Culture Tranny News Megathread - Hot tranny newds

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...school-attack-caught-camera-says-bullied.html

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A transgender girl accused of assaulting two students at a Texas high school alleges that she was being bullied and was merely fighting back

Shocking video shows a student identified by police as Travez Perry violently punching, kicking and stomping on a girl in the hallway of Tomball High School.

The female student was transported to the hospital along with a male student, whom Perry allegedly kicked in the face and knocked unconscious.

According to the police report, Perry - who goes by 'Millie' - told officers that the victim has been bullying her and had posted a photo of her on social media with a negative comment.

One Tomball High School parent whose daughter knows Perry said that the 18-year-old had been the target of a death threat.

'From what my daughter has said that the girl that was the bully had posted a picture of Millie saying people like this should die,' the mother, who asked not to be identified by name, told DailyMail.com.

When Perry appeared in court on assault charges, her attorney told a judge that the teen has been undergoing a difficult transition from male to female and that: 'There's more to this story than meets the eye.'

Perry is currently out on bond, according to authorities.

The video of the altercation sparked a widespread debate on social media as some claim Perry was justified in standing up to her alleged bullies and others condemn her use of violence.

The mother who spoke with DailyMail.com has been one of Millie's most ardent defenders on Facebook.

'I do not condone violence at all. But situations like this show that people now a days, not just kids, think they can post what they want. Or say what they want without thinking of who they are hurting,' she said.

'Nobody knows what Millie has gone through, and this could have just been a final straw for her. That is all speculation of course because I don't personally know her or her family, but as a parent and someone who is part of the LGBTQ community this girl needs help and support, not grown men online talking about her private parts and shaming and mocking her.'

One Facebook commenter summed up the views of many, writing: 'This was brutal, and severe! I was bullied for years and never attacked anyone!'

Multiple commenters rejected the gender transition defense and classified the attack as a male senselessly beating a female.

One woman wrote on Facebook: 'This person will get off because they're transitioning. This is an animal. She kicked, and stomped, and beat...not okay. Bullying is not acceptable, but kicking someone in the head. Punishment doesn't fit the crime.'


FB https://www.facebook.com/travez.perry http://archive.is/mnEmm

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Lol

https://www.presstelegram.com/2019/...trict-to-bring-more-gender-neutral-restrooms/



'She identifies as a transgender woman'

View attachment 640919


Here's his poem where he explains that being a faggot in denial is exactly the same as being fucking murdered by Pol Pot

Grew up in a small city.

Not knowing anyone, not knowing who I am.

Lost with a sense of identity.

A boy hidden a closet, was me.

A family who didn’t know English at all. Parents who were separated. A single mother raising 3 kids. All boys.

Middle school came.

Being different. Not knowing who I am was hard for me.

The only LGBT kid on campus. Maybe in the city. Who knows.

I was always an introvert growing up.

Not having that many friends. Being all alone.

Coming out gay was the hardest for me. Only one person helped me through all this. My true best friend. Someone who understood what I was going through. A true ally.

Ever since I came out. That’s when a whole new chapter started.

Kids chattering, laughing at me for being different, wanting to hurt me both physically and mentally.

My eyes were like a geyser. I didn’t know when to stop.

I couldn’t take it anymore. The constant bullying for being different. For me being me. I wanted to take my life. No one cared about me.

Having to feel this state of paranoia, the feeling of losing all of my sanity.

“Everyone was out to get me”, “No one loves you”, “Go kill yourself” was all I remember hearing, circling in my head, spiraling out of control. Not knowing what to do anymore. I gave up all hope and sense of direction.

I didn’t know who I was anymore.

Time flew by. People matured and started becoming more accepting and supportive.

Entering high school gave me this fresh start. A new life. A journey to embark on.

I was a hidden trans woman freshman year. I didn’t know what was going to happen so just went with the flow.

Hearing about Jazz Jennings and Caitlyn Jenner on the news, I began learning more about the transgender community.

What is transgender you ask? It’s not identifying with what you were born as.

As I began to do more and more research, this description fit me. This is who I truly am.

Slowly, I began to progress my transition

I first attended my first pride event. I was nervous and scared that I might be made fun of. But it was the complete opposite.

All the people’s faces lit up in excitement, joy, and love was in the air. Nothing but support for being who you are. And nothing is wrong with that.

Coming out to my family as transgender was the hardest thing I’ve ever done in my life.

They didn’t take it easily. The feeling of disgrace and shame was brought upon me as if the world was coming to an end.

I am from a family who’s never going to learn to accept me for being trans.

I am from a father who abandoned me, my mother and 2 older brothers from the day I was born.

I come from a mother who’ll never see me as her daughter.

But I never lost hope.

Having hope is all I can do now.

I come from long lines of rich Cambodian ancestry who fled from Cambodia because of the Khmer Rouge and came to the States.

They never lost hope and neither should I.

I am a second generation Cambodian-American

I am the daughter of a Khmer Rouge survivor.

I am like a flower. From the seed to when it blooms in season.

I am optimistic.
I am a fighter.

I am a leader.

I am a feminist.

I am LGBT.

I am a PROUD transgender woman.

I am Amber and this is my story, this story that will never change but always be a part of me.
Oh, good.

It's another one of these.

I see a lot of poems that lack any sort of rhythm, and that seem to rely on the notion that poetry is born of line breaks, here on KF.

Or maybe it's just me.

Oh well.

At least this person acknowledges that the Khmer Rouge were bad.
 
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Lol

https://www.presstelegram.com/2019/...trict-to-bring-more-gender-neutral-restrooms/



'She identifies as a transgender woman'

View attachment 640919


Here's his poem where he explains that being a faggot in denial (also Asian in denial, judging by his hair) is exactly the same as being fucking murdered by Pol Pot

Grew up in a small city.

Not knowing anyone, not knowing who I am.

Lost with a sense of identity.

A boy hidden a closet, was me.

A family who didn’t know English at all. Parents who were separated. A single mother raising 3 kids. All boys.

Middle school came.

Being different. Not knowing who I am was hard for me.

The only LGBT kid on campus. Maybe in the city. Who knows.

I was always an introvert growing up.

Not having that many friends. Being all alone.

Coming out gay was the hardest for me. Only one person helped me through all this. My true best friend. Someone who understood what I was going through. A true ally.

Ever since I came out. That’s when a whole new chapter started.

Kids chattering, laughing at me for being different, wanting to hurt me both physically and mentally.

My eyes were like a geyser. I didn’t know when to stop.

I couldn’t take it anymore. The constant bullying for being different. For me being me. I wanted to take my life. No one cared about me.

Having to feel this state of paranoia, the feeling of losing all of my sanity.

“Everyone was out to get me”, “No one loves you”, “Go kill yourself” was all I remember hearing, circling in my head, spiraling out of control. Not knowing what to do anymore. I gave up all hope and sense of direction.

I didn’t know who I was anymore.

Time flew by. People matured and started becoming more accepting and supportive.

Entering high school gave me this fresh start. A new life. A journey to embark on.

I was a hidden trans woman freshman year. I didn’t know what was going to happen so just went with the flow.

Hearing about Jazz Jennings and Caitlyn Jenner on the news, I began learning more about the transgender community.

What is transgender you ask? It’s not identifying with what you were born as.

As I began to do more and more research, this description fit me. This is who I truly am.

Slowly, I began to progress my transition

I first attended my first pride event. I was nervous and scared that I might be made fun of. But it was the complete opposite.

All the people’s faces lit up in excitement, joy, and love was in the air. Nothing but support for being who you are. And nothing is wrong with that.

Coming out to my family as transgender was the hardest thing I’ve ever done in my life.

They didn’t take it easily. The feeling of disgrace and shame was brought upon me as if the world was coming to an end.

I am from a family who’s never going to learn to accept me for being trans.

I am from a father who abandoned me, my mother and 2 older brothers from the day I was born.

I come from a mother who’ll never see me as her daughter.

But I never lost hope.

Having hope is all I can do now.

I come from long lines of rich Cambodian ancestry who fled from Cambodia because of the Khmer Rouge and came to the States.

They never lost hope and neither should I.

I am a second generation Cambodian-American

I am the daughter of a Khmer Rouge survivor.

I am like a flower. From the seed to when it blooms in season.

I am optimistic.
I am a fighter.

I am a leader.

I am a feminist.

I am LGBT.

I am a PROUD transgender woman.

I am Amber and this is my story, this story that will never change but always be a part of me.

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I also wonder how many of these people actually feel like they were born in the wrong body or are just doing it for attention as some lazy performance art.

When I see something like Macho M'am Tranny Savage at the Gamestop, I can't help but question the validity of it and wonder if its just a big show for some of them and a way to get attention.
 
I also wonder how many of these people actually feel like they were born in the wrong body or are just doing it for attention as some lazy performance art.

When I see something like Macho M'am Tranny Savage at the Gamestop, I can't help but question the validity of it and wonder if its just a big show for some of them and a way to get attention.

This dude is doing it because he has a lengthy, violent criminal history and has done time for crimes such as armed robbery in the past. He doesn't want to go back to prison when he tries to rob a GameStop by physically threatening the clerk and demanding money. So he trooned out so if the clerk doesn't give him the money he's demanding, it's actually the clerk who has committed some kind of crime.
 
Here are some comments on the "interview." Sorry that it's long:
  • "I've been rapping for 25 years, I'm dope at it, cats in Albuquerque know me." His rap name is "Sarah Tonin" btw if anyone wants to look up his "work."
And that's about it, I guess. He starts his plugs around 46:35 if anyone is interested in his (currently locked) Facebook and Instagram or his SoundCloud. He says he reads every message he gets from friend requests, but please don't be autistic. Sorry again for the length of this comment, but I figured that I could spare others from listening to this garbage.

Lol, I went to look for his mixtape and look where the origins of "Sarah Tonin" might've come from:

mhd153.jpg


What's your bet? Clever enough to make a pun, or more evidence of a pornsick agp?
 
TIM is a good abbreviation because Tim is a man's name.
TIF is kind of lame but mostly there is way less talking about TIFs, so it doesn't matter. Mostly we just call them 'lesbians'.

1) consider the name "Tiffany"...Tiff

2) calling them lesbians would exclude the "gay trans boys" who name themselves after anime men and want to get dick'd, and we can't exclude them.

Lol, I went to look for his mixtape and look where the origins of "Sarah Tonin" might've come from:

mhd153.jpg


What's your bet? Clever enough to make a pun, or more evidence of a pornsick agp?

Why not both? :tomgirl:
 
I also wonder how many of these people actually feel like they were born in the wrong body or are just doing it for attention as some lazy performance art.

When I see something like Macho M'am Tranny Savage at the Gamestop, I can't help but question the validity of it and wonder if its just a big show for some of them and a way to get attention.

Given enough time to obsess you can convince yourself that you really do feel like their is a physical issue at play. It's sort of similar to anorexia, but crazier, because the premise is absurd. You can psych yourself up into all kinds of crazy shit, like feeling as if you're meant to have your legs chopped off at the knees, and if you can make that happen *then* you'll finally be happy.

It's especially dangerous with transgender issues because you can never actually achieve the end goal, you cannot chop your legs off or starve yourself into emaciation and call it a day. Even if you have genital deformation surgery you'll not even be one step closer to your goal, you'll always be the sex you were born as, no matter what. It's a losing hand, every time.

You can definitely come to believe you're born into the wrong sex/body, all it takes is time and obsession.

Narcissistic personality disorder is practically guaranteed in transgenders, so that may be where the attention part comes from. That is the public face of transgender.
 
This dude is doing it because he has a lengthy, violent criminal history and has done time for crimes such as armed robbery in the past. He doesn't want to go back to prison when he tries to rob a GameStop by physically threatening the clerk and demanding money. So he trooned out so if the clerk doesn't give him the money he's demanding, it's actually the clerk who has committed some kind of crime.
In case people don't want to search, here is the post with Moore's criminal records
https://kiwifarms.net/threads/tranny-news-megathread.49301/page-21#post-4173566
 
Because I always think of that when it comes to these troons. Anorexics in their heart of hearts know they're fat. Schizophrenics know in their heart of hearts that the CIA is listening in to their brain waves. There's people who, in their heart of hearts know that they are Jesus, or Napoleon, or fated to be married to George Clooney.

Because not all mental health issues are treated in the same way. Sure, in most cases the aim is to return the mind back to more normal understanding of world. In some cases the best approach is learning just to manage symptoms and others times it’s changing once’s lifestyle or environment so that the mental issues don’t cause extra troubles. Many of these aren’t as intuitive as you might guess. For example in paranoia, OCD and some cases of depression it’s beneficial to do mental exercises where you follow your delusional thinking as far you can.

So if you don’t check the oven seventeenth time, then what happens? Okey, your house will burn down? Oh, your kids were sleeping and died? Okey then what, are you going to have a funeral? What are going to do after the funeral? Are you going stay this town or move?

Basically the idea is that putting your worst case scenarios in to words, learning to understand your thinking and noticing that there are ways survive. Building strategies to battle bad things in your life. This is the right tool sometimes.

Other times, especially in memory or impulse control issues, it’s better to setup environment that minimizes possible harm. Good example, when treating far along Alzheimer’s many care centers have a fake bus stop. So when patients get so agitated that they want to run away, they can go and wait safely a noncoming bus till they calm down and are willing to come back.

What I understand about transitioning is that it’s beneficial to small portion of people with gender identity issues. Those people that have life long problems with being the gender that they are. Having body that more resembles what they want allows them ignore gender dysphoria, just concentrate living a normal life and dealing normal life issues. To be clear I’m very against the gender affirming approach that is trendy right now. Transitioning should be a last resort after trying and failing to align the mind with the body. There are many reasons that somebody could be having gender identity issues and only small portion of those people are better off transitioning. It’s so much more likely that there are hormonal imbalances, undiscovered homosexuality, other sexual issues or trans having placebo effect of sorts.

Edit: Just fixing tons of spelling and grammar mistakes. I really should not write long posts just before going to bed.
 
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Because not all mental health issues are treated in same way. In most cases the aim is to return mind back to more normal understanding of word. In some the best approach is just learning to manage symptoms and in others it is changing the lifestyle or your environment so that the mental issues don’t cause extra troubles. Many of these aren’t as intuitive as you might guess. For example in paranoia, OCD and some cases of depression it’s actually beneficial to do mental exercises where you follow your delusional thinking as far you can.

So if you don’t check the oven seventeenth time, then what happens? Okey, your house will burn down? Oh, kids where sleeping and died? Okey then what are you going to have a funeral? What are going to do after the funer? Are you going stay this town or move?

Basically the idea is that putting your worst case scenarios in to words, learning to understand them and noticing that there are ways out. Building strategies to battle bad things in your life. This is the right tool sometimes.

Other times especially in memory or impulse control issues it’s better to setup environment to minimize possible harm. Good example when treating far along Alzheimer’s many care centers have fake bus stop. So when patients that get so agitated that they want to run away they can go and wait safely a noncoming bus till they calm down and are willing to come back.

What I understand about transitioning is that it’s beneficial to small portion of people with gender identity issues. Those that have had life long problems with being the gender that they are. Having body that more resembles what they want allows them ignore gender dysphoria, just concentrate living the normal life and dealing normal life issues. To be clear I’m very against gender affirming approach that is trendy right now. Transitioning should be last resort after trying to align mind with the body. There are many reasons that somebody could be having gender identity issues and only small portion of them are better off with transitioning. It’s so much more likely that there are hormonal imbalances, undiscovered homosexuality, other sexual issues or trans having placebo effect of sorts.

Can you give us a Tl:dr please? That was too much text for an autistic weirdo such as I.
 
Can you give us a Tl:dr please? That was too much text for an autistic weirdo such as I.
Mental issues are treated in many ways and sometimes those can be going with the distorted thinking in different ways. It all depends what allows people to life healthiest, happiest and safest lives they can. Unfortunately we can’t yet cure all issues.
 
I need someone to explain to me in a rational, simple way how an unwillingness to accept a claim of identity is hateful, or in any way related to or associated with hate. Whether I disbelieve the individual, or think they are 'crazy', or think the claim is impossible (biological essentialist), how do any of those correlate with hate? I'm legitimately puzzled, and would appreciate an explanation from anyone. Do I 'hate' Rachel Dolezal when I don't accept the claim that she is black? What is the difference?

Rebecca Tuvel made a similar comparison to the Dolezal situation in a paper published in the feminist journal Hypatia back in April/May 2017, entitled "In Defense of Transracialism". Her major thesis is that trans people need to do better in their argumentation, or they fall prey to this sort of comparison. The paper is worth reading.

Dr. Tuvel was, of course, welcomed with open arms by a loving communi-- Hahahaha no, they turned on her like a pack of rabid wolves and tried to destroy her career for even suggesting that the two situations were comparable, but didn't bother to offer any actual arguments beyond "They're just different, okay?"

Thankfully, the entire philosophical world isn't made up of worthless hacks and identity politicians, and after the "Open Letter" demanding the article's retraction, and the editorial board of Hypatia threw Tuvel under the bus, there were a lot of responses in her favor.

One very good reply from Dr. Mylan Engel from his Facebook:

I just finished reading Rebecca Tuvel’s excellent article “In Defense of Transracialism” in which she argues [yes, ARGUES] that the same sorts of considerations that rightly support transgenderism apply with equal force to transracialism. Her argument runs as follows:

1. Generally, when a person genuinely and sincerely self-identifies as a member of a socially constructed category, we should recognize and respect that person’s self-identification.
Given 1, it follows that:
2. People who sincerely self-identify as a particular gender should have their self-identified gender be recognized, accepted, and respected (regardless of their chromosomal structure or the external or internal genitalia). [As Tuvel puts it: “Thankfully, there is growing recognition that justice for trans individuals means respecting their self-identification by granting them membership in their felt sex category of belonging.”
Likewise, given 1, it also follows that:
3. People who sincerely self-identify as belonging to a particular race should have their self-identified race be recognized, accepted, and respected (regardless of their ancestry or color of origin).

The point Tuvel is making is this:

Just as gender identity has RIGHTLY shifted from an emphasis on one’s sexed biology toward an emphasis on gendered self-recognition, racial identity should shift away from ancestral ties or color of origin toward an emphasis on racial self-identification.

Tuvel concludes: “If some individuals genuinely feel like or identify as a member of a race other than the one assigned to them at birth—so strongly to the point of seeking a transition to the other race—we should accept their decision to change races.”

There are only two legitimate ways to criticize a philosophical argument: (a) show that the argument is invalid, or (b) show that the argument’s premises are false.

The people who have criticized Tuvel’s article and called for its retraction in an open letter to Hypatia have not objected to her argument. They have objected to the fact that she “deadnamed” Caitlyn Jenner, while committing several other grave sins. Here are the grave sins Tuvel’s article alleged commits:

1. It uses vocabulary and frameworks not recognized, accepted, or adopted by the conventions of the relevant subfields; for example, the author uses the language of “transgenderism” and engages in deadnaming a trans woman;

2. It mischaracterizes various theories and practices relating to religious identity and conversion; for example, the author gives an off-hand example about conversion to Judaism;

3. It misrepresents leading accounts of belonging to a racial group; for example, the author incorrectly cites Charles Mills as a defender of voluntary racial identification;

4. It fails to seek out and sufficiently engage with scholarly work by those who are most vulnerable to the intersection of racial and gender oppressions (women of color) in its discussion of “transracialism”. We endorse Hypatia’s stated commitment to “actively reflect and engage the diversity within feminism, the diverse experiences and situations of women, and the diverse forms that gender takes around the globe,” and we find that this submission was published without being held to that commitment.

Justin Weinberg has already shown that the charges in criticisms 2 and 3 are simply false. See his Daily Nous column here: http://dailynous.com/…/philosophers-article-transracialism…/

So, I’ll focus on concerns 1 and 4.

Concern 1

One of the main objections the signatories to the open letter have to Tuvel’s article is that “it uses vocabulary and frameworks not recognized, accepted, or adopted by the conventions of the relevant subfields.” By this reasoning, Peter Singer’s Animal Liberation should have never been published because in his book he introduced the term ‘speciesism’ (vocabulary) and a framework of equality (equal consideration of interests) that were not recognized, accepted, or adopted by the conventions of those working in applied ethics or animal ethics at the time. Thank goodness the thought police weren’t there to censor Singer’s seminal work.

Concern 1 goes on to object that Tuvel’s article specifically commits two reject-worthy sins: (i) using the word ‘transgenderism’ and (ii) “deadnaming” Caitlyn Jenner, by mentioning her previous name ‘Bruce’ (despite the fact that it is true that Caitlyn previously went by the name ‘Bruce’).

Here is the title and first sentence of the Vanity Fair (July 2015) story on Caitlyn Jenner:
“Caitlyn Jenner: The Full Story
Few recent stories have gripped the public imagination as much as Bruce Jenner’s journey from Olympic icon to transgender woman.”

Apparently, Buzz Bissinger (author of the Vanity Fair story) can “deadname” Caitlyn without offense, but Rebecca Tuvel has committed one of the seven deadly sins of publishing in a feminist philosophy journal by doing the same thing.

Tuvel’s second deadly sin was using the word ‘transgenderism’ – a term which Tuvel stipulatively defines in Endnote 3 as follows: “By ‘transgenderism’ (or, sometimes, ‘trans’) I mean those individuals who experience a disconnection between their gender identity and the sexed body they inhabit.”

Why is ‘transgenderism’ so offensive? Presumably, because it conversationally implicates that a person P who self-identifies as a different gender, say X, than the gender P was “assigned” at birth has “changed genders,” when in fact that P was essentially gender X all along. This "essentialist" criticism strikes me as the kind of rigid binary thinking that supporters of LGBTQ rights should adamantly oppose. While many, perhaps most, people who self-identify as a gender, say X, that differs from their originally assigned gender insist that they have always felt that they were an X, it’s both conceptually and psychologically possible for a person who has identified as gender X for a period of years to start to sincerely identify as gender Y, and if such a person were to so self-identify, we should respect that person’s self-identification as much as we respect people who insist that they have always felt they were a different gender than their originally assigned gender.

Criticism 4 suggests that Tuvel’s article was not adequately researched when in fact it was meticulously researched. Indeed, she cites a combined twenty-seven books and articles in the course of presenting and defending her view.

The reason that two anonymous blind reviewers recommended publication of Tuvel’s paper is because it is a tightly written, well argued philosophical defense of a novel thesis that merits serious philosophical consideration. These are the publication standards that every reputable philosophy journal should employ. Hypatia was right to publish the article and profoundly wrong to suggest that its publication was a mistake. Shame on the Associate Editors of Hypatia for their cowardly capitulation to the bullying of an outspoken few (most of whom show no evidence of even having read the article to which they so vehemently object).
 
Transgender woman, 26, who stormed a 7-Eleven and hacked at strangers with an axe in terrifying random attack is jailed for nine years

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A transgender woman who randomly attacked two people with an axe at a Sydney convenience store has been sentenced to nine years behind bars.

Evie Amati, 26, was jailed on Friday after ambushing Benjamin Rimmer and Sharon Hacker at a 7-Eleven in Enmore in the early hours of January 7, 2017.

She was found guilty of attempted murder in August last year after the NSW District Court rejected her claims she was suffering from mental illness.

She told the court that just before the attack she heard voices that told her to 'kill and maim' and 'start the rise of hell on earth'.

CCTV footage of the viscous attack showed Amati casually walk into the store carrying an axe - before standing next to Mr Rimmer, who was in line behind Ms Hacker.

In the video, Amati was seen swinging the axe twice into the face of Mr Rimmer, knocking him to the ground, before hitting Ms Hacker, who also fell to the ground.

Blood is seen gushing from Mr Rimmer's head, as he tries to evade Amati, and he removes his t-shirt to absorb the blood and seal his head wound.

The court also heard evidence from Amati's third victim, Shane Redwood, who told the jury, via audio visual link from the UK, that he was across the road when he saw a woman hit another woman with what he thought was a baseball bat.

Mr Redwood said it was only after approaching the store to offer his assistance that he realised Amati was wielding an axe, at which point she began swinging the axe in his direction.

Judge Mark Williams sentenced Amati to nine years in jail with a non-parole period of four years and six months at Sydney's Downing Centre District Court on Friday.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...med-7-Eleven-hacked-strangers-axe-jailed.html
 
Damnable patriarchy, you win again!

But your day of reckoning is COMING!!!
 
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She told the court that just before the attack she heard voices that told her to 'kill and maim' and 'start the rise of hell on earth'.

These same voices probably told him to start transitioning in the first place. Remind me again how it's impolite to say that mental illness and transgenderism are connected?

Just another reason to avoid troons in public, they're mentally unstable and the voices can make them snap at any time.
 
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