Our TD member Demented One is living proof that men can have periods.
Our TD member Demented One is living proof that men can have periods.
It will never be scientifically proven. Someone with a bit of common sense will write a paper saying that. It will go to the peers to be reviewed who will take guidance from discussed industry (Faggots and Shiftahs Inc) who will inform them that the starting point for any paper on this subject is that people born as men can give birth. The paper will be dismissed and the academic is kicked to the curb to work as an ajarn in bumfuck isaan.
Jaysus that's a pretty blatant attempt to ram your tongue up his arse.Originally Posted by TuskegeeBen
Anyways you could start by dropping the superfluous and random smiles, punctuation and text highlights.
Don't fret, you were lucky. Few years back the crunts moved my bike a couple of metres into the red zone, photographed and whisked it away. The local mosai lads were in hysterics telling me through my gf what happened.
't was the guards time of the month.
From the UK Telegraph. Written by a woman of all things.
That’s it: my daughter’s getting home-schooled. It’s either that or risk having a 7 year-old earnestly assure me at pick-up time that “boys have periods too, you know.” And now that Brighton & Hove City Council have officially approved plans to teach children that “all genders” can menstruate, it won’t be long until British kids are being taught that girls have testes, Paris is the capital of Romania – and 2 + 2 = 5.
It’s a victory for transgender rights campaigners, but also for Dr Seuss, who may as well be running the show for all the sense our green-eggs-and-ham world now makes. And don’t get me wrong, I’m all for menstruation being inclusive (you can have it chaps, be my guest) but there’s a teensy-weensy problem here called ‘biology’. And I know all that’s semantics and we’re living in an emotion-governed universe where even the leader of the free world shows a total disdain for facts, but they sort of do matter. And schools are the one place you’d hope would understand that.
When I wrote about the hijacking of childhood by the trans lobby last month – and lamented the knee-jerk reactions of an education system too scared to question its agenda – the reader response was the greatest and most impassioned I’ve had in thirteen years at this paper. The letters and emails came from men and women young and old, gay, straight and trans – and almost all zoomed in on the following quote from Dr Godfrey-Faussett.
Are we encouraging our children to question biological truths? CREDIT: NA/GETTY
Reacting to the revelation that in one British school where a whopping 17 pupils were changing gender almost all had turned out to be autistic, the British Chartered Psychologist described what was going on as “state-sanctioned child abuse.”
It’s worth noting that not one of the Telegraph readers who wrote to me dismissed this as hyperbole. Not even those who admitted to having spent “a lifetime trapped in the wrong body” and were “grateful” for the medical advances that meant people no longer had to. Because much as the trans lobby likes to muddy the argument by declaring us all ‘transphobic’, that simply isn’t true.
Let people decide what’s right for them when they’re adults, was the general consensus. And I’d hope most fair-minded people would understand that the whole different strokes conversation does need to be had with kids. Certainly we’d all agree with the Royal College of Paediatricians and Child Health’s statement that “it’s helpful to children to learn the meaning of terms such as lesbian, gay and bisexual.” But at the right time.
Every parent knows how crucial timing is. And if anyone tries to tell me that primary school children are of sound and rational mind I shall point them in the direction of my daughter, who currently identifies so vehemently with a superheroine ladybird named Ladybug that she’d have the vile synthentic, highly flammable red and black-spotted onesie she refuses to take off surgically adhered to her body given half a chance.
Will she still be wearing that onesie next month though? Next week would be pushing it. But we’re not allowed to talk about fads. Fads are belittling to these fiercely progressive little humans whose innate, superior knowledge can’t be questioned.
Anna Friel playing the mother of a transgender child in Butterfly which was on earlier this yearCREDIT: ITV/ITV
For Dr Godfrey-Faussett, who has worked extensively with children in schools and knows how forcibly the trans narrative is being pushed (from the reading of books like Michael Hall’s ‘Red: A Crayon’s Story’, about a blue crayon mistakenly labelled red who is suffering an identity crisis, and Sara Savage’s Are You A Boy Or Are You A Girl to primary school children to the instant dismissal of teachers accidentally using the ‘wrong’ pronoun with a child suffering from gender dysphoria) it’s that lack of any questioning that’s most dangerous.
Teachers certainly aren’t allowed to question, since that’s seen as making a judgment, and in her psychological and counselling field, this stance has been taken still further: “A lot of the accredited bodies are recommendations to us as mental health practitioners. So if an individual comes to us with questions about their sexuality or gender, we are strongly advised to affirm it as opposed to help them question or explore what may be underlying it. This in my opinion challenges what I see as at the heart of therapy.”
Children, on the other hand, are being encouraged to question everything, from their very essence to their physical shape and, now, even the workings of their bodies. But telling children that boys can menstruate is not education, it’s mythinformation, pure and simple.
^ If you think this horse shit is the way to go by all means let your son stick tampons up his arse.
some girls get it as early as 9. The problem (or difficulty) with getting it that early is that the girl's body is turning into a woman's, but her mind is still that of a child.
I've a friend who had it at 10 y.o. She developed early (boobs, butt) and in childhood, was tall for her age. But then, she stopped growing taller after she got her menses - she's now shorter than me and she's below 5 feet. I've other classmates who were the same - had menses & developed early, but then they stopped growing in high school. Now, I'm taller than them (they were taller than me in grade school).
As to the OP - yeah, that's strange. Do they allow hormone injections or trans operations/ treatments in grade school? I support trans and LGBTQ ppl, but I think they should reach the age of majority first before undergoing hormone treatments. But yeah, a FtoM trans person could still get periods.
Reminds me of the identical twins who were born male, but now, one is a trans woman and the other is still male. Age old question of nature or nurture ... Forgot their names, will google...
After googling, it's Nicole and Jonas Maines.
https://abcnews.go.com/US/im-nicole-...ry?id=34526553
My bad Katie. I had always assumed that menstruation happened in early teens. Maybe girls are developing earlier in the 21st century?
The op seemed to indicate that genetic males would be allowed to choose their gender at primary school. I disagree on the basis that any gender issues need to be identified as early as possible and dealt with professionally.
This seems to be encouraging change on a whim at too early an age, just in order to satisfy some PC agenda.
Trans issues are already a difficult area without making it fashionable for immature minds.
I do realise I am an old fart, yes.
There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)