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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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New England Journal of Customer Service said:
Designating sex as male or female on birth certificates suggests that sex is simple and binary when, biologically, it is not. Sex is a function of multiple biologic processes with many resultant combinations. About 1 in 5000 people have intersex variations.
This bogus argument has been raised so often that I'm baffled none of these "scientific" types has ever given an account to the obvious counterargument: if sex determination in human is supposed to be so intricate and complex, and is at the mercy of so many biochemical Rube Goldbergs, that it is considered, not merely approximate, but downright false to declare sex as binary, then how come over 99.9% of live births have no pathology of sex development and fit neatly into either male or female? it seems as if evolution has carved two and only two paths for human zygotes to follow; zygotes who failed to go down either path get eliminated. How do you describe something that has only two outcomes?

New England Journal of Customer Service said:
As many as 1 in 100 people exhibit chimerism, mosaicism, or micromosaicism, conditions in which a person’s cells may contain varying sex chromosomes, often unbeknownst to them
Do doctors regularly check for chimerism or micromosaicism? No: these conditions are not thought to be relevant to medical practice. Asking the same about lawyers will let you see that these condition are not relevant to legal practices either. So why are we changing Medicine and Law based on something neither doctors nor lawyers give a thought about?


Nah old news. Engels has already claimed women are the proletariat of the family.
 
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I came out as trans masculine and non-binary nine years ago when I was 25 years old. Although I didn't grow up wanting to be male, I had thought about what I would look like with a flat chest. But I didn't hate my body, I just didn't feel totally comfortable in it. When I was 25 I realized I would feel much more comfortable presenting as trans masculine and so I began my medical transition and taking testosterone. Eight months later I had a double mastectomy in Florida.

I definitely felt like I was living a more authentic version of myself after I transitioned, and I was surrounded by people who were mostly supportive during that time. As I began to become more comfortable in my body they could see how much more comfortable in myself I was becoming. I've always had the support of my family which I feel very fortunate to have and overall, especially living in a big city like Seattle, my transition was definitely much easier than I think it could have been in the small town I grew up in.

In addition to my transition, around that time I also finished a degree in education and child development, and I had five years' experience as a teacher's assistant. I had been a nanny before I transitioned, and I noticed that I immediately began to earn ten dollars more an hour as a trans masculine nanny. I also started working with high profile families and travelling all over the world. As a trans masculine travel nanny, I went everywhere from Morocco to Italy, all over the U.K. and Japan. I noticed differences just in terms of sexism and the privileges that really came with being a male nanny.

Although I identify as trans masculine rather than male, people often read me as a cisgender gay man. So I'm aware that it does make me more visible to live in my identity as a trans masculine person. But I'm very open on social media and of course, when you're a nanny people do background checks. Working with high profile families I disclose information about my identity immediately and then I am able to have conversations about it with kids as we build relationships. That really helps expand their worlds as well.

I've known for my entire life that I've wanted children and I knew before I transitioned that I would want to carry at least one child. Often when people are transitioning they might freeze their eggs. I also thought about how I would feed my baby when I had my double mastectomy, those small decisions had to be made, and I don't regret them one bit. I don't think I would be here with Wilder if I hadn't taken care of myself and honored my identity back then.

However, there are certain parts of my story of becoming a parent that I haven't shared yet because I think they are Wilder's pieces of the story to share. How I became pregnant and whether or not I had planned to be a single parent are both elements of the story I believe are Wilder's to share. However, I have always had an intuition that I would spend a portion of my parenting journey as a solo parent. I'm open to parenting with another person but that person hasn't come along yet.

I found out I was eight weeks pregnant on April 17 this year and I actually only discovered that because from weeks four to eight of my first trimester I had COVID-19. It was right at the beginning of the pandemic and I didn't know I was pregnant at the time so I didn't end up in hospital, but had I known there are a couple of nights when I was very sick that I would have 100 percent taken myself to hospital.

Fortunately, I began to get better. But two days later I started to feel really unwell again and that's how I ended up at the doctors and discovered I was pregnant. I also discovered the reason I was so sick was because I had Hyperemesis gravidarum (HG), which is severe pregnancy sickness and other symptoms. I went less than five days my whole pregnancy without throwing up.

Truthfully, I was really nervous going into the pregnancy, I had no idea how I would really feel. But being pregnant during a pandemic meant that I wasn't going out in public, so I had less fear around how the world was going to see my body, which I think is why I was able to dive into social media a little more.


I carried very large with Wilder, even though Wilder was not a large baby. So I think if I had been going out in public on a regular basis my experience would have been quite different. Instead, I was home alone almost every single day, just with my body, growing this baby. Despite the sickness, it was the most beautiful experience I've ever had. I've fallen in love with my body in ways that I've never experienced before.

I had been on testosterone for nine years, and now I have been off testosterone for a year in order to carry Wilder, and it's like parts of my body from my past are visiting. It's just been a really comforting feeling of welcoming a friend back, knowing that it's not going to be forever. So even if moments do feel dysphoric or uncomfortable, that's OK.

Although I have had moments of insecurity, the fact that I was able to use parts of my body that I was born with, while living in a body that I feel at home in really allowed me to grow this child in a way that feels like they can be at home in my body, too. I wouldn't have done it any other way.

I knew from the moment I got pregnant that I wanted to have a home water birth and for my entire 10 hours of labor, I was only out of the water for 30 minutes. I did experience pain, but my birth was the most amazing experience of my life. It was really an out of body experience. The thing I found about childbirth is that something happens and time doesn't really exist anymore. My midwives were all trained so there wasn't a moment when I was scared, although there were moments of wanting to go to the hospital for an epidural! But every time I said, "I can't," my midwives would look at me and say, "you are" and we kept going.

Although it was amazing, there were some challenges, Wilder didn't breathe at first and needed some assistance, and there was a moment when we considered that we might have to transfer to the hospital. At the end of my birth I did lose a fair amount of blood so I needed a shot to help contract my uterus and stop the bleeding.


But my birth has absolutely shaped the direction of my life; I'm now ready to go and get my certification as a doula. I used to be a professional photographer and my goal is to get into birth photography and be a doula, especially helping fellow trans and non-binary people with their births.

My primary purpose for my visibility and sharing my pregnancy on social media is for other trans and non-binary people. If I had not stumbled across someone else's journey on YouTube when I was 25, I don't know if I would have had the words for my own identity and been able to start this transition. Also, a friend of mine, Tristan, carried his child three years ago and was public about it. He has supported me hugely along the way and guided me to set up some safety nets such as moderators on my social media.

People may see mainly positive comments on my social media, but in the background I have a team of five people who monitor all my pages and delete sometimes hundreds of hateful comments a day. If I posted images of my pregnant body, they were often shared in hate groups. Some days I get multiple death threats and my child has gotten death threats, so my moderators will only give me a heads up when the comments are all cleaned up and then I will go in sometimes and interact. I don't typically read private messages though, because sometimes things sneak through. I've lost track of the amount of times people hoped I had a miscarriage. It happened hundreds of times.

That's something that people like Tristan me have taught me how to deal with. Had it not been for him and all of the other trans masculine people who have been pregnant before me, I wouldn't have known that I could have walked this path. So, it was important for me not only to be visible but to make sure that that space was safe, which is really hard to do on social media.

The first few weeks with Wilder have been beautiful. This is what I have dreamed of my entire life. It has been all skin-on-skin all of the time. Between the two of us I think we've worn a shirt twice. We're mainly just hanging out at home.

I use a combination of Wilder's assigned sex pronouns as well as "they" and "them" when it's just the two of us, but when I am addressing the public, I'm only using "they" and "them." I want to shield Wilder from other people's prejudices or stereotypes and I also feel people assume that they have the right to know what somebody's assigned sex is. Until Wilder identifies with a gender, and they may not, I'm not sharing that part of their story.

Being a parent has been amazing, but it's been more challenging than I anticipated. I had anticipated that parenting during the pandemic wouldn't be as difficult as being pregnant during a pandemic. But the challenge is that I now have this beautiful child that I have wanted my entire life, and I want to share them with the world and connect with people the way I love connecting, which is in person.

Instead, I am terrified to take Wilder out into the world because of the pandemic. Although my parents were here for the first two weeks of Wilder's life, and it was great having them here, now I don't have any support so it's been pretty tiring.

But it's also so beautiful. Even though I'm so exhausted, I still find myself staying awake at night just to watch Wilder sleep, because I just can't get over how beautiful this life is.

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Reminds me of when they first started rolling the crazy shit out for soccer moms on Oprah in the 2000s. They had that creepy cunt on who cut her tits off, fed herself hormones daily to get peach fuzz facial hair like an 80-year old granny, and played pretend as the ""first pregnant man"". This society is not long for this timeline, surely you can see this. China is going to space and colonizing Wakanda's resources - meanwhile America has pregnant bitches trying to turn themselves into hairy men. We have reached the end folks, the end.
 
He's quite the chubster anyway, just play it off as a beer gut.

More to the point, what the fuck is the point of this article, anyway? It's not particularly interesting news, it's been done before. It's just half complaining about alleged male privilege and half raving about the beauty of the female body. It kind of just looks like some dude's blogpost.

On that note, he should get the real male treatment of being called an incel and ostracized for creepily fetishizing pregnancy.
 
What the hell is "trans masculine?" Masculine means "having qualities or appearance traditionally associated with men." So is he transitioning to be more male?

At first, I thought it was a woman transitioning to be a male and had complications with their pregnancy. When you up and decide to radically change your body from the inside out, it WILL have side effects.

But it's a MAN impregnating a baby. No wonder there were complications with birth. That is abnormal.

We're playing with biology.
 
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Reminds me of when they first started rolling the crazy shit out for soccer moms on Oprah in the 2000s. They had that creepy cunt on who cut her tits off, fed herself hormones daily to get peach fuzz facial hair like an 80-year old granny, and played pretend as the ""first pregnant man"".
Oh god, I remember that. That was pretty much my first TERF pill: Bitch, this is not a man. This is a woman who gave herself severe PCOS and then got knocked up. Women with PCOS take fertility drugs and get knocked up all the time, so this is nothing new or remarkable. Stop pretending like the emperor has clothes.

I'm not even somebody who had a problem with transgenderism as a concept, but if you're that hell-bent on having a male body, you think you'd be going out of your way to avoid anything that a female body would do, unless you just have a creepy mpreg fetish. (Come to think of it, I wonder what year that was and if it pre-dated Tumblr's insistence that you don't need to have dysphoria to be trans?)
 
I'm not even somebody who had a problem with transgenderism as a concept, but if you're that hell-bent on having a male body, you think you'd be going out of your way to avoid anything that a female body would do, unless you just have a creepy mpreg fetish. (Come to think of it, I wonder what year that was and if it pre-dated Tumblr's insistence that you don't need to have dysphoria to be trans?)
Gender dysphoria DOES exist, along with intersex births. But the transgender community turned an actual, albeit rare phenomenon into a fad.
 
I use a combination of Wilder's assigned sex pronouns as well as "they" and "them" when it's just the two of us, but when I am addressing the public, I'm only using "they" and "them." I want to shield Wilder from other people's prejudices or stereotypes and I also feel people assume that they have the right to know what somebody's assigned sex is. Until Wilder identifies with a gender, and they may not, I'm not sharing that part of their story.
Just imagine trying to keep this up for years lol

Also, why would you need to say he/him or she/her when there's only two of you in the room?? Don't you typically use pronouns when talking to a someone about a third person?
 
In addition to my transition, around that time I also finished a degree in education and child development, and I had five years' experience as a teacher's assistant. I had been a nanny before I transitioned, and I noticed that I immediately began to earn ten dollars more an hour as a trans masculine nanny. I also started working with high profile families and travelling all over the world.
She started making more money because a certain class of elites decided it was a great opportunity to virtue signal by hiring her. Also, she literally said that her degree was finished around the same time she "transitioned"; I dunno, maybe that had something to do with it too? No no, it's definitely because she suddenly had "male privilege" lol. What an idiot.
Instead, I am terrified to take Wilder out into the world because of the pandemic. Although my parents were here for the first two weeks of Wilder's life, and it was great having them here, now I don't have any support so it's been pretty tiring.
Yeah of course it's tiring, babies are not supposed to be raised alone. If the father was in the picture maybe things would be less stressful. Either way, having this mental case as a mother guarantees the poor kid is fucked.
 
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Gender dysphoria DOES exist, along with intersex births. But the transgender community turned an actual, albeit rare phenomenon into a fad.
I think that's one of the reasons the faux-transgender stuff pisses me off so badly. They're no different than the munchausen's-by-internet crowd who are constantly claiming to have debilitating chronic illnesses and lamenting their latest hospital stay one second, and are posting Instagram photos of their expensive new medical equipment and latest Disney World trip the next. It's repulsive when you know there are people out there who would give anything to just not have the problem in the first place.

What I think is really depressing is that many males with certain intersex conditions used to be given "corrective" surgery for their genitals and raised as girls, which caused them a lot of issues. It's so fucked up to see people treating this as just another form of body modification, as if it were the same as getting a tattoo.
 
I think that's one of the reasons the faux-transgender stuff pisses me off so badly. They're no different than the munchausen's-by-internet crowd who are constantly claiming to have debilitating chronic illnesses and lamenting their latest hospital stay one second, and are posting Instagram photos of their expensive new medical equipment and latest Disney World trip the next. It's repulsive when you know there are people out there who would give anything to just not have the problem in the first place.

What I think is really depressing is that many males with certain intersex conditions used to be given "corrective" surgery for their genitals and raised as girls, which caused them a lot of issues. It's so fucked up to see people treating this as just another form of body modification, as if it were the same as getting a tattoo.
You're leaving out the part when she's turning the kid into an enbie.
 
She wanted to have a child for the novelty of childbirth. That's why she seriously considers the fact that she wouldn't be able to feed her child necessary colostrum but goes through with it anyways. It's why she keeps phrasing her discovery of her pregnancy as if she wasn't having PIV intercourse. It's why there's no mention of a father.

We seriously got trans men being made into single mothers. Oughta be a crime...
 
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Gender dysphoria DOES exist, along with intersex births. But the transgender community turned an actual, albeit rare phenomenon into a fad.
Just because psychologists say gender dysphoria exists doesn't mean it does, it could easily be a sociogenic and latrogenic creation. Psychologists don't know nearly as much about psychology as they like to pretend they do.
 
Reminds me of when they first started rolling the crazy shit out for soccer moms on Oprah in the 2000s. They had that creepy cunt on who cut her tits off, fed herself hormones daily to get peach fuzz facial hair like an 80-year old granny, and played pretend as the ""first pregnant man"". This society is not long for this timeline, surely you can see this. China is going to space and colonizing Wakanda's resources - meanwhile America has pregnant bitches trying to turn themselves into hairy men. We have reached the end folks, the end.

A pregnant man would be an AMAB ciscum penis at birth having testicle possessing natal XY male with a bun in the oven.

I hate myself for writing that. Kill me. *sigh*

That giant meteor can't come soon enough. For the love of God someone press the reset button already. Please.

But my birth has absolutely shaped the direction of my life; I'm now ready to go and get my certification as a doula. I used to be a professional photographer and my goal is to get into birth photography and be a doula, especially helping fellow trans and non-binary people with their births.

It wants to deliver our babies.:cryblood:

What's amusing about this is how crunchy mom this whole paragraph is once you remove the tranny part. She's literally some granola munching hippie who cut her tits off and grew a beard.
 
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