Transgender men impregnating women
Ok, i made a thread about this but people took it the wrong way

I didnt mean if they had like sperm, like is it possible with a doctor? I know trans men dont have balls But ive heard that lesbians can have biological children? So i was wondering the same thing for transgender
Cognitively_Absurd
What you might have heard with a lesbian couple is they could do a reciprocal in-vitro fertilization, where one supplies the ovum and the other carries it after being fertilized. It still requires sperm from a person with testes though, at least for now until whenever it might be stem cell research advances(if it does) to create gametes from other cells of people.
You can have a biological child, but you'll need to save your ova. You could also even do something like reciprocal ivf if you want to have your gamete inside your partner, if they have a uterus. Some third party would still need to provide sperm though.
StoicFerret
You could harvest your eggs, use a sperm donor and implant the embryo in a surrogate's uterus (or your partner's uterus, if your partner has one).
skapeet
So would it be my biological child tho right?
Icy_Phase_9797
It would be biologically yours and the speed donors but not biologically your partners. Your partner may carry the baby if they have a uterus but it will not have their dna at all.
StoicFerret
Yes, because it would be your egg that was used, so it would be your biological child. Keep in mind that if you go on T, doctors recommend harvesting and storing your eggs if you want to have biological kids later because of the chance for infertility from taking T.
skapeet
Would it have the sperm donors dna too?
Im sorry im just Dumbbbb
StoicFerret
Yes. Having kids requires DNA from an egg and a sperm. You can't have a kid without both. This is also how lesbians have a biological kid (assuming neither has sperm). If they're both AFAB, their kid is biologically only one of theirs. The sperm donor is also a biological parent.
Eugregoria
Sometimes the sperm donor is a close relative (e.g. a brother) of the one carrying the fetus, so there's still a genetic relationship.
luckyamr
It’s still a “biological” child of both partners in reciprocal IFV because when a fetus grown inside a person for 9 months their biological material gets all over them. What the child is not is a “genetic” child of the person not contributing genetic material.
MachoMitchie
yes, as it's your egg