Sophie Labelle Verville / Guillaume Labelle / Serious Trans Vibes Comics / Assigned Male / Candycore Comics / Pastel Sexy Times / WafflesArt - Obnoxious webcomics and horrific porn by a crazy fat pedo troon


Hey. Hi. Woman here.

Sophie Stephie, honey. The 'girls only' sex ed class is about the biological aspect of puberty for women. That is, ovulation and menstruation and pregnancy. It's not some kind of mystical thing that the boys are being deprived of learning, it's something that is 100% unmoored from what biological men --including trans-women -- actually experience. You ABSOLUTEY do not need to be in the room and the girls who are already uncomfortable talking about this stuff ABSOLUTELY do not appreciate having a boy sitting there. I would go so far as to say it would discourage girls from asking what might be extremely important health questions just because they don't want to be further embarrassed.

Not that actual women are important to people like Sophie.
 
Hey. Hi. Woman here.

Sophie Stephie, honey. The 'girls only' sex ed class is about the biological aspect of puberty for women. That is, ovulation and menstruation and pregnancy. It's not some kind of mystical thing that the boys are being deprived of learning, it's something that is 100% unmoored from what biological men --including trans-women -- actually experience. You ABSOLUTEY do not need to be in the room and the girls who are already uncomfortable talking about this stuff ABSOLUTELY do not appreciate having a boy sitting there. I would go so far as to say it would discourage girls from asking what might be extremely important health questions just because they don't want to be further embarrassed.

Not that actual women are important to people like Sophie.
Nailed it. Sex ed is differentiated by sex because puberty is differentiated by sex (and different sexes also experience different things during sex and have different concerns!).

My understand is also that "boy sex ed" consists of a lot of talking about male puberty and things like wet dreams and surprise boners and whatnot, which obviously no boy is going to want to talk about in front of girls. Shame is extremely damaging in these kinds of environments, it prevents kids from paying attention and learning stuff that's important for their future health and safety.

Like, do I agree that things like safe gay and lesbian sex should be addressed during sex ed classes? Absolutely. Everyone should learn how to have safe, healthy sex, and there are particular concerns that should be addressed for gay and lesbian students. But it would never take up anywhere near as much time as, say, puberty or even heterosexual sex (because that's the kind of sex most people will have).

And trans shit should have nothing to do with it, because that has nothing to do with puberty or sex. Though I guess the teacher could point out any trans students and make sure everyone knows that they'll never go through normal puberty (because puberty blockers), will be completely infertile, and nobody will ever want to have sex with them, before they make them sit out the class to ensure that they're not "misgendered" by being put in the class of their sex and that they don't make students of the opposite sex uncomfortable by invading theirs.
 
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Probably the teacher should have divided the class into menstruators and ejaculators? That's focusing on mere function, so it shouldn't offend anyone...maybe. Seriously, I wonder how the fuck he managed to survive high school. And I'm happy he's not living in Italy, because he would have made a narrative arc after watching this pad advertisement (sorry, but I had to go through this, now you have too):
I didn't see Italian troons reeeing about it, just people complaining about the fact it was bad taste (and I admit that it wasn't the most tasteful thing I've ever seen, but probably it's this that makes it funny).
 
When I took sex ed they only had one class that was exclusively for the girls and that was because it was about periods.

Something trannies will never experience, eh Billy?
It was the same when I had that although that's in the UK, it seemed to be in different parts, one about body changes (When the sexes were seperated, mostly so they could ask questions without feeling as embarassed), then about sex, mostly focusing on safe sex, peer pressure and pregnancy.

Parent's can take their kids out for religious reasons and they could do the same with trans kids and have a one of one with them with the sex classes or even get a specialist in and they'd have the plausible deniablity of claiming their parents took them out for religious reasons or they were just sick that day.
 
This people are incredibly blind to how little trans people are there in the world
When you make being trans central to your identity, surround yourself with other trans people and talk about nothing but gender, I can see how you might think that way. Particularly if you have no IRL career or social life, which often seems to be the case with troons.

Probably why Labelle sees nothing weird about the fact that Stephie’s school is almost entirely filled with LGBT children.
 
When you make being trans central to your identity, surround yourself with other trans people and talk about nothing but gender, I can see how you might think that way. Particularly if you have no IRL career or social life, which often seems to be the case with troons.

Probably why Labelle sees nothing weird about the fact that Stephie’s school is almost entirely filled with LGBT children.
I would venture to say that being trans is their identity. They have no identity beyond being trans/genderqueer/faggots/etc., which is why they react so violently to anyone disagreeing with the trans message.
 
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