Since it got removed from Medium. From 2018 and 2021:
This article was originally published on Medium in August 2018.
In January 2021, nearly three years after being published, it was
removed from Medium as ‘hate speech’. As this is effectively a
republishing, I’ve taken the liberty of editing some sections for
clarity and updating the original text.
Let me set the stage
for you. It is the recent Anchorage municipal elections. It is cold, it
is chilly, it’s Anchorage, and there are municipal propositions: one of
them is about local cops being able to issue parking tickets. There’s
also Proposition 1 (Prop 1), which attracted $900,000 in spending,
dwarfing every other election by a country mile.
What’s Proposition 1?
Prop
1 was put forward by an organization called ‘Alaska Family Action’, and
the aim of Prop 1 was to make bathrooms, once again, sex-segregated
instead of being based on self-declared gender identity. Anchorage’s
bathrooms had been segregated by gender identity since 2015. The
left-leaning media reacted in cacophony against this new ‘bathroom
bill’, and hundreds of thousands of dollars from reasonable people
flowed into Anchorage to defeat a municipal ordinance proposal that
would harm trans people. Common sense and reason won, and the liberal
project continued, with the rights of transgender people to use the
bathroom, re-affirmed.
Except those ‘reasonable people’ don’t exist. Not in any great number.
See,
after spending a very long weekend combing through campaign filings
from both Alaska Family Action and ‘Fairness for All — Vote No on Prop
1’, it became clear that the vast amounts of money spent on the election
by Fairness For All didn’t come from normal, ordinary Americans. Even
though transgender people are supposedly a persecuted minority that need
civil rights, Vote No on Prop 1 out spent and out raised Alaska Family
Action by around $710,000. In total, Vote No had $828,000 at its
disposal. Its campaign filings reveal that a large majority of this
money came from a set of lobbying groups almost from central casting:
The Human Rights Campaign (HRC), Freedom for All Americans (FFAA),
Planned Parenthood (PP), and the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU).
Large, federally based organizations poured money and staff into a small
municipal election, all to fight ‘bathroom bills’. They flew in
representatives from the National Center of Transgender Equality to help
with ‘story telling’, and The Transgender Law Center provided
consulting services. They made sure volunteers were well fed — ACLU
makes many filings throughout for providing catering at events for
volunteers. FFAA paid for a slick website, and a subscription to
campaigning software Blue State Digital. A local Anchorage ad agency was
hired and paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to produce campaign
material. Vote No spent as much on campaigning collateral as Alaska
Family Action did on their whole campaign, and even more than that on TV
ad buys. While there were many small donors, the clear majority of the
money came from large organizations, such as Planned Parenthood and the
Human Rights Campaign, among others who also provided the Vote No access
to their mailing lists and campaign databases, which is also visible in
their campaign filings.
Despite outspending their opponent 8 to
1, carpeting Anchorage in television ads, mailers, and phone calls, and
the support of federal level political organizations, the result was
only 5% in Vote No’s favor. This is indicative of that Vote No bought an
election — no one outspent that heavily should even dream of getting
within a 5% margin yet Vote Yes got within striking distance having
spent an eighth of the money. This came as a surprise to me. I have seen
a lot of elections and votes. This was one of the oddest. Because one
of the catch-cries of the trans movement is that they are the most
ignored and the most marginalized group in America, yet can outspend its
electoral opponents by orders of magnitude. That doesn’t sound like the
most marginalized group in America. I wouldn’t think the most
marginalized group in America would have a well-funded lobby group
behind them. One capable of outspending the Christian Right on an 8–1
basis. Something doesn’t add up.
I mean, all this money
attention doesn’t make sense if transgender people are the most
oppressed minority in all America. Look at the North Carolina ‘bathroom
bill’, H.B 2. It was international news. How many other state bills
become international news? We watched on TV as celebrities said they
would no longer come to the state and sports teams protested. Bruce
Springsteen said he wouldn’t play there. Every boycott by some famous
liberal was greeted with aplomb. There was a national shaming of the
state, on the massive stage that is the mainstream news cycle. Left
unmentioned by that same mainstream news were the changes to North
Carolina employment laws also in the same bill that negatively impacted
working-class Americans, or the fact some of the outcry was defining sex
under North Carolina law as “the physical condition of being male or female, which is stated on a person’s birth certificate”.
Bruce Springsteen didn’t refuse to play in the state based on
employment law changes. When the ‘bathroom bill’ sections were removed
in 2017, the employment sections did not change. There was a collective
shaking of heads, a throwing up of hands, a celebration of
transgenderism’s victory and the bill disappeared from the national
conversation. Class analysis dies in the face of identity politics.
Transgenderism,
as a movement, has experienced a rapid rise compared to any other civil
rights movement. Sex change surgery only went beyond experiments or the
unfulfilled whims of Roman Emperors until the 1950s, a decade that
brought us the term ‘transsexualism’ courtesy of those that treated
Christine Jorgensen, who was still unable to marry men because their
legal sex was still listed as male despite their sex reassignment
surgery. In that time, it has gone from a freakshow curiosity and the
surgical treatment for the homosexuals (who were popularly believed,
into the 1960s to be a sort of ‘third sex’, and often still are outside
of a Western context), to America’s most pressing civil rights movement,
with hundreds of millions of dollars being poured into the issue across
the fifty states.
By contrast, other civil rights movements have
not enjoyed such a rapid rise. Women, oppressed since the creation of
private property, have endured patriarchy for thousands of years. It
took a hundred years for the United States to abolish slavery, and
another hundred to abolish segregation. It seems it will take another
hundred for people to abolish what Colin Kaepernick kneels over.
Homosexuals have been increasingly marginalized in Western society since
late antiquity and after the Stonewall riots and the collective
awakening in the 60s and 70s, have waged a 50-year long fight for equal
rights — one that has not yet been won, as homosexuals have no federal
civil rights protections. Yet transgenderism, a term itself coined
barely twenty years ago, and included in ‘LGBT’ since only the mid-90s
has money to burn and victories seem to come easily .
Does this
add up to you? I can’t remember everyone boycotting Missouri over
Ferguson. All I can think of is possibly the revocation of Super Bowl
XXVII in Arizona over Martin Luther King Day. Hell, no celebrity is
refusing to play states that are attempting to criminalize abortion. How
are transgender people the most oppressed minority in America, again?
Why the sudden focus on this issue? I decided to find out, and doing
that in modern America requires following the money.
The trans
movement, separate to the gay and lesbian movement, has built itself an
entire political infrastructure over the past ten years, mostly through
cannibalizing gay and lesbian organizations and altering their original
purpose, leaving lesbian and gay people behind in the process at best,
or deriding them as outdated, outmoded, and needing to ‘get over their
genital fetish’ at worst. ‘LGB’ has morphed into ‘LGBTQI+’. One Canadian
school district managed to morph the ‘LGB’ acronym into
‘LGBTQITTIPASFDASFAARP’ (or something similar) which led to a healthy
round of internet mockery. The transgender movement is not marginalized
voices finally being heard; it is a case of large amounts of money being
heard - because these changes weren’t possible without an enormous
influx of cold hard cash. According to Funders for LGBTQ Issues (FFLI),
funding specifically earmarked for transgender causes began rapidly
increasing in 2012; by 2016 it outstripped the ring-fenced funding for
gays, lesbians and bisexuals combined (a total of $13.2m), at a cool $22
million total in funding, specifically earmarked for transgender causes
only. That’s over 10% of the total LGBTQI funding tracked by Funders in
2016, which is $202m total.
By 2017, the latest data from Funders For LGBTQ Issues(FFLI) shows that that trend continues, as we can see in their 2017 Tracking Report.
The amount of money in total given internationally to LGBTQ issues
increased to $183 million, excluding donations and grants for the Pulse
nightclub shooting. The top donors are still organizations like Arcus
Foundation, Ford Foundation, Gilead Sciences, the Gill Foundation, and
the Open Society Foundations. Gay men received 6% of ring-fenced funding
specifically for them, and lesbians 3%. Transgender funding increased
from $22.4 million dollars to $32 million dollars, a huge
increase — almost a fifth of all LGBTQ funding is specifically
ring-fenced for transgender issues, which is highly disproportionate to
their actual numbers in the LGBT community. Domestically, the numbers
look worse for lesbians — in terms of domestic funding from these
organizations, lesbian funding decreased from $3 million to $2.3
million, receiving only 2% of ring-fenced funding, while gay men had an
increase from $5.9 million to $8.2 million, from 4% to 6% of ring-fenced
funding. But both are dwarfed by transgender funding, which increased
from $16 million to $22.5 million spent domestically.
That
the money comes from a wide range of philanthropists: names such as
George Soros’ Open Society Foundation, Arcus (run by gay Stryker Corp
heir Jon Stryker) and Tides come as little surprise to anyone following
money on the center left of politics. But other names stand out:
Jennifer Pritzker, (formerly Col. James Pritzker) who came out as a
trans woman in 2013, donates millions of dollars through their Tawani
Foundation. Pritzker outside of transgender causes, is a far-right
Republican and supported Trump in the 2016 and 2020 elections. This has
come as specifically earmarked funding for gays and lesbians has
declined in the same period — philanthropic funding for lesbians was a
not-so-cool $4 million in 2016, despite being a far larger population
than transgender people.
The other problem is much of this funding
is simply a donation to organizations who campaign for a ‘broad’
variety of issues. 39% of funding goes towards ‘Advocacy’— given the
huge focus of LGBTQI+ organizations on transgender issues, they are
likely getting a more disproportionate slice of the pie than the figures
show. As funding specifically for gay men and lesbian women has
stagnated or declined in the same period, transgender funding has
increased year on year, from $3m in 2010 to $22m in 2016 to $32 million
in 2017.
But some gay and lesbian critics contend that there has been too much focus on the T. John Aravosis wrote a Salon article in 2007 entitled ‘How Did The T get in LGBT?’, criticizing
the decision to refuse a version of the Employment Non-Discrimination
Act that didn’t include gender identity by LGBTQ+ lobbying groups. That
version of the bill in 2007 had the chance to pass in a Democratic
majority Hill — it died in the Senate because of the gender identity
provisions. As of 2021, no similar bill has been passed and millions of
gay and lesbian Americans do not have federal civil rights protections.
Aravosis is confused: he does not know why the transgendered have to be
included the gay and lesbian movement as he believes that gender
identity and sexuality are two very different things.
If
we are to look at the state of other things today, this confusion over
the ‘T’ has turned into a clearly articulated critique, a critique whose
articulators are often derided as ‘radical exclusionary gays’, or more
popularly, ‘Trans-Exclusionary-Radical Feminists’. This argument has
turned violent. In 2018, a young lesbian in a gay bar was removed and assaulted for being a ‘TERF’.
Sometimes, the application of that deadly-four-letter acronym, which
often serves as a scarlet letter in the ‘queer community’, the relabeled
version of ‘gays and lesbians’, can simply come from a lesbian stating
she is not into penises. The harsh way these critics are treated — and
turned on for having an opinion that often amounts to ‘lesbians don’t
like penis’ is ridiculous. This insane level of criticism is not some
asshole in a gay bar or on trans activists on Twitter either, but is
often instead published by large media outlets, supported by political
and civil society infrastructure of the left. That reaction to
criticism, combined with the large amounts of money flowing to the
transgender cause, is a symptom of a political disease.
That
political disease is astroturf. The transgender movement promotes
becoming your authentic self, whilst being inauthentic itself. Let me
explain this to you.
To figure this out, we’ll look at a few lobby groups.
For our first example, let’s look at the organization Global Action For Trans Equality (GATE).
You
might not have heard of it, but it is the prototypical example of trans
astroturf. I picked it out of a Funders For LGBTQI Issues list. It is a
small organization, yet despite it’s size, it somehow made a
presentation to the UN. Odd. It also didn’t think to conceal its donors
in its IRS 990 forms. So, I combed through them. Their Wikipedia page
tells me it’s executive director is Mauro Cabral, a trans and intersex
activist, who was a signatory to the Yogyakarta Principles. Sounds
totally organic and not artificial. Its mission is, supposedly,
“GATE’s
mission is to work internationally on gender identity, gender
expression, and bodily issues by defending human rights, making
available critical knowledge, and supporting political organizing
worldwide. GATE envisions a world free of human rights violations based
on gender identity, gender expression and bodily diversity, and
transformed by the critical inclusion of those historically marginalized
on those grounds. We will contribute to building powerful, expert and
well-resourced political movements, able to have meaningful
participation in global processes and to transform the landscape of
socioeconomic justice worldwide.”
The Wikipedia
page also tells me that the organization was founded in 2009. The
Wikipedia citations for both that, and the mission statement lead to
dead links. A quick perusal of the GATE IRS 990 forms reveals a focus
around ‘depathologization’, which it describes as:
“Coordinating
an international initiative focused on the ICD-11 revision and reform,
supporting processes of legal depathologization and advocating for the
identification of pathologization as a ground for human rights
violations”
What this translates to, in other
words, is a goal of considering gender dysphoria no longer a mental
illness — and for considering gender dysphoria a mental illness as a
ground for violating a trans person’s human rights. This could mean that
with no diagnosis - gender dysphoria is no longer medical condition,
remember, doctors cannot be sued for malpractice for prescribing
transition. Do you see an issue with that? Other focuses of GATE include
“Movement building”, which is described in its 2015 IRS 990 form.
“MOVEMENT
BUILDING — ADVOCATING FOR TRANS, GENDER DIVERSE AND INTERSEX ACCESS TO
AVAILABLE FUNDING AND FOR THE CREATION OF NEW FUNDING SOURCES” [sic]
The
goal: making funding available to trans people in order to achieve
these goals. Where does that money come from? Who are the funding
sources? How will they be created? The 2015 form also mentions aiding in
international HIV response. But crucially, I have saved the best for
last. GATE betrays its actual astroturf nature with this admission in
its 2015 IRS 990.
“Global Action for Trans
Equality INC does not have program service activity to report on for
2015 due to receipt of its first round of funding into the organization
mid-December”.
The organization was not founded
in 2009 like the Wikipedia page would like to tell us. The earliest
publications on its website date to 2013. It received its first round of
funding in 2015, and the organization was set up that year, according
to its tax returns. Where did that money come from? Its 2016 IRS 990
illuminates us. Unlike many organizations I investigated, GATE did not
bother hiding who its primary donors are on its publicly available IRS
forms. On its website(which is literally transactivists.org), it proudly
states it is sponsored by two large philanthropic organizations: The
Open Society Foundations, and The Arcus Foundation.
Open Society
donated $523,000 to GATE, and Arcus $130,000. This was followed up by a
grant of $150,000 by the Fidelity Charitable Trust, which often handles
anonymous charitable donations for people of largesse. It then received a
$103,000 grant from the US State Department during the Obama
administration.
Does this sound like an innocuous, grassroots
organization to you — or is there an astroturf rat abroad the GATE ship?
I smell the astroturf rat. It stinks, so I’m surprised you can’t smell
it. GATE offers a raft of publications for the keen reader, including
its ‘Joint Trans Language Submission to UN Independent Expert SOGI.’
(SOGI: Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity). An astroturf group,
presenting evidence to the UN, purporting itself to be representative of
the wider community, is not ‘activism’. But it’s done in the name of
the LGBTQI+ community. Those endless articles and research? Another
marker of astroturf. By the way — you will see the names ‘Open Society’
and ‘Arcus’ repeatedly throughout the entire article. Why? Because GATE
isn’t the only organization they fund. Their tentacles are everywhere.
Another example is the National Center For Transgender Equality,
with its widely-cited US Transgender Survey. But the NCTE isn’t exactly
a grassroots organization either. Founded by Mara Keisling, a trans
woman, in 2003, Keisling’s biography on the website specifically states
it was founded to provide a “professional activist presence in Washington for transgender people”
and was started with the aid of the National Gay and Lesbian Task
Force. Keisling herself became an activist after transitioning in her
early 40s, after working in social marketing and public opinion
research, and is the child of Bill Keisling, who is a former chief of
staff to former Pennsylvania governor William Scranton. Keisling’s
biography also credits Keisling with leading a coalition of ‘400 LGBT
rights organizations’, called ‘United ENDA’, which prominent transgender
activist Dana Beyer, interviewed in the Washington Blade, credited with making sure “there have been with few exceptions […] no instances of any gay activism or legislation that did not include trans people.”
Why is a bad thing for gay and lesbian people to organize without trans
people? They’re two distinct demographics.The biography then goes on to
outline NCTE’s more recent work: the US Transgender Survey, which is
forming the basis of transgender policy around the world, and then lists
her media appearances. It is notable that NCTE recently face
allegations of racism, outlined in Jezebel,
stating that the organization had a ‘culture of racism’ and fought the
unionization of employees. Class analysis always wilts when faced with
identity politics, it seems.
Let’s drill further into the
NCTE, shall we? Looking through the NCTE’s 2016 tax return, we find that
it received a total of $1,066,962 in contributions and grants, and a
similar number for the 2015 financial year. It paid $897k of that in
salaries, and $335k in ‘other expenses’ leaving the organization $175k
in debt. It gave the IRS the following mission statement
“THE
NATIONAL CENTER FOR TRANSGENDER EQUALITY IS A NATIONAL SOCIAL JUSTICE
ORGANIZATION DEVOTED TO ENDING DISCRIMINATION AND VIOLENCE AGAINST
TRANSGENDER PEOPLE THROUGH EDUCATION AND ADVOCACY ON NATIONAL ISSUES OF
IMPORTANCE TO TRANSGENDER PEOPLE.” [sic]
It describes its survey to the IRS with the following:
“SURVEY:
THE U.S. TRANS SURVEY IS THE NEW NAME OF THE LARGEST SURVEY EVER
DEVOTED TO THE LIVES AND EXPERIENCES OF TRANSGENDER PEOPLE. THE USTS IS A
SURVEY FOR ALL TRANSGENDER IDENTITIES, INCLUDING TRANSGENDER,
GENDERQUEER, AND NON-BINARY PEOPLE, AND WILL BE THE LARGEST AND MOST
DIVERSE TRANSGENDER SAMPLE TO DATE. THE USTS IS OUR COMMUNITY’S SURVEY:
THE USTS DATA SET AND RESULTS WILL BE AVAILABLE TO COMMUNITY ADVOCATES,
ORGANIZATIONS, AND RESEARCHERS FOR YEARS TO COME.” [sic]
The
IRS form lets us know how much that survey cost — $318,154. It also let
us know that nearly a third of the NCTE funding went on two executive
director salaries, those salaries being of Keisling and Lisa Motett,
both of whom are paid six-figure salaries. No contributors are listed on
their tax returns for financial years dating back to 2014, but it
received $711,000 from ‘foundations’ in financial year 2015. Why cover
up donors who are supposedly donating to a human rights cause?
It takes looking at the lauded NCTE survey,
the National Transgender Discrimination Survey(NTDS) which is
downloadable from their website, to put the puzzle pieces together over
where their funding comes from. While the largest share of funding came
from an ‘anonymous donor’, the rest are standard names: The Arcus
Foundation, the Gill Foundation, the Human Rights Campaign, and the
Tides Foundation among others. The survey has become one of the most
cited trans studies in the world. It is regurgitated to politicians by
professional activists, forms the basis for governmental and health
policy, has its stats posted in Twitter arguments, and is regarded as
sacrosanct among the trans community.
Except the
survey, despite its six figure costs, contains numerous methodological
flaws. It is a survey where the sample was built on self-selection. The
sample isn’t random. Amusingly, the survey, which was run online, had as
its first question ‘have you already taken this survey before?’, and
warned that taking the survey repeatedly would not increase the number
of entries into a prize draw (you can view a screenshot here).
That meant the survey could have been taken over and over again by the
same person. It was also meant to provide US-based statistics, but had
no restrictions on of which country the survey could be taken from.
That’s not a valid dataset. That’s not even going to pass an
undergraduate statistics course. Supposedly NCTE cleaned the dataset,
but I am not sure how you can clean a survey with such flaws. It should
only serve as an indicator for further research at best, not a bible or a
reason to bring about legislative change. It brings into question every
statistic in the survey. Other criticisms were that it tried leading participants into a particular response.
It
is an issue because the survey has gone on to shape public policy and
be cited by numerous other organizations. The survey, which is
incredibly flawed, has been cited numerous times by other associated
transgender lobby organizations — the Human Rights Campaign, the
Transgender Law Center, the National LGBTQ Task Force, a litany of other
lobby groups and the Democratic Party, all groups that use its
statistics as crucial evidence for their argument that transgender
people are the most oppressed minority in America. Despite its
methodological flaws, it was published, and proudly sponsored and cited
by a number of corporate and philanthropic foundations. This was also
used by groups funded by these organizations as electioneering material,
and for lobbying purposes — to advance an agenda.
But if the survey is flawed as it is, why not try and find better
statistics? And why use bad statistics to advance an agenda? And this is
not the only example of bad transgender statistics. After all this is
not the only statistical error that is commonly cited. For example, you
may read that trans women are more likely be assaulted in a men’s
prison. or example, you may read that trans women are more likely be
assaulted in a men’s prison. This comes from a 2007 California study,
which used a convenience sample of transgender women in California’s
prison system, and then compared that convenience sample to a sample of
the general prison population, which is to put it mildly, is um, not
something you should do.
There are plenty of astroturf groups to tell you about, so I’ll tell you about some more. The National Centre for Lesbian Rights (NCLR)
was one of the biggest receivers of philanthropic funding in 2016,
receiving $2.6m. Displayed prominently on the NCLR website is its legal
director, who now identifies as a man (Shannon Minter), and a pledge
towards transgender service members. In fact, outside of the name, I saw
nothing specifically lesbian when I loaded up the webpage. I even tried
using ‘Ctrl-F’ which showed me one total mention of ‘lesbian’ on the
entire homepage that wasn’t part of the name of the organization.
According to its 2016 IRS 990, it received $4.6m in grants. It spent
most of that on salaries and wages. The NCLR annual report has no donors
listed, leaving their identities unknown. Given that the supposed
‘National Center For Lesbian Rights’ mentions lesbians once on its
entire page, and not at all in its subsections, but has three different
sections for transgender legal cases, the phrase ‘lesbian erasure’ and
the word ‘subverted’ come to mind. Perhaps that is needlessly
suspicious?
Maybe not. The NCLR organized its first
ever boycott in the history of the organization, of the Michigan Womyn’s
Festival (or Michfest), a musical festival which made clear it was for
people with female anatomy only and excluded transgender women. After
criticism from a range of lesbian sources, it backed down. But Michfest bowed to the pressure, and unable to continue, now no longer exists.
NCLR is not the only national gay and lesbian organization that seems to have forgotten the ‘gay and lesbian’ part. GLAAD, which has been criticized for lacking members born and socialized as female, no longer stands for ‘Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation’. It’s
just ‘GLAAD’ now, an acronym that stands for absolutely nothing, which
is not good imagery. This removal of meaning is to be more inclusive. If
we look through GLAAD’s Annual Report,
which opens to a photo of its president and CEO, Sarah Kate Ellis,
staring directly into the camera like a blonde, well-coiffed Ted Bundy
(it’s a really bad photo), it thanks its foundation funders, which
include the Tawani Foundation, Arcus, and a collection of Silicon Valley
companies, such as Google, Salesforce, and Comcast. These are all the
same or similar groups and corporates funding every other LGBTQI+
organization — like our astroturf friends GATE and NCTE. That’s a far
cry from the anti-AIDS campaigners of 1985 that scrabbled around for
change under the sofa while going to their third funeral in a week. The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force is now the National LGBTQ Task Force. The
National LGBTQ Task Force has been criticized for ignoring lesbian
issues by lesbian commentators, including conferences with only few or
no lesbian events — like the NCLR.
I decided to verify this and looked at their 2018 Creating Change conference schedule.
Out of hundreds of events, there are a total of four events for lesbian
women, which consist of a session on age, ‘femmes, studs and stems’
(terms used by the black lesbian community), the lesbian caucus, and I
quote directly, ‘Sexversations, Pussy Politics and Top/Bottom/Switch
Culture’. The conference has four lesbian events (perhaps lesbians only
have four concerns, including pussy politics?), but twenty on the topic
of ‘sexual freedom’, including both a beginners and an advanced course
on ‘Polyamory/Nonmonogamy’, a course on ‘Sex Positive Trans Sex’, the
essential ‘Kink 101: Let’s Get Visual’, and ‘A place for polyamorous/non-monogamous communities in the LGBTIQA movement”
(which doesn’t seem to discriminate against the heterosexual polygamist
going by the description), nine sessions for ‘Transgender Justice’
alone, seven for bisexuals, and eleven for self-care (including on how
to deal with Donald Trump being president), and ‘activism for
introverts’.
The Task Force didn’t give its donors away in
its tax returns, but its annual report tells me it received donations in
the hundreds of thousands from the Arcus Foundation, the Ford
Foundation, the Evelyn and Walter Hass Jr. Fund, followed by Horizons,
Marguerite Casey, the NoVo Foundation, as well as from two anonymous
foundations. It tells us those anonymous donors donated more than
$100,000 — by how much is an exercise left to the reader. The annual
report also thanks its corporate partners, which include the liquor
company Bacardi, pharmaceutical company Gilead Sciences (which
manufactures PrEP drug, Truvada), a gaggle of banks, cable channels or
providers as well as Hilton Hotels. With such large donations, that
would clearly influence the Task Force’s policy direction — so why don’t
we know about who they are? If the Task Force wants to represent a
community, it needs to be honest with that community.
But it’s not the only organization that changed its name and direction almost overnight. The Gay-Straight Alliance is now the ‘Gender and Sexuality Alliance’. To be more inclusive. Even the Washington D.C police department, bastion of liberalism, even changed the ‘Gay and Lesbian Liaison Unit’ to the ‘Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Liaison Unit’.
Or
take famous volunteer organizations like PFLAG, which used to stand for
Parents and Friends of Lesbians And Gays, but is now just ‘PFLAG’ to be
‘inclusive’. It’s 2018 financial statement
claims 400 chapters and 200,000 members and supporters (that’s 500
members per chapter). But it’s 2015 report said the same thing, while
saying it had added new chapters. In 2014, PFLAG reported 385 chapters
across the country. In 2009, it reported approximately 500 ‘affiliates’.
This is the same in their 2010 financial statements, and 2011, 2012 and
as far back as 2007. The statement about affiliates disappears in their
2013 financial statement, and instead PFLAG now has ‘400 chapters’.
Are
affiliates the same as chapters? Did PFLAG lose members overnight, and
are they masking a slow decline? To be honest, trying to get numbers on
how many chapters there are is actually quite difficult. I am told there
are affiliates, chapters, all sorts. But the numbers seem to have
declined over the past ten years, as PFLAG has striven to become more
‘inclusive’.
Everyone is becoming more inclusive — but of who? Are
gay and lesbian lobby groups now the lobbying version of The Blob? And
as they become The Blob, are they hollowing out internally too, husks of
what they were?
This isn’t just a problem in US
organizations. Stonewall, the largest LGBT organization in the UK, has
the same problem. A view through of it’s annual report
reveals similar problems. Stonewall’s income was £8.7 million (US$10.8
million), yet they can only train 118 ‘police, prosecutors, and policy
makers’ with their ‘Access For Justice Program’, and they only hosted
243 activists at their international events and programs in four
countries in ‘East and South East Europe’. Only 250 young people
attended their Pride events, and they supported only ‘40 more’ to become
‘young campaigners and host Youth Pride events’. These events were held
in Birmingham, UK Black Pride, Bristol, ‘Trans Pride Brighton’, Wales,
and Manchester. This is supposed to ‘foster camaraderie and common
purpose’ and create a ‘UK wide network of skilled activists’.
Which
leads to another problem - many of these longstanding organizations
have seen a complete loss of membership or grassroots engagement over
the past ten years. Ta
Lesbians are often the LGBT canary in the coal mine. There are now books being published by lesbians such as The Disappearing L that
discuss lesbian erasure. Lesbian erasure, like major LGBT organizations
having four lesbian events out of hundreds at multi-day conferences.
This is something that isn’t unique to the Task Force’s conference, and
it is becoming an epidemic across Pride festivals and organizations. Protests have taken place internationally, such as in London.
Queer and transgender critics have hit back at accusations of lesbian
erasure with name-calling, marking critics with the dreaded four-letter
‘TERF’ word. In The TransAdvocate an opinion writer characterized discussion of lesbian erasure as such:
“What
this is REALLY about, of course, is hatred: hatred for trans women,
hatred for sex workers, hatred for third wave feminists, and hatred for
sex-positive and sex-radical feminists. We have, it seems, stolen their
thunder, and they are very, very bitter about it.
I
could list more examples of dismissing lesbian concerns as
‘transphobia’. Outside of lesbian erasure, many gay men are feeling
pushed out of their movements, and the name changes don’t help that
perception of being erased out of a movement that used to be their own. A
recent proposed change to the classic rainbow flag features a black and
brown triangle, with the trans flag in the middle, placed on top of the
rainbow. It looks like an invading force establishing a beachhead.
Money is constantly flowing down the donation pipe for trans issues: a glowing Inside Philanthropy article on a Funders For LGBTQ Issues (FFLI) initiative details the creation of Grantmakers United For Trans Communities
or GUTC. GUTC’s goals are supposedly capacity building, increasing the
number of funds available for transgender people. The article actually
contradicts FFLI’s own studies on the issue, saying that transgender
funding forms a ‘small part’ of overall funding, despite the fact it
outstripped the gay, lesbian, and bisexual combined in 2016, and has
done so since 2014. The philanthropic gears are beginning to turn on
this issue.
Outside of GUTC, a $20m endowment was announced in 2015 by the Arcus Foundation specifically for transgender issues. A glowing Buzzfeed article
on the endowment tells us that the Arcus Foundation is giving $15m
towards the endowment, and NoVo Foundation which ‘focuses on girls and
women’ will give $1m. “A coalition of other foundations will give the
remaining $4m”, the article reports. We are told by an Arcus
representative, Jason McGill, the vice-president of Arcus’ social
justice programs, that “Transgender leaders and their movement have been
dramatically underfunded.” This is despite clear evidence that compared
to other LGBT groups, they are not.
Suspiciously,
the article chooses to cherry-pick its statistics. Despite the 2014 and
2015 reports from Funders For LGBTQ Issues being available, which show
dramatic increases in transgender funding, Buzzfeed cites the reports
that date from 2011 through to 2013. Cherrypicked statistics are very
much a repeating pattern when it comes to transgenderism. The article
tells us that transgender people “have been used as scapegoats” by
“conservatives” who oppose “LGBT non-discrimination laws” and bring up
the dreaded “men in women’s bathrooms”. It tells us that this is
happening while “homicides of transgender women in the US have doubled in the past 12 months”.
Doubled?
What did it double from? I decided to verify this, and GLAAD (remember
an acronym now devoid of meaning) gave me the answers. So, how many
homicides of American transgender people were there in 2016? I am sure
you are waiting with bated breath for some kind of titanic, earth
shattering number that will have you click ‘exit tab’, and bitch about
my bullshit article on Twitter. Okay, here it is:
27.
That’s
not a typo. It really is 27. The number of total murders in the US in
2016? 17,250, and disproportionately trending black and male. 27 is
0.15% of murders in the US. In terms of figures, the Williams Foundation
did a survey and estimated the number of trans people at 0.6% of the US
population. The US population is estimated at 325 million at time of
writing, which results in a figure of 1.95 million trans people across
America.
We’ll take 1.95 million Americans. If we figure how
many trans people are victims of murder a year as a percentage, that
figure is 0.0013%. Per capita,that’s a
ratio of 1.3 trans people murdered per 100,000. The murder rate of women
in the US is triple that, and of men, quadruple. Even with an extremely
conservative estimate of 0.1% of the US population (or 325,000 trans
people), we have a murder rate of 8.3 per 100,000. The murder rate of
Chicago is twice that conservative figure at 16.02 people murdered per
100,000. In terms of gross numbers — that’s 11,535 murders of male
Americans, and 3,292 murders of female Americans in 2017. 27 is small
potatoes. That is not a murder epidemic — in fact it’s a murder rate per
capita lower than Canada. It certainly doesn’t mean that there’s an
‘epidemic of transphobic violence’. That’s not something to campaign
about — you’ve got it better than literally everyone else. Even if we
use the Human Rights Campaign estimate of 750,000 trans people, which is
half the 0.6% number, we get a murder rate of 3.6 per 100,000. That’s
not a high murder rate.
There are more bad statistics though. That same article tells us that “globally 1,700 transgender murders have been reported, in the past seven years, according to Arcus data” [emphasis mine].
Your
eyes immediately drift to the ‘1,700’ figure, and don’t see the 7
years, do they? That’s why I bolded it. If we take the 0.6% estimate of
trans people in the US and apply it globally to a population of 7
billion people, we get 42 million people. 1,700 divided by seven years
gives us a grand total of 242 murders a year. That amounts to 0.58
murders per capita of trans people, worldwide, every year. That’s
definitely not an epidemic. In fact, that’s a global murder rate lower
than every other category on earth. The murder rate per capita of
unicycle-riding clowns is probably higher. To #StopTransMurders would be
to eliminate the homicide of an entire group of people, which no nation
has been able to accomplish. Ever.
Maybe you think 42
million trans people on this earth is too big a number. So, we’ll make
the figure 5 million people. A murder rate of 242 per year of a group of
5 million people is still a per capita rate of 4.84 — roughly similar
to the US overall murder rate of 4.7. And that’s with a hugely
conservative number that I literally pulled out of thin air. All these
figures say the same thing — there is no trans murder epidemic — and
philanthropic groups and their funded organizations supporting trans
rights and sympathetic media have to perform statistical sleight of hand
to even make such a proposal look even the slightest bit true. For
comparison, the highest murder rate in the world belongs to Honduras,
which had 90.4 homicides per 100,000 in 2017. That’s a violent epidemic.
To add — the majority of those 27 killed? Black prostitutes. No
middle-aged white trans women were killed at all (though some did commit murders)
yet they are the ones bleating about #StopTransMurders and working in
activist organizations. And the sex-work and transgender lobby does not
seem to care about those vulnerable prostitutes, beyond using their
names and deaths as a political prop.
If you’re wondering
about the gay and lesbian side of things, rather than the transgender
epidemic that doesn’t exist, yet is talked about so heavily, the FBI
reports in its latest Hate Crimes report state that 16.7% of hate crimes
were motivated by sexual orientation. 1.7% were motivated by
gender-identity bias. Of the 1,255 victims targeted by sexual
orientation, 62.7% were anti-gay male, 21.6% were LGBT (mixed group),
and 11.7% targeted towards lesbians. There were 131 victims of ‘gender
identity-bias’, 20 of whom were simply ‘gender-non-conforming’. In terms
of hate crimes (which is criminal offenses carried out motivated by
bias, not necessarily violent) gay men are disproportionately
over-represented among the LGBT. That’s an actual disproportionate
epidemic of violence — rather than the trans murder epidemic that
doesn’t exist.
When was the last time you saw that on BuzzFeed?
But
this is not the only ‘transgender murder epidemic’ article on Buzzfeed.
The author of the article on the $20m endowment, Dominic Holden, wrote a feature entitled Why Are Black Transgender Women Getting Killed In Detroit that
uses the same sleight of hand, saying that the murder rate has ‘
doubled’ yet doesn’t give you a number. I looked into the source it
cited, and the murder rate doubled from 12 murders to 24 murders. That
figure comes from ‘The National Coalition Of Anti-Violence Programs’,
counting between Transgender Days of Remembrance. That’s an even lower
figure than the GLAAD data! And it is not just Buzzfeed. LGBT news
sites, the left-leaning media, the list goes on — a quick Google search
leads to more repeating of the meme ‘trans murder rate is high’. In
fact, I googled ‘trans murder epidemic’ and got 535,000 results from
Wikipedia, to the Human Rights Campaign, to ‘America’s transgender
murder epidemic: why is nothing being done?’ from a UK website called ‘Blasting News’.
It even appears as the beginning of the National LGBTQ Task Force’s
2016 annual report, highlighting its #StopTransMurders campaign. But the
facts and figures say there isn’t an epidemic. Rather the
opposite — trans people have the world’s best murder statistics, as a
group. The ‘epidemic’ is easily debunked using LGBTQI+ groups’ own statistics. The
trans murder rate is a false meme worthy of inclusion in a late 90’s
chain email promising you the truth about Bill Clinton and Whitewater.
It’s literal fake news. Why do this? Why frighten a small minority more,
and why use it as a brickbat to obscure violence against gays and
lesbians?
Where does the money come from, the money that keeps up a healthy supply of this fake news?
As
I’ve gone through organizations, I’ve pointed out who provides them
with funding. The primary funders of the transgender movement are large
philanthropic foundations. Political lobbying often comes from them. One
issue with identifying donors is that they are often not listed on IRS
forms given to the public, nor identified in annual reports.
Occasionally you will find a donor celebrated in a press release. I have
tried to be as true and accurate as possible in my reporting despite
these obstacles. Another issue is that a lot of money comes through the
Tides Foundation, which has been accused of being ‘charity money
laundering’.
Effectively, what Tides Foundation does is receive
funding from corporations, people of largesse, or philanthropic
foundations, and then donates that funding for those groups or
individuals, but in the name of The Tides Foundation. This effectively
anonymizes those donations. If you see ‘Tides Foundation’ on a charity
return, that money could have come from the Aliens of Epsilon Beta — and
you’d have no idea. When you can’t find out who is funding your
supposed community organizations, that should be a cause for concern.
With that said, let’s dive into the names we can know.
One name that comes up frequently and will continue to do so is Col. Jennifer Natalya Pritzker,
a trans lesbian, who transitioned in August 2013. Heir to the Hyatt
Hotel fortune, Pritzker funds both transgender and far-right causes
through their Tawani Foundation. Notably, Pritzker donated millions of
dollars to the Gender And Sex Development Program, a transgender youth
clinic in Chicago launched in 2013, by providing the money used to start
the program. The Gender And Sex Development Program is run by one
Robert Garofalo, who will be mentioned later on. Pritzker also provides
funding to the World Professional Association for Transgender Health
(WPATH), and has also donated to GLAAD, among other large LGBTQI+
organizations.Apart from t their transgender donations, Pritzker is
extremely right-wing. Alternating their occupation between ‘Retired’ and
‘Tawani Enterprises Inc’ on FEC returns, Pritzker donated hundreds of
thousands, if not millions of dollars, to the Republican Party and its
candidates in 2016, including state parties and the ‘National Draft Ben
Carson For President Committee’. Perhaps Pritzker wishes GLAAD to debunk
anyone saying the pyramids were not grain silos. To balance this all
out, Pritzker gave small donations to Tammy Duckworth, a Democrat.
SuperPACs Pritzker donated to include the American Future Fund, which
has received funding from the Koch Brothers, and Bruce Rassetter (who
runs the Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America.) Pritzker
donated $33,900 to the Republican National Committee in April this
year. While organizations Pritzker donates money to (like GLAAD, and the
Task Force) have sessions about coping with the President, Pritzker
gives money to Trump’s re-election campaign. Pritzker has been
criticized by other transgender activists like academic Dean Spade for
astroturfing the ‘transgender military service’ issue (I would note that
many of the organizations I investigated had the military service issue
prominently featured on their websites.)
The Open Society Foundations
(OSF) are the largest philanthropic organization in the world. Chaired
and funded by hedge fund maestro George Soros, its size as the largest
philanthropic organization has meant that it is the target of many
conspiracy theories. Some of those theories may not be without validity.
Soros is extremely active politically, not just through the Foundation,
but also through various political groups and donations that run into
the millions of dollars, mostly on the left of the political spectrum.
After a Russian intelligence-linked hacking group, Fancy Bear, stole OSF
documents, it was revealed Soros had been emailing 2016 presidential
candidate Hillary Clinton with campaign advice personally. The
Foundation has spent over $11 billion since 1993 and has the largest
endowment of any foundation in the world. Soros himself is also
controversial for shorting the British pound in 1992, among other
currency bets, such as the Thai baht in 1997. Open Society Foundations
are supposedly decentralized and the boards running operations are
autonomous. This ignores the fact that all activities carried out by the
OSF are funded by one man. You can tell me Ford is decentralized and
autonomously runs its operations in a variety of countries — they are
still run by the same board, with the same objective: sell Ford cars.
And while it insists it doesn’t follow a top-down approach of funding
organizations… it does. It funds organizations and sponsors them — we’ve
already seen that before. The Open Society Foundation doesn’t just
leave activism to its many astroturf tentacles. A quick browse of their
website gives you the lowdown on what they believe. Pushing for gender
markers on legal documentation or ‘self-identification laws’ are a
prominent part . This is pushed through a project called License To Be Yourself. It tells us of this burning issue with the following:
“When
trans people’s passports, driver licenses, and national ID cards, do
not reflect their gender identity, it can exclude them from fundamental
aspects of daily life — like receiving health care, schooling, housing,
or a bank account. And it can prevent trans people from exercising basic
liberties like the right to vote or freedom of movement.”
The
vast majority of trans people around the world cannot obtain official
documents under their appropriate name and sex that match their gender
identity. Where this is possible, trans people often face highly
restrictive laws or regulations for changing name and sex that violate
human rights obligations. These restrictions may involve excluding trans
people who are married or have children or require compulsory medical
diagnoses or procedures[sic], including those that result in
sterilization.
“License to Be Yourself documents some of
the world’s most progressive and rights-based laws and policies that
enable trans people to change their gender identity on official
documents. It shares strategies that activists have successfully used in
a variety of global and legal contexts, and features case studies from
Argentina, Australia, Hong Kong, Kenya, Ukraine, and the United States.”
Self-identification has been criticized by feminists for essentially making legal sex meaningless, as well as by transgender people themselves.
What the OSF is advocating is that someone should be able to obtain
official legal documents declaring them the other sex, without any form
of medical treatment, based on self-declaration of ‘trans’ status.
That’s clearly nonsense.
The issue with the OSF is
that its founder has a clear political agenda — and his vision must be
enacted by his foundation, for better or worse. A pattern of Soros
heavily investing into astroturf organizations to further his political
agenda has been noticed by anti-drug campaigners. An article in the LA Times
describes how billionaires put large amounts of funding behind the
legalization of marijuana too, highlighting the 2016 Proposition 64 to
legalize marijuana in California. Yes, George Soros is involved with
that. Anti-legalization campaigners have complained of being out-gunned
and outspent, often by astroturf organizations that amount to little
more than an election filing and a billboard. The money comes from large
federal organizations and billionaires, not locally, and outspends the
competition by a country mile. Sound familiar?
Yet another
name to add to the list is Jon Stryker. An heir to Stryker Corp, the
medical supplies company, he is the gay founder and president of the
Arcus Foundation, which has given millions of dollars to the transgender
cause over the past few years. His fingerprints are all over
organizations like GATE, the NCTE, and The Transgender Law Center, all
of which advocate for the same pro-trans policies in unison. Arcus has
faced complaints from Catholic organizations that it used it’s grants to
the Religion Newswriters Foundation, accusing it of using its money to
manipulate the news and content produced by organizations it donates to.
It also opens and runs centers to train ‘thought leaders’ in
Arcus-approved policies and research.
Philanthropy and
philanthropic initiatives have long histories of social intervention.
Dating back to days that captains of industry such as Rockefeller and
Carnegie walked the earth, the goal would be to spend their vast amounts
of funds on solving problems, through research and implementing a
desired solution. That many social problems originate from their ability
to hoard wealth does not appear to occur to the philanthropist, who
continues, nonplussed, with implementing his vision for the world, not
through charisma or popular appeal, or via democratic means, but by
throwing around money. These foundations operate tax free in the US.
Essentially,
the modern philanthropist does not research to solve a problem; he has a
predetermined solution in mind and desires research to support his
opinion, rather than funding research to form an opinion. It’s like
wanting to score a touchdown late in the fourth, using a specific play,
and repeatedly calling that play trying to score, regardless of
defensive scheme. This comes through grants to existing non-profit
organizations, or through creating new ones that look
grassroots — astroturf. See our friends NCTE or NCLR and GATE,
respectively, who produce research and reports that seem designed to
reach a specified conclusion. Because organizations are effectively
created or hired, the power in the relationship is held entirely by the
philanthropist, who expects return on investment. Essentially, with
their vast funding and reach, they strangle any form of actual
grassroots organization with ease. Because their research predominates,
it becomes the orthodoxy among the chattering classes. This is not
simply donations to non-profits in the case of transgenderism — it is
donations to universities and hospitals, which then produce scientific
research of questionable validity, given that bias is inextricable from
this situation.
It’s not just trangenderism.
Probably
the most famous example of philanthropy, astroturf, and a predetermined
vision coming together is charter schools. Foundations from the Bill and
Melinda Gates Foundation, to the Waltons, to a laundry list of wealthy
family foundations have taken on the specter of American public
schooling. Supposedly, if education were at the whims of the market, it
would function more efficiently. These philanthropic experiments often
target minority groups — the poor, racial minorities, and poor racial
minorities (after all, if it doesn’t work,it wouldn’t affect the
children of the philanthropist, just people who don’t matter). Targeting
resource starved organizations, they benefit from the completely
imbalanced relationship between patron and client, because school
districts with a large funding shortfall are not going to say no to
millions of dollars. Of course, astroturfing takes place in this
philanthropic area of interest. Take this example: The Gates Foundation
needs support for its teacher effectiveness reforms. It pays a group
called ‘Rockefeller Philanthropy Advisors’ (essentially a company that
creates ‘activist groups’ complete with the latest model of a Thought
Leader), to create a group called ‘Teaching First’. The Gates Foundation
went ahead with its ‘grassroots organization’ having launched in 2010,
and called ‘Communities For Teaching Excellence’. It went belly up in 2012, having accomplished nothing. Of course, we would not know about this dastardly behavior had the document planning this little excursion not leaked in 2011 and
been splashed all over the media. The leaked document contained such
gems as encouraging the organization to participate in campaigns not
related to their goal in an attempt to look more authentic.
The
Gates Foundation got frustrated at this point. So, it started funding
other non-profits that agreed with them, dispatched paid staff to those
non-profits, and suddenly saw a wealth of success. After all, if a bunch
of different groups with obscure funding (remember in an IRS 990 you
don’t have to disclose your donors) start saying the same thing, they
must be right, right? But it is not only the Gates Foundation that does
this. Other philanthropic organizations, run by people with similar
views, donate to the same groups. The Gates, the Waltons, and others all
donated to one group called ‘Parent Revolution’, for example.
There
are other examples — a push by the Gates Foundation emphasized smaller
schools, and they put $1 billion into the project, creating a nationwide
trend towards smaller schools. But as with all modern philanthropy,
they put the cart before the horse — the results were no different than a
bigger school. Rather than figuring out which means would best bring
about required ends, the philanthropist implements his own, untested
means — a vision for how things ‘should work’, in his eyes, on a large
population, able to simply because of vast funds, rather than democratic
consent.
Astroturfing isn’t exclusive to philanthropic
foundations. A famous leaked memo from the Phillip Morris tobacco
company (from one John F. Scruggs, from an advertising company to one
David Nicoli) illuminates astroturfing in all its phony glory. To quote
the entire memo, because of its relevance:
““TO:
David Nicoli DATE: December 18, 1998 FROM: John F. Scruggs RE: THE “ECHO
CHAMBER” APPROACH TO ADVOCACY. This responds to your request for a memo
explaining my proposed strategy for utilizing polling research,
particularly in the upcoming excise tax fight. I have described this as
the “echo chamber” approach to advocacy. This approach attempts to cause
favorable information to resonate with and from various sources in
order to increase its credibility with the target audience. As you are
well aware, Members of Congress are impacted by multiple “influentials.”
In fact, a number of studies have been done that attempt to rate the
relative impact of these influentials on Members. A rough hierarchy has
been established as follows, from most influential to least influential:
Constituents (unaided)
Major Fundraisers
Local Media
Colleagues
National Media
Advertising
Lobbyists
“The
more a particular view or piece of information “echoes” or resonates
through this group, the greater its impact. Grassroots efforts are so
effective in modern day advocacy programs because they cause many
constituents to repeat the same message to the target Member. Grasstops
or “Influentials” campaigns work because those highest on the hierarchy
scale, with the greatest degree of credibility, repeat the same or
similar messages. You will note that the echo chamber effect can work in
two different ways. First, the same message can reverberate among
multiple sources toward the target Members. For example, the same
information from polling data captured in a single poll can be repeated
by the media, congressional colleagues, lobbyists and advertising.
Second, similar but complementary messages can be repeated by a single
source. For example, a media report that includes polling data as well
as Bill Lilley research, comments from colleagues, and the text of
advertising. Either the repetition or “piling on” approach provide the
same result: enhanced credibility and influence of the essential
message” [sic]
Does this sound familiar? The
funding of various groups, all of whom apply political pressure,
repeating the same message, over and over, to create an echo chamber
where this is the only information getting to politicians and the
general public? I’ve filled out my transgender lobby bingo card, have
you?
But astroturfing does not simply take the form of
funding non-profits. Often, astroturfing occurs through the use of
Twitter bots and on internet comment sections, paid commenters who
repeat the same message ad nauseam, hoping to create a feeling to the
reader that their opinion is mainstream. The legitimate reader may then
propagate the message again, giving an air of legitimacy and
authenticity to the message, and then what is a ‘meme’ in the Dawkins
sense (though astroturfing can also be internet memes, as the world
discovered when the House Intelligence committee released Russian
astroturf election advertising a few months ago) becomes repeated over
and over. People become afraid of being considered backwards or
regressive, so they don’t question what ‘everyone’ seems to think. The
original comments may have only been a few paid commenters posting under
hundreds of different identities — that ceases to mean anything when
their message is being promoted by hundreds of real people using their
own online identities. Astroturf movements often train their own
organizers: one such example on the left is the Equality Federation,
which trains center-left LGBTQI+ ‘thought leaders’. It features six
figure donations from the Gill Foundation and the Tides Foundation,
among others. It is a name plucked out of a very large hat — there are
dozens of other ‘Institutes’ and ‘Fellowships’ that train professional
activists in professional Kool-Aid drinking across the political
spectrum. Trained in drinking the ideological Kool-Aid, they further
make the patron-client relationship more of a master-slave one.
Professionalized into activism, it does not serve their interests to
ever actually ‘win’, as with no issue to campaign on, they are out of
work. They may be doing so unconsciously, but an ultimate victory would
harm their chances at employment, leading to them favoring
incrementalism and creating a cultural forever war. Even worse is if
they question their beliefs — because that’s an entire career down the
drain if they do.
Critics do not fare well when criticizing the message of astroturf. Investigative right-wing journalist Sharyl Attkisson describes the descriptions used for an astroturf’s movements critics:
“The
language of astroturfers and propagandists includes trademark
inflammatory terms such as: anti, nutty, quack, crank, pseudo-science,
debunking, conspiracy theory, deniers and junk science. Sometimes
astroturfers claim to “debunk myths” that aren’t myths at all. They
declare debates over that aren’t over. They claim that “everybody
agrees” when everyone doesn’t agree. They aim to make you think you’re
an outlier when you’re not.
Astroturfers and
propagandists tend to attack and controversialize the news
organizations, personalities and people surrounding an issue rather than
sticking to the facts. They try to censor and silence topics and
speakers rather than engage them. And most of all, they reserve all
their expressed skepticism for those who expose wrongdoing rather than
the wrongdoers. In other words, instead of questioning authority, they
question those who question authority”
Does
this sound familiar to you, with the ‘TERF’ debate? Anyone who
disagrees with transgenderism is ‘crazy’, believes in ‘conspiracy
theories’ and promotes ‘junk science’. The Advocate literally used this phrase in a piece
by Brynn Tannehill on Rapid Onset Gender Dysphoria. Doctors who agree
with them are called quacks. The transgender movement has much in common
with any other astroturf push by large philanthropic groups. If you
want the right-wing version, simply look at the ‘Tea Party’ movement.
Eventually, the movement was tracked down to two large right-wing think
tanks — FreedomWorks and Americans for Prosperity, both funded by the
Koch brothers. There were paid organizers, astroturf phrases such as the
infamous ‘death panels’, and town hall debates with arranged
altercations. Even grassroots groups on the left can become top-down
organized — look at the Obama campaign, which took genuine grassroots
support for his 2012 candidacy, and began arranging their logistics for
them. But planned protests and a top-down astroturf approach are also
present in the oil industry and the net neutrality debate. Pick an issue
and you’ll find some plutocrat is pushing an agenda. The issue was
highlighted even in Newsweek;
“It
seems like the big thing that has changed is that historically,
movements were made up of people who were disenfranchised; now they’re
sponsored by insiders,” says Paul Frymer, a political scientist at
Princeton. “They still have true activists attached to them, they just
have a lot more help than they used to.” Much of that help now comes
from the Internet.”
Amusingly enough,
trans activists themselves have criticized the ‘trans in the military’
debate as astroturfing by Jennifer Pritzker. Dean Spade, a transgender
academic attacked the sudden push as astroturfing, saying it obscured
real issues faced by the transgender community, and attacked its
right-wing nature. Brynn Tannehill, writing for the Huffington Postargued
that it wasn’t astroturf, but a genuine movement. Tannehill is the
co-chair for ‘Trans United Families For Equality’ and sits on its board.
Trans United, a national organization, has put money into local school
board races, likely to push bathroom-related policy. It partners with a
variety of organizations, all with slick logos and profiles. Despite
being both a 501(c)(3) and a 501(c)(4), I was unable to find an IRS 990
form on its website (I am not an expert, but I do not think that is
legal.) Charity Navigator informs me that it is both headquartered in
Washington DC and was granted a charity ruling in 2009. A glowing article in Timedoes describe its first advertising venture, an ad called ‘Meet My Child’, featuring transgender children and their parents. But another glowing Time article
on the forming of the group describes an organization formed for the
2016 election in April 2016, by a slew of professional activists and
campaign veterans. It is a nationally-based lobby organization that does
not disclose any form of donor. It is astroturf. Brynn Tannehill argues
that they are not astroturf and have never participated in astroturf,
while holding membership in an astroturf organization.
But
it is not the only astroturf PAC for transgenderism that has sprouted in
the past decade. Remember Prop 1 in Alaska? Freedom For All Americans
donated hundreds of thousands of dollars towards the bathroom fight in
Anchorage. It is a PAC run by Masen Davis, who used to be the Executive
Director for the Transgender Law Center (an organization that is also
funded by large philanthropic groups and corporates.) The PAC lists some
of its most prominent donors as Paul Singer, Tim Gill and Daniel Loeb.
Tim Gill runs the Gill Foundation, another large LGBTIQ+ focused
foundation that also makes large donations to many of the organizations
mentioned and described above. If Paul Singer is a familiar name to you,
it is because he is notorious for buying up Argentine debt and taking
the country to court for a debt judgment, winning a judgment that
allowed him to seize Argentine property in the UK. He continued
harassing the country for repayment for years and made similar moves in
the 90s with Peruvian debt. He has done this to multiple other nations.
He opposes raising taxes on the 1% and parts of the Dodd-Frank Act.
Outside of donating parts of his $2.8 billion fortune to LGBTQ+ causes,
he is a large Republican donor, making donations to the National
Republican Senatorial committee. Daniel Loeb runs one of the largest
hedge funds on Wall Street: Elliot Management.
Freedom for All Americans (FFAA), when it announced its creation in 2015, leaves us with the new consensus from the federal-level LGBTIQ+ lobby.
“In
addition to dedicated campaign efforts in states across the country,
FFAA will be launching an LGBT-U program, geared toward training and
deploying the next generation of campaign staffers and movement leaders.
FFAA also is working to identify and elevate transgender spokespeople
all across the country — so it’s crystal clear to policymakers that
sexual orientation and gender identity and expression protections must
always move together; no exceptions.”
Why are
these organizations putting millions upon millions of dollars into
transgenderism? What is so important about it that it needs fake news
and millions of dollars poured into it?
I’ll get to that. But first, lets ask a question — what do these groups actually stand for?
I needed to answer this question: it is pointless to describe the movement around something if I do not describe that something.
I sought a definition of the ‘T’, of LGBTIQ+, from the Human Rights Campaign (HRC), who advise me with an article, Understanding the Transgender Community,
with a header picture of the transgender flag, which is two sets of
pink and blue bars separated by a white bar (and which does not show up
well on a white internet page). The HRC advises me that:
“Transgender
people come from all walks of life. We are dads and moms, brothers and
sisters, sons and daughters. We are your coworkers, and your neighbors.
We are 7-year-old children and 70-year-old grandparents. We are a
diverse community, representing all racial and ethnic backgrounds, as
well as faith backgrounds.”
Okay, so anyone can be transgender. But what is transgender?
“The word “transgender” — or trans — is an umbrella term for people
whose gender identity is different from the sex assigned to us at birth.
Although the word “transgender” and our modern definition of it only
came into use in the late 20th century, people who would fit under this
definition have existed in every culture throughout recorded history”
The
HRC doesn’t give any examples of these historic figures. I believe they
refer to the concept of ‘third sex’ or ‘third gender’, which is often
used to categorize effeminate male homosexuals, and occasionally butch
women and allow them roles within a still patriarchal society, such as
the Hijra or the Albanian Sworn Virgins. There were publications
describing homosexuals as a type of third sex or ‘third gender’ in
Western culture in the 1970s, so it is not something unfamiliar to
America and wider Western culture. But the HRC doesn’t tell us what
‘gender identity’ is, nor why it is significant that is different from
the ‘sex assigned at birth’. I thought sex was observed, as a biological
fact about a newborn?
“The transgender
community is incredibly diverse. Some transgender people identify as
male or female, and some identify as genderqueer, nonbinary, agender, or
somewhere else on or outside of the spectrum of what we understand
gender to be. Some of us take hormones and have surgery as part of our
transition, and some don’t. Some choose to openly identify as
transgender, while others simply identify as men or women. For more
information on questions you may have about transgender people, check
out our Transgender FAQ.”
Yes,
but what is gender? What is the gender spectrum? What are the two ends
of the gender spectrum? And what does it mean to identify as something?
The
article goes on to outline the main concerns, all of which are shared
with organizations described above — a lack of legal protections,
poverty (15% of trans people are in poverty, which is the same
percentage as the general US population and lower than Black and
Hispanic populations), harassment and stigma, anti-transgender violence
(telling us that 13 transgender women were murdered in 2014, which gives
us an even lower murder rate than GLAAD gave us), and identity
documents, telling us this:
“Identity Documents — The
widespread lack of accurate identity documents among transgender people
can have an impact on every area of their lives, including access to
emergency housing or other public services. To be clear, without
identification, one cannot travel, register for school or access many
services that are essential to function in society. Many states require
evidence of medical transition — which can be prohibitively expensive
and is not something that all transgender people want — as well as fees
for processing new identity documents, which may make them unaffordable
for some members of the transgender community. The NTDS found that among
those respondents who have already transitioned, 33 percent had not
been able to update any of their identity documents to match their
affirmed gender.”
Accurate identity
documents? That’s contradictory. While trans people supposedly have
(inaccurate) legal documents, they are unable to access services that
require identity documents because… they don’t have legal documents?
Which is it? Do they have them or not? Some would contend they are
accurate, because those documents record biological sex, not gender.
Gender still hasn’t been defined in this article, by the way. What is
gender, and why does it need to be affirmed? Supposedly, updating these
requires evidence of a medical transition, rather than simply showing up
and demanding changes to the sex marker on identification documents.
How is the state to know who is truly trans and needs this information?
What’s the burden of proof to prove that one is ‘truly trans’? Such laws
would be easily exploitable — for example, a man declaring he is a
transgender woman, making no attempt at transition, changing his
documents, and accessing college scholarships intended to help women
into college. How is he a woman? What is the criteria? Why should there
be no criteria to determine a person’s legal sex? I am hopelessly
confused. I have not been given a definition of any of these words in
this entire article.
Left for last, is this:
“Barriers to healthcare — Data
collection on health disparities among transgender people is very
limited, but the data we do have reveal a healthcare system that is not
meeting the needs of the transgender community. In a 2012 needs
assessment by the Washington D.C. Trans Coalition, 44 percent of those
who identified health as one of their top priorities said that access to
transgender-sensitive healthcare was their most significant need.
Beyond facing barriers to obtaining medically-necessary health services
and encountering medical professionals who lacked transgender health
care competency, the NTDS found that almost 20 percent of respondents
had been refused medical care outright because of bias.”
Transgender
sensitive? What are medically-necessary health services? We aren’t
told. There is no explanation as to the nature of what is required, only
that something is required and you’re a bigot for not supporting
whatever that may be.
I decided to look at the HRC’s Transgender
FAQ, written by Meghan Stabler for more information. After all, they
recommended it. Perhaps that will clear everything up. Meghan was born
Mark and was formerly a senior software executive who now works at the
HRC. Meghan gives us this definition of ‘transgender’:
“Transgender — or
trans — is an umbrella term for people whose gender identity or
expression is different from those typically associated with the sex
assigned to them at birth (e.g., the sex listed on their birth
certificate). Conversely, cisgender — or cis — is the term used to
describe people whose gender identity or expression aligns with those
typically associated with the sex assigned to them at birth.”
Meghan,
in our next quote, finally gives me HRC’s definition of ‘gender
identity’ and ‘gender expression’. I’m sure this will clear everything
up, make me delete everything I’ve written, and go home, reassured that
the transgender movement is fine, dandy, and a legitimate civil rights
movement.
“Gender identity refers to a person’s
innate, deeply-felt psychological identification as a man, woman or some
other gender. Gender expression refers to the external manifestation of
a person’s gender identity, which may or may not conform to
socially-defined behaviors and characteristics typically associated with
being either masculine or feminine.”
Wait? So,
gender identity is about someone identifying as a man or a woman? But
what are men and women then? Can I identify as a woman on Wednesday and a
man on Friday? And gender expression is about gender stereotypes?
Actually, the whole thing just sounds like gender stereotypes. Maybe,
that’s what ‘gender’ is.
Meghan finally tells us the difference between sex and gender:
“Sex
refers to the designation of a person at birth as either “male” or
“female” based on their anatomy (e.g. reproductive organs) and/or their
biology (e.g. hormones).
Gender refers to the traditional
or stereotypical roles, behaviors, activities and attributes that a
given society consider appropriate for men and women.”
Okay,
a butch lesbian has a ‘gender expression’ that is different from those
typically associated with the sex assigned to them at birth — does that
make a butch lesbian transgender? Are women who do non-stereotypical
jobs transgender? So, remember, drawing from Meghan’s own definitions,
being transgender is about identifying with the traditional or
stereotypical roles, behaviors, activities and attributes that a given
society consider appropriate for the other sex. Are you not especially identified with gender stereotypes? Under Meghan’s definition, the Human Rights Campaign’s definition, you are transgender.
Meghan tells us that to live as the other gender, one must transition:
“Transitioning
is the process some transgender people go through to begin living as
the gender with which they identify, rather than the sex assigned to
them at birth. This may or may not include hormone therapy, sex
reassignment surgery and other medical procedures.”
Only
some transgender people go through transition? What are the other
transgender people doing then? What makes them the other gender? How are
they the opposite sex, outside of saying they are? It doesn’t make
sense. The Human Rights Campaign, if this is what they think is cutting
edge activism for the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender
communities, must have been replaced by Family Research Council lackeys,
because that’s incredibly regressive.
With this definition of
gender, all the drag queens on RuPaul are transgender. Last I checked,
almost all of them were happy gay men. Is K.D. Lang transgender? Ellen
DeGeneres? Is a man transgender if he binge-watched Sex And The City on
Netflix? That’s contrary to stereotypes, after all. The LGB have a long
history of playing with gender stereotypes. Are all those gender rebels
transgender? I found similar definitions of transgender on Wikipedia and
on other LGBTIQ+ websites.
At this point, I did decide to seek
out what the other side thinks, and whether they are really all that
crazy. So I went looking for the evil TERF definition of gender. I
didn’t need to hunt through a body of research and endless puff pieces
to find it. In fact, it was explained on the front page of the multiple
websites I looked at. In a single sentence: Gender is the sex
stereotypes and roles that are prescribed to men and women under
patriarchy, in order to perpetuate patriarchy. Doesn’t look too
different to the definition of the HRC, does it? Now, think about every
single mention of ‘gender’ to come, with that meaning in mind, and
you’ll see what this may actually all be about.
Because, from the
horses mouth, being transgender is about identifying with the
stereotypes and not being a stereotypical member of one’s own sex, then
using modern medicine to fix this problem. This problem is fixed by
treatments to cosmetically resemble the opposite sex. If I want to be a
woman, all I need to do is identify as a woman. If I want to be a man,
all I need to do is identify as a man. That is a tautology, and it is
incoherent. It should not be the basis for a civil rights movement. The
same logic can apply to being, for example, a white person who
identifies as a black person, such as the infamous case of Rachael
Dolezal. Even a toddler can point out that’s a nonsense argument. I have
not made any of these quotes up — you can see this in the HRC’s
transgender FAQ for yourself, if you want. This is dangerous. It
presents gender stereotypes and gender as an innate thing to either sex,
and that differing from them requires medicalization — hormone
treatment and surgery, transition. Or even just a legal sex change
should do the trick to fix that gender problem.
I doubt very many
women agree with their own oppression or identify with it as part of
their core being. If stereotypes are what the transgender movement is
about, this is only going to harm women and gay and lesbian and bisexual
people — the people who have the most to lose by gender stereotypes
being encoded in the law. It’s clear ‘gender identity’ is about which
set of stereotypes one subscribes to, rather than some inborn trait that
needs civil rights protections. The HRC is an authority and a national
lobby group. How can they, having fought for gay and lesbian people so
long, not see quite what they are supporting?How can other LGBTQI rights
groups not see the logical conclusions of these arguments?
But
perhaps the scientific basis for transgenderism is still sound, and I
can rest assured that everything will be fine once I realize this all
grounded in solid science and established fact. All that money behind
it, all this effort, all of it, will make sense.
Let us talk about medicine.
Let
me start with a story. The story is that of Hormone Replacement Therapy
(HRT), and starts in the 1930s and 1940s .Christine Jorgenson was the
first patient to receive HRT for transgenderism in the 1950s. It began
its life being marketed as a cure-all, for the ills of menopause to the
fountain of youth. It was also used as a tool to punish homosexuals,
such as Alan Turing. Use for transgenderism was a side project carried
out by a few doctors considered quacks and oddballs.
The most
common use for HRT over the 20th century was instead to treat menopause.
That particular train derailed in 2002, when the National Institutes Of
Health’s Women’s Health Initiative, a large clinical trial to test
HRT’s safety and efficacy, found out that HRT in women led to raised
rates of strokes and breast cancer among other deleterious side effects.
Lawsuits, particularly against the pharmaceutical company Wyeth
(purchased by Pfizer in 2009), quickly followed, and the number of
prescriptions of one of Wyeth’s most profitable medications dropped 66%.
Overnight, HRT for menopause was no longer understood to be the
automatic course of action. It later emerged that Wyeth and other drug
companies marketing HRT had known about the risks but had deliberately
concealed them to continue selling profitable drugs.
This caused
some issues for pharmaceutical companies. Premarin, manufactured by
Wyeth, was the best-selling drug of the 90s. HRT became accepted by
women and physicians alike, and HRT was encouraged as safe and effective
for menopause — which was untrue. It has been described as a time when
patients request the medication, and physicians prescribed it, without
checking on whether this medicalization of a natural process was needed
or not. 42% of American women between the ages of 50 and 72 were on some
form of HRT in 1999. Yet clinical trials instead proved that HRT was
dangerous, and that the risks outweighed the benefits. And the
prescription of HRT for menopause ended almost as quickly as it started.
Pfizer,
which makes the estrogen drug Premarin after purchasing Wyeth in 2009,
is a major corporate partner of the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) and
received a 100% score on the HRC’s Corporate Equality Index.
Wyeth was no stranger to targeting minorities for drug experimentation.
In a suit filed and unsealed in 2010, a pair of former hospital sales
representatives filed a whistleblower suit, alleging that Wyeth
illegally promoted the Rapamune kidney transplant drug. Targeting
African-Americans, Wyeth promoted off-label use of the Rapamune drug for
use in other organs, when it was only FDA approved for use in kidney
transplants. Representatives were provided with studies and abstracts to
use when marketing the use of the drug off-label. Wyeth offered doctors
and hospitals kickbacks when they prescribed Rapamune off-label. The
FDA had actively warned against some of the promoted uses of Rapamune. Wyeth later agreed to pay $490 million to the Department of Justice to resolve its liability.
Wyeth again engaged in unethical behavior with Prempro, another
estrogen hormone replacement therapy drug, which is also used for
transition. Wyeth used ‘medical ghostwriters’ to build a brand around Prempro and various off-label uses of the drug.
What’s medical ghostwriting? Essentially, it’s a pharmaceutical company
producing a peer-reviewed article promoting use of a drug it makes,
often for off-label uses.
This is done by hiring a
commercial medical writing company to produce papers that can then be
published in academic journals. An academic is attributed authorship,
even though they have not written the paper. The paper contains
conclusions that support the pharmaceutical company’s marketing desires
for a particular drug. In the case of Prempro, legal documents that
emerged from a lawsuit brought by 14,000 patients were released to PLoS
Medicine, an open access journal (viewable here).
It revealed that Wyeth hired a medical communications company,
DesignWrite, who then produced a first draft of a paper, received advice
on a second draft from Wyeth, then sent it to an academic who would
‘author’ the paper by attaching their name and claiming authorship.
Typically, the papers are review articles — they review a body of
literature on a particular drug, then draw conclusions on its use. While
the academics weren’t paid, political currency in academia has become
the number of papers published in journals, so it added to their
credentials. DesignWrite sold over 50 articles to Wyeth about HRT and
produced conference posters and symposia materials. The material
produced by DesignWrite promoted off-label uses of HRT. DesignWrite also
promoted its advisory board creation and management capabilities to
pharmaceutical companies.
While medical ghostwriting is
clearly unethical, it’s not illegal. Because academic publications
aren’t considered promotional, it does not fall afoul of off-label
marketing laws. Pharma companies can ghostwrite as many articles as they
like, building a message that the off-label use of drugs is safe,
acceptable. They then publish that in an academic journal. Wyeth would
produce studies that sang the praises of HRT for things it could never
market it for, like curing wrinkles. Because the fact that the paper is
ghostwritten is never disclosed, it means that people could potentially
be receiving biased information that favors a drug company and using
that when making decisions around patient health. If a large body of
‘research’ is promoting a use for a drug, then it must work, right?
How prevalent is medical ghost-writing,? The New York Times estimated in 2009 that 5–11% of medical articles are ghostwritten,
though this ultimately depends on the drug. With one drug (sertraline),
between 18% and 44% of articles on the subject were funded and
ghostwritten by Pfizer. But without disclosure, we do not know how
prevalent the problem might actually be.
Disturbingly
enough, similar evidence is beginning to come out regarding HRT in men,
who have been sold similar stories about ‘Low T’ and testosterone
therapy. Unlike HRT in women, this has not come through a large drug
trial, but nearly 7,000 lawsuits,
directed at the makers of low testosterone treatments. Side effects
include strokes, elevated risk of heart attack and blood clots.
In
fact, the makers of Androgel, AbbVie, were ruled against in a lawsuit
brought by one Jesse Mitchell, described as a ‘bellwether’ case, to the
tune of $150 million, for misrepresentation of the safety of their
testosterone gel, Androgel. Mitchell suffered a heart attack after four
years of using the gel, which was ruled to be directly caused by the
Androgel treatment. AbbVie aggressively marketed Androgel on television,
despite the fact that testosterone treatments were causing elevated
rates of heart attacks.
The $150 million lawsuit was later tossed, but a second trial again ruled against AbbVie, awarding Mitchell $3.2 million .
4,500 of the nearly 7,000 lawsuits involve AbbVie’s Androgel, which is
considered the ‘Low T’ market leader. It is notable that AbbVie promoted
the Androgel drug off-label. In fact, a former FDA head, David Kessler,
told jurors in an another testosterone lawsuit,
that he believes that AbbVie illegally promoted the testosterone
supplement to aging men, without testing the safety of doing so. To
quote his testimony:
“What the companies in
essence did was to take those indications of low testosterone in men
for specific reasons [and] the company in essence broke that link,” “It
was no longer [being marketed] for specific diseases; it was for low
testosterone for a broad range of issues.”
The
drug companies pushed to market the drug off-label, regardless of
whether ‘Low T’ was a scientifically valid condition or simply the
natural aging process.
What relevance this does have to the
transgender movement? Hormone Replacement Therapy is the primary drug
prescribed for the treatment of transgenderism. It has a long history of
illegal marketing, medical ghostwriting, and unethical behavior towards
vulnerable patients.
Many of these same side effects have
been reported in transgender people who take these drugs. For example,
it is well known among female-to-male transgender people that after long
periods on testosterone they require a hysterectomy, as they have higher risks for uterine cancer.
They also frequently experience incontinence and vaginal prolapse. Many
trans women experience heart attacks and strokes. These side effects
have been dismissed as hormone therapy is ‘necessary’ — so that this
population don’t kill themselves. Surgery can leave MTF transgender people with urinary issues.‘Gender affirmation surgery’ for both sexes often leads to incontinence and recurrent urinary tract infections.
HRT
is prescribed and intended for the patient to take for life as they
begin a journey into being their ‘authentic self’. A transgender person
expects to take hormones for the rest of their life. This is significant
because every drug prescribed for transgenderism is prescribed
off-label. There are no approved drugs for treating transgenderism. Not
puberty blockers, nor HRT. For transition, many of the drugs used by
transgender people are common brand name HRT drugs that are being used
off-label. Premarin, Androgel, and others. All of these drugs have
histories of off-label marketing. Androgel as aforementioned has
thousands of lawsuits pending against it. This history of pharmaceutical
companies using illegal marketing practices and ignoring deleterious
side effects can’t possibly be the case with transgender use, can it?
Stephen
Rosenthal, former president of the Pediatric Endocrine Society and
transgender scientist media star and one of the primary researches on
transgenderism describes this off-label status as a hurdle for puberty
blockers in an article in Endocrine Today:
“One
critical issue at this point in time is that none of the options for
pubertal blockers on the market are FDA approved for transgender use. No
pharmaceutical company has taken the steps necessary to change their
labelling to include this category.”
A look
through the names of the scientists that study and promote
transgenderism and the use of HRT to treat it, and you will see
Rosenthal’s name repeatedly. You will also see other names repeatedly,
particularly in transgender children research, and you will find the
same group of people are always responsible for such research, such as
Dr. Norman Spack, of Boston’s Children’s Hospital and Robert Garofalo,
from Lurie Children’s Hospital in Chicago. Many of them only began
producing research on transgenderism, particularly in children, during
the past decade. For example, Rosenthal’s publications are on topics
such as insulin metabolism until 2012, when his entire output becomes
focused around transgenderism.
Later on, in that Endocrinology Today interview, Rosenthal states the following:
“The
Dutch, who really are the pioneers in this work, started treating kids
with a group of medications called GnRH or gonadotropin-releasing
hormone agonists. These medications have been used in the pediatric
population for about 30 years now to very effectively treat kids with
precocious puberty, kids who, at way too young an age, go through the
full-blown pubertal process. … GNRH agents have been used for many years
and have been found to be very effective and specific for blocking
puberty in a completely reversible manner.”
This
is contradicted by the fact that GnRH agents are currently the subject
of multiple investigations for causing irreversible bone health
problems, something Rosenthal does not acknowledge in this interview,
but does in his research. A recent news article in Kaiser Health News
found that many patients who had received Lupron in their formative
years suffered numerous side effects. One woman had a hip replacement in
her early twenties.
“We want to provide
advocacy that is informed and based on data, which shows that there has
never been any example of a transgender person who has inappropriately
behaved or interfered with the privacy of a non-transgender, cisgender
person.”
This is both a clear lie and
misinformation. Gender critical activists have collected screeds of news
articles describing the exact scenario Rosenthal says does not happen.
One project is literally called ‘This Never Happens’. A study found that when Target moved to gender-neutral changing rooms, incidences of voyeurism increased.
Who is telling the truth? Because according to Rosenthal, this exact
scenario, which has happened often enough to make the news hundreds if
not thousands of times, ‘never happens’. One defense that I have seen
used is that such criminals aren’t ‘real trans people’. Perhaps they are
also not true Scotsmen. He essentially proposes that transgender
people, as a class, are incapable of behaving inappropriately, which is a
ridiculous proposition worthy of ridicule. Rosenthal goes on to imagine
a clear clinical process with a new type of medical specialist — the
‘gender specialist’, who will clearly form part of some kind of gender
industry, is consulted when someone begins questioning their gender.
Presumably, making a vast amount of funds in the process of doing so.
The doctors also make misrepresentations to the media, not just philanthropic foundations. Robert Garafalo made comments to PBS about puberty blockers:
“They
allow these families the opportunity to hit a pause button, to prevent
natal puberty … until we know that that’s either the right or the wrong
direction for their particular child.”
Garofalo fails to mention the issues with using GnRH agonists in children. The article then goes on to say that “The
handful of studies that do exist suggest that gender dysphoria persists
in a minority of children, but they involved very few children and were
done mostly abroad”which is incorrect. The article then goes
on to acknowledge that the use of puberty-blockers is off-label, and
even concedes that such uses of the drug, considering the length of time
it is used for, and the effects of stalling puberty, are totally
unresearched. Another pediatrician at Lurie, Lisa Simons, admits this:
“We
know that there’s a lot of brain development between childhood and
adulthood, but it’s not clear what’s behind that.” What’s lacking, she
said, are specific studies that look at the neurocognitive effects of
puberty blockers.”
The article then comments in a wish-washy fashion:
“Another
potential dilemma facing transgender children, their families and their
doctors is this: Taking cross hormones can reduce fertility. And there
isn’t enough research to find out of it is reversible or not. So, when
children make the decision to start taking hormones, they have to
consider whether they ever want to have biological children.”
This
is a clear lie. Failure to experience puberty (and no, cross-sex
hormone administration is not a ‘correct puberty’ or a puberty at all),
means the gonads never mature. Immature gonads, with immature gametes
are never fertile. These children will grow up to be sterile. And there is no research into what taking these hormones for fifty years or more could do to a human body, which is mentioned in the article.
Garofalo even admits he is using children as guinea pigs:
“I think those are the unanswered questions that really trouble me and can only be answered with long-term follow-up studies.”
Despite his unanswered questions Garofalo marches on, giving these drugs to children, drugs that will sterilize those children.
Oh, here’s a fun fact the article also includes:
“Most
of these treatments are still very expensive and often out of reach for
people without the help of insurance. The cost of puberty blockers is
approximately $1,200 per month for injections and can range from $4,500
to $18,000 for an implant. The least expensive form of estrogen, a pill,
can cost anywhere between $4 to $30 a month, according to Simons, while
testosterone can be anywhere between $20 to $200 a vial.”
Using
these figures, and taking a ten-year-old child, the total cost of
transition for a ten-year-old who takes puberty blockers until they are
16, is $86,400. There are 725 children being treated for gender
dysphoria at Lurie’s, which gives us a figure of $62 million dollars
over 6 years in Lupron prescriptions were all those 725 children
starting to take puberty blockers right now. Transition is an expensive
business.
We end with the following:
“Ultimately,
the doctors working in clinics like the one at Lurie Children’s hope to
spare transgender children some of the anguish and societal isolation
that earlier generations of transgender people went through. But they
too would like the answers to the unknown consequences of these
medications.
“The stakes are super high, and we don’t
have all the answers,” Garofalo says. “Hopefully, there’s going to be
more research and some of those unanswered questions, hopefully, will
begin to be answered.”
I decided to answer those questions for myself.
Let’s look at three doctors in particular. Their names are Dr. Diane Ehrensaft, Stephen Rosenthal, and Johanna Olson. Why?
All three of those names have had a financial relationship
with AbbVie, maker of Androgel and Lupron, amongst other hormone
replacement therapies and GnRH agonists. All three have gone on to
promote the off-label use of AbbVie products to treat transgenderism.
Both Joanna Olson and Diane Ehrensaft attended an AbbVie advisory board
on gender care, Olson in 2015 and Ehrensaft in 2014. Olson discloses
this as a conflict of interest in the paperCare of a Transgender Adolescent Commentary, which
was published July 2015 — she attended this advisory board after
submission and was compensated for attending. Olson then continued
promoting off-label use of AbbVie drugs. Diane Ehrensaft does not
declare this as a conflict of interest on any research papers, but it
appears in her Curriculum Vitae
(scroll to page 16), which she submitted to court while an expert
witness, and is hosted on her website. Her CV reports, that in 2014, she
was a board member of the ‘AbbVie Trans Advisory Board’, while
promoting their drugs for off-label use in transgenderism, both in
academia and through popular science books she wrote, such as The Gender Creative Child. Was
she compensated for being on this advisory board, like Olson? Stephen
Rosenthal frequently discloses that he is a consultant for AbbVie as a
conflict of interest in both interviews and research, and then continues
to promote the dangerous off-label use of their medication in
adolescents.
Why is this concerning? The Center for
Medicaid and Medicare Services advises that among the methods of
spotting unlawful, off-label promotion, is paying physicians to serve as
advisory board members.
In fact, let me quote directly from their consumer factsheet on the matter.
“Knowing some of the forms that off-label promotion can take will make it easier to recognize this unlawful practice.
These forms include the following:
• Paying incentives to sales representatives based on sales for off-label use; [8]
• Paying kickbacks to physicians to prescribe drugs for off-label use; [9]
• Disseminating misleading posters promoting off-label use; [10]
• Paying physicians:
To pretend to be the authors of articles about off-label uses when the articles were actually written by manufacturers’ agents;
To serve as members of “advisory boards” promoting off-label use;
To travel to resort locations to listen to promotions about off-label use; or
To give promotional lectures in favor of off-label use to fellow practitioners; [11]
•
Providing advice to prescribers on how to code their claims and
document their medical records to support payment for off-label uses not
covered by Medicaid;[12]
• Publicizing studies showing efficacy of off-label uses while suppressing studies showing no efficacy; [13] and
• Making false representations directly to Medicaid to influence decisions about payment for drugs used off-label.[14]”
Stephen
Rosenthal is a consultant for AbbVie while giving lectures and media
interviews essentially promoting the use of AbbVie products in
‘transgender children’. I would say that none of this passes the smell
test at all. If there isn’t an inappropriate relationship between these
scientists and AbbVie, they need to come clean on what exactly is going
on between them and the company. Ehrensaft has not disclosed this as
potential conflict of interest at all in either research or in media
interviews. Given that she is promoting the use of AbbVie drugs in
popular media through her own books that is extremely concerning. These
scientists go out and promote the use of these drugs for transgenderism
in popular media, arguing that it should be a civil right. They and
others disseminate misleading information about transgenderism to the
media. Rosenthal
and Olson, along with Garofalo and Spack are leading a long-term
observational study of transgender children going on puberty blockers
and cross-sex hormones. How can they be neutral on this when
both have a financial relationship with AbbVie? How can we be sure that
this study — or any other studies by theses scientists or even with
collaborators is not biased because of this relationship? What about the
long-term studies they are involved with? Is the result of those
studies already pre-determined, because of the financial fortunes to be
made?
I have learned through experience, that when
there is smoke, there is fire. Ehrensaft and Olson clearly engaged in a
possibly illegal advisory board. All these scientists disparage previous
research and scientists who disagree with their views — the transgender
movement specifically smeared one scientist,
Kenneth Zucker, for relatively mild criticisms of transgender science,
out of a job. Similar disparagement has occurred to transsexual-typology
describer Ray Blanchard and sexologist Michael Bailey. Suppression of
studies contradicting the trans narrative is frequent.
A well-documented example in the UK involved a study declined at an
ethics committee stage for possibly being ‘politically incorrect’.
But
it is not only those three who have had a clear financial or otherwise
relationship with a drug company or philanthropic foundation. Other
scientists are also possibly monetarily compromised beyond redemption.
Robert Garofalo, who is a co-author of many of the recent studies on
transgenderism, particularly in children, works for Lurie’s Children’s
Hospital, where the Gender and Sex Development program he directs was started with seed money from Jennifer Pritzker,
and continues to receive donations from the billionaire. How does this
affect his research and opinions? If he disagrees with Pritzker, who is
ideologically motivated towards a certain conclusion, he will no longer
be employed at a prestigious children’s hospital. It is far too large a
conflict of interest, and it is not declared in his research. How can
any of it possibly be impartial? What is even more worrying, is that
they lie to the media, and that the media does not question their
narrative.
But
promoting transgender health is not only the purview of the doctor or
large pharmaceutical concern — it is also one of philanthropy. Take, for
example, the ‘Center Of Excellence For Transgender Health’, based in
the University of California San Francisco (which is advised by Johanna
Olson, our favourite AbbVie Advisory Board member.)If we pursue the
sponsorship and supporters page of the Center of Excellence For
Transgender Health’s recent summit, we get a list of familiar names
funded by Arcus, Tawani and the Open Society Foundations — the NCTE, the
Transgender Law Center, WPATH, and GATE. One sponsor of particular
interest for my inner comedian is lesbianhealthinfo.org,
a domain that has unfortunately expired and is being squatted. The link
now leads to a WordPress blog in German, that Google Translate advises
me is about ‘Lesbians also play in the casino’ and contains possibly the
worst summary of The Iliad that I’ve ever read. I
applaud this German spam blog for its inclusivity of lesbians in the
casino. It has been the most lesbian-inclusive website I have seen
through the course of writing this article.
No discussion
of transgender medicine would be complete without looking at the World
Professional Association for Transgender Health, or WPATH. WPATH bills
itself as the thought leader in all things transgender health, and
almost every scientist discussed in this article belongs to WPATH. It
issues the guidelines, holds the conferences, and provides the forum for
research papers on transgenderism.
It has also been criticized, not just by gender critical activists, but by the people it supposedly treats. An open letter
written by patients of WPATH’s membership circulated on the internet,
criticizing its membership for performing procedures with insufficient
medical training, and criticized its research:
“Our experience is that surgeons in WPATH’s membership are:
1.
Offering free or low-cost surgeries to under-resourced patients in
order to gain operating experience in procedures for which they have
incomplete professional training.
2. Engaging in pre-operative counseling, academic publishing, and public presentations using complication rates that are:
3· Based on incomplete patient records and insufficient follow up. It distresses us to see academic publications²
and other claims regarding our bodily experience that imply a level of
follow-up that has simply not occurred. When a surgical center does no
routine follow-up on initial surgeries, the cohort of patients on whom
they have sufficient longitudinal data to report has an enormous
selection bias. Many of us have had our concerns and symptoms dismissed
by our initial surgical teams, or do not have the means to return to our
initial surgeons and have had post-operative management and revision
surgeries elsewhere. Our initial surgeons have no record of these
outcomes.
4· Not inclusive of conditions
experienced by patients as complications, such as fistulas, strictures,
and tissue necrosis that significantly delayed healing but not requiring
surgical correction.”
The open letter goes on
to criticize WPATH for inadequate after care, providing inaccurate
medical information and offering experimental procedures without
advising a patient those procedures are experimental. Not a particularly
great rap sheet for a supposedly professional organization. It does not
help that the WPATH is funded by an ideologically motivated Jennifer
Pritzker — yes, the Tawani Foundation sponsored the 2016 WPATH biannual
symposium.
The thing that recurs in media discussions of the
topic is that these treatments are ‘accepted practice’, and that to
provide anything other than gender-affirming care is ‘conversion
therapy’. One must accept self-identification of the transgender
individual at all costs. Thing is, that wasn’t accepted practice twenty
years ago. For example, the British Royal College of Psychiatrists produced a 1998 report on childhood gender dysphoria, which I quote below:
“Gender
identity disorders can be seen as states in which, in the course of the
young person’s psychosexual development, there is an atypical gender
identity organization. The young person experiences their phenotypic sex as incongruous with his or her own sense of gender identity.
This predicament, which is commoner in boys, is characterized by:
• A desire to be of the other sex
• Cross-dressing
• Play with games, toys and objects usually associated with the other
sex and avoidance of play normally associated with their sex
• Preference for playmates or friends of the sex with which the child identifies
• Dislike of bodily sexual characteristics and functions
It is important to consider these states as different from those seen in adults because:
(a) A developmental process is involved (physical, psychological and sexual).
(b) There is greater fluidity and variability in the outcome, with only
a small proportion becoming transsexuals or transvestites, the majority of affected children eventually developing a homosexual orientation and some a heterosexual orientation without transvestism or transsexualism.”[emphasis mine]
Times
have changed quickly in twenty years. For example, the rates of
childhood gender dysphoria in girls outstripped boys over the past
decade. A feminist would point out that patriarchy has more to do with
which toys, games, clothing and objects are associated with a particular
sex, or preferring playmates of the opposite sex (a child may simply
want to play with the other children that like what they like), but it
is clear that what is emphasized here is sex dysphoria, rather than
‘gender dysphoria’ — a dislike of physical sex, not of a particular
assigned role. I have placed emphasis on the final conclusion: that sex
dysphoric children usually turn out homosexual. In
an interview, Rosenthal informs us that these studies were small and
done mostly abroad. Yet, only twenty years ago, the British professional
psychiatrists association was content to advise its membership that the
vast majority of children who suffer sex dysphoria desist at puberty
and mostly grow up to be happy homosexuals.
This is not a
particularly novel conclusion. Gender non-conforming behavior during
childhood is associated with homosexual behavior in adulthood. This has
been replicated in large studies. What most studies find is that very
few children with gender dysphoria grow up to be gender dysphoric
adults — most grow up homosexual. If a cursory search of the literature
on Google Scholar can turn up this fact, why are we so confused about
childhood gender-non-conformity now? Perhaps there is merit to gender
critical critics of transgenderism calling it ‘gay conversion therapy’
after all.
The paper is also interesting because it comments on
the distinctions that need to be made between a presentation of
transgenderism in childhood and in adulthood.
“Similarly,
pre-pubertal and post-pubertal groups need to be differentiated. There
is greater fluidity and likelihood of change in the former.
Phenomenologically there is a qualitative difference between the way
such children and young people present their predicament from
presentations involving delusions or other psychotic symptoms.
Delusional beliefs about the sexual body or gender can occur in
psychotic conditions but they can be distinguished from the phenomena of
a gender identity disorder as outlined in this paper. There
are issues of nosology because current classification systems seem to
suggest that gender identity disorders in childhood are equivalent to
those in adulthood and that the one inevitably leads to the other. This
is not the case.” (nosology refers to the classification of diseases).
The paper also advises against surgical intervention and recommends that children go through puberty.
Yet just as with the trans murder epidemic the media are all too willing to swallow a line fed to them by these organizations. A Psychology Today article
supposedly ‘debunking junk science’ (of the American College of
Pediatricians, which produces anti-gay material), starts with the well
known facts that reparative therapy is a bad idea, and that gay parents
are fine, and then promotes actual junk science by promoting ‘affirming
transgender youth’. It also manages to lie about the fact that
transgender children are, in fact, sterilized by their treatment.
“The
ACP claims that hormonal interventions make it impossible for
transgender individuals to have biological children. This is false.
Transgender teens receiving hormonal interventions are offered fertility
preservation measures as explained in Endocrine Society Guidelines(link is external) and detailed here(link is external).”
But
this is a lie. Immature gonads cannot produce viable gametes and any
fertility preservation measures are completely experimental. That does
also not change the fact that without going through puberty, and later
surgical intervention, transgender children of both sexes are
effectively castrated throughout adulthood. And this is a lie repeated
again and again, not just to the public, but to the very patients these
doctors are supposedly treating. The author, Jack Turban also fails to
mention that of the sources he cites, many of them ultimately have a
fiscal relationship with a billionaire or a pharmaceutical company
somewhere along the way. Among the studies he cites is one from the
TransYouth project, which has the following acknowledgement:
“This work was supported by grants from the Royalty Research Fund and the Arcus Foundation
to K.R.O. These funding sources played no role in the study design,
data collection, analysis, or interpretation, and no funding source saw
the report before submission for publication.”
I
find it hard to believe that a foundation with a clear political
objective that has invested in astroturf organizations did not want a
predetermined outcome. So what research are these groups funding?
I looked into the TransYouth project, based out of the University of Washington, Seattle, and headed by Kristina Olson, which bills itself as the ‘largest project and is the first large-scale, national, longitudinal study of socially-transitioned transgender children to date.’
It is following 300 socially transitioned children from 45 US states
and in Canada. It is currently advertising for participants.
“In addition to that project we are recruiting new families for new studies on gender development
both in the Seattle region and nationally. Right now, we are recruiting
children who are gender nonconforming, tomboys, princess boys,
intersex, and gender “typical” children. If you and your family are
interested in participating or have more questions, feel free to
complete the sign-up sheet below or email us at gendev [at] uw [dot] edu
so we can tell you more about our work. For more, check out our Frequently Asked Questions page!”
Wait
a minute? I thought this was about trans youth. Why request ‘tomboys’
and ‘princess boys’. What are those things? Gender non-conforming
children (who, as a reminder, mostly grow up into homosexuals), are
being requested for a longitudinal study to discover what happens to
them (we know: they turn out homosexual.) What research does the
TransYouth Project churn out? I decided to go through some examples. I
will quote liberally from the following research article: Gender Development in Transgender Preschool Children :
“[…]
More recent theorizing, however, suggests that although full gender
constancy knowledge may not be responsible for enhancing gendered
preferences and behavior, understanding gender stability in particular
is a central factor in motivating strong gender preferences (Ruble et
al., 2007). For example, a very young girl might already display an
affinity toward pink, dolls, and dresses, but once she understands the
stability of her gender, she will have even more extreme gendered
preferences”
This looks like pseudo academic
word salad to me, although I am the world’s harshest critic. I believe a
translation of this gobbledygook may be:
A girl likes dolls and
pink. Once she discovers girls are stereotypically supposed to like
dolls and pink, she likes them even more, because conformity is rewarded
by our society. Any critical discussion of the fact ‘dolls and pink’
are social constructions of the modern era and do not reflect any innate
biological preference seems to go out the window here.
“At
the same time some work with older socially transitioned trans-gender
children suggests that they give gender-typical (but not sex-typical)
responses on measures of gender development, such as gendered
preferences (Olson, Key, & Eaton, 2015). Evidence that transgender
children show strongly gendered preferences (perhaps as strong as
controls) paired with a lack of gender stability beliefs (at least as it
has traditionally been tested) could suggest that the “boost” from
stability beliefs is not needed to show the high levels of gendered
preferences observed by gender-typical children.”
What
is gender? Is it, like the HRC says, sex stereotypes? Is it some
inalienable psychological development that drives boys to like trucks
and girls to like pink dollies? Or is it a complex process of
socialization that some children resist, and those children are now
being medicalized? How can stereotypes be stable? Do they mean that the
children’s understanding of stereotypes is stable?
The paper then tells us this:
Despite
the large body of work on gender development, most of that work has
been conducted with gender-typical children. The current study is an
exploratory investigation into whether socially transitioned transgender
children show the same patterns of gender development during the
pre-school years. To date, there has been no work on this question,
though there has been one study reporting on gender development in
elementary school-age children and a few studies reporting on gender
development in a broader range of gender diverse children.”
But
this is wrong. Follow up studies on gender dysphoric children have been
done: they turn out to be normal homosexuals. This study does not even
mention the concept of ‘socialization’: it talks about ‘gender
development’, as if modern gender roles are some innate psychosexual
fact, rather than a product of our culture.
“In
addition to this more recent work on socially transitioned transgender
children, there is a longer tradition of studying gender nonconforming
children — those who defy cultural gender expectations for children of
their sex — in the clinical psychology and psychiatry literature.
Although typically focused on clinical outcomes (e.g., Cohen-Kettenis,
Owen, Kaijser, Bradley, & Zucker, 2003), these research teams have
occasionally reported on basic gender development, much as we do in the
current study with socially transitioned transgender children. For
example, one study found that while siblings of gen-der nonconforming
children preferred to play with toys manufactured for children of their
sex, gender nonconforming children (Mage= 7.6 years) did not — they
equally preferred toys manufactured for their own sex and the other sex
(Zucker, Bradley, Doering, & Lozinski, 1985). In contrast, for
games, gender nonconforming children actually expressed a preference for
games manufactured for the other sex, but their siblings did not. Thus,
it appears that gender nonconforming children’s preferences
consistently differ from their gender conforming peers (the definition of
gender nonconformity), but only sometimes was this difference in the
direction opposite their sex at birth. Furthermore, Zucker et al. (1999)
found that a group of 3 to 10-year-old gender nonconforming children
showed an atypical understanding of gender constancy. That is, the
gender diverse group of children was less likely than gender-typical
children to believe that their own gender was stable across time (gender
stability) or across changes in appearance (gender consistency)
compared to others’ gender.”
After reading
through most of this, I began to wonder if my brain would melt out my
ears, on to the carpet, and create a large stain. I didn’t need to know
the words ‘gender constancy’ could be used in a sentence. Let me remind
you: gender is the stereotypes assigned to a particular sex. That is the
Human Right’s Campaign definition. This study is measuring stereotypes.
The study goes on to outline an experiment — of ‘measuring
participant’s gender’. How did they do this? I thought you’d never ask. I
didn’t realize gender was even a measurable concept. Apparently, it is!
“To
measure participants’ gender expression in everyday life, without
telling parents or children in advance, two experimenters independently
rated the outfit worn by each participant at the testing session on a
scale ranging from 1 to 5 (allowing for half-point ratings) with lower
numbers representing more stereotypical boy outfits and higher numbers
representing more stereotypical girl outfits (r = .94, p < .001).
However, in some cases (n=13) only one experimenter was able to provide
an outfit rating,”
SCIENCE! I
love the first acknowledgement of gender stereotypes in this entire
paper is in this ‘experiment’. I have a question — who decides which
outfit belongs to which gender? Is it the gender police? What gender is
the uniform of the gender police?
“Experimenters
were told that the most masculine outfits consisted of clothing items
such as male-stereotypic sports attire, superhero costumes, and men’s
formal wear, whereas the most feminine outfits consisted of frilly
dresses or skirts, princess costumes, and sparkly accessories.
Experimenters also considered the colors (e.g., pink) and style (e.g.,
fitted vs. baggy shirt) when determining outfit ratings”
Dear young girls of America: do you like football? Ever worn a baggy shirt? What about both at once? Yeah, you’re a boy now.
My
interest was piqued by this TransYouth study that consisted of an
unholy combination of word salad, jargon, and gender measurement(but I
thought gender was stereotypes?) I decided to go and read more
scientific articles. I had assumed that the scientific basis for a civil
rights movement would be sound. Maybe the Human Rights Campaign is
telling me incorrect things about gender. Perhaps this study was an
outlier.
I went to find the scientific basis that underpins the
transgender issue. I decided to look at, ‘transgender children’ in
particular. After all, transgenderism is supposedly the same thing, from
childhood to adulthood. I did not believe that the scientific basis to
change a child’s sex could possibly be baggy shirts. Surely the sound
scientific basis for this endeavor would be there.
I read through Transgender youth: current conceptswhich
is a literature review. I would note that ‘literature reviews’ are the
currency of medical ghostwriting; that there is one academic attached,
and that academic is Stephen M. Rosenthal, who as previously discussed,
has a financial relationship with AbbVie as a consultant (this is
disclosed as a conflict of interest within the paper.) Perhaps I am only
hallucinating the smoke, or perhaps there is a fire. You decide. Of
interest are the following passages:
“Based
on pioneering work form[sic] the Netherlands, the Endocrine Society
(ES) guidelines and WPATH SOC endorse the use of pubertal blockers using
gonadotropin releasing hormone (GnRH) agonists at Tanner stage II/III
in individuals experiencing a significant increase in gender dysphoria
with onset of puberty3,4,44,45,46,47). This
treatment is fully reversible and allows additional time for gender
exploration without the pressure of ongoing pubertal development.”
Yet
many women with precocious puberty report bone problems due to using
Lupron as children. The article admits this later on, saying:
“The
primary risks of pubertal suppression in gender dysphoric youth treated
with GnRH agonists include adverse effects on bone mineralization,
compromised fertility, and unknown effects on brain development.”
Is
that fully reversible? Or did Rosenthal lie to the media? They’re
messing with these kid’s brains. It also contradicts itself. It also
lets us know about the status of that sound scientific basis:
“There are currently only limited outcomes data to support the ES and WPATH recommendations for care of transgender youth.”
These people are castrating children
based on limited outcome data. This may or may not work as a treatment.
Who knows, really? This isn’t settled science. This is a grand
experiment, on children who are overwhelmingly more likely to grow up to
be gay than transgender. There isn’t a scientific basis for the
hundreds of millions of dollars poured into the transgender movement and
the children it supposedly protects. Rosenthal did not start publishing
on transgender issues until 2012, though he was a publishing
endocrinologist before that. In a few short years, he went from an
obscure endocrinologist to a media star, being interviewed about his
work with transgender children. I leave why this work has made him a
media star and exercise to the reader.
I decided to
look at one of the other transgender media stars, Diane Ehrensaft.
Ehrensaft, who as we know has written two popular books on the subject
and served on an AbbVie advisory board, must know what ‘gender’ is. I
read her paper Gender nonconforming youth: current perspectives.
Hopefully, I can find something that justifies this entire transgender
exercise. I’m getting desperate. After all, this is the up-to-date
summation of the current state of gender-affirming healthcare in
children. Surely this is all very reasonable, really.
“In
contemporary versions of gender development theory that take into
account gender variations as a normal part of the human condition, the
understanding is that the sex assigned at birth may match the gender a
youth will eventually know themselves to be, but it might not. Each
child is presented with a developmental task of weaving together threads
of nature, nurture, and culture to establish their individual and
unique authentic gender self. This self will be composed of both gender
identity — who I know myself to be as male, female, or other, and gender
expressions — how I choose to perform my gender, including clothing
choices, activity preferences, friendship choices, and so forth.
Recently, this transactional relationship between nature, nurture, and
culture in gender development has been referred to as the gender web,
broken up into components that consist of the items in”
So gender can be defined by — the gender web? The gender web?! I am not joking.
Here are the elements of the gender web, which are given to us in a table.
“• Chromosomes
• Hormones
• Hormone receptors
• Gonads/primary sex characteristics
• Secondary sex characteristics
• Brain
• Mind
• Socialization: family, school, religious institutions, community
• Culture: values, ethics, laws, theories, and practices”
Five
of these are biology. Four are influenced by the culture around
us — the brain, the mind, socialization and culture. But perhaps gender
is not stereotypes but inborn, after all. Maybe Ehrensaft can tell us
that, and I’ll delete everything and forget this ever happened.
Ehrensaft instead gives us a ‘fourth dimension of gender development’. I will let her hoist herself with her own petard:
“In
this contemporary model of gender development, added to the three
dimensions of nature, nurture, and culture is the fourth dimension:
time. Each child alters their gender web as they weave together nature,
nurture, and culture, “over time”. In other words, gender is neither
fixed by age 6, as in the traditional model, nor static throughout all
stages of child and adult development, thus explaining how an individual
at age 40 or 50 could come to the realization that the gender they had
identified as being is no longer a good fit. It is also recognized that
gender development is a discrete and separate track from development of
one’s sexual identity, and typically proceeds it in a youth’s
development.”
Gender changes over
time — and it is affected by culture. This is utter nonsense. Why are we
medicating people over this? And if gender can change over time, what
about transgender children? Can their gender change after you’ve
castrated them? Why is this something that requires medical intervention?
It
is interesting that Ehrensaft desires to establish that there is no
link between ‘gender development’ and ‘one’s sexual identity’, despite
the plethora of studies to the contrary — that gender non-conforming
children often grow up to be homosexual adults. In a way, homosexuality
is the ultimate gender non-conforming behavior. Perhaps Ehrensaft is
taking into account the many ‘transgender lesbians’ who transition in
mid-life.By insisting sexuality has nothing to do with transgenderism
except ‘crossing at certain points’, Ehrensaft may also be sensitive to
the gay critics who call this modern science of ‘transgender children’
gay conversion therapy.
Ehrensaft then presents a summation of the
‘gender affirmative’ model that LGBTQI+ organizations are promoting,
she is promoting, and oligarchs are funding.
“Basic premises of the gender affirmative model
• Gender variations are not disorders.
• Gender presentations are diverse and varied across cultures, requiring cultural sensitivity.
• Gender involves an interweaving, over time, of biology; development and socialization; and culture and context.
• Gender may be fluid; it is not always binary.
•
If present, individual psychological/psychiatric problems are more
often than not secondary to negative interpersonal and cultural
reactions to a child.
• Gender pathology lies more in the culture than in the child.
“[…]
The
basic therapeutic tenet of the gender affirmative model is quite
simple: When it comes to knowing a child’s gender, it is not for us to
tell, but for the children to say. In contrast to the watchful waiting
model, once information is gathered to assess a child’s gender status,
action is taken to allow that child to exercise that gender. Therefore,
if after careful consideration, it becomes clear that a young child is
affirmed in their gender, demonstrating that the gender they know
themselves is different than or opposite to the gender that would match
the sex assigned to them at birth, the gender affirmative model supports
a social transition to allow that child to fully live in that gender,
whether that child is 3, 7, or 17 years old. Such decision-making is
governed by stages, rather than ages, both for social transitions and
later for medical interventions. Once the child’s gender comes into
clear focus, which is posited as happening with a child of any age, no
need is seen to hold off until adolescence to affirm that gender. This
viewpoint is informed by data indicating the psychological harm that can
be done, including heightened risk for generalized anxiety, social
anxiety, oppositional behaviors, depression, compromised school
performance, if a youth experiences themselves living in a gender that
is inauthentic to them.25”
Remember, according to the Human Rights Campaign
and Ehrensaft herself, gender is stereotypes. This paper is literally
saying that sexed body does not match the stereotypes assigned to it; it
requires medical intervention to ‘affirm gender’. Despite this
pathology being cultural, and acknowledging this fact, Ehrensaft still
wants to chemically and physically castrate children who do not conform
to ‘gender’. If a child believes they should be, or are the other sex,
because they do not conform to society’s expectations and stereotypes of
their sex, Ehrensaft believes we should medicalize this and treat them
with drugs, and ultimately ‘affirm their gender’ by castrating
them. She has published two books on this subject, encouraging the
castration of non-conforming children. She has sat on advisory boards
for drug companies to promote this off-label use of their medication.
You think I’m exaggerating about castration? Ehrensaft admits to supporting castrating children:
“Another
critical task for the medical-mental health team is the necessary
discussion of fertility implications for each of these interventions.
Although advances are being made in reproductive medicine to preserve
immature gametes or reproductive tissues for later reproduction, at
this point in history a child who begins puberty blockers at Tanner
Stage 2 and proceeds directly to cross-sex hormones will be rendered
infertile. Administration of testosterone or estrogen to a
post pubertal adolescent may compromise a youth’s later fertility, or
might require going off the hormones for a period of time if a
transgender youth who has not had gonad or genital surgeries later in
life desires to have a genetically related child.”[emphasis mine]
From the horse’s mouth. Infertile. No gonads. Castrated. No sexual development. A brand new caste of eunuchs. Are you concerned yet?
But she keeps going. Ehrensaft even sees the potential of drugging the ‘non-binary child’:
“Not
only is there no other aspect of adolescent care where the teamwork
between medical and mental health provider is critical; there is no
other domain of youth services in which a mental health provider is so
actively involved in medical decision making. Where this has surfaced
most recently is in the recent emergence of youth in gender clinics who
present as neither male nor female, but rather gender nonbinary or “in
the middle”, adopting the platform of the multiplicity of gender. The
challenge is when these youth ask for a particular medical intervention
that achieves that goal of a middle ground — perhaps a touch of
testosterone, or chest surgery with no other intervention and a chosen
pronoun of “they” rather than “he” or “she”. These are new horizons for
both medical and mental health professionals today, and there is a
mutuality, therefore, in the medical professional training the mental
health professional while the mental health professional is in turn
training the medical professional in order to integrate the
biopsychosocial aspects of care to include the gamut of all the gender
nonconforming youth presenting for care.”
Just a
touch of testosterone will not lead to health problems later in life,
like heart attacks or irreversible physical changes.
If you don’t conform to sex stereotypes, you need medicalization. This is what these scientists believe.
Ehrensaft concludes with this:
“In
the course of only two decades, sophisticated models for the care of
gender nonconforming and transgender youth have evolved. There is an
urgent need to provide more research data documenting the efficacy of
these different programs, but the recent findings of the Amsterdam group
provide hope that the care, particularly within the watchful waiting
and gender affirmative models, is promoting gender health. In the Dutch
authors’ words, the treatment, including puberty suppression, cross-sex
hormones, and then in adulthood gender affirmation surgery, “leads to
improved psychological functioning of transgender adolescents. While
enabling them to make important age-appropriate developmental
transitions, it contributes to a satisfactory objective and subjective
well-being in young adulthood”.33
The authors propose that not only early medical intervention, but also a
comprehensive multidisciplinary approach contributes to the youth’s
gender health. Reflecting back on Daniel, the youth introduced at the
opening of this review, the ability of professionals to aid youth such
as Daniel in getting his authentic gender into focus and providing the
appropriate treatments to bring that gender in alignment with his body
is the key to overall well-being for all youth seeking professional
gender care.”
The ‘gender affirming model’ has been around for less than two decades.
Two decades ago, it was considered settled science that gender
dysphoric children mostly grow up gay and that puberty suppression was
ill-advised. Regardless of the
fact that it contradicts all prior science and thought on the subject,
has emerged and it has become accepted extremely rapidly, despite the
concerns of lesbians and gays, women, and not to mention many
transsexuals. It begs the question: why the change? Ehrensaft also
contradicts herself in other parts of the paper: she says that GnRH, has
no risks and then admits later that the risks of such treatment are
unknown, but that there are reports of bone problems — just like
Rosenthal does in the paper he wrote quoted above. If neither of them
can keep their story straight in a single, peer-reviewed paper that they
authored, this ‘science’ has some catastrophic flaws, especially when
its prophets and proselytizers lie to themselves over the efficacy of
their own treatments!
Ehrensaft has written books on
this subject and works with the lobby group Gender Spectrum (she sits on
its board), which provides services to workplaces seeking diversity
training. It is impossible for such a scientist to be impartial when
they stand to make money and have been compensated by a particular
pharmaceutical company to advocate use of their drugs. It is less a
science and more a religion. These are not scientists. They are priests
of a cult. Oh, and if you’re wondering, in this bizarre interview with Psychology Art, where
she uses the term ‘gender resilience’, and insists that some females
produce sperm and some males produce eggs, Ehrensaft advocates taking
away children if the parents believe in the concept of biological sex:
“Now
the question comes, what if this type of family intervention still
doesn’t influence the family and they still are hostile to their child? At
some point mental health professionals know that your chosen family is
much more important sometimes than your family of origin in keeping you
afloat and this is true for the trans youth community as well.
Sometimes we as mental health professionals have to help trans youth
find alternative places and relationships. I’m not saying necessarily
moving them from their home but making sure that there’s an alternative
supportive spaces for them, and somebody who can mentor them.
And
sometimes you do wanna think about removing them from the home because
it’s abusive. It’s as if they are being abused, and that’s a hard thing
to call. But I think that the, kind of, severe gender solution that can
happen in a home, I’d qualify it as abuse. It’s not the kind of abuse
that I can report to CPS. It’s not considered physical abuse typically,
but we can call it emotional abuse. So you can do that as well.”
Diane
Ehrensaft wants to take away your children if you don’t want to give
them drugs that include things like ‘organ damage’ as side effects
because they don’t conform to sex stereotypes.
I read through more
scientific articles than this — dozens. To be honest, reading them
upset me with the sheer level of homophobia within. Most of them
repeated exactly the same things. If I continued quoting from them this
article would be even more unwieldy and unpublishable. What got me the
most was that it took me a lot of hunting to even get a definition of
‘gender’. To these scientists it seems to be some kind of cultural
construct that is also an innate psychosexual drama that can only be
resolved through affirming whichever ‘gender’ a child chooses and
deciding that a particular ‘gender’ belongs to a particular ‘sex’, so
that child must be transitioned towards the appearance of a particular
sex (with none of the sexual function of that sex, or their own sex.)
These papers all say that behaving in a ‘male gender’ means a female
child should be transitioned towards being a ‘male’, at least in
appearance, and vice versa for male children. It is homophobic,
regressive science. And it is being funded by drug companies and
philanthropists with investments in those drug companies or a personal
agenda.
The worst part of all of this? The data we do have says all of this medical intervention doesn’t reduce suicidality in transgender people.
The
overall mortality for sex-reassigned persons was higher during
follow-up (aHR 2.8; 95% CI 1.8–4.3) than for controls of the same birth
sex, particularly death from suicide (aHR 19.1; 95% CI 5.8–62.9).
Sex-reassigned persons also had an increased risk for suicide attempts
(aHR 4.9; 95% CI 2.9–8.5) and psychiatric inpatient care (aHR 2.8; 95%
CI 2.0–3.9). Comparisons with controls matched on reassigned sex yielded
similar results. Female-to-males, but not male-to-females, had a higher
risk for criminal convictions than their respective birth sex controls.
We
don’t know if the current ‘gender affirmation’ model might make it even
worse! Yet they tell us if trans people don’t receive this medical
treatment, they will be murdered or commit suicide. Which one is
it — the rhetoric or the data we do have?
But I know one thing now: the transgender lobby is built on a foundation of money, nonsense and homophobia.
I
was inspired to investigate the election funding behind the Anchorage
‘bathroom bill’ municipal ordinance, not by anything relating to
transgenderism, but researching how philanthropy empowers other causes
into the stratosphere. I wondered — how much of this is also happening
with identity politics? I wanted to follow the money. And thus, that set
off months of investigating funding, causes and lobby groups. The
totality of my research was impossible to fit into a single article. But
the evidence is clear: transgenderism isn’t a real civil rights
movement.
Let us think about it: what every group in the
transgender lobby is demanding is essentially guaranteed access to
medication for off-label purposes. None of these drugs are approved for
transgender uses. Given the data we do have and the state of the science
behind that data, accompanied by the side effects up to and including
death, it is unlikely to ever be approved by the FDA in a clinical
trial. Unless, of course, the side effects were better than the outcome.
Hence, the creation of a perception that transgender people are
murdered a at higher rates than the general population, even though that
isn’t true. Saying that the side effects are better than the suicide of
the patient probably wouldn’t pass muster either, given that medical
intervention did not change the fact that transgender people have
elevated suicide rates compared to the general population.
Hence
our endless bad statistics and fake news. A survey with methodological
flaws and some good messaging can cover for the actual reality, at least
to the general public. Because the one way these ‘treatments’ could get
approved is if the problem is worse than the side effects and the
solution — this poor, gender dysphoric wilting flower of a person will
kill themselves or be murdered unless they can access ‘gender-affirming
healthcare’. Dangerous drugs that have failed clinical trials before
could be issued on-label for this process, and protected by civil rights
legislation. That the ideology that is built around these demands is
incoherent, serves only to foist drugs on to vulnerable people, and is
fundamentally homophobic is of little consequence to those who see the
dollar signs. Transition could be a big business, which over a 50-year
period of ‘transition’ could create a market worth trillions of dollars,
if not more. Think of the potential markets! Surgeries that run into
the six-figures. Body modifications that have not yet been invented
outside of science fiction. And some of the 90’s best-selling-drugs,
drugs that could be best-sellers again if only they had blanket approval
to be used on a class of people once again.
Almost every
philanthropist I investigated had financial ties to the pharmaceutical
industry — George Soros and his connections to Pfizer and chemical
company Monsanto, Jon Stryker, who is an heir to the Stryker
Corporation, which makes medical and surgical supplies. The lone
exception was Jennifer Pritzker, who appears to be ideologically
motivated, particularly given their transition. Pritzker is
extremely-right wing. Perhaps homophobia is their reason, or perhaps
they truly believe. Maybe it really is about being ‘validated’ as a
‘woman’. If so, Pritzker is being taken for as much a ride as any other
activist, they simply have more fiscal ability to promulgate the
ideology. The ideology is a byproduct of the main goal — which is
guaranteeing access to expensive, off-label drugs for a group of people,
with civil protections. That the ideology has morphed into one that
demands lesbians make themselves sexually available to male bodies,
where ‘sexual fluidity’ is considered the ideal, and had its language appropriated and used by Christian conversion therapy groups promising a ‘cure’ to homosexuality seems to matter little.
To
do this, they have hijacked the once powerful and grassroots gay lobby
with large amounts of philanthropic and corporate funding, to the point
these organizations have changed their names in order to be ‘inclusive’.
Ordinary gays and lesbians, especially the lesbians and their concerns,
have been pushed out of their organizations, even as almost every
lesbian bar in the US has closed and gay loneliness is on the rise, and
as both groups have no federal civil rights protections.
While
transgenderism will fall over — because it must, because it cannot be
sold to the general public without threats, and because ultimately, it
is a corporate initiative using shady if not outright-illegal methods,
it won’t happen very fast without people speaking up about it.
Ultimately, my concern is for the homosexuals who have lost control of
their movement and now face a group of people that believes that their
gender non-conformity requires surgery, even if they are children. And
if transgenderism does not fall over because of these things, it will
fall over because of the lawsuits those children will make. And things
like ‘Limited outcome data’ and sterilizing a child for little
demonstrated medical benefit look like dollar signs to personal injury
and medical malpractice lawyers.
But what this demonstrates the
most is that a rich man with an ideology should have no greater voice
than the ordinary citizen. We all live in nation-states: we should all
contribute equally and proportionally to the pool of funds that run that
state and have an equal voice on how those funds are distributed. The
ability of the very rich to divert their funds into services and
organizations they believe is optimal without any democratic consent is
fundamentally anti-democratic, no matter how much you may agree with
their aims. Had the billions poured into philanthropy gone to the state,
many of these problems could have been solved. Had our nation’s
political discourse been one where each voice is equal, would we have
the disaffection that creates populist monsters?
As it stands,
politics is a battle of oligarchs that wield their ideologies in a great
war of money. Their soldiers are professional activists invested in the
permanent war between either end of the political spectrum. Their
cheerleaders are media outlets that report on these wars, treat them
like football games, and take the claims of these organizations to be
unassailable fact, it is easy for the average person to disengage and
become disaffected. Ultimately, their voice and vote does not matter.
This creates a situation where ideologies such as transgenderism, an
ideology that is fundamentally incoherent and experimenting on children
can be accepted on the left. A situation where the punishment for not
going along with the party line is a violently enforced exile.
The
influence these large foundations and their funders have on our
politics cannot be underestimated, and it needs to be questioned. The
transgender civil rights movement consists of (i) large numbers of
astroturf organizations funded by billionaires with financial interest
in its success, (ii) medical professionals who stand to gain from
‘selling’ transgenderism to the public (and who are happy to lie to the
public about their treatments) and (iii) pharmaceutical companies that
appear to be engaging in illegal off-label marketing with said medical
professionals. The question of what came first-the foundations, the
pharmaceutical companies, or the medical professionals -is like asking
whether the chicken or the egg came first. But the fact of the matter
is, all three groups stand to benefit from the transgender civil rights
movement. No transgender person does. With no unbiased research, they
cannot get the answers they need to treat their condition effectively.
They are left stranded and marooned, with an entire movement dedicated
to foisting drugs upon them, instead of finding an actual cure or
treatment for gender dysphoria. When ‘transition’ is complete and they
are left a castrated eunuch, with no more steps up the Bridge To Total
Freedom, their suicidality does not decrease. With an incomplete path to
salvation, they are told they can chase after something they can never
realize. They are obliterated as a distinct legal class of people by
self-identification legislation — the legal ramifications of which could
set trans rights back years, which has been raised by gender critical trans activists such as Miranda Yardley.
The
modern transgender movement is an astroturf tiger. It is not
grassroots, it is not organic, and it serves the purposes of no one
beyond homophobes and pharmaceutical companies. It is a menace, it has
hollowed out the LGBT community, it threatens women’s legal gains for
the past hundred years, and it is going to destroy people’s lives. An
entire generation of gender non-conforming children that may have
otherwise grown up gay are going to grow up to be brain damaged,
weakened eunuchs with a medical malpractice lawyer on retainer. This
‘movement’ needs to end before that happens. The LGBT community needs to
wake up and start talking back to the fox in the hen house.