Transgender rights discussion

The word make vs prove is the least important thing in a discussion about you making up a stat to support a made up view you have of reality that you then go on to say can’t even be known.
There is no discussion, just you being a pedant.

I used numbers as a linguistic expression as people do all the time, to express my opinion, when someone called me out I clarified it. These are not numbers from any study, just my perception.

A quick redcafe search from the last couple of days:

"His podcast has gone from being having an audience that's 90% middle aged men to 90% middle aged men and their daughters"

"One scores 90% of our goals, the other creates 90% of our goals, yet the tactics aren't designed to carry them "

I wonder if these people were just making a point or if they conducted any studies or posted links to prove the numbers they cited. Hmmm...

So yeah, stop being a pedant.
 
Do you think the numbers compare? In my experience the kind of poisoning you're describing is residual compared to the amount of actual transphobes out there using women sports as ammunition.

I honestly don’t know. I’m sure Twitter is unbelievably toxic and absolutely riddled with transphobia. That’s one of the reasons I never look at it any more. My only exposure to this discussion now is on this website. Where all but a very small minority are arguing in good faith.
 
There is no discussion, just you being a pedant.

I used numbers as a linguistic expression as people do all the time, to express my opinion, when someone called me out I clarified it. These are not numbers from any study, just my perception.

A quick redcafe search from the last couple of days:

"His podcast has gone from being having an audience that's 90% middle aged men to 90% middle aged men and their daughters"

"One scores 90% of our goals, the other creates 90% of our goals, yet the tactics aren't designed to carry them "

I wonder if these people were just making a point or if they conducted any studies or posted links to prove the numbers they cited. Hmmm...

So yeah, stop being a pedant.
You realize that I don’t care about the actual numbers, right?

It’s the act of you making things up just so you can attack people’s motives. Motives that you go on later to admit can’t actually be known.
 
There is no discussion, just you being a pedant.

I used numbers as a linguistic expression as people do all the time, to express my opinion, when someone called me out I clarified it. These are not numbers from any study, just my perception.

A quick redcafe search from the last couple of days:

"His podcast has gone from being having an audience that's 90% middle aged men to 90% middle aged men and their daughters"

"One scores 90% of our goals, the other creates 90% of our goals, yet the tactics aren't designed to carry them "

I wonder if these people were just making a point or if they conducted any studies or posted links to prove the numbers they cited. Hmmm...

So yeah, stop being a pedant.

You surely have to realise that there's a marked difference between someone saying "x player scores 90% of our goals" and "x podcast has an audience of 90% middle-aged men" to you stating that 90% of people in this thread are arguing in bad faith simply because they "don't like transgender people"?
 
I certainly hope not. A child doesn’t have the emotional maturity to make a decision about a difficult risk vs benefit scenario. Even if that decision is purely about their own health. Hence they’re not allowed to vote/drive a car etc

The role of the parents/doctors there would have been to steer the child towards making the best decision for their own long term health. Not to rubber stamp a decision left entirely up to someone too young to understand the various nuances involved.

Yeah, rubber-stamped was a poorly chosen phrase. The process is clearly more nuanced than that. Ultimately, however, after presenting the options and evidence and availing them of your opinion it would seem to often be reasonable (or at least not unreasonable) to "let them" have the final say. I mean, I know you're a doctor and I'm not exactly coming at this from a position of great knowledge myself but I don't think you can just blithely assume incompetence just because the patient is under 16. This is what the Great Ormond Street website has to say about consent:

AGE OF CONSENT
This depends on your child’s age and whether they are competent or have capacity to make the decision whether to have treatment. Children under 16 years old can give consent for themselves if they are judged to be capable of making the decision. If your child under 16 years is judged competent and refuses treatment, this can be overruled by a person with Parental Responsibility, if the doctors think that is in their best interests.

However, if your child under 16 is judged competent and agrees to treatment, this cannot be overruled by someone with Parental Responsibility.

If your child under 16 years is judged incapable of making the decision, either due to their age, their emotional maturity or learning disabilities, then a person with Parental Responsibility can give their permission.

https://www.gosh.nhs.uk/your-hospit...t-giving-permission-your-child-have-treatment
 
You surely have to realise that there's a marked difference between someone saying "x player scores 90% of our goals" and "x podcast has an audience of 90% middle-aged men" to you stating that 90% of people in this thread are arguing in bad faith simply because they "don't like transgender people"?
I wasn't referring to this thread, but my general interactions with people on this topic, online and real life.

And no, I don't see a difference, it's just something people say as a synonym for majority. Nothing in my post indicated I was trying to prove anything scientifically, so it's a weird detail to be hung up on, especially after I clarified it literally in the next post.
 
You realize that I don’t care about the actual numbers, right?

It’s the act of you making things up just so you can attack people’s motives. Motives that you go on later to admit can’t actually be known.
I didn't make anything up though, just as in the examples I quoted people didn't make anything up. Apparently it's news to you but people sometimes use 90% as a synonym for vast majority.

Anyway, I think everyone fair-minded knows what I meant, so I'll leave this very uninteresting episode of twilight zone.
 
I think you missed my point.

The fact transphobes use women sports as a way to discriminate against transgender women poisons the discussion, because those discussing never really know if the other person is being genuine or just ohpleasesomeonethingofthechildren-ing them.

If you are discriminated against on a daily basis, it's only natural you become very defensive.
In fairness you said that 90% of the people arguing against were transphobes, didn't you? Which utterly ignores the fact that many people without any skin in the game (or biased) may have an opinion that falls along those lines.
 
I didn't make anything up though, just as in the examples I quoted people didn't make anything up. Apparently it's news to you but people sometimes use 90% as a synonym for vast majority.

Anyway, I think everyone fair-minded knows what I meant, so I'll leave this very uninteresting episode of twilight zone.
I literally just said it isn’t the numbers that I care about. It’s the disingenuous argument you used them to make.
 
In fairness you said that 90% of the people arguing against were transphobes, didn't you? Which utterly ignores the fact that many people without any skin in the game (or biased) may have an opinion that falls along those lines.
Lets set the 90% aside and replace it with vast majority, is that ok?

In my experience, and to be honest I think it applies more widely, the vast majority of people who enter these debates about transgender women in women sports don't give two fecks about women sports, their main motivation is to shit on transgender women. But they know this argument has some validity, so they use it to sound really concerned and not transphobes. I think what you refer to as many people are a minority.
 
I wasn't referring to this thread, but my general interactions with people on this topic, online and real life.

And no, I don't see a difference, it's just something people say as a synonym for majority. Nothing in my post indicated I was trying to prove anything scientifically, so it's a weird detail to be hung up on, especially after I clarified it literally in the next post.

How is anyone supposed to discern that you didn't mean the people in this thread when all you said was "these discussions"?

Forgetting the numbers, it's still a very disingenuous and deeply unhelpful statement to make. It effectively paints anyone that disagrees with you as a bad faith actor, which is simply unfair and a terrible way to engage in any discussion.
 
Firstly, and has as has been repeated to you ad nauseam, the evidence basis simply isn't there to be confidently asserting that "going through adolescence is going to make that dysphoria significantly worse". There are even studies showing that going through adolescence can relieve these feelings of dysphoria. Again, I implore you to actually read and engage with the literature and studies that are out there.

Secondly, as the Cass Interim Report highlighted as one of its key points, there isn't even consensus of what gender dysphoria even is. How can you possibly expect to treat something that we can't even define?

Thirdly, for someone who was so concerned with my apparent "alarmingly sensationalist misinterpretations", you've tried to paint my views a few times now as wanting to "stop them from being able to transition" and not the clearly stated view of "let's wait until there's evidence to support the medical pathways being used (as we do for pretty much every other aspect of medical treatment) before allowing kids to begin potentially irreversible treatments".

Finally, this doesn't actually address the question answered about making informed decisions. It's essentially conjecture around the effects of delaying medical treatment (unless you're able to produce evidence that the Cass Interim Report has been unable to find supporting your stance).

Given that minors are not able to provide consent for other elective treatments, with parents or guardians having to do so on their behalf, I ask again, why this is different to that, or any of the other many things we recognise that they are not able to make informed decisions on?



I'm also not really advocating a one-size fits all approach, but it seems quite clear to me that placing minors on potentially irreversible medical pathways is never going to be anything more than an extreme, last resort.

I'm happy to respect that you believe early medical treatment can be life-saving, and this is something that remain open to, but the fact remains that we simply do not have the evidence to support this belief, and until we do, I'll be sticking with my stated view of things.



I'm glad you've acknowledged that there have been failings, but in all honesty, you still don't seem to be grasping the severity of these failings, or indeed what I have had to say about them.

Yes, the clinic has not failed due to simply not attempting to provide care. Neither I or the Cass Interim Report have stated as much. Yes, it's abundantly clear what some of the contributions to some of the failings have been. It is highlighted in the report that the organic growth of the service was one such contributing factor.

None of this changes the fact that the actual clinical processes and treatments carried out there were woefully inadequate.



Again, you seem to have fundamentally failed to comprehend what the report has said. This is not the key message. This is simply a recommendation for increased service, and is the first and only recommendation it can make at this time. The report essentially spells out that it can not even begin to place recommendations on what the actual details of this service will be because the evidence is not there to support any of the currently used medical processes.

To spell it out for you again, within the current service:
  • Children and young people using the service were not routinely offered or given therapy before being placed on puberty blocking hormone treatments.
  • Children and young people that had been placed on pathways of hormone therapy (including puberty blockers) routinely saw a drop-off in the frequency of their appointments. The exact opposite of what you would expect to happen.
  • Children and young people that had been placed on pathways of hormone therapy, and indeed referred for surgery, were not kept track of, and outcomes of these treatments were not sought nor recorded.
  • The medical pathways that children and young people were placed on were not supported by evidence or extensive review by medical experts.
  • Clinical decisions were not always being made by appropriate clinical experts.
  • There were not appropriate safeguarding procedures in place.
These are also just some of the findings. You can read up on more in the report, or indeed, my earlier posts quoting the report.

As I have said now on numerous occasions, it is simply not enough for the staff that worked there to have tried their best. I have never doubted that they did anything other than do their best for the children placed in their care. I haven't even denied that demand for the service has been a contributing factor; I've simply pointed out that this is not a phenomena unique to the gender services as practically the whole NHS has demand vastly outweighing available treatment. I also agree wholeheartedly that the service, in whatever form it takes in the future, needs to be readily available at more than a single location, at a single level of the NHS care structure.



Once again, you are deliberately misrepresenting my posts and responding to things that haven't actually been said, rather than engaging with the things that I am actually saying to you. You could not be arguing with much more bad faith.

What do you even mean by "if I had been promoting the need for increased care"? What are you on about when you say I "don't think young people should be transitioning at all"?

Literally one of the posts you quoted of mine literally shows me saying that we should want the treatment and care available to children and young people to be extensively reviewed by medical experts. What is this, if not advocacy for better care for young people? As above, I have not once expressed that I disagree with the recommendation for more availability of services.

Another post you've quoted quite literally has me advocating for leaving children to choose how they live and how they dress. How does this oppose transition? You are conflating my (current) opposition to early medical transition with your entirely misplaced belief that I believe children should not be free to express themselves how they wish. I could not have been clearer about why I believe that medical transition should be off the table for children (again, it's because there is little to no evidence supporting these treatment pathways), and yet you continue to ignore these explanations to instead repeat complete falsehoods about my views and present straw-men arguments in response.

I am not using the failings of the Tavistock of evidence "to stop young people transitioning" at all. I am using the failings of the Tavistock to highlight to the many people in this thread that the care provided to children and young people is not remotely close to the quality and standards they seem to believe it is, or indeed the quality and standards these children deserve.

For the nth time, you quite clearly do not understand what the Cass Interim Report is for. You quite clearly do not understand what it has found. You quite clearly do not understand my position on this issue.

The Cass Interim Report is an intermediate report published part way through an extensive review of the services provided to children and young people in relation to gender dysphoria or feelings of gender incongruence. It is not a report advocating against gender transition, which is not something I have ever claimed it to be, despite your numerous attempts at suggesting such. It is also not a report strictly designed to "help children transition", as you seem to believe it to be.

The Cass Interim Report is a report designed to highlight the failings and flaws of the current services provided (of which there are many), and present an early outline of how the service can move forward to resolve and correct these issues, so that the children and young people requiring access to the service can receive care of an adequate standard. Helping children transition will form just part of this reformed service, but there are many failings in practice and gaps in evidence that need resolving, including providing actual therapeutic treatment, before transition can even be determined as the best option for these children.

I have no idea what you are even suggesting by saying you are "dubious about [my] motives" when your motives seem to extend no further than blind advocacy for transitioning children, despite the obvious failings in the entire structure through which these transitions take place, stemming right from diagnosis of gender dysphoria, right through to a complete lack of aftercare or follow up on treatment outcomes, and despite an extremely fragile evidence base upon which the whole structure has been built.

From very early on in this thread it was clear that you have decided that anyone that disagrees with your stubborn, largely conjecture-based stance, is a horrible bigot. You have repeatedly demonstrated an inability to engage with actual evidence put to you - be that in relation to the participation requirements for trans-athletes in Olympic competition, the performances of Lia Thomas in NCAA competition, or indeed what the Cass Interim Report has to say about gender care for children in the United Kingdom, instead choosing to either ignore and disengage from discussion, or misrepresent points and argue against strawman.

Engage in good faith. Respond to my actual points. Stop making things up.



You've shown a remarkable ability to consistently talk out of your arse in this thread, but this has to be the most blatant load of bollocks you've come out with yet.

As a pre-teen, you (and your parents) were presented with the option to undergo elective surgery on your back. You (and your parents) were told the full range of possible outcomes, because this is standard practice when presenting a patient with any surgical treatment (I was once due an appendectomy and they told me there was a slim chance I'd die during it - fortunately it turned out to be a kidney stone). Your doctor advised you (and your parents) against electing for the surgery.

Your parents may well have asked you what you wanted to do, and ultimately respected your decision, but be under absolutely no illusion that had you elected to go for it (it is not clear that you did), your parents would have been the ones signing the consent form(s) for the operation to go ahead.

As for that last line, you are clearly incapable of coherent debate.



Given that I have repeatedly asked (and failed to receive) clarification as to how a minor can make an informed decision on electing to undergo potentially irreversible treatment while it is acknowledged that a minor cannot make an informed decision when it comes to consenting to sex, and the entire precursor to that post was a quite clearly false recounting of a tale of being offered elective surgery as a minor, it seems abundantly obvious that NotThatSoph was, in fact, referring to the doctor's ability to "feck" them.

It's well established at this point that reading comprehension is not a strength of yours though, so it's not really a surprise that you've failed to grasp this.
Excellent post.
 
come on guys, you know what he meant. just add the word 'over' after 'feck me'. the doctors and the parents didn't feck him over by ignoring his wishes, despite the legal responsibility being with the parent.

young people are given treatment all the time, some of which can be risky. it's not unique to those requiring care in this area.
I don't think anyone knows what he means given most of his posts are nonsensical and devoid of logic.
 
How is anyone supposed to discern that you didn't mean the people in this thread when all you said was "these discussions"?

Forgetting the numbers, it's still a very disingenuous and deeply unhelpful statement to make. It effectively paints anyone that disagrees with you as a bad faith actor, which is simply unfair and a terrible way to engage in any discussion.
Fair enough, if it wasn't clear, now it is. I meant all general discussions, not this thread.

Most people I've discussed this with are turned out to be bad faith actors. Most commentators I see on tv/youtube are bad faith actors, politicians particularly are bad faith actors.

This is what I mean by the discussion being poisoned. In real life I rarely engage anymore because 90% of the times the majority of times I discover I'm actually debating transphobes and women sports was just an acceptable topic to start a discussion and make them sound reasonable concerned folks.
 
I'm genuinely interested to hear the explanation as to what exactly makes someone transgender if not gender dysphoria. My understanding was that gender dysphoria (however that is meant to be defined) is the root of the discomfort that ultimately makes transition a necessary step to take. Take out this apparent discomfort with one's own body, and what exactly is it that is prompting people to transition?

not every trans person experiences emotional pain or discomfort from being in the body they're living in, and not all trans people need to medically transition to express their identity. i think it's more rare than those who do, but pain or trauma is not an intrinsic property of being trans.

and when you have spent half of your posts in this thread dancing around directly calling people transphobes, but definitely implying as much, for daring to have a remotely different view of things as you.

i've asked for people to post proof of this alleged 'calling someone a transphobe' point at least three times now. please post proof or refrain from it, please.

From very early on in this thread it was clear that you have decided that anyone that disagrees with your stubborn, largely conjecture-based stance, is a horrible bigot. You have repeatedly demonstrated an inability to engage with actual evidence put to you - be that in relation to the participation requirements for trans-athletes in Olympic competition, the performances of Lia Thomas in NCAA competition, or indeed what the Cass Interim Report has to say about gender care for children in the United Kingdom, instead choosing to either ignore and disengage from discussion, or misrepresent points and argue against strawman.

Engage in good faith. Respond to my actual points. Stop making things up.

It has come as absolutely no surprise to me that the weight of evidence presented to you has become so large that you are no longer even pretending to engage in debate.

this is all just nonsense frankly.

i have consistently stated that i don't have all the answers, but that we should be trying to promote inclusivity wherever we can, and work towards an acceptable solution for everyone. banning trans people from sports, or banning treatment for young people, is not the answer. hopefully you agree with that at least. they are blunt object solutions to a far more nuanced topic. i have expressed doubts in this thread about certain people - PhilQ being one from a year or two ago, who suggested trans people were not born trans, and have at times linked the type of language used today against trans people (not referring to just this thread) as being similar to that used against gay people 40-50 years ago. this isn't in any way a controversial statement.

our understanding is constantly evolving and developing. you say i'm just 'making things up' when leading medical groups worldwide recognise the medical necessity of treatments for gender dysphoria and indeed endorse such treatments. these groups include the likes of the American academy of nursing, oediatrics, physicians, counselling, american medical association, public health association, endocrine society, world medical association, the NHS, and many many others.

i am convinced, just as maniak is, that these 'edge cases' such as sports and young people are used deliberately by people who do not have trans people's interests at heart, as a way to rope in otherwise good people and start to insidiously build up anti-trans sentiment. i'm saying this generally, not talking about anyone in particular in this thread. there is a sweeping anti-trans movement worldwide and especially in the UK, and it's saddens me that transphobic and now even wider LGBT+ abuse is on the rise as a result. that's before we even consider the suicide rates which again is evidence to show that more treatment and care is needed. hopefully the replacement regional centres as recommended by the Cass report are opened promptly as, as it stands, young people are not being provided with that care they desperately need.
 
Last edited:
come on guys, you know what he meant. just add the word 'over' after 'feck me'. the doctors and the parents didn't feck him over by ignoring his wishes, despite the legal responsibility being with the parent.

young people are given treatment all the time, some of which can be risky. it's not unique to those requiring care in this area.
Still doesn't make sense?
 
Last edited:
i don't have those stats in front of me, but i'd be interested to see them if you have them. i'd say that sometimes it does for some individuals, but not for others. it stands to reason that if you're already suffering from gender dysphoria (and not all trans people do suffer from it, although most do) already, then the changes to your body as a result of puberty are only going to exacerbate that problem. however ultimately what is required is individual care. there shouldn't be a blanket approach, which is why we need to increase the quality and availability of services to young people.
I agree, I will look back through some studies I've read and try to dig them out. Obviously care of the individual comes first but a patient approach seems to be the consensus.
 
I certainly hope not. A child doesn’t have the emotional maturity to make a decision about a difficult risk vs benefit scenario. Even if that decision is purely about their own health. Hence they’re not allowed to vote/drive a car etc

The role of the parents/doctors there would have been to steer the child towards making the best decision for their own long term health. Not to rubber stamp a decision left entirely up to someone too young to understand the various nuances involved. Someone who can’t possibly understand why a long term view is so important as they’ve not yet been able to establish a long term perspective on anything.

Which seems to bring us neatly back on topic…
Good post.
 
Yeah, rubber-stamped was a poorly chosen phrase. The process is clearly more nuanced than that. Ultimately, however, after presenting the options and evidence and availing them of your opinion it would seem to often be reasonable (or at least not unreasonable) to "let them" have the final say. I mean, I know you're a doctor and I'm not exactly coming at this from a position of great knowledge myself but I don't think you can just blithely assume incompetence just because the patient is under 16. This is what the Great Ormond Street website has to say about consent:
Isn't this in the instance to stop parents refusing life saving treatment for children under 16 on like religious grounds?

Like blood transfusions for Jehovah's witnesses?

Like this statement or consent is working in one direction @Pogue Mahone ?
 
I have but the context it was used didn't seem to fit. It's a small point and arguing over it will derail the thread so happy to leave it.
I think they meant exactly what they said, and I think they said it because the question has been asked of why should minors have the power / right to consent to something like this but not other things.
 
not every trans person experiences emotional pain or discomfort from being in the body they're living in, and not all trans people need to medically transition to express their identity. i think it's more rare than those who do, but pain or trauma is not an intrinsic property of being trans.

This doesn't really answer anything. You've just repeated the assertion that not every transgender person has (or has had) gender dysphoria.

What is it that makes someone transgender if not a feeling that their body does not match their gender? Is that not the key aspect of being transgender?

These are huge questions that are not being answered with this assertion that being transgender is not even necessarily about a discomfort about one's body.


i've asked for people to post proof of this alleged 'calling someone a transphobe' point at least three times now. please post proof or refrain from it, please.

As I said, you've danced around directly saying it. It is evident from a number of your posts, including this one, that you deliberately frame your views in such a way that anyone that disagrees with them must be a transphobe.

This is you, in this very post:

i am convinced, just as maniak is, that these 'edge cases' such as sports and young people are used deliberately by people who do not have trans people's interests at heart, as a way to rope in otherwise good people and start to insidiously build up anti-trans sentiment.

What exactly are you implying when you say that you are "convinced" that this debate is "used deliberately [...] to insidiously build up anti-trans sentiment" if not that the people engaging in these debates are transphobic?

Explain yourself.


this is all just nonsense frankly.

i have consistently stated that i don't have all the answers, but that we should be trying to promote inclusivity wherever we can, and work towards an acceptable solution for everyone. banning trans people from sports, or banning treatment for young people, is not the answer. hopefully you agree with that at least. they are blunt object solutions to a far more nuanced topic. i have expressed doubts in this thread about certain people - PhilQ being one from a year or two ago, who suggested trans people were not born trans, and have at times linked the type of language used today against trans people (not referring to just this thread) as being similar to that used against gay people 40-50 years ago. this isn't in any way a controversial statement.

Is it nonsense? You are blinded by your own ideological stance on this. You repeatedly reject and ignore evidence presented to you, and remain steadfast and stubborn in your views despite never actually offering any evidence of your own to support them. It was like getting blood out of a stone to get you to even acknowledge that the Tavistock Clinic had a number of failings, despite the evidence of this being repeatedly presented to you, and even then you demonstrated a fundamental lack of comprehension about what these failings meant for the service. You just kept parroting an irrelevant point about the staff doing their best.

It's all well and good claiming not to "have all all the answers" but you cannot repeatedly engage in bad faith debate with people presenting actual evidence to you, offer nothing of your own, all while throwing around accusations of people being "misleading" or "alarmingly sensationalist".

As you're responding to me, and have been almost exclusively for a while now, I simply have not advocated for "banning trans people from sports, or banning treatment for young people". This is once again a gross misrepresentation of what has been said to you, and yet another example of your infuriatingly stubborn refusal to actually engage with the posts you are pretending to respond to.

It has been repeatedly stated by myself and many others that we want children and young people to receive the best possible care. A huge part of this is the medical pathways being extensively researched and evidence based. It has been repeatedly highlighted to you that this is not the case. It is not advocacy for the banning of treatment for young people to point out that current care provision is woefully inadequate.

The issue you seem to be having here is conflation of your blind advocacy for the current treatments, despite the obvious gaps in the evidence supporting them, with these treatments actually being the best thing for these children. They cannot be considered as such, as the Cass Interim Report highlights.

As for the banning of transgender people from sports. This has again not been a suggestion from basically anyone in this thread. Once again it is your own stubborn refusal to acknowledge the solutions presented by sporting bodies, as such, instead conflating your blind advocacy for "inclusion at all costs" policy with this being the only option.

You acknowledge that this is a nuanced topic, bring up "blunt object solutions", yet show absolutely no sign of acknowledging the nuances in this topic or indeed how your own supposed "solutions" are in fact, quite "blunt" themselves.

You have once again failed to respond to any of the numerous things I, or others, have presented to you, and have now decided to present yet another strawman argument by bringing up an essentially random poster who, to my eyes, has barely taken part in this discussion, and by your own acknowledgment made comments "a year or two ago". What has this got to do with anything we've been (supposedly) discussing in relation to the Cass Interim Report?

our understanding is constantly evolving and developing. you say i'm just 'making things up' when leading medical groups worldwide recognise the medical necessity of treatments for gender dysphoria and indeed endorse such treatments. these groups include the likes of the American academy of nursing, oediatrics, physicians, counselling, american medical association, public health association, endocrine society, world medical association, the NHS, and many many others.

Yes, understanding is constantly evolving and developing, and yet, despite their now being increasing acknowledgment that our current treatment processes fall markedly short of the care standards you would expect, you remain unwavering in your support of these exact processes.

Leading medical groups worldwide recognise the medical necessity of treating gender dysphoria, yes. However, it has been pointed out to you on a ridiculous number of occasions now that there is not even a consensus on what gender dysphoria is. It has also been pointed out to you on a ridiculous number of occasions that the current treatment processes are severely inadequate.

I do say you are just making things up, because right here you list a number of groups as if at they all support your views. The NHS services have literally been exposed as being deeply flawed by the very report we have been talking about for ages. A report that you have quite clearly not read.

The American College of Pediatricians have quite literally said that:

Transgender Interventions Harm Children
No Evidence that Transgender Interventions are Safe for Children

https://acpeds.org/transgender-interventions-harm-children

You can read about it there.

I'm not even going to bother looking into what the others are doing because this is quite clearly energy that you are not expending yourself.

Aside from the fact that you have repeatedly just made up things that I'm supposed to have said, you have also consistently misrepresented things and ignored evidence that contradicts your stance.

You posted at the very beginning of this thread that transgender athletes had been able to compete in the Olympics in 2004, but no transgender athlete had ever qualified until Laurel Hubbard. You completely ignored it when it was pointed out to you that the rules regarding access requirements had been drastically changed, and it was only the 2020 Olympics that would realistically see trans-athletes competing for the first time.

You quoted the IOC guidance as evidence for your stance, but when this was changed and acknowledged as inadequate, you suddenly went very quiet.

You repeatedly asserted that Lia Thomas was not dominating the women's category, but again, suddenly went very quiet on the matter when it was pointed out that Thomas had won in the vast majority of races.

More recently, you have repeatedly represented the Tavistock Clinic as an effective service running treatments extensively reviewed by medical experts, despite this quite blatantly not being the case.

i am convinced, just as maniak is, that these 'edge cases' such as sports and young people are used deliberately by people who do not have trans people's interests at heart, as a way to rope in otherwise good people and start to insidiously build up anti-trans sentiment. i'm saying this generally, not talking about anyone in particular in this thread. there is a sweeping anti-trans movement worldwide and especially in the UK, and it's saddens me that transphobic and now even wider LGBT+ abuse is on the rise in this country.

As I said earlier, what on earth is this if not skirting around directly calling individual posters, "transphobes"?

You are incapable of arguing in good faith. You are incapable of addressing the many, researched points that have been put to you. You are incapable of answering any of the reasonable questions asked of you.

At this point, it seems very clear that you are simply nothing more than a troll.
 
Those who have read the other thread about the replication crisis are well aware of how much shitty science and research is out there but also how misinterpreted they are.

It's October 2023. What is the latest, up-to-date, peer-reviewed, doublechecked/ whatever science on this subject? For example, what is the % that doesn't experience gender dysphoria anymore as they get older?
 
Those who have read the other thread about the replication crisis are well aware of how much shitty science and research is out there but also how misinterpreted they are.

It's October 2023. What is the latest, up-to-date, peer-reviewed, doublechecked/ whatever science on this subject? For example, what is the % that doesn't experience gender dysphoria anymore as they get older?
He's vilified but the actual reporting and highlighting of the studies from Jesse Signal is fairly decent because he goes beyond the headlines and actually looks at and finds the data used to draw the conclusions.
 

The American College of Pediatricians (ACPeds) is a socially conservative advocacy group of pediatricians and other healthcare professionals in the United States, founded in 2002.[1][2] The group's primary focus is advocating against abortion rights and against rights for gay, queer, and transgender people. ACPeds promotes conversion therapy and purity culture.[3][4][1] As of 2022, its membership has been reported at about 700 physicians.[5][6][1]

i smelled it about a minute after seeing the page you linked. if they wanted to be a good denier of trans medicine, they'd smuggle in a lot of stuff about doubt, unknown results, missing data. instead they go straight forr harmful, permanent damage, etc. and then the homepage is a total give-away, "biological integrity" with male and female symbols, blue and pink, the works.

i wonder if your posting of this link confirm's @stepic assertion about how athletes are used as a wedge issue - this topic got you to uncritically accept and regurgitate conservative bile on the topic of transgenderism as a whole, without a second thoguht.
 
Last edited:
Isn't this in the instance to stop parents refusing life saving treatment for children under 16 on like religious grounds?

Like blood transfusions for Jehovah's witnesses?

Like this statement or consent is working in one direction @Pogue Mahone ?

I think that's certainly one element of it, yes, but it does seem like there's at least a somewhat developed metric by which a person under sixteen can be recognised competent enough to make their own medical decisions:

Children under the age of 16 can consent to their own treatment if they're believed to have enough intelligence, competence and understanding to fully appreciate what's involved in their treatment. This is known as being Gillick competent.
https://www.nhs.uk/conditions/consent-to-treatment/children/

Gillick competence (Of which I have never before heard) is described here. Basically a medical professional decides if the kid is capable of deciding and it seems to basically operate on a case by case basis:

excerpt said:
There is no set of defined questions to assess Gillick competency. Professionals need to consider several things when assessing a child's capacity to consent, including:

  • the child's age, maturity and mental capacity
  • their understanding of the issue and what it involves - including advantages, disadvantages and potential long-term impact
  • their understanding of the risks, implications and consequences that may arise from their decision
  • how well they understand any advice or information they have been given
  • their understanding of any alternative options, if available
  • their ability to explain a rationale around their reasoning and decision making.
Remember that consent is not valid if a young person is being pressured or influenced by someone else.

Children's capacity to consent may be affected by different factors, for example stress, mental health conditions and the complexities of the decision they are making. The same child may be considered Gillick competent to make one decision but not competent to make a different decision.

If you don't think a child is Gillick competent or there are inconsistencies in their understanding, you should seek consent from their parents or carers before proceeding.

In complex medical cases, such as those involving disagreements about treatment, you may wish to seek the opinion of a colleague about a child’s capacity to consent (Care Quality Commission, 2019).

Young people also have the right to seek a second opinion from another medical professional (General Medical Council, 2020).
 
What is it that makes someone transgender if not a feeling that their body does not match their gender? Is that not the key aspect of being transgender?

as i said, you can have a feeling that your body does not match your gender (which, yes, is key to being trans) but not every trans person experiences emotional pain or discomfort from it. it is the pain/trauma aspect that is associated with the dysphoria.

What exactly are you implying when you say that you are "convinced" that this debate is "used deliberately [...] to insidiously build up anti-trans sentiment" if not that the people engaging in these debates are transphobic?

you cut off the quoted paragraph before the very next sentence where I explicitly stated: i'm saying this generally, not talking about anyone in particular in this thread.

the point is clear. using wedge topics to ensnare otherwise good people is a common tactic and is not just relevant to this topic.
 
Between the lack of available data (and test subjects), almost no long term investigations, political pressures, the pharma lobby and the plastic surgery lobby... Wouldnt fully trust any research paper in this area to be honest.
There's quite a bit of research done on the causal link between GD and neurological and psychiatric disorders such as autism, schizophrenia, bipolar, depression, anxiety disorder. ADD is one that they've found doesn't have a strong link.
 
There's quite a bit of research done on the causal link between GD and neurological and psychiatric disorders such as autism, schizophrenia, bipolar, depression, anxiety disorder. ADD is one that they've found doesn't have a strong link.

that's the good trans research, not affected by the replication crisis or external pressures!
 
I think that's certainly one element of it, yes, but it does seem like there's at least a somewhat developed metric by which a person under sixteen can be recognised competent enough to make their own medical decisions:



Gillick competence (Of which I have never before heard) is described here. Basically a medical professional decides if the kid is capable of deciding and it seems to basically operate on a case by case basis:
Yes but in a specific circumstance where if they were overruled, they may not receive life saving treatment.
 
There's quite a bit of research done on the causal link between GD and neurological and psychiatric disorders such as autism, schizophrenia, bipolar, depression, anxiety disorder. ADD is one that they've found doesn't have a strong link.
I'd be mindful of the phrase link, moreso comorbities, is this the right word? As in a cluster of different MH issues.
 
I'd be mindful of the phrase link, moreso comorbities, is this the right word? As in a cluster of different MH issues.
It's a genuine causal link though -

Schizophrenia:
Gender identity disorder (GID), recently renamed gender dysphoria (GD), is a rare condition characterized by an incongruity between gender identity and biological sex. Clinical evidence suggests that schizophrenia occurs in patients with GID at rates higher than in the general population and that patients with GID may have schizophrenia-like personality traits. Conversely, patients with schizophrenia may experience alterations in gender identity and gender role perception. Neurobiological research, including brain imaging and studies of finger length ratio and handedness, suggests that both these disorders are associated with altered cerebral sexual dimorphism and changes in cerebral lateralization. Various mechanisms, such as Toxoplasma infection, reduced levels of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF), early childhood adversity, and links with autism spectrum disorders, may account for some of this overlap. The implications of this association for further research are discussed.

Austism:
The current literature shows growing evidence of a link between gender dysphoria (GD) and autism spectrum disorder (ASD). This study reviews the available clinical and empirical data. A systematic search of the literature was conducted using the following databases: PubMed, Web of Science, PsycINFO and Scopus; utilizing different combinations of the following search terms: autism, autism spectrum disorder (ASD), Asperger's disorder (AD), co-morbidity, gender dysphoria (GD), gender identity disorder (GID), transgenderism and transsexualism. In total, 25 articles and reports were selected and discussed. Information was grouped by found co-occurrence rates, underlying hypotheses and implications for diagnosis and treatment. GD and ASD were found to co-occur frequently - sometimes characterized by atypical presentation of GD, which makes a correct diagnosis and determination of treatment options for GD difficult. Despite these challenges there are several case reports describing gender affirming treatment of co-occurring GD in adolescents and adults with ASD. Various underlying hypotheses for the link between GD and ASD were suggested, but almost all of them lack evidence.

Although caveat - there's still a lot of research to be done in this field.

that's the good trans research, not affected by the replication crisis or external pressures!
So you're in academia right? What's your take? Is the research valid or not?
 
Yes but in a specific circumstance where if they were overruled, they may not receive life saving treatment.

Could you cite from where you get that limitation? That does not seem to be a stipulation in any of the guidance I have read. It seems to be a rule for if they refuse treatment, not for if they consent.
 
The American College of Pediatricians (ACPeds) is a socially conservative advocacy group of pediatricians and other healthcare professionals in the United States, founded in 2002.[1][2] The group's primary focus is advocating against abortion rights and against rights for gay, queer, and transgender people. ACPeds promotes conversion therapy and purity culture.[3][4][1] As of 2022, its membership has been reported at about 700 physicians.[5][6][1]

i smelled it about a minute after seeing the page you linked. if they wanted to be a good denier of trans medicine, they'd smuggle in a lot of stuff about doubt, unknown results, missing data. instead they go straight forr harmful, permanent damage, etc. and then the homepage is a total give-away, "biological integrity" with male and female symbols, blue and pink, the works.

i wonder if your posting of this link confirm's @stepic assertion about how athletes are used as a wedge issue - this topic got you to uncritically accept and regurgitate conservative bile on the topic of transgenderism as a whole, without a second thoguht.

This just highlights an issue I have with this debate (and indeed, lots of other debates these days).

I don't agree with a lot of (or even pretty much all of) the views held by this organisation. That does not necessarily mean that the points raised by what is still an organisation of medical professionals on this specific page are not salient. It's common these days for people to act like you have to 100% agree with what a person or organisation say, or 100% disagree. The reality is that sometimes these parties may have a point, even if they can be wildly off the mark in other areas.

I would concede that the actual headline of that piece is somewhat sensationalist, and state that I don't particularly agree with all of the language used. There's also a small part where they reference unpublished studies, which I find odd. However, the subheading "No Evidence that Transgender Interventions are Safe for Children" is pretty much supported by the Cass Interim Report reviewing NHS gender care, and there are also a number of other referenced points made on that page that are also supported by the Cass Interim Report.

It's interesting that accuse me of being uncritical in my posting of it, when you've quite clearly not read it within the context of the wider debate that's happened in here.

as i said, you can have a feeling that your body does not match your gender (which, yes, is key to being trans) but not every trans person experiences emotional pain or discomfort from it. it is the pain/trauma aspect that is associated with the dysphoria.

And I will once again, for the millionth time, point out that a major flaw in the current structures is a lack of consensus as to what exactly gender dysphoria is.

I would argue that any amount of feeling that your body does not match your gender is gender dysphoria, but it's quite clear that there is not universal agreement on this.


you cut off the quoted paragraph before the very next sentence where I explicitly stated: i'm saying this generally, not talking about anyone in particular in this thread.

the point is clear. using wedge topics to ensnare otherwise good people is a common tactic and is not just relevant to this topic.

It is very convenient for you (and maniak) to be repeatedly talking generally about a debate, while engaging in that very same debate, but not be referring to the people you are debating with.
 
It is very convenient for you (and maniak) to be repeatedly talking generally about a debate, while engaging in that very same debate, but not be referring to the people you are debating with.
I made a general post, I didn't even quote anyone when I made that statement.

But just to make it clear, I believe we have genuine transphobes posting in this thread, I'm not trying to weasel my way out of anything.