How do you think the next generation will look back at (former) troons of today time? It's a house of card that could stand up when the number was still low (1920s-2010) ... But wouldn't withstand its own weight when it gets too big and too disruptive.
Most of them are mentally ill people without a stable sense of self, and I bet they'll get bored of this shit someday but these people are going to live for 40-50 more years regardless if they regret it or not... Like. I don't know what next generations would think of older people with mangled crotch, hormone fuckery and a these unnecessary scars... When the idea of 'trans' became an outdated practices.
I'm genuinely sad about them.Even though they're pretty laughable too... But I can't look at this thread and not feel like the real horror is a few decades away
I think most of the change will stem from people who transitioned young (before age 25). At some point we’ll start seeing lawsuits from people who got older and realized that they weren’t trans, felt like the system failed to treat their real issues (being teens who hate their changing bodies), and allowed them to disfigure and sterilize themselves. Honestly wouldn’t be surprised if there are some high profile murders/suicides associated with people who regretted transitioning, too.
From there, some states might enact laws that make doctors actually vet the kids coming in, which progressives will whine about and call “conversion therapy.” Some of the changes will probably come about because of lawsuit avoidance. Doctors will largely do a better job vetting trans identified people (especially teens) and directing them to treatment for underlying issues like depression and anxiety. Less progressive states will also probably tone down the trans rhetoric in schools. Framing it as protecting kids who don’t know better will make it all go over easier on progressive parents, since trans kids often come from progressive families.
Years later, we’ll probably look at most trans people in a few ways: some will be pitied as victims of a craze and a medical system that didn’t protect them, like patients of lobotomies; high visibility trans people like Buck Angel and Laverne Cox will probably be considered “true” trans people; and the AGP types who don’t pass will probably occupy their own spaces and be viewed as freaks by the rest of society.
I realize this is might read like optimistic cope, but I can’t imagine this situation being sustainable at all. The trans stuff started really popping off in what, 2017? And now it’s 2022. After 5 years or so on T, your uterus and vagina start atrophying and you often have to get a hysterectomy to avoid getting cancer. So, assuming some girls started transitioning around 5 years ago, we’re probably right on track for some women to be realize how badly they’ve fucked their bodies up and to realize they were taken advantage of at a vulnerable time in their lives.