Culture Tranny News Megathread - Hot tranny newds

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

5412086-6317165-image-m-70_1540490802441.jpg

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

FB_IMG_1540539738552.jpg
 
Last edited:
Yaniv moves north to the future

The municipality of Anchorage goes after the Hope Center for acting in the best interests of the women it serves.
It was a cold Friday night in January when Sherrie Laurie, director of the Hope Center — a Christian homeless shelter in downtown Anchorage, Alaska — was called down to the floor to deal with a disruptive “man in a nightgown” who was “very inebriated, with a big gash down his face.” Laurie recognized the man, whom she had seen in men’s clothing before, she tells me by phone. Though the individual professes a female gender identity, he was over six feet tall and “very large.” And Laurie was in no doubt about his sex.


Laurie explained that it wouldn’t be possible for him to stay the night — he was intoxicated and in clear need of medical attention. She called him a cab to the hospital and paid the fare herself. The individual left on good terms. When he showed up the next day, Laurie explained that check-in wasn’t until 5:45 p.m. (On Saturdays during the day, the Hope Center is staffed by volunteers and therefore is only open only to those who have checked in the night before and have undergone breathalyzers and bag checks.) Again, he left without an issue.

Though the Hope Center serves both men and women during daytime hours, its overnight facilities are reserved for females only. And, then, only women who are sober and who have been determined to be non-threatening. This is owing to the vulnerability of the women the Hope Center serves. They have often come out of “extremely abusive situations,” including sex trafficking and domestic violence. Laurie recalls one time assisting a woman who had been “held captive” and whose captors had “set her backpack on fire and she was burned.” She explains that the Hope Center staff (at night, all female) are often “first responders.” Laurie says that it is “absolutely critical” that this particular service remain single-sex. The women sleep in the same room and may be in various stages of undress. “Somebody may be raped and then come right to our door,” she says.


Laurie later learned that, before being turned away from the Hope Center, the male individual was in a fight at another shelter. Surely she made the right call. But not in the eyes of the Anchorage Equal Rights Commission (AERC), an administrative agency within the municipality of Anchorage.

A week after the incident, the AERC notified Laurie that they were investigating a complaint against the Hope Center on behalf of the individual she sent to the hospital, Jessica Doe. Doe alleged that the Hope Center’s shelter was a public accommodation and had discriminated against Doe on the basis of sex and gender identity. The Hope Center disputes both claims — the shelter is a non-profit, not a public accommodation, and, besides, it did not discriminate against Doe on the basis of gender identity. Indeed, had Doe been a female identifying as a man, there would have been no issue (provided he was also sober and non-aggressive).

“At first I didn’t even think of legal stuff,” Laurie says. “I thought, Oh my, all I have to do is explain this. Because it was so clear.” But the AERC would not back down. In fact, when Laurie’s legal counsel spoke to local media about the Hope Center’s policies, the AERC filed a second discrimination complaint, alleging that these comments, too, were discriminatory. This deterred the Hope Center from making further public comments about the case and, as a result, allowed their reputation to be tarnished in the public eye.

This was when the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) stepped in, taking the case to federal court. Laurie’s ADF counsel argue that the second complaint — which, in effect, prevents the Hope Center from publicly defending itself — is unconstitutional and in violation of the First Amendment. The second complaint was successfully challenged. And last Friday, the Hope Center was granted a preliminary injunction that temporarily enjoined the city from pursuing the first complaint, meaning that the Hope Center can continue to operate as a women’s-only shelter while the case continues. A decision on the question of unlawful discrimination is scheduled for April 2020. Laurie’s legal team are hopeful.

“If you look at the order itself,” says Ryan Tucker, Laurie’s lawyer, “one of the standards is whether there’s a likelihood of success on our case. And so the court had to find that to grant our motion. We’re quite hopeful that we’ll have a final ruling that says something similar to what the court has already ruled.”

The Hope Center has served Anchorage’s homeless for 30 years. It first started offering overnight facilities in December 2015, in response to the nation’s drug crisis, which had increased the homeless population. Indeed, it was the city that initially asked the Hope Center to become an overflow shelter in response to this need. Now that same city is attempting to sue it for acting in the best interests of the women it serves. Laurie hopes she can put the incident behind her so that the Hope Center can “continue protecting these women and giving them a safe place to receive the counsel and the love and all the things that they need to get on with their life.”
 

the dana rivers murder trial is going on, in which one of the troons from "camp trans" protesting mich fest killed two real lesbians and their son & burned down the house. There is no media coverage of the trial. Gender Trending is asking for anyone in the Oakland CA area who can attend to do some IRL citizen journalism (like that woman did with the JY HRT case).

This is juicy. I hope in the end, this gets as much coverage as Jonathan Yaniv's bullshit.

:optimistic:
 
Everyone, we have another buyer's regret story:

Congratulations Kenna on your 1 year post-op anniversary. All the points you made are all valid. I wished there were more videos like yours that pointed out the challenges, risks and complications involved. Unfortunately, for me it’s a little too late. I undergone GRS surgery about a year and a half ago and during my research couldn’t find videos out there that discussed the complications and risks that go with GRS. I wished that I would of enjoyed the process and the journey of the changes to my body from the HRT. I jumped in too quickly with the surgery thinking that it will solve all my problems when in reality I did encounter immediate complications after the surgery. If I could turn back time I would of not done the surgery or I would of really taken my time. I know the only thing good that came out of this is that I’ve much more confident in myself and that I no longer need to tuck. Like you said, for some of us girls GRS doesn’t necessary resolve all your problems. But, I’m human and we make mistakes in life. And remember that there are much more worst and unfortunate situations people are facing in life and I’m blessed and fortunate to be living my truth. Thank you again for sharing and hope that there are more videos like this out there that educate and expose the truth of GRS.


Johanna, you should've read Kiwi Farms. Every SRS complication in the books has been amply documented and gone over on this forum. This is literally the only place on the whole internet where frank uncensored discussion about these topics is allowed.
 

Transgender rugby player playing with 'a smile on my face'
By Ceri Coleman-Phillips
BBC Sport Wales
Sharethis page


Kelly Morgan: Trans rugby player blazing a trail in Wales
Kelly Morgan is a trailblazer.
Born Nicholas Gareth Morgan, she played representative rugby for east Wales as a teenager.
Injury ended that initial involvement with the sport but, after a decade wrestling with gender identity and transitioning to female, Kelly is back playing - and loving it.
Having impressed in friendly fixtures for Porth Harlequins Ladies, she now hopes to compete in the Welsh women's leagues from September.
Transgender women participating in female sport is a divisive subject, and one not confined to Welsh rugby.
Welsh Rugby Union (WRU) guidelines - which are "fully committed to the principles of equality" - state Kelly can play providing her blood-measured testosterone levels are within a certain range.
And she has taken a daily dose of the female hormone oestrogen for the past 18 months.
"They don't half make you cry," she says. "My body shape, my size... it's scary the massive difference it makes. I don't think I'll ever get used to hormones."
At nearly 6ft she stands out among her team-mates, and club captain Jessica Minty-Madley recounts a time she folded an opponent "like a deckchair".
But coach Wayne Mansell notes: "I've seen Kelly struggling more than a lot of the girls with the demands our of training."
That said, Kelly, 33, accepts transgender women may have an advantage in terms of size and strength.
"I do feel guilty, but what can you do?" she says. "I don't go out to hurt anybody. I just want to play rugby."
And she is proud of her journey, humorously documenting her highs and lows on social media.
"I'm always optimistic and I think being open breaks the ice with people," she says.
"I'm like, 'this is me, this is what I'm going through'.
"Times are changing. Hopefully I'll inspire more people to come and play rugby, or any sort of sport."

'If you can't take the mick out of yourself, then what's the point?''She's one of us'
The affection all at Porth have for Kelly, who has been nicknamed 'Beast' by her team-mates, is clear.
Brian Minty, who founded the team four years ago, says: "I've always taken rugby as a totally inclusive sport and we're happy to welcome Kelly to the club.
"One of the main things Kelly does is give confidence to the other people around her. We've got a number of people who've only just started playing."
He can't resist a joke, though, adding: "She's going to be a good, good player for the next few years, as long as we can stop her injuring players in training."
Minty-Madley says Kelly is not treated differently to other members of the squad.
"Kelly has become completely and utterly absorbed into the team," she says.
"She's one of us. She comes in, trains hard, plays hard and parties hard with us afterwards.
"She folded a girl like a deckchair during a game, which was quite funny, but they're still friends."
Mansell sees Kelly as a great addition to his squad.
"Straight away we just saw there was a load of ability there," he says.
"Some days are good, some days are bad, but at the end of the day can you really exclude people?
"Kelly has made a brave decision to do what she's done and if the WRU says she can play, she can play."
And Kelly, who works as a lorry driver, has a simple message.
"I have no shame in who I am," she says.
"I'm itching to go out on the rugby pitch, have a good laugh with the girls and be part of a massive community. It brings a smile to my face."

Kelly has played in two friendlies for Porth, including this one against Pembroke

1566489447036.png

1566489511561.png
 
Last edited:
This will result in serious injuries or death. There are strict rules about school rugby in order to make sure pre pubescent boys aren’t playing against and injured by bigger kids. People are insisting on that and in the same breath allowing HUGE men to play against women. It’s a recipe for disaster. Somebody is going to get killed.

I’ve said it before but I don’t think many men appreciate just how much stronger you are than women - even strong women, even women the same height and weight as you. The thought of playing a contact sport against men is terrifying.
 
This will result in serious injuries or death. There are strict rules about school rugby in order to make sure pre pubescent boys aren’t playing against and injured by bigger kids. People are insisting on that and in the same breath allowing HUGE men to play against women. It’s a recipe for disaster. Somebody is going to get killed.

I’ve said it before but I don’t think many men appreciate just how much stronger you are than women - even strong women, even women the same height and weight as you. The thought of playing a contact sport against men is terrifying.

It’s going to happen, and when it does, these leagues are going to go bankrupt after getting sued into oblivion— which will then mean no female rugby league for actual women. I can’t imagine what their insurers are thinking.
 
Last edited:
From the article: "Brian Minty, who founded the team four years ago, says: "She's going to be a good, good player for the next few years, as long as we can stop her injuring players in training...She folded a girl like a deckchair during a game, which was quite funny, but they're still friends."

Oh, ha ha ha. That's cute. I'll bet the women who get injured just about split their sides laughing.

Fuck off, you wank sock excuse for a human.

Edit: I am exceptional and cannot rite.
 
This will result in serious injuries or death. There are strict rules about school rugby in order to make sure pre pubescent boys aren’t playing against and injured by bigger kids. People are insisting on that and in the same breath allowing HUGE men to play against women. It’s a recipe for disaster. Somebody is going to get killed.

I’ve said it before but I don’t think many men appreciate just how much stronger you are than women - even strong women, even women the same height and weight as you. The thought of playing a contact sport against men is terrifying.
The BBC has already censored its own article and removed the part about "Troon breaks coaches ankle in practice"Screenshot_20190822-220257.png
Unfortunately it didn't get archived in time that I can find but here's a screenshot!
 
Oddly enough, none of the "menstruation symptoms" that stunning and brave trans women like Brenda list as proof of them being on their period ever involves them bleeding due to them shedding their uterus lining
Sometimes they do nick their "ovary sacks" with razorblades, though.
Untitled.png
 
Oddly enough, none of the "menstruation symptoms" that stunning and brave trans women like Brenda list as proof of them being on their period ever involves them bleeding due to them shedding their uterus lining
Yeah, explosive diarrhea after eating an entire pizza is only proof you're a pig.

Sometimes they do nick their "ovary sacks" with razorblades, though.
Of course you're going to bloat up after having dicks up your ass. Lol, every woman's period is slightly different meaning not everyone bleeds after drawing down the moon.
 

On a dull autumn day in 1964, two NHS doctors strapped a 17-year-old boy into a wooden chair in a dark, windowless room and covered him in electrodes. During hours of so-called therapy, they repeatedly electrocuted him while showing him images of women's clothing.

In a coffee shop in Soho, Carolyn Mercer, now 72, smiles as she looks at a photograph of the boy. "That person has grown and developed," she said.

"But it's still me."

Carolyn - who prefers not to mention the male name she used to go by - remembers the first time she realised she was different. As a three-year-old boy playing in the backstreets of Preston, Lancashire, she persuaded her younger sister to switch clothes with her. The pair swapped their pre-school uniforms and Carolyn stood on the front step of her mother's shop, hoping people would see a little girl standing there.

"It was never about clothes... It was about something deep inside," Carolyn said. "I was a boy, and I didn't want to be."

Carolyn Mercer (left), aged six, with her younger sister
Image copyrightCAROLYN MERCERImage captionCarolyn Mercer (left) growing up in the 1950s, with her younger sister
Presentational white space

When Carolyn was born in 1947, society's attitude to gay and transgender people was far from accepting. England and Wales was still 20 years from legalising homosexual relationships - or using the word "transgender".

As a little Lancashire lad in his sister's school skirt, Carolyn had no words to describe her feelings. But she now knows she was a trans girl with gender dysphoria - distressed because her biological sex did not match her gender identity.

"I went to sleep hoping someone would invent a brain transplant to put my brain in a more appropriate body," she said.

Throughout boyhood, Carolyn's secret desire to live as a woman morphed into an all-consuming self-loathing.

Composite of Carolyn as a boy
Image copyrightCAROLYN MERCERImage caption"I knew what I wanted to be, and that dissonance and dysphoria [was] accentuated from the age of three onwards," Carolyn says
"That self-hatred was because I wanted something so absurd."

Carolyn said she felt "dirty" because society viewed transgender people as "wrong" and "evil". "If it was wrong and it was evil, that must be because I am wrong, and I am evil," she mused.

As Carolyn grew into a strongly-built teenager, she threw herself into trying to be "good bloke" - playing "masculine" sports like rugby and boxing. But she could not shake the deeply uncomfortable feeling of pretending to be someone she was not.

Carolyn began to feel depressed and suicidal. She thought it "would be easier" for her friends and family if she died than if she told anybody how she felt.

Then, aged 17, she shared her secret with a local vicar. He took her to see a doctor at a psychiatric hospital. "Five or six" sessions of aversion therapy at a hospital in Blackburn were arranged.

"I asked for that, I wanted to be cured," Carolyn said.

Nurses attending to a patient receiving electro-convulsive therapy to cure depression in 1946
Image copyrightHULTON ARCHIVE/GETTY IMAGESImage captionElectric shock therapies of various kinds have been used in medicine since the 1930s (file image)
Carolyn was strapped to a wooden chair in a dark room as doctors dipped electrodes in brine and attached them to her arm. They projected image after image of women's clothing on to the wall in front of her.

As each photograph snapped into view, a current was passed through the electrodes to give her a painful electric shock. Carolyn vividly remembers the surging shock wrenching her hand painfully upwards as her arm remained pinned to the chair.

Despite her tears of agony, the doctors pressed on. They were convinced that if she "learned" to associate thoughts about her gender with memories of pain, she would stop thinking she was a woman.

After a few months of treatment, Carolyn opted out of more. But the trauma was so great, she went on to experience physical shaking and flashbacks for the next 40 years.

Presentational grey line
What is conversion therapy?
Protester in Sao Paulo
Image copyrightNURPHOTO VIA GETTY IMAGESImage captionIn 2017 there were widespread protests in Sao Paulo, Brazil, after a judge overruled an old law forbidding "cure" therapy for LGBT+ people
So-called "gay-cure" conversion therapies claim to help change someone's sexuality or gender identity. Methods include hypnosis, exorcisms and aversion treatments such as patients receiving electric shocks or vomit-inducing drugs.

The therapies were available on the NHS until the 1970s. Both the NHS and the government said there was no record of how many people were treated or died as a result of the treatment.

Various forms of conversion therapy continue to be carried out across the world on LGBT people despite scientific evidence it is harmful and ineffective.

In 2018, a survey suggested 2% of the LGBT community in the UK had undergone conversion therapy - prompting the government to promise it would ban the treatment.

Work is under way to see how a ban would be implemented. But the complex and deeply entrenched beliefs that fostered the spread of the therapy mean it will still be some time before it is brought to an end.

Presentational grey line

For a while, Carolyn thought the therapy had worked.

She led as "manly" a life as possible. By the age of 19, she had a wife and a baby daughter. She became a maths teacher and was promoted quickly, soon becoming one of the youngest head teachers in Lancashire. But her dysphoria had not been stifled.

Carolyn Mercer aged 19 on her first day of college
Image copyrightCAROLYN MERCERImage captionA 19-year-old Carolyn on her first day of teaching college, two years after having aversion therapy
Her depression worsened as she was gripped by uncontrollable shaking whenever she thought about the treatment she had received.

"Did [the therapy] work in that it affected my body? Yes," Carolyn said. "Did it work in affecting my mind? Only in terms of making me hate myself even more."

After years of struggling to cope with the all-consuming dysphoria, Carolyn eventually began taking hormones to develop breasts in the early 1990s.

This was the beginning of a process described by many in the transgender community as "transition" or, as Carolyn prefers, to "align my gender expression with my gender identity". It's "a bit of a mouthful", she says, "but it suits me".

Although her family had been "incredible", they did not actively support her decision. "They actually liked the person they saw - a different person to the one that I was looking at," she said.

Double mastectomy
At work, Carolyn bound her developing breasts to hide the effects of her treatment. But in 1994, a journalist learned she was taking hormones, and Carolyn's personal life was plastered across tabloids claiming it was in the "public interest" to report the secret of a high-profile head teacher.

The episode forced Carolyn to rethink taking hormones. The following summer, she had her breasts surgically removed - an operation normally reserved for cancer patients.

Once again, an impassable void had lodged itself between who Carolyn was, and who she wanted to be. But after several more difficult years - though with the support of her staff, students, friends and family - Carolyn, aged 55, retired early to finally undergo the surgery she had been dreaming of for decades.

Carolyn Mercer
Image copyrightCAROLYN MERCERImage captionCarolyn's road trip in the US at the age of 67 was the first holiday she had been on where she felt she could enjoy herself
"Life is so, so much better. I don't have that dark secret hidden away all of the time."

Some members of the trans community say the person they were before surgery is dead. But for Carolyn, who has lived most of her life as that person, the little boy wearing his sister's pre-school uniform is very much alive.

"I'm still the same person with the same experiences," she said.

She continues to struggle with being happy. Following conversion therapy, she became so used to burying her innermost desires that she finds it difficult to let herself be happy.

"You show me a menu in a restaurant and you say 'which would you prefer?', I don't know," she said.

"Some will find it sad, but it's something I've come to terms with... I don't have a light anymore, or emotion like that, because I suppressed it for so long."

Prep the chair, I think we have a couple of suitable candidates to experiment with regarding if this actually works.
 
Back