- Joined
- Jul 6, 2015
Do you think he's realised yet?
View attachment 1248292
View attachment 1248293
View attachment 1248295
View attachment 1248296
I believe that is indeed, two
Gyandromorph butterflies are always a beautiful sight, but they're almost always a genetic dead end. They're usually sterile because their gonads do not produce viable gametes (if they produce either gamete at all), and their genitals are freakish fusion of male and female that can't interlock properly with a mate.Cool, now can humans be BIOLOGICALLY Half-Male, Half-Female? (Without being a hermaphrodite)
Tranners often try to use (and claim to have) genetic disorders and intersex conditions in order to justify their rhetoric, but I think it only makes their arguement worse, like the butterfly does.
For instance, in humans, true hermaphroditism is staggeringly rare, with only about 500 cases recorded, and only about 10 cases of fertility have ever been reported. If I'm not mistaken, none of those cases of fertility were in regards to spermatogenisis. On top of that, only one person with true hermaphroditism has ever successfully given birth.
Basically, having both sets of gonads in humans is excessively rare, and having both of those gonads work has... never happened. And in regards to the genitalia of humans, no one has ever "had both" (I've seen many troons claim this) in a sense where both genitals are distinct and fully formed. Chimera or mosaic, if you have both sorts of genitals, both are likely to be a tragic malformed piece of work so wrong that doctors have to surgically disassemble it at birth so you don't develop a blastoma.