UK I went to bed every night wishing I woke up with cancer - Insane Bong-Indian pooner promoting the use of child sterilization drugs

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Published December 16, 2024 5:24pm
Updated December 17, 2024 10:14am
I was uncomfortable with how the world saw my body and confined me into a little gendered, binary box.

When I was a teenager I wished I had breast cancer.

I know it isn’t something to be taken lightly – I watched my aunt fight the illness for years as cancer infected her other organs until she died, slowly, painfully.

But I still thought it was the only solution to the discomfort I felt from my developing chest. That’s how desperate I was.

I needed someone else to see that my body was not how it is supposed to be. I wanted, more than anything, for a doctor to say: ‘Yes, in fact, after looking there is something wrong here. Your breasts are wrong and need to be removed’.

I knew I was uncomfortable with my body and I was still reckoning with my gender. I was uncomfortable with how the world saw my body and confined me into a little gendered, binary box.

And these feelings only worsened when my teenage years hit and my body started to change in ways I hated.

It was clear that I was expected to be a girl or at the very least, behave in the way society expected girls to behave – like talk about boys, try to get away with wearing make-up to school, and get excited about buying my first bra.

But instead, I would bind my chest with bandages and tape, actively hurting myself. Sometimes, deliberately causing pain in the hope that the damage I caused would have to result in their permanent removal.

And of course, my discomfort was so strong that I was hoping to have an illness that was slowly taking the life of one of the strongest women I have ever known.

That’s why I’m so furious, saddened, and downright scared by the news that Health Secretary Wes Streeting has indefinitely extended a ban on the use of puberty blockers for treating gender dysphoria in under-18s, the one thing that could have helped me as a teenager.

Puberty blockers pretty much do what they say – they are a medication used to postpone puberty in children.

They block testosterone and oestrogen – hormones that lead to puberty-related changes in a person’s body, such as periods, breast growth and hair growth.

The ban will not impact children who are not transgender, the majority of whom are proscribed puberty blockers for the temporary treatment of ‘precocious puberty’ when the onset of puberty is thought to potentially cause physical or mental harm.

Studies also suggest they can help to reduce depression and suicidal ideation in transgender and nonbinary youth.

If I had known what they were when I was growing up, I absolutely would have tried to get my hands on them. They would have saved me a lot of physical and mental pain that I have carried into adulthood.

Wes Streeting told parliament that he ‘really cares’ about LGBT children. But his actions don’t show that.

After consulting with independent expert advice from the Commission on Human Medicines (CHM), who stated that they are ‘an unacceptable safety risk’, Streeting has ripped this potentially life saving medication from the trans youth of today.

Considering his previous remarks about trans healthcare, the decision didn’t exactly come as a shock. However, it did feel like a glimmer of hope had been snatched away.

The Cass Report into gender identity services, which came out earlier this year, called puberty blockers ‘powerful drugs with unproven benefits and significant risks.’

But I believe the real risk to young trans and non-binary people comes from banning them.

I didn’t have access to puberty blockers, and so I thought those horrible thoughts about cancer and tried to damage myself. Now, as an adult, I can see how unhelpful that was, and I work to make sure no other child has the same levels of distress I had.

I do this by sharing my experience publicly to help anyone else feel less alone. I work with organisations, such as the NHS Sexual Health London – a free online sexual health service – to make their environments inclusive of trans people and their needs.

And I amplify the voices of other trans people, particularly trans youth who are at the coalface of successive governments attempting to strip them of their right and dignity to score political points.

I have also been inspired by the work activist group, Trans Kids Deserve Better, has been doing to shed a light on how dangerous this decision is.

Since 24 August, shortly after Streeting confirmed he was ‘minded’ to continue a ban, they have been leaving messages for the Health Secretary outside his constituency office in the form of cardboard ‘coffins’ that have been painted and decorated with messages.

Each one represents a trans person who risks losing their life due to lack of healthcare.

The message is simple: trans and non binary people demand to be treated with respect, dignity and wish for access to lifesaving healthcare.

Until that happens, I’ll remain genuinely scared for all the young trans and non-binary children, who instead of spending time thinking about video games, homework, parties could instead be hurting themselves, just to be seen for who they are.

By banning puberty blockers Wes Streeting is neglecting his role as Health Secretary. He is feeding into a culture war and turning his back on some of our society’s most vulnerable, children. He should be ashamed.

Puberty blockers aren’t some evil potion, they are simply medication. Treatment. I don’t understand how Streeting can strip young people of that in good conscience.

Everyone deserves access to medication that can help alleviate the discomfort they have with their bodies. He has no right to take that away from anyone.
 
These levels of insane thought should tell clinicians "this person is having trouble thinking rationally about their body and is having a mental health crisis."

Instead, their feelings are validated. If they feel that strongly about their breasts, it can't mean their brains are broken. It must mean these girls really need to have them removed! We can't have them wishing for cancer, therefore we must yeet them teets immediately.

It just can't be stated enough how insane this is. "Therapists" now validate a patient's most crazy, catastrophizing thoughts instead of interrogating those thoughts and figuring out how to help the patient through them. Just scalpel your way out of your problems, we all know how great cosmetic surgery is at improving self-esteem in the long term (spoiler: it's not, this never works).
 
Memo to any Desis reading this thread: Stay out of the West, unless you want your kids to end up like this one.
Wes Streeting told parliament that he ‘really cares’ about LGBT children. But his actions don’t show that.
Male and female homosexuals don't need (or want) chemical castration puberty blockers. His actions have nothing to do with the L, the G or the B.
 
Study undertaken by poison peddlers finds that poison good.
All their literal toadies say it works great too.

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Puberty blockers aren’t some evil potion
shut the fuck up you crazy bitch

Seriously, there is nothing MORE evil than fucking with the natural development of some unsuspecting kids physical well-being.

Kids are stupid, they don't know what they need and they don't know any better. Left to their own devices, a child will rot out all their own teeth from eating sugar and not brushing, will be coated and encrusted with filth from not bathing, will have all manner of broken bones and lacerations from falling off things, will get lost walking home and get kidnapped or murdered. Children are dependent on responsible adults to know better and do right for them, whether they like it or not.

Puberty blockers are literally the devil's own piss. I can't think of anything more utterly reprehensible in this day and age short of outright murder.
 
First, it's normal for most women to feel some discomfort and awkwardness when you're developing your breasts. It gets in the way of playing sports, you have to now wear bras all the time, and people stare at you. And that happens around the time of your first period, so it's just a terrible time for girls, and I'm sure boys have some equivalent time as well. If you tell me that this girl was having some development that was out of the ordinary, I believe it. When your boobs grow bigger and faster than other girls (and the rest of your body doesn't catch up), that's also something to feel bad about. We're "normalized" the "non-normalization" of this process, though. I also went through it, also were the many women in my family. In the same way you get used to the rest of your body. You're not special for wishing puberty just ended already.

Second, she's a pajeet. So, I have to wonder if the awkwardness has to do with the men of her group acting retarded (which is the default for men of her group) around her.
 
Male and female homosexuals don't need (or want) chemical castration puberty blockers. His actions have nothing to do with the L, the G or the B.
And yet, the Ls, Gs and Bs refuse to grow a fucking spinal column and throw out the Ts.

And let's not pretend the Ls, Gs and Bs are faultless. Remember monkeypox with Gs and underage boys? Or are we memory hole-ing that one already? One group goes after the other group for targeting kids but here we are...a bunch of older gay men and underage boys suddenly contracting monkeypox all at the same time with nary a woman in sight doing the same.
 
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