Erin Reed / Anthony Reed II / @ErinInTheMorn / @ErinInTheMorning / @ErinInTheNight / _supernovasky_ / beholderseye / realitybias / AnonymousRabbit - post-op transbian Twitter/TikTok "activist" with bad fashion, giant Reddit tattoo. Former drug dealer with felony. Married to Zooey Simone Zephyr / Zachary Todd Raasch.

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This made me laugh:
Screenshot 2023-08-01 at 07-59-06 Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn).png
Screenshot 2023-08-01 at 07-59-10 Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn).png
Screenshot 2023-08-01 at 07-59-58 Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn).png
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@erininthemorn Jul 29, 2023 · 5:59 PM UTC: Hey Gary Click, I thought pastors were not supposed to lie. The bill in Michigan does not criminalize “wrong pronoun use” at all. detroitnews.com/story/news/p…

@clickforohio Jul 30, 2023 · 5:26 PM UTC: That’s rich coming from a guy claiming to be a woman! 😂👫

@erininthemorn Jul 30, 2023 · 5:31 PM UTC: Hey @clickforohio , why the sidestep? As a pastor, your casual lying regarding Michigan should give everyone who follows you pause. Maybe reflect on the meaning of removing the "log from your own eye" before trying to deflect when called out on your hypocrisy.

@clickforohio Jul 30, 2023 · 5:34 PM UTC: Sidestep? Why are you avoiding the truth that you can’t tell the truth and want to impose an extremist view if sex and gender on the world. When you figure out yourself, then maybe you can attack the rest of us.
(archive)
 
In today's episode of delusional nonsense Tony says.....

View attachment 5242341
Tony is legit retarded. Twitters ad revenue sharing program is legit amazing, I was seeing creators brag about getting thousands of dollars. Elon said some accounts got over 20,000 dollars. Now, those figures were backdated to February, so you can't expect those kind of numbers every month, but it's still impressive.

To get paid you have to have 15 million impressions over the previous three months and subscribe to Twitter Blue. You pay them $8/mo, keep doing what you were previously doing, and get essentially free money. How is that not winning? If I qualified I'd have zero problems with signing up for Blue, even though I'm anti-subscription services in general.

Only a retard would throw away free money. I don't care how good his grades are, he's clearly a retard.

I know he lurves us and obsessively lurks, so if he does an about face and suddenly signs up for Twitter Blue I will demand a substantial cut be given to Josh.
 
The Sixth Circuit delivers again. Troons are not protected by the constitution. Looking forward to constitutional scholar Tony Reed's sperg out.

A federal appeals court is allowing Kentucky to enforce a recently enacted ban on gender-affirming care for young transgender people while the issue is being litigated.

The 2-1 decision Monday from the Sixth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in Cincinnati is not unexpected. The same three-judge panel ruled the same way earlier this month on a similar case in Tennessee.


The Kentucky law, enacted this year over the veto of Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear, prevents transgender minors from accessing puberty blockers and hormone therapy.

Appeals court lets Kentucky enforce ban on transgender care for minors
 
Troons are not protected by the constitution.
They're as protected by the Constitution as anyone else and no more. They cannot be discriminated against on the basis of race, religion, national origin, and alienage. The Sixth Circuit has declined the invitation to write a fifth "inherently suspicious" category into the Constitution.

So long as there is a rational basis for regulation involving this quackery, it stands. The government is merely prohibited from passing laws based on nothing but animosity against a group.
 
he starts by lying about the Littman paper:

"Her paper was immediately withdrawn with an apology by the journal for correction after the data collection methods were revealed, with the republication stating that the research “does not validate the phenomenon” of transgender social contagion."
He outright altered the statement that Littman was forced to attach:
1690852582416.png

The statement is meaningless because the study couldn't have done this anyway.

then goes on to comparing being trans to like being left handed in the 1800s. on the surface it makes sense, well this was not socially accepted so rates went up when it became so. but with half a second of critical thought, it falls apart. there are physical differences between left handed, right handed, and ambidextrous people that can be detected with simple tests. not so for trans people. secondly, there are actual detectable brain differences between left and right handed people (https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5516604/)
It also falls apart because the time cutoff that were the basis for that chart was wrong, the data goes back further and there's no evidence of a suppressed left-handedness. (Not to mention that the "source" of the data doesn't exist, the chart is extrapolated from unconnected data.) It's a thing "everybody knows" but can't prove.
 
The statement is meaningless because the study couldn't have done this anyway.

I was just looking at critiques of the Littman paper in Google Scholar. They all suffer from the same defect of starting from an activist conclusion and then engaging in circular reasoning. "Rapid Onset Gender Dysphoria is "wrong" because it means troons are illegitimate."

Tangentially related - how does that troon Florence Ashley get so much absolute trash published with no similar demands for retraction?
 
Tangentially related - how does that troon Florence Ashley get so much absolute trash published with no similar demands for retraction?
Nobody reads that garbage. Plus saying that all children should be put on puberty blockers by default is evidence of being a true intellectual.
 
For completeness, archived Substack article: No Evidence Being Transgender Is A "Social Contagion" (archive)

Twitter thread (link goes to a tweet part-way through to capture the whole thing):
ErinInTheMorn-1686066010590232577-thread.png
@ErinInTheMorn, tweet 1686067475299909646 (archive)
Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Jul 31, 2023 · 5:27 PM UTC
Recently in a national congressional hearing, Republicans asserted being trans is a "social contagion."
The claim was made in legislatures across the United States.
Research, history, and science show that's not the case.
Subscribe to support my work.

Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Jul 31, 2023 · 5:28 PM UTC
The idea of trans “social contagion” was proposed in a 2018 paper by Dr. Lisa Littman, a researcher who has pushed the theory heavily.
When it came out that she recruited her surveys froma nti-trans sites like 4thWaveNow and Transgender Trend, the journal issued an apology.

Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Jul 31, 2023 · 5:29 PM UTC
A pivotal study published in The Journal of Pediatrics in 2021 entirely debunked the concept.
They found that trans youth knew about their identities an average of 4 years before coming out.

Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Jul 31, 2023 · 5:31 PM UTC
They didn't stop there though. They then looked at the few people who did say their self-awareness was recent, and found it was not correlated with having trans friends, having online trans acceptance, or mental disorders.

Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Jul 31, 2023 · 5:33 PM UTC
One of the claims is often that transgender men, for instance, are actually "lesbians" being "influenced" to transition (as if being gay is more acceptable than being trans)
This is not the case either though... LGBTQ+ identification is up across the board.

Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Jul 31, 2023 · 5:34 PM UTC
So what is going on? We have a good analogue in history.
In 1900, left handedness was only reported to be 3%. That shot up to 12% in 1950 where it has maintained ever since.
This came after parent campaigns to "allow kids to use whatever hand feels comfortable"

Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Jul 31, 2023 · 5:35 PM UTC
Thanks for reading, and remember to go read the artcle, where I cover so much of this in greater detail.
And please, subscribe to support my work. I depend on readers like you to be able to do this.

In a sense I quite like this article by Tony, in that it is perhaps the most obviously false thing he’s written. Whether he’s just straightforwardly lying to people, or is so mentally ill as to have truly deluded himself, is a question for others to mull over.

Others above have hit some of the important points, but I thought it was worth going through the whole thing to address each of Tony’s claims.

I’ll start here:
Tony said:
The idea of transgender "social contagion" was first proposed in a 2018 paper by Dr. Lisa Littman
False: Lisa Marchiano wrote about it in 2017, even using (in quotes) the phrase "Rapid-onset gender dysphoria". Littman’s research was conducted in mid-2016, but her paper was published after Marchiano’s.
Lisa Marchiano said:
Currently, we appear to be experiencing a significant psychic epidemic that is manifesting as children and young people coming to believe that they are the opposite sex, and in some cases taking drastic measures to change their bodies. Of particular concern to the author is the number of teens and tweens suddenly coming out as transgender without a prior history of discomfort with their sex.

"Rapid-onset gender dysphoria" is a new presentation of a condition that has not been well studied. Reports online indicate that a young person’s coming out as transgender is often preceded by increased social media use and/or having one or more peers also come out as transgender. These factors suggest that social contagion may be contributing to the significant rise in the number of young people seeking treatment for gender dysphoria.
Lisa Marchiano (2017) Outbreak: On Transgender Teens and Psychic Epidemics, Psychological Perspectives, 60:3, 345-366, DOI: 10.1080/00332925.2017.1350804 (archive)

Tony doesn’t actually link to the text of the Littman paper, only the APA Psychnet record. It’s here: Littman L (2018) Parent reports of adolescents and young adults perceived to show signs of a rapid onset of gender dysphoria. PLoS ONE 13(8): e0202330. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0202330 (archive)

Tony said:
[Littman], a researcher who has pushed the theory heavily.
False: Littman has written only one paper on ROGD. "Heavily" is subjective, but at this point Tony has written more blog posts about ROGD than Littman has papers.

Tony said:
The article … proposed that social contagion was leading to an increase in trans identification. To support her claim, Littman solicited interviews from anti-trans websites such as Transgender Trend and 4thWaveNow. She used data from those interviews to claim that transgender youth "suddenly" develop gender dysphoria through a process known as "Rapid Onset Gender Dysphoria."
False: Tony is wildly misrepresenting the paper, and attributing a motive to Littman (setting out to prove social influence) for which he gives no evidence.

It will become very clear very quickly to anyone who reads the paper that it is not overwhelmingly about social influence, but rather about understanding a group of people with a new presentation of gender dysphoria. There is material in there about friend groups, and Internet and social media use, but this is just part of the picture (though obviously a major one).

There is also material discussing rates of same-sex attraction, existing mental health problems, trauma, and familial relations. There is material describing the adolescents’ "coming-out" announcements, and interactions with doctors.

The key to understanding the paper is that adolescents and young adults ("AYA" in the paper) without a childhood history of symptoms gender dysphoria are a new patient group who don’t appear in the literature before about 2012. Before then it was people who showed symptoms as children (early-onset GD), and adults who develop symptoms after puberty (late-onset GD).

If there quickly emerges a group of people afflicted with a condition, who previously never had been, it makes sense to ask: "What is driving this, why now, and what does this mean for treatment?"

I could (actually did) write much more about the paper itself to show that it clearly couldn’t have been primarily motivated by an attempt to "prove" anything about social and peer influence, but it would obvious to anyone who has read it.

Tony said:
Her paper was immediately withdrawn with an apology by the journal for correction after the data collection methods were revealed, with the republication stating that the research "does not validate the phenomenon" of transgender social contagion.

This sentence is doing a lot of work for Tony, let’s unpick it.

Tony said:
Her paper was immediately withdrawn with an apology by the journal
False: PLOS One did not withdraw the paper. The paper was published on August 16 2018, and on August 27 2018 PLOS One said it would conduct a post-publication review. But in the interim, it wasn’t withdrawn; here it is on September 21 2018, October 27 2018, November 30 2018, January 10 2019, and February 11 2019. On none of those archive pages will you find any mention of it being "withdrawn".

The apology Tony links to was published on March 19 2019 — when the article was republished, not when it was supposedly "withdrawn". Why editor-in-chief Joerg Heber felt the need to apologise for publishing a paper that he then republished substantially unaltered is a question for him, perhaps along with a question about where he keeps his spine.

Next from Tony:
Tony said:
withdrawn … for correction after the data collection methods were revealed
This implies that the paper’s data collection itself was flawed, but the same data is used in the "corrected" paper. Obviously the point Tony is trying to make here is that Littman was biased in her recruitment, by posting the link to "anti-trans" websites. (Littman’s correction notice does note that the survey link did make its way to a pro-transition Facebook group.)

But Littman’s recruitment methods are common and seemingly unproblematic when used by pro-transition researchers. As Littman wrote in 2020:
Lisa Littman said:
The methodologies singled out for criticism in Littman (2018) — parent-report, targeted recruitment, convenience samples, online and anonymous surveys — are used in research that supports or is otherwise in line with the GAMC [gender-affirmative model of care] and appear to be considered perfectly acceptable in that context (e.g., Dickey, Reisner, & Juntunen, 2015; Olson, Durwood, Demeules, & Mclaughlin, 2016; Riggs & Bartholomaeus, 2018; Riley, Clemson, Sitharthan, & Diamond, 2013; Riley, Sitharthan, Clemson, & Diamond, 2011; Russell, Pollitt, Li, & Grossman, 2018; Tebbe & Moradi, 2016; Timmins, Rimes, & Rahman, 2017). Table 2 lists eight articles that have been published in reputable journals, have been subsequently cited in the literature, and share methodologies with those criticized in Littman. Some have been used explicitly as reasons that the medical community should adopt the GAMC (Olson et al., 2016; Russell et al., 2018). I have selected these articles not to suggest that they should be dismissed, but rather to make the point that these articles contribute to our understanding and that none of the limitations noted are grounds to disqualify the research articles out of hand.

And lastly in Tony’s sentence:
Tony said:
with the republication stating that the research "does not validate the phenomenon" of transgender social contagion.
This is not something the paper could do, and not something the paper set out to do. And Littman is very clear about this — Littman wrote the correction notice, so Tony is quoting Littman herself here. She writes a little later in the notice:
Lisa Littman said:
As mentioned in the article, the study design of this research falls under descriptive research: as such, it did not assign an exposure, there were no comparison groups, and the study’s output was hypothesis-generating rather than hypothesis-testing. Descriptive studies often represent a first inquiry into an area of research and the findings of descriptive studies are used to generate new hypotheses that can be tested in subsequent research. Because of the known limitations of descriptive studies, claims about causal associations cannot be made, and there were none made in the article. The conclusions of the current study are that the findings raise certain hypotheses and that more research is needed. Simple descriptive metrics to describe the quantitative characteristics of a sample in a descriptive study are the appropriate measures to use in this study. Additionally, because the data were collected at one point in time, no claims of cause and effect can be made.

Tony writes next:
Tony said:
"Rapid Onset Gender Dysphoria" is derived from interviews with parents who report their children "abruptly came out as trans" without any forewarning.
False: It is not that they simply "abruptly came out as trans", but that they came out as trans in adolescence with no prior childhood history of gender dysphoria — a new phenomenon. As well, they don’t meet the accepted GD criteria either:
Lisa Littman said:
It is important to note that none of the AYAs described in this study would have met diagnostic criteria for gender dysphoria in childhood. In fact, the vast majority (80.4%) had zero indicators from the DSM-5 diagnostic criteria for childhood gender dysphoria …

Tony continues:
Tony said:
For numerous parents on these websites opposed to transgender rights, they claimed their children’s coming out was too sudden to be genuine. Coupled with conservative media exposure asserting that being transgender results from factors ranging from TikTok to alleged "grooming" in schools, parents frequently sought alternative explanations for their children’s trans identification, instead of acknowledging the possibility that their children were authentically transgender.
Tony is speculating here. I would just emphasise that the survey responses were collected in mid-2016, when the cultural zeitgeist was very different, with the Obama administration’s "Dear Colleague" letter and the boycott of North Carolina over its "bathroom bill". (And, for reference, over 2.5 years before Tony himself started to identify as transgender.)

Next, Tony writes:
Tony said:
A pivotal study published in The Journal of Pediatrics in 2021 entirely debunked this concept.
The "pivotal study" that Tony links is Bauer et al 2021. It cannot "debunk" anything because it defines ROGD to mean something entirely different — those who attend a gender clinic within 1 year of "realizing" that their "gender was different from what other people" call them. For comparison the Littman definition is adolescents and young adults who develop a transgender identification without a history of childhood GD.

As Littman pointed out in a letter to the journal, it’s entirely possible that there are ROGD adolescents in both the study and the control groups of Bauer et al. Saying that Bauer et al studied rapid onset gender dysphoria is inaccurate and misleading - The Journal of Pediatrics (archive). A similar point was made separately in a letter from Joanne Sinai, a Canadian psychiatrist: Rapid onset gender dysphoria as a distinct clinical phenomenon - The Journal of Pediatrics (archive).

Tony praises this irrelevant study for a couple of paragraphs, then says:
Tony said:
Although there is no proposed explanation, those opposed to transgender rights continue to maintain that transgender people are increasing in population, and therefore, there is a "social contagion" factor that is explaining that increase.
It seems that Tony doubts that there is an increase in transgender identification, which is certainly an odd position to take. It’s not a matter of debate that referrals to pediatric gender clinics have increased worldwide, and the sex ratio has changed from mostly boys to mostly girls. Here’s what happened at GIDS in England, from the Cass interim report:
The Cass Interim Report said:
3.10. In the last few years, there has been a significant change in the numbers and case-mix of children and young people being referred to GIDS. From a baseline of approximately 50 referrals per annum in 2009, there was a steep increase from 2014-15, and at the time of the CQC inspection of the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust in October 2020 there were 2,500 children and young people being referred per annum, 4,600 children and young people on the waiting list, and a waiting time of over two years to first appointment. This has severely impacted on the capacity of the existing service to manage referrals in the safe and responsive way that they aspire to and has led to considerable distress for those on the waiting list.

3.11. This increase in referrals has been accompanied by a change in the case-mix from predominantly birth-registered males presenting with gender incongruence from an early age, to predominantly birth-registered females presenting with later onset of reported gender incongruence in early teen years. In addition, approximately one third of children and young people referred to GIDS have autism or other types of neurodiversity. There is also an over-representation percentage wise (compared to the national percentage) of looked after children.

The Littman paper looked at parent reports in an attempt to get a feel for why this sudden change has happened. This is a new, large population suffering with a previously rare condition that presents in a new way, and we don’t understand why. Tony has not addressed any aspect of it!

Tony briefly mentions the idea of "transing away the gay" but dismisses it because a larger proportion of young people consider themselves LGBT, with no further comment. (As an aside: the biggest change in the chart he shows is in bisexuals, almost doubling between generations, which makes sense if Gen Z understands bisexual to mean "one sex, either gender". There’s also an almost doubling of "transgender", and "other LGBT" — furries and demisexuals and whatever else.)

Then Tony rehashes his tired left-handedness argument, which has been discussed to death, so I’ll just throw in this chart that begins earlier than his favourite:
c50d65a5-9315-43ba-9336-1a0c5a5e3fd1_960x708.jpg
More on this: The Left Hand of Daftness - by Dave Hewitt (archive).

Lastly:
Tony said:
It is clear that "social contagion" does not explain increase in transgender identification. Instead, increased acceptance has allowed more LGBTQ+ people to feel safe being public with their identities.
Why anyone would "feel safe" publicly identifying into a group that Tony says is the target of a worldwide genocide, I will never know.
 
Doc Martens were worn by mods, hipsters, punks, SKA fans, rockers, skinheads, alternative rockers, and fashionistas DECADES before the troons and the alphabet cult launched their parasitic co-opt of the brand.

Screenshot 2023-08-01 103308.png
article-2525602-1A2B2A3600000578-553_634x408.jpg


Uncle Geranium and others have nicely illustrated how Tony has created a bizarre echo chamber for himself where he simply denies that anything running contrary to his assertions, delusions, and fetishes even exist.
 
“Instead, increased acceptance has allowed more LGBTQ+ people to feel safe being public with their identities.”

Ok but how does he square that while he preaches about the ongoing genocide? His substack is dedicated to tracking the bigots murderraping all the lgbbq people. His very own polycule members are encouraging muh trannies to arm up and fight back against the cis-tem that’s clearly targeting them in a life or death situation. It’s all so blatantly retarded. More people feel confident and comfortable enough to elect themselves into a group facing an ongoing genocide?
 
Obligatory Britbong gripe that Doc Martens have been shit for 20 years, since they sacked 98% of their workers and moved manufacturing to China and Thailand.

Doc Martens were worn by mods, hipsters, punks, SKA fans, rockers, skinheads, alternative rockers, and fashionistas DECADES before the troons and the alphabet cult launched their parasitic co-opt of the brand.
You missed the best part of that thread, when Tony posted a photo of his giant feet and chunky legs, as some kind of own(?).
F2dhUfxX0AcCaLk.jpg
Edit: lol, nearly 35 years old and still tying granny knots.

Twitter thread:
ErinInTheMorn-1686419897604100099-thread.png
@ErinInTheMorn, tweet 1686419897604100099 (archive)
Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Aug 1, 2023 · 4:53 PM UTC
"Doc Martens Go Woke"
Conservatives are bafflingly calling for a boycott of the brand over art on a shoe collaboration that features a transgender person.
The brand has long been a queer staple.
Subscribe to support my work.

Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Aug 1, 2023 · 4:54 PM UTC
The design in question comes from the DIYDocs project, which are not mass produced. Instead, it allows artists to reimagine the brand. Only two shoes were actually ever made with the design, done by Jess Vosseteig, a queer artist from Colorado.

Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Aug 1, 2023 · 4:55 PM UTC
Jess states:
“I wanted to include two stylized people that were part of the queer community. I knew I wanted to incorporate lots of color with rainbows, clouds, and sparkles! I wrote "Queer Joy" on the back of them to send the message that queer joy will always exist.

Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Aug 1, 2023 · 4:57 PM UTC
The outrage was immediate. Within hours of posting to instagram, Chris Elston (Billboards Chris) - known for his self proclaimed "stochastic terror tours" against childrens hospitals - protested.
Libs of Tok, Maya Forstater, Moms For Liberty founder Tiffany Justice all joined.

Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Aug 1, 2023 · 4:59 PM UTC
The response quickly drew comparisons to Bud Light and Target, and it appears this is the next brand the right wing has focused their outrage over.
Bud Light and Target were the recipients of violent threats over those campaigns.

Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Aug 1, 2023 · 5:00 PM UTC
Will this work against Dr. Marten?
Not if it stays true to its brand identity. The brand has historically been hugely associated with queer people.
It is often something queer people look for to signal someone else may be queer.

Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Aug 1, 2023 · 5:01 PM UTC
The brand has released pride themed shoes and shoelaces for years. Here is their shoe from 2019, for instance:

Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Aug 1, 2023 · 5:03 PM UTC
There are signs the boycotts over "wokeness" are beginning to fall apart.
Recent box office hits are breaking records, despite conservatives calling them "Woke" and trying to stop people from watching them:

Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Aug 1, 2023 · 5:04 PM UTC
On top of that, a recent Fox News poll shows "Wokeness" ranked for last on what people care about:

Erin Reed (@ErinInTheMorn) · Aug 1, 2023 · 5:08 PM UTC
Lastly, in disclosure, the writer of this story was not paid by Dr Martens, but she does own a pair of woke docs herself:
 
Last edited:
Doc Martens were worn by mods, hipsters, punks, SKA fans, rockers, skinheads, alternative rockers, and fashionistas DECADES before the troons and the alphabet cult launched their parasitic co-opt of the brand.
Even the skinheads back then were split between commies and fascists of various stripes and just people who liked the look. Docs were pretty common among all of them. That said, fuck those ugly-ass boots and that soulless corporate Memphis looking shit.

Also I've heard the quality has gone really downhill in general so if you didn't want to buy them, the fact they now fall apart in a couple years would be another reason.
 
Target were the recipients of violent threats over those campaigns.

Those threats came from inside the lgbtbbqwtf house, angry that Target didn't have their back. I'm sure that created goodwill towards the community.

"Target is full of cowards who turned their back on the LGBT community and decided to cater to the homophobic right wing redneck bigots who protested and vandalized their store," the emailed threat read in part, Cleveland 19 News reported.

Lots of salty tears in that article, but even the media is acknowledging the bomb threats came from the angry incels by quoting it. Would they have done that a year ago?
 
Tony continues:
Tony is speculating here. I would just emphasise that the survey responses were collected in mid-2016, when the cultural zeitgeist was very different, with the Obama administration’s "Dear Colleague" letter and the boycott of North Carolina over its "bathroom bill". (And, for reference, over 2.5 years before Tony himself started to identify as transgender.)
This is pretty funny and makes me wish I had read Tony's article closer like you had. He's ascribing to things that happened after the paper came out as the reason for the survey results in the paper. This is very top level work on his part.

Tony mistakenly thought that this was clever.

View attachment 5245953
I rarely see any of these things in troon photos. In fact, I think Katie Herzog already made a version of this joke on Twitter a year ago.
 
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