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More on that troon MP, Jamie Wallis, from Private Eye: -

Wallis.jpg
In summary: -

Businesses owned by him and his family have hundreds of trading standards complaints against them.

He claims to have a PhD, supervised by someone called NC Wickramasinghe, an 83 year old astronomer who claimed that COVID came from outer space. The PhD is about "panspermia", the fringe idea that life exists throughout space and is distributed around via space dust.

Wallis's PhD was awarded in 2014, but from 2012 onwards, Wickramasinghe was the sole staff member at a private "university", that also awarded Wallis's father with a PhD.

The whole family sounds dodgy as fuck, with fake PhDs and shady businesses.
 
He mentioned blackmail, but it's important to remember that the British Parliamentary system has state-sanctioned extortion in the form of whips.

The whip tells MPs of their party how to vote. Boris might want all the Tories to vote for a proposal, so he gets the whips to tell his MPs to vote for, regardless of what they feel or what their constituents think. If MPs consistently disobey instructions, they'll "have the whip withdrawn" (which essentially means they're no longer part of the political party and would be running as an independent in the next election).

However the whips generally exert control by collecting dirt on MPs and then threatening to expose it if they don't obey instructions. Boris is currently using the Culture Wars to deflect from his corrupt and inept government, by continually painting the opposition as woke while he's the party of common sense and British values etc etc.

Having Jamie embrace his status as a Stunning and Brave woman and very publicly start transition - with the ridiculousness of an early-in-transition man staggering around Parliament in a dress and cheap wig - completely destroys Boris's ability to use the War on Woke as a deflection tactic. There could even be rows if Jamie tried to use the women's toilets in the House of Commons despite having been a man a few months earlier. It's everything Boris wouldn't want.

I'm willing to bet that the Chief Whip had a word with Jamie and said "If you start transitioning, we'll leak all these details of your fraud and crimes to the papers and you'll go down for it." And now Jamie is staying as a bloke.

DING DING DING DING :winner:

We have a winner. I'd put a solid bet down that this is exactly what's behind it, and I really want to picture the whip as having been Malcolm Tucker threatening to perform a manual vasectomy on him if he dared to show up in a wig.
 
Even if they started injecting you with T at 9 years old, you'd never end up 6'3 like your brother. Trannies love to try to argue that biology is complex and we don't understand, while simultaneously believing that a simple hormone injection just given early enough can cause a female to develop into a male.

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Yep... and actually, testosterone *closes* the growth plates, so getting HRT earlier would make her shorter, not taller. To gain height, she would need to megadose growth hormones quite early. The problem is that growth hormone itself paradoxically triggers early onset puberty so she would get a quick growth, but not unlimited because the growth plates close up quicker. Kids who get growth hormone treatment for short stature still end up on the shorter side of average because of this. At best the kids end up a little taller than they'd otherwise be, but you're not going to see any FtM drugs that give biological women 6'5" gigachad frames. It simply isn't possible.
 
UK Conservative MP Jamie Wallis has trooned out becoming the first Anglo Tranny in government after he was blackmailed £50,000 with compromising photos

The fun part is going through the Twitter replies of his tweet announcing it and looking at the profiles of the "stunning and brave" responses (lots of masks and filters)
Tweet:

His statement
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Some of the people responding look like this
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The breaking news via Sky
Is there anything the Conservatives actually want to conserve?
 
It makes me feel like they think they're entitled to my attention
They do think that, otherwise you're transphobic (their words, not mine)
I was also relatively accepting of trans people until they started deciding that they're entitled to my romantic interest
Welcome to the "TERF" pipeline, many such cases
 
had on
He mentioned blackmail, but it's important to remember that the British Parliamentary system has state-sanctioned extortion in the form of whips.

The whip tells MPs of their party how to vote. Boris might want all the Tories to vote for a proposal, so he gets the whips to tell his MPs to vote for, regardless of what they feel or what their constituents think. If MPs consistently disobey instructions, they'll "have the whip withdrawn" (which essentially means they're no longer part of the political party and would be running as an independent in the next election).

However the whips generally exert control by collecting dirt on MPs and then threatening to expose it if they don't obey instructions. Boris is currently using the Culture Wars to deflect from his corrupt and inept government, by continually painting the opposition as woke while he's the party of common sense and British values etc etc.

Having Jamie embrace his status as a Stunning and Brave woman and very publicly start transition - with the ridiculousness of an early-in-transition man staggering around Parliament in a dress and cheap wig - completely destroys Boris's ability to use the War on Woke as a deflection tactic. There could even be rows if Jamie tried to use the women's toilets in the House of Commons despite having been a man a few months earlier. It's everything Boris wouldn't want.

I'm willing to bet that the Chief Whip had a word with Jamie and said "If you start transitioning, we'll leak all these details of your fraud and crimes to the papers and you'll go down for it." And now Jamie is staying as a bloke.
- transwoman?
I though when I read the tory it meant the the troon MP was The Right Honorable Aiden-
and that the blackmail would have been regarding their life as a woman in earlier years, etc.


so ...the nature of the blackmailed material is probably something much grosser now- wigs n dresses etc.
looking closely at the photo he's got a big jaw, but the midsection of face had me thinking woman...thats a very high forehead though.

EDIT

NEVER MIND, SEEN HIS STSATEMENT



Regarding his quick halt, i reckon that might be those pesky Whips-

the Tories have been gunning with this Woke Labour talking point, its apparently a big part of their next Gen Elect strategy- the whip might have doe a deep die and told him to stop after finding some gross scandalous material/ that he would blackmailed with..idk.
I just think it's weird to have decided to bother your arse to actually Come Out (TM.) - as a Tory MP! but then instantly put the anchors on like this...

People will 1000% be in his ear, its just who and why.
 
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Source: https://www.refinery29.com/en-us/2022/03/10885697/gender-dysphoria-us-immigrant-experience
Archive: https://archive.ph/4IG8P
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Navigating Transness in an Immigrant Home Has Brought Me Heartbreak & Hope​

ROMMY TORRICO
Full text:
LAST UPDATED MARCH 29, 2022, 6:08 AM

My parents always made birthdays a grand occasion. When I was a kid, my mami would bring a cake to my grade-school class; in those moments, as I sat in front of that confectionery fire hazard, I felt on top of the world. Blowing out the candles gave me a reason to dream. It gave me an excuse to demand my wishes come true rather than have them sink as they did the other 364 days of the year. It’s March, so I’m preparing to dream again. I turn 33 this month. As a nonbinary trans baby and someone who was formerly undocumented, I don’t take for granted having made it this far. My Jesus year is momentous — and the wish I’m making while blowing out the candles this year is, too.

After months of planning, my biggest dream of the last 28 years — to visit the country I left when I was five years old and was never able to return to — is being realized. Going back home to Chile, I’ll see my paternal extended family for the first time since I left and my maternal grandparents since they visited us in South Florida seven years ago. It’ll also be the first time they’ll meet me tatted and trans, and I’m anxious and kind of a mess.

Planning for this trip has hit the defrost button on so many memories and emotions that have iced over the years. Will returning to Chile finally feel like I’ve found “home,” a place where I belong? Will I still feel the ease, happiness, and acceptance with my grandparents that I did when I was tiny? Even now, as I page through old photos from my birth country in search of ones to recreate on this trip, I feel myself tensing up. As much as I’m over the moon about ringing in this birthday with exciting adventures, I’m also terrified of how I’ll be perceived by my extended family and how their perceptions could color every moment of the 17-day trip. I started microdosing testosterone (“T”) six months ago, and while the physical changes my body is going through are still slight, they’re definitely noticeable. The smallest furry caterpillar has taken up residence on my upper lip, and a frog permanently lives in my throat. This aside, my designer chest, which some extended relatives have undoubtedly seen on my social media, might attract unwanted conversation.

Yet there is a thought that does bring me comfort amid this flurry of anxiety: knowing that my immediate family will have my back if my dream suddenly takes a turn for the worst. If anyone steps out of line, my Tauran sister will bring upon them the wrath of a thousand suns. If someone looks at me sideways, my Capricorn mami will likely slap them with an “¿y tú, qué miraí?” and keep it moving. And if anyone dares to ask an invasive question that I don’t want to answer or have difficulty explaining, my Aquarian papi will shoot me a quick glance and tenderly redirect the conversation. Don’t get me wrong, all these situations are extremely awkward for me to think about, but it’s a relief to know I have a family of protectors.

It wasn’t always like this, though.

Growing up in an undocumented (and eventually mixed-status) immigrant household for nearly three decades was a funhouse of mirrors; there were corridors of reflections that showed opaque and distorted fragments of us as individuals and as a family. Our legal status defined and dictated how we navigated life and what we prioritized as a household. Often, we kept a low profile to stay safe. So naturally, the mirrors would reflect back only the practical, reasonable, controlled aspects of us and nothing more. We moved through this terrifying carnival trick as a unit, without much color or shine as far as onlookers were concerned. Because of this, for a long while, we were completely insular and came to rely heavily on just each other to make it through the other side. While I’m grateful that living collectively bonded us solidly and sharpened our problem-solving skills to the finest point, the intense sense of responsibility we had to each other often left my sister and me feeling guilty when we acted independently or made personal goals. In our world, life was a team effort. Nearly everything was to be discussed, decided upon, and agreed on as a team and for the team. At the time, it made sense, but somewhere along the line all these tricks we learned to stay safe ended up burrowing deep within us, long after they were no longer needed.

I felt the full weight of that truth in 2007, when I was accidentally outed as gay at 17 years old. My parents were less than thrilled with my surreptitious desires and not at all supportive of “the path” I was taking. All of us were still undocumented at that time, and the only way for me to open a door with my immigration status was to get into college. There was no room for distractions, no exceptions. It wasn’t personal; this is just how it was. After all, this moment was the reason my parents had sacrificed so much. It couldn’t all be in vain. Being gay was too big a risk. None of us was really even exposed to what queer life was like. On novelas, we saw queer folks as the butt of a joke or an element of sass. And even then, “esas lesbianas marimachas” didn’t get a place in the novelas we watched because they were way too subversive and smutty.

I couldn’t be gay because I couldn’t call any attention to myself. As someone who was undocumented, visibility wasn’t safe for me or them. Now, looking back with perspective, I understand they were trying to protect me the best they knew how. It wasn’t a useful or healthy method of protection, but I acknowledge they had limited tools to work with. Remembering the times when my mami would ask me why I was actively trying to make life harder for myself, I can now hear the trauma that underlined this question: being undocumented pushed us to make painful concessions that made us smaller so that we could accommodate to our reality.

It’s difficult to think back on these moments, to remember that my parents didn’t accept my queerness or believe it. They thought my disinterest in boys was related to the boys’ disinterest in me. According to my parents, it was all because I had low self-esteem due to my body size, and that my lack of confidence and weight were keeping the swarm of teenage boys from approaching me. This caused a further blow to my self-esteem and the start of a sort of reform boot camp. For months before I started college, we took family trips to the gym and they surveilled my food. We don’t speak much about those times. It’s too painful for me and, possibly, too embarrassing for them. In their ways, they’ve said and made their amends. It wasn’t easy, but with a lot of education, patience, love, and understanding from both sides, we’ve been able to move past that shadow period. In 2016, they both proudly walked me down the aisle when I got gay married and have grown to be wonderful cheerleaders in most aspects of my queerness.

My transness, however, has brought with it its own set of unique challenges and opportunities. In college, I discovered a word that could capture the dissonance I had been feeling within myself since I was around eight years old, when I began understanding the world and I perceived my body differently: dysphoria. At first, this feeling was uncomfortable, but after hitting puberty, it became a veritable nightmare. In high school, I began binding with several super-tight sports bras; in college, I used duct tape. It was also in college that I first began learning about trans identities and gender-affirming surgeries from other trans students. It opened up a map of a world I had been dreaming about but didn’t know I wanted. Throughout my 20s, I began navigating my way around this new world alone, finding welcoming harbors where I felt seen and understood. I felt protective of this journey, like it was a sort of beautiful, rare plant that I needed to nurture before sharing. I didn’t want to tell my parents until I was sure my little trans seedling was in full bloom.

I was 31 when that time came. It was spring 2020, and I had made the decision to get top surgery and tell my parents. By then, it had been 15 years since I had “dropped the last bomb,” as my mami likes to say, yet part of me felt like it was still too much for them to handle and too soon. Again, I was twisted and warped with the guilt of choosing myself instead of the unit. I was embarrassed and uncomfortable. When the FaceTime tone beeped, I felt like the world was about to swallow me whole. But then I saw my parents’ faces, and the words just bursted out of me. My glorious sister, who is without a doubt my most valiant champion and steadfast companion, helped facilitate the rest of the call as my parents tried to process what they were hearing. I can barely remember the conversation, but I do know, in a beautiful turn of events, my dad, a loyal and trustworthy ally, was completely on board. My mom wasn’t elated, but she didn’t put up a fight. She asked somewhat prying questions and didn’t exactly mask her disappointment, but she wasn’t angry. Thinking back on the conversation, the response wasn’t perfect, but there were some serious wins considering what we’ve been through.

In keeping with the many changes life has had in store for me, I moved back to my papis’ house in early 2021 to support them through the pandemic, which has been a mixed bag. It’s been a wonderful change to help them financially, something that wasn’t always possible when I was undocumented, but it’s been challenging to have them be so present during this part of my trans process. I still struggle substantially in conversations with my parents around my transness, and generally anything that’s happening or shifting within me. For starters, my Spanish has gotten a little clunky, which was perfectly fine until I had to initiate conversations about gender and sexuality. When I first explained to my parents in 2019 that I identified as nonbinary, it took them for a loop. According to my mom, if I didn’t identify as “a mujer, entonces quieres ser hombre, con barba y todo!” My papi, while initially confused, was quicker to understand the concept of nonbinaryness with a little help from the Trans Student Educational Resources’ Gender Unicorn.

Using gender-neutral language and pronouns in Spanish has also been difficult. For my sister’s wedding, we made pronoun stickers for the guests. While confused at first, my parents did well using the pronouns or just calling people by their names. But it didn’t really stick. Recently, mami giggled at the idea of writing “bebitx lindx” or “bebite linde” on a baby shower card. My parents also still don’t use gender-neutral pronouns with me. I don’t push it — it’s one of the few concessions I make regarding my gender around migrant elders. As someone who has grown up in a generation that prioritizes inclusivity, I appreciate the notion that language is always in flux, but I can also understand the disconnect when it comes to implementing language with our elders. Some things are just not accessible. As I make my way back to South America, I’m keeping this in mind.

When I began taking hormones last year, looking for accessible Spanish-language literature around how to support an adult family member who is taking hormones, what changes were to be expected on hormones, and how to process all of that information as a parent felt like finding a needle in a haystack. It didn’t exist. I don’t know if my parents have researched or looked for support on their own. We haven’t spoken about this aspect of my transition since that initial conversation. I haven’t quite known how to broach the subject, but I’m sure my continuing physical changes will break the silence at some point in the near future. While I know I could be more proactive in proposing conversations, right now I’m just giving myself permission to process my journey and grow into myself so that I’ll have more strength and resolve for the conversations ahead, because there will always be more conversations. I take comfort in knowing that there’s no one-size-fits-all manual on how to transition — any way you do it is the right way if it feels right for you.

Honestly, I have absolutely no clue what I’m in for once I arrive in Chile. Uncertainty and I have yet to become friends, but we are very well acquainted. I’ve learned to make peace with not knowing. Variability, awkwardness, and ache are just a few of the many rolling waves that come from exploring the great and vast oceans of identity. These waves have put my body through a lot, and not all of it has been wonderful. But sometimes there’s bliss, and that’s enough for now. While some pivotal parts of my past were spent in a twisted carnival, I trust that my family will have my back as we move forward. I think that was the missing piece before.

As I finish packing for this new adventure, it only seems fitting that “Tren Al Sur” by Chilean rock band Los Prisioneros comes on to remind me que aún hay muchas alegrías por venir. “Porque me llevan a las tierras / Donde al fin podré de nuevo / Respirar adentro y hondo / Alegrías del corazón.” This is my birthday wish, for me and for my fellow trans migrants returning to their birthplace in search of the homes they had to leave: to know we are already home because our bodies never left us. Our bodies have held us tenderly through all our seasons and have been waiting for us to come back to ourselves, whole and full of joy.

HOW I COPED WITH GENDER DYSPHORIA IN AN IMMIGRANT HOME
ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED ON MARCH 29, 2022, 2:08 AM
SOMOSWELLNESS
WRITTEN BYROMMY TORRICO
ILLUSTRATIONS BY MAYARA MARQUES DIAS
Highlights:
  • As a nonbinary trans baby and someone who was formerly undocumented, I don’t take for granted having made it this far.
  • Going back home to Chile, I’ll see my paternal extended family for the first time since I left and my maternal grandparents since they visited us in South Florida seven years ago. It’ll also be the first time they’ll meet me tatted and trans, and I’m anxious and kind of a mess.
  • I started microdosing testosterone (“T”) six months ago, and while the physical changes my body is going through are still slight, they’re definitely noticeable. The smallest furry caterpillar has taken up residence on my upper lip, and a frog permanently lives in my throat. This aside, my designer chest, which some extended relatives have undoubtedly seen on my social media, might attract unwanted conversation.
  • If someone looks at me sideways, my Capricorn mami will likely slap them with an “¿y tú, qué miraí?” and keep it moving. And if anyone dares to ask an invasive question that I don’t want to answer or have difficulty explaining, my Aquarian papi will shoot me a quick glance and tenderly redirect the conversation.
  • My transness, however, has brought with it its own set of unique challenges and opportunities. In college, I discovered a word that could capture the dissonance I had been feeling within myself since I was around eight years old, when I began understanding the world and I perceived my body differently: dysphoria. At first, this feeling was uncomfortable, but after hitting puberty, it became a veritable nightmare. In high school, I began binding with several super-tight sports bras; in college, I used duct tape. It was also in college that I first began learning about trans identities and gender-affirming surgeries from other trans students.
  • I can barely remember the conversation, but I do know, in a beautiful turn of events, my dad, a loyal and trustworthy ally, was completely on board. My mom wasn’t elated, but she didn’t put up a fight. She asked somewhat prying questions and didn’t exactly mask her disappointment, but she wasn’t angry.
  • According to my mom, if I didn’t identify as “a mujer, entonces quieres ser hombre, con barba y todo!” My papi, while initially confused, was quicker to understand the concept of nonbinaryness with a little help from the Trans Student Educational Resources’ Gender Unicorn.
  • Using gender-neutral language and pronouns in Spanish has also been difficult. For my sister’s wedding, we made pronoun stickers for the guests. While confused at first, my parents did well using the pronouns or just calling people by their names. But it didn’t really stick. Recently, mami giggled at the idea of writing “bebitx lindx” or “bebite linde” on a baby shower card. My parents also still don’t use gender-neutral pronouns with me. I don’t push it — it’s one of the few concessions I make regarding my gender around migrant elders.
 
Women! If you don't surrender your organs to a transsexual as his sex toy, you are a FASCIST!!!
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Is there any place in the world where they even do uterus transplants into males? I thought that practice died with the (pre) nazi mad science that birthed it, on account of it never actually working.
Also, nice MovieBob retweet!
 
mo creepo stuff from Our Right Honorable Discord Friend, the AGP for Bridge End.
(no not that bridge end..)

fuck me, apart from these noticeable (and damning as shit) exceptions , it really is unironic STUNNING & BRAVE up in these replies..... :(
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mP.png
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Him fairly successfully pulling this of as a distraction to being a fucking crap driver...
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fucking hell this guy is sleaze.
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sample of his shiney new supporters-
lmao much like all Ameritroons always look like Kev Gibes - every BRITROON looks EXACTLY like this!?
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Is there any place in the world where they even do uterus transplants into males? I thought that practice died with the (pre) nazi mad science that birthed it, on account of it never actually working.
Also, nice MovieBob retweet!
I'm pretty sure it's medically and physically impossible, like head transplants, or AGP troons passing as women
 
Is there any place in the world where they even do uterus transplants into males? I thought that practice died with the (pre) nazi mad science that birthed it, on account of it never actually working.
Also, nice MovieBob retweet!
No, but several people (including medical professionals) have called for it. Almost every article about uterus transplants I've read have mentioned that it's really important to make sure that troons will be able to get one and not just cis women
 
No, but several people (including medical professionals) have called for it. Almost every article about uterus transplants I've read have mentioned that it's really important to make sure that troons will be able to get one and not just cis women
They can't even always reliably transplant someone's own skin on their own body none the less bloodtype matches for life saving organs for others. Kidney transplants fail after X years.

Even if you are trans or pro-trans asking someone to have basically 100% chance of organ failure that could kill them is pure evil.
 
Guys, all this sleepover talk has made me dysphoric.

I grew up in the 90s and I never had a single pillow fight during my many sleepovers. We never even kissed or experimented!

We just played violent videogames, ate nachos and rented whatever horror movie the host parent would allow us to watch.

I think that means I had the male experience growing up, despite being a bonafide woman! This causes me trauma!

However when I ask my adult female friends to come over and paint my toesies so I can reclaim my youth, they tell me I'm an adult and to stop being a weird fetishist creep :(
 
Is there any place in the world where they even do uterus transplants into males? I thought that practice died with the (pre) nazi mad science that birthed it, on account of it never actually working.
Also, nice MovieBob retweet!
There really is no point ever in doing this, it's not like we have spare uteruses just lying around and the only reason to transplant one (into a woman) is for its intended purpose - pregnancy. Though honestly even SRS is ultimately pointless (you can never create a real vagina or penis, just some crude facsimile that is often more horrifying than not), but bla bla dysphoria whatever, maybe one day people will realise it's a horrible procedure with very few benefits and finally stop doing it.

Anyway, unlike SRS and other shit I doubt that they can argue for men NEEDING a uterus stuffed into their body due to "uterus dysphoria". And claiming that this surgery would enable them to become pregnant is sheer lunacy. I'm sure there are some megalomaniac surgeons who would love to try and they write retarded articles on "uterus transplants are ttly coming for trans women!! uwu" (btw, is it even called "transplant" if they are not equipped to have one in the first place? I have the feeling there should be another word) but nah. Clown World must have a limit somewhere.
 
There really is no point ever in doing this, it's not like we have spare uteruses just lying around and the only reason to transplant one (into a woman) is for its intended purpose - pregnancy. Though honestly even SRS is ultimately pointless (you can never create a real vagina or penis, just some crude facsimile that is often more horrifying than not), but bla bla dysphoria whatever, maybe one day people will realise it's a horrible procedure with very few benefits and finally stop doing it.

Anyway, unlike SRS and other shit I doubt that they can argue for men NEEDING a uterus stuffed into their body due to "uterus dysphoria". And claiming that this surgery would enable them to become pregnant is sheer lunacy. I'm sure there are some megalomaniac surgeons who would love to try and they write retarded articles on "uterus transplants are ttly coming for trans women!! uwu" (btw, is it even called "transplant" if they are not equipped to have one in the first place? I have the feeling there should be another word) but nah. Clown World must have a limit somewhere.

Even IF neovaginas looked just like natural vageens, and you COULD put a uterus and womb and everything in a trans woman... Wouldn't they tear that shit wide open the moment they try to poop out a baby, granted they could even bring a healthy child to term?
 
Even IF neovaginas looked just like natural vageens, and you COULD put a uterus and womb and everything in a trans woman... Wouldn't they tear that shit wide open the moment they try to poop out a baby, granted they could even bring a healthy child to term?
Yeah I think the pelvic bones (or whatever it is going on in there) of a woman actually separate to accommodate childbirth.
 
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