I'm not promoting either. — Benkei
As such, your argument, applied to public health policy, could be used equally to design policies which place barriers (or further barriers) in the way of pharmaceutical and surgical responses to gender dysphoria using exactly the same argument as is being used to design policies which remove or lessen those barriers. — Isaac
because public health policy isn't in the business of resolving social issues. — Benkei
doing away with gender stereotypes will not resolve all gender dysphoria — Benkei
I find this hard to accept. I would take issue with it on its face - junk food, for example, is as much a social issue as a medical one and public health policy acknowledges that. But I would also take issue with it from the position of a citizen. If it is, as I believe, our duty as citizens to hold our authorities to account, then we needn't (nor ought to) limit our assessments to artificially narrow concerns.
If the social impact of a public health policy is negative, then the personal benefits to individuals need not outweigh that as far as we're concerned. The authority itself might have a narrow remit, but we don't. — Isaac
I agree, but there are solutions to gender dysphoria which do not involve promoting the idea that it's the individual who needs 'fixing'. As unenlightened has alluded to, there are mental health approaches which focus on acceptance (society's, not the client's), and strategies to deal with the lack of it. Therapies which focus the blame where it belongs and provide mechanisms for change on both sides of the individual's relationship with their community. — Isaac
it's all connected but no we're not capable of untangling that web and I don't think anybody is. So we have to compartimentalise out of necessity. — Benkei
I don't find it helpful to build hypothetical solutions to actual problems. — Benkei
I don't disagree with anything you say, I just don't think it's in any way practical. — Benkei
So some kind of comparison is in the essence of identity, right? — fdrake
people do have predispositions, perhaps some bodily, which constrain how patterns can be internalised into identity, which constraints work and which don't. That manifests as a constraint on someone's propensities for development, who they become depends on how they're set up to grow and set up to adapt, even though all the potential is not determined in advance. — fdrake
It wasn't, until you introduced it.Yes, but that [a better, healthier direction] 's not the debate here. — Isaac
1. I am unaware that "people" are being encouraged to alter their bodies, and if so, by whom they are being encouraged.I'd prefer people not be encouraged to surgically alter their bodies [1] to 'fix' a mental health problem [2] caused by societal values [3] which are themselves wrong. [4] Fixing society's unhealthy attitudes by laying the fault at the individual is itself unhealthy, [5] but doing so by giving more power to an industrial complex [6] which is already responsible for some of the greatest tragedies we've recently been through is doubly bad.[7] — Isaac
no proof is offered. — Vera Mont
I do not believe — Vera Mont
I do not believe — Vera Mont
I am unaware that — Vera Mont
I do not believe — Vera Mont
This argument is interesting for its sheer impenetrable complexity. — Vera Mont
As to social policy, the fascists are coming, so I would strongly encourage anyone who values their individual freedom to exercise their options while they can. — Vera Mont
1. I am unaware that "people" are being encouraged to alter their bodies, and if so, by whom they are being encouraged. — Vera Mont
2. This assumes that you are qualified to assess whatever problems people you have never met experience in relation to their gender identity, or that these problems are necessarily and invariably psychological. I do not believe either to be the case. — Vera Mont
3. Such psychological problems are assumed to have a single cause: societal values,
which are
4. presumed wrong in some unspecified way. — Vera Mont
5.I do not believe that 'society's unhealthy attitudes' can be fixed, but I do know that laws are always drafted in such a way as to hold individuals responsible for transgressing social rules and mores. Whatever a society is right or wrong about, only individuals can be punished. — Vera Mont
6. Industrial complexes already have a good deal of power through their economic influence. I don't follow which particular industrial complex is being empowered by gender transitions — Vera Mont
7. Unclear also is what industrial complex has been responsible for what great recent tragedies. — Vera Mont
... Christ almightly! Does everything one doesn't personally agree with have to be a 'conspiracy theory' these days? — Isaac
What's lazy is dividing every position into one of the two ready-made media-friendly tribes on every issue instead of actually reading what people are saying.
.all offered without a shred of proof nor even any argument. — Isaac
Correct. Woefully behind on UK news. But if it's been shut down, it's presumably stopped encouraging people.You've never heard of Tavistock Clinic, sued for medical negligence for doing exactly that, and then promptly shut down after a damning report by the Care Quality Commission? — Isaac
Blaming people's bodies because society won't accept them as such is wrong. Categorically. — Isaac
No, it presumes someone is [qualified to assess whether a problem is psychological]. Or rather, someone must. — Isaac
Rules and laws can be drafted so as to bring about social change. — Isaac
This is the industry you're wanting to entrust with the lifelong 'solution' to gender dysphoria. — Isaac
I read an article in the news recently in which there is some possibility that the male chromosome may become extinct. — Jack Cummins
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gay_liberationThe gay liberation[a] movement was a social and political movement of the late 1960s through the mid-1980s that urged lesbians and gay men to engage in radical direct action, and to counter societal shame with gay pride.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sexual_Offences_Act_1967The decriminalisation of homosexuality was one of multiple liberal social reforms to be passed under Wilson's 1966-70 government and the wider move towards a "permissive society".
In 1974, the DSM was updated and homosexuality was replaced with a new diagnostic code for individuals distressed by their homosexuality. Distress over one's sexual orientation remained in the manual, under different names, until the DSM-5 in 2013.
And the suggestion that the declassification of homosexuality and/or gender dysophoria as mental illnesses was done on the basis of "social mores" or political agendas and not evidence or valid scientific/medical considerations (nevermind the extensive body of evidence/medical studies cited as the basis for those decisions) lands pretty comfortably in conspiracy theory territory, in my estimation... and especially when this is suggested on the basis of no evidence whatsoever (as it has been here). This is the stuff of vaccine "skeptics" and flat earthers, not people interested in philosophy, and not least because its simply lazy. — busycuttingcrap
Don't let history get in the way of your ranting scientistic ideology. — unenlightened
in my estimation — busycuttingcrap
This is the sort of nonsense you expect from vaccine "skeptics" — busycuttingcrap
the APA's decision was based on... — busycuttingcrap
I don't think I should be required to prove my belief and disbelief to you — Vera Mont
if it's been shut down, it's presumably stopped encouraging people. — Vera Mont
(The irony is that homosexuality's original classification as a mental illness was due primarily to social and cultural biases and presuppositions in the absence of really any relevant empirical support, — busycuttingcrap
https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/1938342/Showalter described how the prevailing attitudes toward the mentally ill, and toward women in particular, were influenced by the social changes of each historical phase and how these attitudes affected the thinking and treatment used by the psychiatrists.
https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance in my country to consider social impacts. It already considers economic impacts. I accept it'll never cover everything, but I don't accept it's thereby under no obligation to even try. — Isaac
A 'rough sketch' of the likely 'web' seems another viable alternative, or 'as many plausible connections as you can manage' is another. I share your concern about pragmatic limits, but it doesn't seem too difficult to me for an institution like https://www.nice.org.uk/guidance in my country to consider social impacts. It already considers economic impacts. I accept it'll never cover everything, but I don't accept it's thereby under no obligation to even try. — Isaac
Can you share a guidance where you think they're doing this because I just tried to randomly and after spending 30 minutes reading, I couldn't find what you're referring to. — Benkei
I do think we could have afforable healthcare not through policy but healthcare worker autonomy - they decide what care their patient should get. — Benkei
what to do with people with gender dysphoria? "Yeah, it really sucks you're depressed but... — Benkei
allow gender affirming operations, it will save lives while society tries to catch up with not being dicks about other people's gender expressions. — Benkei
GPs, therapists and the whole healthcare system violates the nice guidelines everywhere. They're guidelines and do almost nothing to change the behaviour of healthcare professionals as far as I'm aware. It has a moral obligation to try, it usually just pretends to. — fdrake
Then why should I be required to prove mine to you? — Isaac
You're suggesting that the most plausible explanation for the near criminal misconduct of the nation's leading gender clinic is that it was just one single bad apple? — Isaac
This is in conflict with women's rights and dignity such as not undressing in front of a male bodied person in a changing room and not being physically intimately examined by a male bodied person etc. — Andrew4Handel
How should I know all the fuck-ups of your health care system? There may be lots of bad apples misconducting themselves all over the place. Shut down all of the criminal ones. — Vera Mont
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.