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Frederick R Prete's avatar

A very thought-provoking, interesting essay. As a Biological Psychologist, I agree with you. I also agree with your very clear statement that "We are the adults." And, I agree with the fact that we have to simply say "No" when it's warranted. That doesn't mean that we can't be kind, sensitive, and (appropriately) supportive. By "supportive," I do not mean agreeing with everything a child says. If my son or daughter thought he or she was a tiger, a pirate, or a princess, I wouldn't make them feel bad about their fantasy. However, it would be my responsibility as a parent to teach them the difference between reality and make-believe.... without any interference from the schools or the Internet. Thank you, again, for a great essay.

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Beeswax's avatar

The author points out the irony of the double standard, where schools support a "trans kid" who has certain dress preferences, while opposing a "non-trans kid" who has the same preferences. But take a step backwards in time, and we discover that today's "trans kid" is yesterday's non-trans kid, one who's been praised, encouraged, targeted and groomed by activist teachers. Without that indoctrination, there'd be no trans kids in the first place.

Sure, there might be gender-confused kids...it's not an uncommon condition. But as the author points out, the confusion resolves in 90% of the cases once they reach puberty, and most of them would be gay. But gay isn't good in trans land, because gay is based on biological sex, the very thing trans ideology seeks to invalidate.

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