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... what about serious people who are struggling with whats going on inside their own heads? ....
Indeed.
... what about serious people who are struggling with whats going on inside their own heads? ....
Ask Brian and David Reimer.I keep hearing "brainwashing".......how many courses do the hetrosexual folks on here figure they'd need to take before they'd be homosexual??
Ask Brian and David Reimer.
My problem with the LGBTQ debate is we have so called 'experts' on both sides who really are not qualified to make statements about the medical realities.
I personally don't understand trans, and I may have a negative mindset towards it, but if my child felt they are trans and discussed it with their teacher. I would want to be a part of that conversation so I can support them. Keeping me out of the loop will not really give me a chance to help my child feel more accepted.
I would like to add this:
If any one other than immediate family tells your kids to keep secrets from their parents in my mind that is a red flag. Many LEOs have said this including several criminal profilers.
So take care. Be careful of who you trust.
You guys really like pulling out the most public and extreme cases, and completely ignore the huge body of study on these matters.Ask Brian and David Reimer.
This is children we are talking about not adults. Stories are starting to come out of now adults who realized none of this applied to them but unfortunately for some of them it is after surgeries or other negative things have happened to them. I think over the next decade there will be lots of case studies for this behaviour.
How many times does someone need to read from the Quran to you to make you a muslim? Would it be much easier to convert a child or a adult?
Children are impressionable. It’s very easy to mess with a childs mind. What is taught needs to be carefully thought through as otherwise you can really warp their world view without much effort. Look at the children in the USSR which were taught to turn their parents in for anti-communist activities and thoughts.
All sorts of evidence of adults who have turned away from what they were taught as a child, be it religion, culture, or in this case sexuality. Children are malleable. It doesn’t take a ton to really mess with their heads.
Unlike most on here I was in high school when they really started to push the gay movement, and there wasn’t much of a issue then. That being said I can see how it has evolved into what it is now with the zealots and refusal to tolerate anything other than their constantly moving goalposts.
"I want all children, especially those at highest risk of discrimination and bullying, to feel safe and accepted by everyone in society," shouldn't be an opinion, and you shouldn't be bothered by the idea.Everyone is entitled to their opinion, no matter how wrong it may be.
one of the many questions I haveThe "twittersphere" may be full of "experts", but there are plenty of actual experts saying that gender dysphoria is not an illness, and that discussing ideas such as homosexuality and transgenderism in school is a good idea.
Well allow me to try and explain it to you. Next to homosexuality, transgenderism should be the easiest to understand and accept, because even if you have bigoted views (not saying YOU do, I mean the general "you"), you can still accept the reality of what transgendered people are going through, and act accordingly (i.e. act like a good person).
A transgender person believes that the gender that they they "feel" internally is opposite to their sex at birth. Here is why this is easy to
"accept":
a. you can believe that gender and sex are independent, and can be opposite of each other, and that gender , and therefore gender dysphoria is something that can clearly happen from time to time (i.e while rare, is nonetheless "normal");
b. you can believe the above, but also believe that gender is not binary, but rather a spectrum... or not;
c. you can believe any of the above, but also believe that gender is wholly or partly a social construct (not just genetic)... or not;
d. OR, you can believe none of that, that gender and sex are not independent, and/or that gender is binary, and/or that gender is genetic, and therefore if any of this "confusion" is taking place (i.e. gender dysphoria) then its a mental disorder.
In any case, it doesn't matter what you believe, because what you have is a person who themselves believes that their gender and sex don't match, and therefore is experiencing mental distress, both from the internal sense of misalignment, but also (and probably more so) from the external social stigma of being transgender and "different".
So what are you suppose to do with someone who's sad and distressed? You act nice to them and give them support. If the support they need is for your to accept who they are, then do that. It doesn't matter which of the cases above (a thru c) is true; if you refuse to help them* because you don't believe them, that just makes you a fucking asshole. *also, helping them does not include trying to "change their minds. that's like conversion therapy.
I'm actually not against discussing the ideas.The "twittersphere" may be full of "experts", but there are plenty of actual experts saying that gender dysphoria is not an illness, and that discussing ideas such as homosexuality and transgenderism in school is a good idea.
Careful lad, you may want to walk that one back.You guys
You make an assumption about my beliefs. The idea you quoted doesn’t bother me in the least."I want all children, especially those at highest risk of discrimination and bullying, to feel safe and accepted by everyone in society," shouldn't be an opinion, and you shouldn't be bothered by the idea.
have a brother that was messed up as a teen to the point of suicide (almost). Turns out that hormones had gone crazy. He hit 18 and all his problems magically vanished and stayed gone. So the above advice is totally sound. Surgery is a very final decision and shouldn't be undertaken without careful counselling. By careful I mean by people who are not biased in thought before they start and those are hard to find. They certainly are not found in the average school guidance department.I'm actually not against discussing the ideas.
I am against using medication or surgery to gender affirm before the person is a legal adult.
I honestly feel someone who is not legally an adult is not mentally developed enough to make those decisions. Decisions that have very long term consequence and will most likely be irreversible.
I know personally if I did everything I wanted to do as a child, no matter how strongly I felt I needed to do something. I wouldn't of had a very productive life as an adult.
I can no longer edit it, but I was referring to him and Tactical Tea only.Careful lad, you may want to walk that one back.
There are certain age restrictions for very valid reasons.have a brother that was messed up as a teen to the point of suicide (almost). Turns out that hormones had gone crazy. He hit 18 and all his problems magically vanished and stayed gone. So the above advice is totally sound. Surgery is a very final decision and shouldn't be undertaken without careful counselling. By careful I mean by people who are not biased in thought before they start and those are hard to find. They certainly are not found in the average school guidance department.
How on earth do some people think that sexuality and gender can be decided earlier than that?
I probably should have included rationally in my commentFeelings/emotions and political motivations.
I probably should have included rationally in my comment
In any case, it doesn't matter what you believe, because what you have is a person who themselves believes that their gender and sex don't match, and therefore is experiencing mental distress, both from the internal sense of misalignment, but also (and probably more so) from the external social stigma of being transgender and "different".
So what are you suppose to do with someone who's sad and distressed? You act nice to them and give them support. If the support they need is for your to accept who they are, then do that. It doesn't matter which of the cases above (a thru d) is true; if you refuse to help them* because you don't believe them, that just makes you a fucking asshole. *also, helping them does not include trying to "change their minds". That's like conversion therapy.