Sadie,
Thanks for your reply. Reading the article from the place that I am at, one of having to deal with issue personally, and already knowing much of what underlies the discussion at the level of the general population, I don't what what the general reader would take from this article.
I do not wish to be argumentative about any of this with you. However, I will make a couple of comments.
The article does not actually say that ->-bleeped-<- began in Germany in the 1930's It says sexual reassignment surgical intervention for a person's gender dysphoria began in the 1930's, in so many words.
While the writer does not delve into the more recent science that is reinforcing the basis for the current more mainstream thought on the nature and source of our gender identities as human beings, the writer does say:
QuoteWithin the past 20 years a dominant theory about gender identities has emerged. Humans come equipped with an innate, gendered sense of who they are—not just those who wish to transition from one sex to another, but "cis" people (those content with their natal sex) and "non-binary" people who do not fit neatly into either category.
Take note of the words I emphasized. I do not think it is necessarily the writer's duty to defend the theory by delving into the supporting research. I think that is a summation of all the research into brain development, prenatal or otherwise. I do wish it was more explicit that the source of the "innate, gendered sense" was the brain, itself.
I see the piece as an attempt to present the rationalizations for two different courses of action by two different governments. The rationalization for the US government's course of action is founded on misinformation. I think there is a place for an article such as this to allow more open-minded people to see the contrast in the thought processes. For open-minded people who seem to stand against us, I think, they are driven by fear, not hate. Yelling at them does nothing to assuage their fears. Showing the contrast might allow them to shift their views.
I have, for all intents and purposes, just completed my coming out. I had to come out to a lot of friends who are largely right leaning. Some of them actually made comments that were anti-gay or anti-trans in the past. All but one was at the very least, OK with my course of action. Most were affirming and supportive. I do not know all of the reasons, but I have to think it is more information about ->-bleeped-<- in recent times. But more than that it is knowing someone, me, who does not fit the image of what they feared.
Anyway, just some of my thoughts. I was glad to see an article that wasn't rivaling the decibel level of a jet engine.
Take care, Sadie,
Stevi