I wonder where the transgender issue really began. I kinda shrugged off the whole thing about her family seeking involuntary psychiatric care as a typical dramatic parental response at first.
But I later read that a former chief of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins had a commentary in the Wall Street Journal where he stated it was a mental disorder, similar to a "dangerously thin" person suffering anorexia who looks in the mirror and thinks they are "overweight," and that it does neither the public nor the transgender community any favors by promoting it as a civil rights movement that needs defending. It also mentioned a statistic that the transgender suicide rate post-reassignment is 20 times higher than non transgender people, and that they have since stopped performing such surgeries since most people (70-80%) with transgender feelings abandon them later in life.
It makes the case that perhaps surgery isn't addressing the root of the issue, if there is an issue at all.
But I later read that a former chief of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins had a commentary in the Wall Street Journal where he stated it was a mental disorder, similar to a "dangerously thin" person suffering anorexia who looks in the mirror and thinks they are "overweight," and that it does neither the public nor the transgender community any favors by promoting it as a civil rights movement that needs defending. It also mentioned a statistic that the transgender suicide rate post-reassignment is 20 times higher than non transgender people, and that they have since stopped performing such surgeries since most people (70-80%) with transgender feelings abandon them later in life.
It makes the case that perhaps surgery isn't addressing the root of the issue, if there is an issue at all.