Alejandra Caraballo / Alex Caraballo / @Esqueer_ - Twitter trans rights activist, cyberlaw teacher who doesn't understand cyberlaw, mass flaggot, humiliated in congress by a real woman.

Not the first time this semi retarded troon "lawyer" has been duped by a fake tweet.

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Of course Alex and the progressive media asshats are misrepresenting this story. Even worse, Alex and the progressive media find this type of potential sexual battery to be reasonable and appropriate. Hopefully the DeSantis admin intervenes with the locals.

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According to police, the crime happened on Nov. 18 after the three victims left a Wynwood nightclub.

Arrest reports state that while at the club, a woman invited the three transgender women to party with Gaitan and Valle at a Brickell bar.

After they all got into a car and began driving towards the club, one of the “very intoxicated” transgender women began vomiting on her friend, leading one of them to yell at the driver, Gaitan, in Spanish to pull the car over, the reports state.

An investigator wrote Gaitan pulled over in the 600 block of Northwest Eighth Street, in Miami’s Overtown neighborhood, at which time he and Valle realized that the trio “were not born birthed female.” That led Valle to hit one of the victims from behind “multiple times,” causing her to fall, authorities said.

All the while, police said he was yelling, in English, “You’re a man, you’re a man. F---ing liar, we are going to kill you. You are not women.”

Valle “began to drag Victim #2 across the street by her hair while continuing to strike her, but Victim #2 managed to get away and hide under a car,” police wrote.

“Victim #1 was also struck several times by both (men),” the report states. “The victims stated that (Valle) took their purses from them which contained personal documents and their cellphones, valuing a total of $5,000 and fled the scene in the white vehicle.”

Miami police would locate the pair Monday in the area of Northwest Seventh Avenue and 21st Street, in the city’s Allapattah neighborhood, and arrest them.

Gaitan would tell police he was “too drunk to remember anything” from that night while Valle would invoke his right to an attorney, according to the reports.

Both men were being held in the Turner Guilford Knight Correctional Center on a $15,000 bond. Additionally, Gaitan remained jailed on a probation violation, according to online records.

Miami police accuse pair of hate-fueled beating, robbery of transgender women
 
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Of course Alex and the progressive media asshats are misrepresenting this story. Even worse, Alex and the progressive media find this type of potential sexual battery to be reasonable and appropriate. Hopefully the DeSantis admin intervenes with the locals.

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LGBTQ people never were harmed in any way in Florida, especially Miami, before Ron DeSantis said a few things?
 
Dear Big Dumb Gay Al,

Does the paper you are fawning over commit any of the same methodological errors that Turban did that have been identified by Leor Sapir and Lisa Littman? I am going to guess that it does AND that you didn't even bother to check. Its hilarious to me that a bloated incompetent buffoon who spontaneously trooned out in adulthood after finishing law school is one of the most ardent deniers of rapid onsent when he has all of the signs and symptoms.

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All the while, police said he was yelling, in English, “You’re a man, you’re a man. F---ing liar, we are going to kill you. You are not women.”
"I tried to rape a man and he went nuts and tried to kill me! Who could have seen this coming?" Don't attack random drunk men, everyone. Little-known life hack, that.
 
Good article about Big Al getting dragged in an academic journal for shoddy research are deeply flawed reasoning. Big Al published a paper arguing that the only legitimate expert witness are people who affirm troonery and actively particpate in facilitating that delusion.

"The core question in lawsuits over state-level age restrictions on “gender-affirming care” or former patients suing their providers for fraud or malpractice is whether sex-trait modification is an evidence-based and ethical medical practice. Recognizing the limits of their own knowledge on such matters, judges have turned to expert witnesses to help them understand the key issues at play. But since both sides in these legal contests appoint expert witnesses to back their claims (typically medical doctors and mental-health professionals), judges must determine which are more credible.

A recent exchange between Moti Gorin, an associate professor of philosophy and bioethicist at Colorado State University, and Alejandra Caraballo, a transgender activist and cyberlaw instructor at Harvard Law School, provides crucial insight into how these questions bear on the outcome of lawsuits over gender medicine. In a paper titled “The Anti-Transgender Medical Expert Industry,” published earlier this year in the Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics, Caraballo argues that judges should disregard the opinions of medical professionals who testify on behalf of states seeking to restrict “gender-affirming care.” In a newly published letter to the editor in the same journal, Gorin shows the fatal flaws in Caraballo’s arguments. (The journal also gave Caraballo the chance to respond to Gorin.)"

Who Counts as an Expert?
 
Alex was quoted in this Time magazine article, and his opinions are as retarded and wrong as ever:

Article | Archive

Malpractice Insurance Prices Are Stopping Small Clinics From Offering Gender-Affirming Care to Minors​


After Iowa lawmakers passed a ban on gender-affirming care for minors in March, managers of an LGBTQ+ health clinic located just across the state line in Moline, Illinois, decided to start offering that care.

The added services would provide care to patients who live in largely rural eastern Iowa, including some of the hundreds previously treated at a University of Iowa clinic, saving them half-day drives to clinics in larger cities like Chicago and Minneapolis.

By June, The Project of the Quad Cities, as the Illinois clinic is called, had hired a provider who specializes in transgender health care. So, Andy Rowe, The Project’s health care operations director, called the clinic’s insurance broker to see about getting the new provider added to the nonprofit’s malpractice policy.

“I didn’t anticipate that it was going to be a big deal,” Rowe said. Then the insurance carriers’ quotes came. The first one specifically excluded gender-affirming care for minors. The next response was the same. And the one after that. By early November, more than a dozen malpractice insurers had declined to offer the clinic a policy.

Rowe didn’t know it at the time, but he wasn’t alone in his frustrating quest.

States erecting barriers to care​

Nearly half the states have banned medication or surgical treatment for transgender youth. Independent clinics and medical practices located in states where such care is either allowed or protected have moved to fill that void for patients commuting or relocating across state lines. But as the risk of litigation rises for clinics, obtaining malpractice insurance on the commercial marketplace has become a quiet barrier to offering care, even in states with legal protections for health care for trans people. In extreme cases, lawmakers have deployed malpractice insurance regulations against gender-affirming care in states where courts have slowed or blocked anti-trans legislation.

Five months after starting his search for malpractice insurance, Rowe said, he received a quote for a policy that would allow The Project to treat trans youth. That’s when he realized finding a policy was only the first hurdle. He expected the coverage to cost $8,000 to $10,000 a year, but he was quoted $50,000.

Rowe said he hadn’t experienced anything like it in his 20 years working in health care administration.

Insurance industry advocates argue that higher premiums are justified because the rise in legislation surrounding gender-affirming care for minors means clinics are at increased risk of being sued.

“If state laws increase the risk of civil liability for health professionals, premiums will be adjusted accordingly and appropriately to reflect the level of financial risk incurred by the insured,” Mike Stinson, vice president of public policy and legal affairs at the Medical Professional Liability Association, an insurance trade association, said in an emailed statement. If state laws make an activity illegal, then insurance will not cover it at all, he said.

Read More: Gender Affirming Care Bans Are Spreading Across the Country

Only a few states have passed laws preventing malpractice insurers from treating gender-affirming care differently than other care. Massachusetts was the first, when lawmakers there passed legislation that says insurers could not increase rates for health care providers for offering services that are illegal in other states.

Since then, five other states have passed laws requiring malpractice insurers to treat gender-affirming health care as they do any other legally protected health activity: Colorado, Vermont, New York, Oregon, and California (similar legislation is pending in Hawaii).

“This was a preventative measure, and it was met with full acceptance by both the insured and the insurers,” said Vermont state Sen. Virginia “Ginny” Lyons, a Democrat who co-sponsored the state’s law. She said lawmakers consulted with both physicians and malpractice insurance companies to make sure the language was accurate. Insurers just wanted to be able to clearly assess the risk, she said.

Lyons said she hadn’t heard of any providers in Vermont who had trouble with their malpractice insurance before the law was enacted, but she was concerned politics might get in the way of doctors’ ability to offer care. In March 2022, The Texas Tribune reported that one Texas doctor had stopped offering care because his malpractice provider had stopped covering hormone therapy for minors.

Extending statutes of limitations​

Lawmakers in some states have gone further and revised malpractice provisions to restrict access to gender-affirming care, often while bans on offering that care to trans youth are stalled in court. In 2021, Arkansas became the first state to ban gender-affirming care for trans children. When that ban was held up in court this year, the governor signed a new law allowing anyone who received gender-affirming care as a minor to file a malpractice lawsuit up to 15 years after they turn 18.

Similar laws followed in Tennessee, Florida, and Missouri, all extending the statute of limitations on filing a malpractice claim anywhere from 15 to 30 years. (Another was introduced but not passed in Texas that would have stretched the statute of limitations to the length of the patient’s life.) Typically, malpractice suits must be filed within one to three years of injury.

The civil liability that those laws created has forced at least one clinic to stop offering some treatments. The Washington University Transgender Center in Missouri said the law subjected the clinic to “unacceptable level of liability.”

Alejandra Caraballo, a civil rights attorney, said there has been “a concerted effort on the part of anti-trans activists to utilize malpractice insurance as a means of eliminating care.”

She likens the strategy to laws that have long targeted abortion providers by increasing “legal liability to chill a certain type of conduct.”

Anti-trans activists have drawn attention to a small number of “detransitioners,” who have filed lawsuits against the doctors who provided them with gender-affirming care, Caraballo says. She believes those lawsuits, filed in such states as California, Nebraska, and North Carolina, will be used to lobby for longer statutes of limitations and to create the perception that liability for providers is increasing.


For independent clinics, like The Project in the Quad Cities, and small medical practices that purchase their malpractice insurance on the commercial marketplace, those tactics are restricting their ability to offer care. Many providers of gender-affirming care are protected from rising premiums such as health centers that receive federal funding, which are covered under the Federal Tort Claims Act, or academic medical centers and Planned Parenthood clinics, which are self-insured. But a small number of independent clinics have been priced out.

Insurance premiums double​

In New Mexico, a state that, like Illinois, has protected access to gender-affirming care, family medicine physician Anjali Taneja said the clinic where she works is running into the same trouble getting coverage.

Casa de Salud in Albuquerque, where Taneja is the executive director, has provided gender-affirming care to adults for years, but when the clinic decided to start offering that care to younger patients, insurers wouldn’t issue a malpractice policy. The clinic was quoted “double what we paid a few years ago,” just to cover the gender-affirming care it offers to adults, Taneja said.

The red tape both Casa de Salud and The Project are encountering has prevented treatment for patients. When Iowa’s ban on gender-affirming care took effect Sept. 1, officials at The Project had hoped to offer services to the transgender youth who previously sought care an hour west at the University of Iowa’s LGBTQ Clinic. Instead, Rowe said, patients are making the difficult decision between going without treatment or commuting four hours to Chicago or Minneapolis.

After months of fundraising, The Project has almost enough money to pay for the $50,000 malpractice policy. But, Rowe said, “it’s a tough swallow.”


This retard doesn't seem to realize that insurance actuaries don't give a fuck about politics, they have one job, and one job only: to price risk when issuing an insurance policy. Longer statutes of limitation absolutely do change the calculus of risk, it's not a "perception". And as soon as the first detransitioners start winning their lawsuits, you can expect to see a blanket exclusion from EVERY insurer on covering anything relating to trooning out. That day is coming, and it will mark the beginning of the end of this insane cult religion.
 
Alejandra Caraballo, a civil rights attorney
Since when has Alejandro been a fucking "civil rights attorney"? Mein Gott!

I'm old enough to remember when the label "civil rights attorney" was reserved for only a select few and had a certain venerable air to it, see, e.g., Thurgood Marshall. To see the term so watered down to nothing that it can be used to describe Big Boy Al makes one weep.
 
Similar laws followed in Tennessee, Florida, and Missouri, all extending the statute of limitations on filing a malpractice claim anywhere from 15 to 30 years. (Another was introduced but not passed in Texas that would have stretched the statute of limitations to the length of the patient’s life.)
She believes those lawsuits, filed in such states as California, Nebraska, and North Carolina, will be used to lobby for longer statutes of limitations and to create the perception that liability for providers is increasing.
So Alex believes the "perception" of something happening will be created for something that's already happening?

Would love to have troons counterlobby for a liability cap on mutilating your genitals and this other shit. :story:
 
Since when has Alejandro been a fucking "civil rights attorney"? Mein Gott!

I'm old enough to remember when the label "civil rights attorney" was reserved for only a select few and had a certain venerable air to it, see, e.g., Thurgood Marshall. To see the term so watered down to nothing that it can be used to describe Big Boy Al makes one weep.
More like civil rights FATtorney amirite
 
Only a few states have passed laws preventing malpractice insurers from treating gender-affirming care differently than other care. Massachusetts was the first, when lawmakers there passed legislation that says insurers could not increase rates for health care providers for offering services that are illegal in other states.

Since then, five other states have passed laws requiring malpractice insurers to treat gender-affirming health care as they do any other legally protected health activity: Colorado, Vermont, New York, Oregon, and California (similar legislation is pending in Hawaii).
Translated: The higher costs of malpractice coverage for gender quackery will be passed onto doctors in sane, low-risk specialties. Insurance companies aren't going to walk away from the extra premium money because of these laws, they're just going to collect it elsewhere.

The red tape both Casa de Salud and The Project are encountering has prevented treatment for patients. When Iowa’s ban on gender-affirming care took effect Sept. 1, officials at The Project had hoped to offer services to the transgender youth who previously sought care an hour west at the University of Iowa’s LGBTQ Clinic. Instead, Rowe said, patients are making the difficult decision between going without treatment or commuting four hours to Chicago or Minneapolis.

After months of fundraising, The Project has almost enough money to pay for the $50,000 malpractice policy. But, Rowe said, “it’s a tough swallow.”
I can't help but notice two things are missing here: These clinics are going to see increases in patient volume since child quackery clinics in Iowa and Texas just got shut down, and the doctors never even considered taking a pay cut to help defray the added costs of insurance. You'd think a diligent, unbiased reporter would notice these inconsistencies and start poking at them.
 
What's the "qualifications" for being an university president? Has Alex ever looked at them for most university presidents?

Alex is a little bit slow on the uptake. For example, this article he is sperging over has a copy of one the the grand jury subpoenas embeded in it. Alex didn't notice that, or the date June 27, 2023. Alex is all excited about an investigation that never went anywhere, being that we are now six months down the road, and that grand jury has likely already been discharged without indictment. I thought that idiot was supposed to be a lawyer.

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