the university's ethics committee because it could be "politically incorrect".
Mr Caspian, a counsellor who specialises in therapy for transgender people, told Radio 4: "I was astonished at that decision.
"I think that a university exists to encourage discussion, research - dissent even, challenging perhaps ideas that are out of date or not particularly useful."
He says he wanted to study people who had swapped gender and then changed their minds after coming across evidence of a growing number of people who regretted having the surgery and finding no research had been done into the subject.
Better 'not to offend
He amended his proposal - to include people who had transitioned to men and reverted to living as women but without reversing their surgery - and resubmitted it, but it was rejected by the ethics committee.
"The fundamental reason given was that it might cause criticism of the research on social media and criticism of the research would be criticism of the university and they also added it was better not to offend people," he said.
According to the Times, it was rejected because "engaging in a potentially politically incorrect piece of research carries a risk to the university".
American transgender activist Riki Wilchins said studies on transgender people could have a "political undercurrent" and potentially have a negative effect on the way they are treated.
"People have been launching studies that undercut transgender people's access to surgery for decades now," she told Radio 4.
But Mr Caspian said older studies were out of date and the research was necessary "to help people".
He added: "The whole field has completely changed over the last few years.
"The idea that we might use the information from the research I was going to do in a way that wouldn't help people is completely wrong."
He is considering a legal challenge but is waiting for the university to conclude an internal investigation.
Are you saying that you don't have a source? If not then why do you believe that there is a high rate of regret? If your opinion is based on some evidence that show me the evidence — Michael
A total of 156 cases met age criteria and were undergoing assessment in the specified time period (47 male-bodied young people; 109 female-bodied young people). Four cases were excluded due to dropping out after one session, 20 female-bodied young people were excluded due to intending to pursue medical interventions in adult services, 4 cases that gave practical reasons as to why they were not seeking medical interventions at that time were also excluded (two males; two females). Of the remaining 128 cases, 12 cases (9.4%) met criteria for GD emerging in adolescence, were actively requesting medical interventions at outset of assessment and ceased wishing to pursue medical interventions and/or no longer felt that their gender identity was incongruent with their biological sex.
...
Out of the 12 cases, the majority had not received a formal diagnosis of GD.
Easy. Male = he/himWould you refer to someone with XX male syndrome using "he" or "she" (or both or neither)? — Michael
You say "complex", I say "confused".When pronouns, "he" and " her" are a reference to one's sex, not gender - whatever that is if it's not the same as sex.
— Harry Hindu
According to who or what?
How we actually use language determines what words mean and pronoun-usage in the modern age is more complex than it may have been historically. — Michael
Intersex people do not have an equal amount of male and female characteristics. They have mostly one or the other, therefore they would fall into one of two clusters I mentioned in my post to Michael.This person is intersex, as it says on the wiki. People with abnormal or mixed-sex characteristics/traits have always been "intersex". Intersex is uncommon and a fact. Just like male and female. There are males, females and then intersex. This is the only time the 'they/them' pronoun makes any form of sense outside of arbitrary made-up identities. I respect the intersex and they must be protected. The other arbitrary trivial identities are just that. — Cobra
When pronouns, "he" and " her" are a reference to one's sex, not gender - whatever that is if it's not the same as sex.
— Harry Hindu
According to who or what?
How we actually use language determines what words mean and pronoun-usage in the modern age is more complex than it may have been historically.
— Michael
You say "complex", I say "confused". — Harry Hindu
Would you refer to someone with XX male syndrome using "he" or "she" (or both or neither)? — Michael
Easy. Male = he/him — Harry Hindu
How is it that "gender" became part of a discussion on changing "sex" if they aren't both related or the same thing? — Harry Hindu
Racists, homophobes, sexists, Nazi sympathisers, etc.: We don't consider your views worthy of debate, and you'll be banned for espousing them.
I can't pretend to understand this phenomenon experientially but I can support (transgender) people and wish them the best. — Tom Storm
You support thousands of young women including teenage girls having healthy breasts removed, the indoctrination of children, undermining women's rights, the existence of 100 genders and so on. — Andrew4Handel
:100: — emancipate
Tom Storm expressed support towards transgender people, and got criticized with a dumb argument that being transgender equals to horrible things. That's a gross generalization, and it's a clear example of inappropriate transphobia. — pfirefry
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