(Taking my mind of politics for a while...)
We often see queries on the forum about timelines for the effects of HRT. Over the last year, I have noticed some long-term effects that I haven't seen discussed much. Most people concentrate on short-term effects.
I started HRT in January of 2017, so it has been eight years. I had all the normal short-term effects: elimination of "mental static" almost immediately, boobs by six months, facial changes, slowing of body hair growth by 12 months, etc.
In the past year, I have noticed some fat transfer to my hips. I have been careful not to put on weight (in fact, I have gone down about 5 lbs), so this is definitely fat transfer. When I look in a mirror, I have curves!! I am still a bit thick in the middle, due to my male rib cage and my "third boob" (belly), but the overall effect is very nice.
The other long-term effect was more subtle. Here, women aged 40-75 get a mammogram every two years, and trans women are eligible five years after starting HRT. On my first two mammograms, they found that my breasts had "heterogeneous density", meaning that they were naturally lumpy. I had noticed the same on self-examination. Because the varying density makes it hard to detect cancerous lumps, I was scheduled for another mammogram one year later instead of two years. Same the second time around.
But the third time, last year, I didn't get the same followup letter telling my about the density. So I called the screening program to check, in case the letter had gotten lost. No, they said, the density was normal enough that I was back on the standard two-year cycle. And, thinking about it, on self-exam, they are not as lumpy as they used to be.
While my breasts are not significantly bigger - I might be up to an honest A-cup now, but no more - they are softer and more breast-like.
So, for anyone frustrated by lack of progress on the boob front, be patient. They can still be developing as much as seven years after you begin HRT.