Off-Topic Random Trans Thoughts, Musings, and Questions - For all your armchair psych and general sperging

Man, I want people to figure out a better way to say "pronouns" and mean "pronouns."

Everyone has pronouns; they're a part of speech, you dorks! There needs to be a succinct phrase for troon or theyfab-demanded incorrect pronouns, which are the red flag people are describing when they say "pronouns."

Suggestions:
  • Custom pronouns
  • Prescriptive pronouns (derogatory; people love to sperg about descriptive vs. prescriptive language)
  • Non-intuitive pronouns (I like this because it sounds kind at first)
  • Vanity pronouns (also derogatory but probably too obvious)
The one time I spoke to a troon (which was in an online gaming lobby), he told me that he wants people to use the pronouns that reflect his true self, so I said "oh, so truenouns", which he liked a lot, but he didn't realise that I was really saying "oh, so troonouns", while having a little giggle to myself.
 
  • Custom pronouns
  • Prescriptive pronouns (derogatory; people love to sperg about descriptive vs. prescriptive language)
  • Non-intuitive pronouns (I like this because it sounds kind at first)
  • Vanity pronouns (also derogatory but probably too obvious)
Custom is best in a neutral sense, Vanity pronouns is hilarious. Like you got a vanity license plate to tell people you like attention.
 
Saw this on r/blockedandreported

Transgender Identity Is Associated With Bullying Involvement Among Finnish Adolescents (A)​

Conclusion: Transgender identity, especially non-binary identity, is associated with both being bullied and perpetrating bullying even when a range of variables including internal stress and involvement in bullying in the opposite role are taken into account. This suggests that bullying during adolescence may serve as a mechanism of maintaining heteronormativity.
 
Vanity pronouns is hilarious. Like you got a vanity license plate to tell people you like attention.
After thinking about it for a bit, I bet "vanity pronouns" will play the best with Boomers. Doesn't make me seem mad at the they-fabs, like I'm going to get off-puttingly political. Just "she has a set of vanity pronouns, so you kinda know what to expect."
 
I forget which thread I saw it in but the trans EMT and trans medical workers in general fuck with my head. Respecting and caring for the human body and the person in it, the priority should not be pronouns. Are most EMT cases sex-specific, even? I know for example female heart attack symptoms differ from male but say I have liver failure, does it matter what my chromosomes are?
Call me he/him/Billy Bob on my insurance forms, idgaf. If I'm in a medical emergency let me live to post shits.
 
A pretty good article highlighting the parallels between trans ideology and Andrew Tate's ideology, as well as the hypocrisy of both the left and the right.

(A)

Based and brainpilled.

Tateism and wokeism are two cheeks of the same arse. The clash between these camps is a classic case of the narcissism of small differences. It’s a battle whose shrillness and noisiness disguises the fact that both sides are made up of narcissists who are fine with porn and prostitution and who believe men should have ownership of women – whether of their identities (the woke mob) or their bodies (the Tate mob). We who prefer reason to conspiracy theory, sexual equality to misogyny and decency to ugliness need to speak up.

He is a cool cucumber. We need to support dudes like this author.

From online behavior, this checks out. I'll read it but the snippet alone you posted rings true.
 
Are most EMT cases sex-specific, even? I know for example female heart attack symptoms differ from male but say I have liver failure, does it matter what my chromosomes are?
The difference pre-hospital is mostly having pregnancy in the algorithm.

I could go on about transgender medical professionals, but after thinking about it, an EMT is the least upsetting. They're underpaid and out doing real work every night, going into alleys and hoarder homes. EMTs can get pretty weird after a while, so a middle-aged male EMT trooning out doesn't seem that surprising. An FtM EMT would be, because as macho as they like to posture, they're not known for being resilient. I'd more expect an FtM to train for a week or two and then accuse everyone of microaggressions.

If a patient is acute enough to scoop and run, they're not spending enough time with the EMT for either of them to get philosophical. For a frequent flyer who treats an ambulance like a lonely person taxi to the attention store, I kind of want them to be creeped out by the local hon and maybe stop activating EMS for things that could be a PCP visit instead.
 
A pretty good article highlighting the parallels between trans ideology and Andrew Tate's ideology, as well as the hypocrisy of both the left and the right.

(A)
Love Brendan O'Neill! He's one of those pundit types that used to be an avowed, self-described lefty (he used to call himself a Marxist), and now people think is on the right all because he's maintained his position on individual freedom (i.e., the Overton window in the mass media having moved decidedly leftwards).

(Don't ask me how he squared his self-proclaimed Marxism with individual liberty--I have no fucking clue.)
 
How do atheist transgenders exist? The main crux of transgenderism is that they were "born in the wrong body", which doesn't make any sense unless you are a creationist. How do they justify this to themselves?
They used to justify this by saying that there was such a thing as a "male brain" and a "female brain" and transgendersexxualism (preferred language changed in the 2000s, you can still find "transsexuals" on twitter who hate the modern trans movement) was when the sex of the brain wasn't matched to the sex of the body. The "proof" of this is shoddy at best and it's all based on early 20th century eugenicist theory meant to show that men were inherently superior to women. But there was at least an attempt to use medical logic and science to prove that it was real. Now it's more "it's real because I say it's real." Because we live in a world where everyone thinks that shared objective reality should bend to their own wants and desires.
 
Now it's more "it's real because I say it's real." Because we live in a world where everyone thinks that shared objective reality should bend to their own wants and desires.
I wonder how the atheists who support gender ideology today would react if religious people suicide baited(like trans people )in order for God to be taught in schools?I dont know what the data is now, but i remember years ago religious folks would share studies claiming religious countries have lower rates of suicide compared to secular ones.Much like TRAs argue that playing into the delusions of a man who thinks he's a woman improves their mental health, and decreases their suicide, why dont these same atheists apply that to religions being taught?
 
Something that has been weighing on my mind lately, but the transgender movement, and its effect on autistic (or neurodivergent people, really) is probably the most compelling argument I know of against the "neurodiversity" movement.

That's not even getting into the fact that Darwinian processes ensured that those meanie neurotypicals would become the majority and set those pesky social rules and force everyone else to follow them. Something that would never happen if autism had inherent advantages, but I digress.

Proponents of "neurodiversity" speak of the "strengths" of autistic people, like out-of-the-box thinking, favoring objective truth over emotional reasoning or popular beliefs, the ability to spout observable truths without regard to if it makes other people uncomfortable, supposed lack of conformity to social trends, no sense of (or outright contempt for) social hierarchy, ability to think in a non-linear fashion, etc.

A lot of that may be true, and this very board is certainly the finest gathering of autists imaginable, and much is said on "weaponized autism."

Why not weaponize that autism against the LGBTQP movement? Muscle your way past those taboos, those social constructs, and spout the truth without shame:
  • Gays are not born that way and activists intentionally lied about it being genetic or prenatal.
  • No matter your proclivities, you still have moral agency, it is not unfair to expect people to abstain from certain sexual behaviors.
  • Homosexuality is a self-defeating lifestyle that goes completely against the whole point of sexuality
  • It spreads disease and even creates new diseases seemingly out of thin air, even to spread to heterosexuals through bisexuals and blood donations
  • Such people are not entitled to adopt children or produce them through artificial means, especially since the latter involves intentionally ripping them from one of their blood parents
  • Gays and troons commit a disproportionate amount of sexual violence against children, even pro-gay studies show them committing over 25% of sex crimes against children despite being 3-7% of the population.
  • Even if you had an inherent right to engage in poopy butt sex (which you don't), people have the right to find it distasteful and disgusting without being persecuted or censured for it, and you're a bigot if you claim otherwise.
  • You will never be a real member of the opposite sex, and you should be fucking embarrassed for being retarded enough to believe so
  • "nonbinary" or other similar "identities" are nonsensical and serve no purpose other than to seek attention.
  • The rule that says you have to respect other peoples' "preferred pronouns," chosen names, or games of pretend, is an arbitrary social rule pulled out of thin air. Be as autistic as you want and flout this rule, it's for everyone else's good, really.
  • It's not kind to entertain someone's self-destructive delusions, if you truly loved them, you'd snap them out of it.
  • It's much easier to change the mind to match their body than to mutilate their body to match their disgusting fetishes and fantasies.
And yes, autism is weaponized against LGBTQ nonsense, but not nearly enough. Anywhere from a quarter to one third of troons are autistic. Only 63% of autistic people are heterosexual. If autism was truly just a different "neurotype," and the only problem was lack of acceptance or accommodation of other peoples' social sensibilities or "neurological operating systems," so to speak, then autistic people should be no more likely than the rest of the population to be groomed into these self-defeating lifestyles. But they are. Much more so.

There's a fucking eugenics program being waged against the autistic community by the medical industrial complex. By selling them "gender affirmation" and other bullshit. And they don't notice or even care. They're being groomed into sterilizing themselves or wasting their strength on the same sex, and they don't care. Autistic people who don't toe the line, who successfully resist the brainwashing are persecuted, bullied, or even arrested (two examples in the UK, at least), and they don't give a single damn.

Even feminists, as idiotic as they are, have caught onto the fact that troon ideology is an existential threat to them and their rights, why hasn't the autistic community or "neurodiversity" movement also figured it out?

I know this site is all about making fun of retards and even autists, but it's genuinely disheartening, something to get MATI over.

I wonder how the atheists who support gender ideology today would react if religious people suicide baited(like trans people )in order for God to be taught in schools?I dont know what the data is now, but i remember years ago religious folks would share studies claiming religious countries have lower rates of suicide compared to secular ones.Much like TRAs argue that playing into the delusions of a man who thinks he's a woman improves their mental health, and decreases their suicide, why dont these same atheists apply that to religions being taught?

Mainly because many of these atheists aren't motivated so much by reasonable skepticism of metaphysical realities as they are by the fact that they simply want the freedom to be as degenerate as they want to be. You know, the very kind of people that are deathly afraid of the possibility of an afterlife or a God existing. The idea that they stop existing after they die is a comforting one to them.

They hate religions that don't affirm them, these are the same people who would gladly engage in poopy orgies with temple prostitutes on the altar of Baal, or burn their children alive to Molech if they were alive during that time period. Many of these people actually did chase after esoteric religions and cults between the 60s and 80s.

They love religion, religion is engrained into the human psyche. They just hate religion that involves self-mastery, self-denial, and abstinence from carnal pleasures. That is all. Using their own rhetoric against them does not work here, any justification they have to hate the Abrahamic religions is good enough for them, no matter how hypocritical or self-serving.

The mere fact that even fundamentalists, those that believe that the Earth was literally created in 6 twenty four hour periods, or that Pokemon is Satan worship, are more mentally stable and healthy than troons, should speak for itself.
 
Last edited:
Found an interview with a detransitioner up on Genspect. It hits a few points we've talked about before.

Eliza Mondegreen: Where did you first encounter the idea that you could be trans?

Steven A. Richards: It was in the background for most of my life—something I heard jokes about in school and saw on TV—but the first time I saw it presented the way it is nowadays, as a legitimate identity and marginalized group, I must have been 13 years old. That was a really difficult time in my life. Being 13 isn’t easy for anyone, but in my case, I had been bullied a lot. My family had moved. I didn’t have many friends. I spent a ton of time online. My ninth-grade English teacher recommended Christopher Hitchens, so I read God Is Not Great, and I got into online atheism and leftism on Reddit, where the version of trans ideology we see today was just starting to circulate.

The idea of being special appealed to me, and so did the idea of being someone else. I didn’t like who I was at the time. A lot of that had to do with my isolation, and a lot of it also had to do with the messages I was getting online about being privileged for my race and sex. I got it in my head that maybe being trans explains all the unhappiness I’d been feeling. It helped explain away all the bad stuff and it gave me a purpose in my life—a narrative, something to strive for—when I’d never really felt like I’d ever had that. It brought meaning that I didn’t have before.

That’s why I was initially attracted to it, but once you’ve been involved in those communities for a while and internalized all these ideas and come to believe them, whatever it was that originally brought you in doesn’t matter anymore because the ideology starts perpetuating itself. It even gets to the point where maybe you’re not happy in your transition and you don’t feel like it’s helping, maybe you even feel like it’s hurting you, but the ideology is like a virus running in your head. It’s hard to get it out.

EM: Why do you think the online atheism community leaned so heavily into gender? Might it be related to the search for meaning that you’re talking about?

SAR: I think there are two basic types of online atheists: the people who were raised religious and who are rebelling against that, and people like me who were not raised religious and got into it because they needed meaning and community and wanted to believe in something, and maybe they saw it as being a bit rebellious. I think I saw the atheist community as this spunky group of freethinkers, fighting back against the oppressive establishment. Another part of the appeal is that religion is coded as conservative. So if religion and conservatism is the stuff you’re against, you’re going to gravitate to the other end of the spectrum. In these spaces, there were a lot of people who wanted to make the world a better place and wanted to do something meaningful and this seemed like the civil rights issue of our time. That’s the narrative. Then the trans issue comes along. You feel like you’re doing something heroic, like you’re just like the civil rights activists you learned about in history class, acting in accordance with these modern myths.

EM: Tell me what it was like being immersed in the trans community online.

SAR: There was a lot of talk about how we were fighting for our rights, and a lot of discussion around the best ways to access hormones and the best places to go for surgeries. New people would come in asking if they were trans, or how could they know if they were trans, and would be brought into the community and gently encouraged to transition and every time they hit a milestone—like, I just dressed in opposite-sex clothing for the first time, I just came out to my parents, I just took my first dose of HRT, I just scheduled surgery—they’d make a post to share and everyone would celebrate. When I found this community, I felt welcomed in. I felt like people cared about me, and I felt that even more when I sought out queer groups in real life. These communities are full of love for new members.

I wound up spending a lot more time on Tumblr than Reddit, and Tumblr was a much weirder community. At its best, it was funny and welcoming, and it could look at the weird situation we were all in with a sense of humor and compassion, but at its worst it was full of backbiting, reputation-destroying callouts, and despair. You’d see absurdist humor next to pleas for money from people in desperate situations, like their parents just kicked them out or they were trying to escape an abusive partner, and those might or might not have been scams. Next to that would be news stories about the worst things in the world. Next to that was straight-up porn. All of this stuff just got fed to you in an infinite stream of content, but with this sense of purpose to it all, like you’re doing something really important, like you’re building a better world.

I remember people expressing doubts and the idea that having doubts is an indication that you’re actually trans. I remember feeling like I should share my own experiences with doubt to comfort whoever was currently experiencing that doubt, to help them feel like they weren’t alone by saying, It’s OK, every trans person feels like that. Everybody is propping each other up, helping everybody else shore up their doubts and construct their identities. If my identity is valid and you’re experiencing what I experienced then your identity must be valid, too.

EM: How far did you go with transition?

SAR: I was on estrogen for about eight years, starting when I was sixteen. For most of that time I was also taking puberty blockers, but five or six years in, I had an orchiectomy. My doctor had suggested to me that the blockers weren’t healthy to be on for a long time, and—when I tried switching from Lupron to another type of testosterone blocker—I didn’t react well to it, so having my gonads removed seemed like the easiest option. At the time, I didn’t really feel like I’d be losing anything; I actually felt like it was the right thing to do for my long-term health, even though I was unsure if I wanted to get total reconstructive surgery. That’s as far as I went.

EM: You’ve talked about how this belief system felt like a virus running in your brain and the community reinforced people’s identities and squelched doubts. So I’m curious, how did you start to come out of this belief system?

SAR: That’s something I’ve thought about a lot. I don’t have an answer—I have theories. For the last few years that I identified as trans, I spent a lot of time trying to ‘solve’ the ideology. It became an obsession for me for a while. I was reading about the ideology of gender—and also about anarchism, because I was friends with a bunch of queer anarchists. I was trying to sort out in my head how all the things I believed could possibly be true at once, and I wasn’t able to solve that. I kept hitting a point where it all just didn’t make sense anymore.

Then there was the physiological side of things. I was put on antidepressants at 13 and was on one medication after another from age 13 to 23, when I decided I didn’t want to take these medications forever. I wanted to see if I could do without that. My psychiatrist wasn’t very cooperative, and warned me that it was bad for people to go off medications in winter, so why not wait till summer? I didn’t want to wait, so I ended up just stopping antidepressants cold turkey. I started feeling like myself again, which I hadn’t in a long time. I felt more of a connection to my body and I thought, Oh, I remember feeling this way. I had sort of found the feeling I had been trying to find with the transition. That thing I had been looking for was there again. So I think being medicated at a young age played a role.

Between the mental and physiological changes, at some point, I sort of snapped. The immediate feeling I had wasn’t I made a horrible mistake transitioning, I’m actually a man. Instead, it felt like I made a choice. I said to myself, I don’t think transitioning is ever going to make me happy, it’s not going to make me more genuine or more me. Transitioning is just a thing I did and I can either choose to live as a transwoman or I can detransition and live as a man. If both of those are valid options, I’d rather live as a man.

After I made that choice, I moved out of the ideology. My thinking changed. More and more, I began to realize it was a messed up situation, a messed up thing I’ve done to my body. Now I’m here and I’ve been writing about this because I don’t think anybody should be doing it to themselves. I definitely don’t think it’s medical care. But that was a long process. There was no one moment.

EM: When did that process of questioning the beliefs you’d adopted and questioning your decision to transition start?

SAR: I was 21 when I started trying to ‘solve’ the ideology. It was after I’d had my orchiectomy. I was experiencing pain after the surgery—frayed nerves. It was unpleasant. When I got the surgery, I wasn’t thinking of it in terms of, Oh, I’m having a body part removed and there are going to be complications that go along with that. That’s because I didn’t feel like my sex organs were part of my body. I felt like they were attached to me, but that they weren’t really me. So I felt like having them removed wouldn’t do anything. It was magical thinking. I was basically delusional about this and that delusion was encouraged by the community and the medical establishment and all of my friends. Actually having to live with the reality of surgery made me realize I was inhabiting a real human body.

I think what really started me thinking was realizing that I didn’t have the option to go off hormones anymore—that if, for some reason, I lost my health insurance or there was some kind of medical supply-chain issue and I wasn’t able to access estrogen, I’d have serious health complications. That was somehow something I hadn’t thought about before the surgery and something that no doctors or therapists ever talked to me about. When I realized that, it really freaked me out. That was what sent me over the edge into two years of obsessively questioning and trying to solve the ideology and trying to figure out a way that it would all make sense, trying to figure out a way that what had happened was OK. And I couldn’t figure it out.

EM: What do you wish people understood about boys and young men who are drawn to transition?

SAR: Just understand that they’re human beings. They’re not cartoon monsters. Most of them are not out to hurt anyone and most of them wouldn’t hurt anyone. A lot of them are just people who are suffering, and suffering in complicated and nuanced ways that can’t be reduced to a single driving factor. As a general rule I think that people deserve compassion, empathy, and grace.

EM: When did you decide to start writing about your experiences with transition and detransition?

SAR: I’ve been writing my whole life—

EM: What’s the first thing you ever remember writing?

SAR: I loved Disney’s Hercules and in preschool I wrote and drew a picture book about Hercules. I think that was the earliest story I ever wrote. I was writing stories when I was in elementary school. I wrote my first novel—a short novel, it wasn’t very good—in middle school. I’ve written a couple of unpublished books, but most of my life I wasn’t really showing what I wrote to people—or maybe just to one or two people at a time—so it’s been a little weird having my writing out in the world.

EM: Did you write during the time you were identifying as trans, too?

SAR: I was writing then, too, and I was sharing some of what I wrote online. What I was writing then was all fiction, stories, mostly featuring queer and trans characters, but I still wasn’t showing anyone. A lot of it was very intense and dark. I look back now on what I wrote during that time—poetry, short stories, two novels—and I think a lot of my doubts and fears around transition were coming out in my writing. I was processing that way: write it, get it down on the page, get it out of my head.

In terms of writing about my transition and detransition, I wasn’t immediately like, Oh, I’m going to detransition. I realized that maybe I’d rather live as a man, so I tentatively started looking up detransition online and I found the detrans subreddit. That subreddit had a rule on the sidebar that says “Never promote cross-sex hormones” here. Calling HRT [hormone replacement therapy] “cross-sex hormones” is not something you do in the trans community. Those are your hormones, the hormones your body is supposed to have. Just seeing that—as someone who was so deep in that ideology—I had a fear response. I almost clicked out of the page right then and went back to living as trans. But then I said to myself, No, this matters to me. So I didn’t click away.

I spent time reading about other people’s experiences with transition and detransition and I joined the Discord server so I could talk to other detrans people. There I found other people posting their stories. We were all sort of figuring it out. I decided I wanted to share my story, but I didn’t want to show my face, so I wrote it down as I understood it at the time. It got a ton of responses. Then I wrote something else, about the ideology behind transition and how I felt it was both misrepresented by activists and misunderstood by people outside the movement, and got a lot of responses to that, too. Some were positive and some were negative, but I realized that maybe I had insights that were valuable. So I kept writing.

EM: Can you say more about that fear response you felt when you read the words “cross-sex hormones”?

SAR: Yeah, it was a moment of panic, a moment of Oh, this is bad, this is wrongthink, I shouldn’t even be looking at this. Looking at something like that to attack it or hold it in contempt is one thing, but to look at it and consider it? That felt like I was doing something wrong. I think I’ve always had a strong sense of right and wrong. I was someone who always followed the rules. So I had to really push myself to consider these ideas and weigh them on their merits, instead of just dismissing them immediately because it was wrong or immoral or a bad thing to think.

EM: What are you writing these days?

SAR: These days, mostly fiction. When I write fiction it’s because there’s something I’m trying to express that I don’t know how to put into words directly. So I try to approach it from the side, sort of frame it in a narrative so that people can encounter it experientially and think about it for themselves rather than just straightforwardly telling them my opinion. I did this before with a trilogy of pieces using demon worship as an allegory: On the Subject of Child Sacrifice, The Pact Shaming Needs to Stop, and Keep Our Sacrifices Safe. More recently, I did it with a lot more nuance in a piece called On Emory’s Balcony.

That story is about detransition and what it’s like to be trans and to be surrounded by a community of trans people. I like it a lot and I feel like there’s more to say with these characters and themes, so I’ve been trying to expand that and turn it into a novel. I’m not interested in just trashing the trans community. I want to be honest about my experiences and generous where I can be. I hope that when people read my writing, they can feel empathy for these characters who they might find distasteful or unpleasant in real life. I think we could all benefit from being kinder to each other and viewing even people we don’t like as fellow humans and not just ideological enemies.

The stuff I write for fun is mostly fantasy. I’ve been working on a fantasy novel since the start of the year, but it’s super-long and despite being a hundred thousand words in, I don’t even feel close to done. So I’m splitting my attention between that and my new project, which I think I can write in a more reasonable time frame. I love writing. It’s my favorite thing to do, and I’d be doing it even if no one wanted to read my work. I’m really grateful there are people who care about what I have to say, and I hold myself to a high standard because I want to keep writing stuff that’s worth reading.
 
I wouldn't consider that powerleveling.....I consider myself one of those "progressives".
It's only not powerleveling because each one of them doesn't know about the other 3 or 4.

They know that I am pretty liberal socially, but that I've drunkenly questioned trans-specific issues here and there for the past decade, after the party when most people go home and everyone's winding down. Never dropped a "tranny", but I will mention how they are fat and I will not have sex with them.
 
I see so many people who seem terrified of "coming out" to their friends or family as a normal person who doesn't agree with this tranny bullshit, and it doesn't make sense. If these people are actually worth a fuck they won't drop you cause you say something crazy like "boys cannot be girls and girls cannot be men".

And if they do, then you've just gotten rid of some dead weight you didn't need to be carrying.

Seriously it just reeks of people being insecure with a desperate need to be accepted by everyone. Why else would you deny your true feelings to the ones you're supposed to be able to be honest with?

Unsurprisingly this seems to come up most with people who label themselves "progressive" or anything left of center. Which to me just means "I'm still a limp wristed faggot but at least I don't like troons", more often than not.
 
I see so many people who seem terrified of "coming out" to their friends or family as a normal person who doesn't agree with this tranny bullshit, and it doesn't make sense. If these people are actually worth a fuck they won't drop you cause you say something crazy like "boys cannot be girls and girls cannot be men".

And if they do, then you've just gotten rid of some dead weight you didn't need to be carrying.

Seriously it just reeks of people being insecure with a desperate need to be accepted by everyone. Why else would you deny your true feelings to the ones you're supposed to be able to be honest with?

Unsurprisingly this seems to come up most with people who label themselves "progressive" or anything left of center. Which to me just means "I'm still a limp wristed faggot but at least I don't like troons", more often than not.

I can partially understand. I have an older brother who is married to an FtM troon. I'm still in contact with him, but I tread carefully. His IQ, from what I can observe, is continuously dropping the longer he stays in his toxic pseudo-homosexual relationship. He was apparently distraught about it at first, and even (not incorrectly) guessed that my sister-in-law trooning out was related to her autism. But now he whole-heartedly accepts it.

I also hope to adopt my niece from him if things go really south, either that or I hope she goes to one of my other siblings.

I've lost countless friends and associates because I was unwilling to compromise on this issue, even when I treated the subject with kid gloves and was as nice and gentle as possible.

So why do I tread softly in certain situations? Maybe it's because I hope to be able to gently peak them, help turn them around with relatively little drama. Or maybe I'm watching and observing and wondering how badly they fuck their life up before they realize what pretty much anyone with an IQ of room temperature should have already known.

It doesn't matter how reasonable, or cool, or nice your friends or associates are. They're still not immune to neo-Maoist social engineering. It's unbelievable how evil troons are. The level of machiavellianist, psychopathic manipulation they've pulled off just to get normal people to turn their brains off and accept the most retarded of superstitions just to keep the peace, keep social harmony.

What can I say? People are dirty, contemptible cowards. The most "courageous" people out there are either too powerful to truly be afraid of losing anything from challenging the status quo, or don't have very much to lose in the first place.

It's just another one of those things that explains, so eloquently and so poignantly, why so many societies throughout history thought it appropriate to put fags and gender-benders to death, or otherwise punish them severely. Because now, we see them being manipulative little monsters, to the point where there was even a guidebook, intended for fags, on how to be a manipulative fucking monster.

Impressive, the lengths they will go to fuck others for refusing to affirm them every second of the day. Socially engineering entire societies for their own sick, twisted ends. If that's how fruits behave NOW, there's no reason to believe they weren't just as horrible, if not worse, back then. They were, and still are, ungrateful parasites who hate the society they live in no matter how much it affirms them, and do everything possible to undermine them, either to allow for even greater perversion, or even just for shits and giggles. Why allow these borderline sons-of-perdition even the smallest foothold?
 
Last edited:
They hate religions that don't affirm them, these are the same people who would gladly engage in poopy orgies with temple prostitutes on the altar of Baal, or burn their children alive to Molech if they were alive during that time period. Many of these people actually did chase after esoteric religions and cults between the 60s and 80s.
I think this was the fundamental problem with the atheist movement in the late 2000s.Most of the people just hated Christianity because it was mostly teens, and young adults who grew up Christian.Most of the people who were like that didn't really know anything about other religions like islam, or didn't want society to think logically.This is why most of the atheists i know left the movement because it became the "Christian bashing movement." We saw this once the likes of Dawkins started criticizing islam, and gender ideology, that he suddenly became the bad guy.
 
Stuff that may have been said many times before:
- Trans people never film themselves from the waist down because even they know their hips will give it away.
- Why do FtMs always dye their hair? It gives away that they identify as trans or some other gender. They also pick basic trans boy names like Aidan or Ollie.
- Don't go out when you're barely passing and get mad when you're misgendered.
- I've seen trans people who get deadnamed and misgendered and politely corrected the person who did it, but i've also seen people who have had a mental breakdown over being called the wrong name or pronouns.

Two transgender people I've been seeing a lot lately are some FtM who's hair looks like it got stuck in a cotton candy machine and some MtF that is skinny af, doesn't pass (both of them don't) and had his bulge on proud display when he uploaded a GRWM
 
How do atheist transgenders exist? The main crux of transgenderism is that they were "born in the wrong body", which doesn't make any sense unless you are a creationist. How do they justify this to themselves?
Fun fact: a lot of them ten to trend towards half assing a new religion, like neopaganism. If they don't, they have a replacement religion with politics. They just don't think about it.

Or, they do think about it, but... they're not exactly atheist. They're Christians who hate God. They're people who think God and the devil are real, but they remake them in their head and just ramble at one with an angry fist, then hope that the devil is like the parent you never met instead of the bum and horrible person your bitch of a parent who raised you said they were. It's not conscious, and they wouldn't say they believe in it, but you can tell something is there.

why hasn't the autistic community or "neurodiversity" movement also figured it out?

I'm going to rephrase your question for you: "Why haven't these autists who are easily influenced by people they trust developed any sort of self awareness on this issues, even though self awareness isn't what they're famous for?"

You do the math now.

Damn Wallace, good article.
So if religion and conservatism is the stuff you’re against, you’re going to gravitate to the other end of the spectrum.
Pretty much. We need to figure out how to make a non-degenerate religion appealing to more normie leftists. I think progressive churches aren't too bad, but I'm not a Christian so don't quote me. And no one hates different religious sects like others of the same religion, so maybe a new religion entirely needs to be made with a hard moral backing of such. Whatever.

You feel like you’re doing something heroic, like you’re just like the civil rights activists you learned about in history class, acting in accordance with these modern myths.
Perfect way to put it. I can see that in other people I read, and I know it's why some people get into social justice in the first place. Not everyone's a dick, some are just blindly optimistic.

I don’t have an answer—I have theories. For the last few years that I identified as trans, I spent a lot of time trying to ‘solve’ the ideology. It became an obsession for me for a while. I was reading about the ideology of gender—and also about anarchism, because I was friends with a bunch of queer anarchists. I was trying to sort out in my head how all the things I believed could possibly be true at once, and I wasn’t able to solve that. I kept hitting a point where it all just didn’t make sense anymore.
Anarchism is the gift that keeps on giving.

I started feeling like myself again, which I hadn’t in a long time. I felt more of a connection to my body and I thought, Oh, I remember feeling this way. I had sort of found the feeling I had been trying to find with the transition. That thing I had been looking for was there again. So I think being medicated at a young age played a role.
This is something very intense that's hard to talk about. When you're 13, you don't have awareness of the side effects of drugs, and not all doctors have every single pill side effects memorized. A body removal is something a lot of trans people and detrans people talk about: sometimes it's a side effect of medication, sometimes the depersonalization is a subset of autism or anxiety that disconnects your body & mind connection. This guy is semi-lucky in that since it was a drug, he could feel things again without training.

Powerlevel: all meds I take for muh mentals haven't made me feel disconnected from my body. Medication is hard and I think holding off a few more years for antidepression meds would have helped this poor guy - he might not have needed them at all at that age (I find it hard to believe he did) and likely could have developed better coping mechanisms to help himself so that hell, he might not have needed them at all. Some people end up needing them, some don't. It's hard to have both doctors AND patients be aware of this, and hard for patients & parents of patients to advocate for themselves when it's hard to say "hmm I might know better than the doctor", a phrase that many of us associate with psychos.

I said to myself, I don’t think transitioning is ever going to make me happy, it’s not going to make me more genuine or more me. Transitioning is just a thing I did and I can either choose to live as a transwoman or I can detransition and live as a man. If both of those are valid options, I’d rather live as a man.
I think this is a good indicator of how some people trans. Like, everyone has different goals: some want to be sex object/sex god, some want to never be seen as their old selves, and this person, like others, did it just to cure unhappiness and malaise with the body. It's why saying "YWNBARW" won't work on everyone. Focusing on "are you sure that this choice made you happier?" and "has transitioning been a net positive for you?" can be effective questions to people like this.

I felt like they were attached to me, but that they weren’t really me.
Actually having to live with the reality of surgery made me realize I was inhabiting a real human body.
Huge hard hitter. Many troons haven't had experience with surgery before transitioning aside from perhaps wisdom teeth, which are a net positive to be removed most of the time. You can tell from social media posts which trans people hit the fucking wall of thought when they have surgery and go either more depressed or more crazy.

: Just understand that they’re human beings. They’re not cartoon monsters. Most of them are not out to hurt anyone and most of them wouldn’t hurt anyone. A lot of them are just people who are suffering, and suffering in complicated and nuanced ways that can’t be reduced to a single driving factor. As a general rule I think that people deserve compassion, empathy, and grace.
I'm going to say something that might be controversial and fucking agree with him (to an extent). I'd say most trans people are just humans who are hurting in ways they don't understand and are trying to use transitioning as a solution since it worked out "well" for others on the surface, or gave them something to fight for or a community to be with.

Most crazies with twitter accounts and threads are what we document on Kiwi Farms. Of course they're going to be batshit: we don't pay attention to non-batshit people on the farms (and that's a good thing). It's just good to remember to approach gently, then wait to see if they become obnoxious troon or are just someone who's more mellow than you realize.

And of course, if they're an obnoxious as fuck troon and come in as an obnoxious troon, go HAM.

is not something you do in the trans community. Those are your hormones, the hormones your body is supposed to have. Just seeing that—as someone who was so deep in that ideology—I had a fear response. I almost clicked out of the page right then and went back to living as trans. But then I said to myself, No, this matters to me. So I didn’t click away.
Kickass. Most trans people don't share the same strength. Some do and can slowly climb out. Some don't, and maybe it will come, and maybe it won't.

but I realized that maybe I had insights that were valuable. So I kept writing.
Undervaluing yourself always sucks. I'm glad he took the courage and got positive feedback.

I want to be honest about my experiences and generous where I can be. I hope that when people read my writing, they can feel empathy for these characters who they might find distasteful or unpleasant in real life. I think we could all benefit from being kinder to each other and viewing even people we don’t like as fellow humans and not just ideological enemies.
I hope he does well and gets good positive feedback. I hope people enjoy his characters and his writing, talking about or not talking about transitioning. He's a homie. Sky's the limit, good luck man.

Seriously it just reeks of people being insecure with a desperate need to be accepted by everyone. Why else would you deny your true feelings to the ones you're supposed to be able to be honest with?
Because some people are fucking vindictive enough that if you say "I don't like troons" you end up with a pink slip because you are troon racists. Or will post about you to facebook and get an army of troons to harass you, dox you, and annoy you for "Social Justice". Maybe it's not the person you can be honest with, maybe they're a retard and talk about it to someone else who then does it.

There's also the factor that if you love someone and you two have a disagreement you KNOW they would hate, but get along great aside from something that doesn't matter much to your life, you clam up because who cares. Sometimes a relationship is more meaningful than a fringe issue.

Lastly, some of these people depend on others to get like, food and shit. If you're in a rough situation and your family is helping you out, cutting them off from giving help because men in dresses sucks. At least let them do it after they're through a rougher patch.

Why do FtMs always dye their hair? It gives away that they identify as trans or some other gender. They also pick basic trans boy names like Aidan or Ollie.
It's a fashion statement. It gives them the chance to experiment and be unique, and signifies they belong to a group of unique thinkers that are different (and they feel free to dye their hair rather than conform because people around them now dye their hair).

The latter is because FtMs name themselves popular baby boy names on the charts, the same names they'd think to give a boy child, a boy dog, a boy character in a book, etc.. It's what is trendy with people of their generation. You see MtFs do so too, but they're also more likely to skinwalk or go hard fantasy.

-Don't go out when you're barely passing and get mad when you're misgendered.
This assumes they don't want to get into a fight irl and feel better by yelling at the "aggressor" and putting said aggressor in their place. But then they crumple and go into "woe is meeee" mode if it doesn't work, geting pity points instead.

- I've seen trans people who get deadnamed and misgendered and politely corrected the person who did it, but i've also seen people who have had a mental breakdown over being called the wrong name or pronouns.
Some know they just won't be taken seriously. They/thems are usually theythemers with friends or online only because they know they aren't ever going to obtain the gender neutral pronouns they seek. Others are more patient and less mentally fragile, so they just correct others and move on.

Meanwhile, there's people with that linebacker shoulders and manhands being super confused on why people don't tell him he a wahmen by just his dress and make up that day. He might be genuine face blind: he might only see gender as a set of props. He might be a whiny demanding asshole who just hates when his delusions are broken and people won't play ball with him. He might tie a huge amount of meaning to an article of speech you don't and the weight he assigns to it in his head is absolutely crushing when it goes wrong. But why would anyone assign stuff like that so much meaning? Two words: mental illness. And mental illness doesn't make sense all the time. Replace HE with SHE for FtM troons.

doesn't pass (both of them don't) and had his bulge on proud display when he uploaded a GRWM
He is likely enjoying it. It could either be him enjoying making others uncomfortable as a sexual domination display or he might enjoy the embarrassment in an embarrassment fetish display. Either way, sexual pervert.
 
Back