The difficulty with this thread:
https://www.susans.org/forums/index.php/topic,27302.0.html and with its premise is that the OP forms an argument based on a belief. It then stipulates that in order to prove/disprove the basic presumption "i am a woman born that was born with hbs" can only be made by someone with HBS. That is to set-up a parameter for an argument that is circular, a tautology.
The presumption is that HBS is,
de facto, a medical condition that has been as validated as, say, lung cancer. The factual basis for that validation is lacking. In using ICD-10 one cannot find a listing for such a medical condition. One can only find the designation at sites, and in the writings of those that propounded the HBS or of those who agree with that particular explanation of what has been called transsexuality. Proponents are generally not going to sow the seeds, intentional, of disproval within their propagational sites and writings.
I don't disagree at all that a medical/physical reason for transsexuality that
might include some of the traits associated with Harry Benjamin Syndrome (HBS) may well be discovered, researched and established at some time. That time is 'not yet.' We may well someday be able to isolate a gene or set of genes that cause an anomaly such as the proposed HBS. As yet, there is nothing to establish such a condition except my belief that I have it, and the belief that it is limited to those who think of ourselves as 'true transsexuals.' Although I will also allow that in the readings I have made of HBS I find that certain limitations to the class of individuals with such a disorder seems to skew on the side of economic, social and ethnic disparities that are socio-cultural and personal, not medical.
There was a time when transsexuals were known as 'unicorns' as well. I might well start a thread that limited participation to transsexuals who defined themselves as unicorns. I might establish that any who disagreed had to show through articles, journals, statements of policy and medical literature that was written and accepted by the unicorns that 'unicorns' were mythological creatures.
I might also limit all discussion of 'unicorns' to those who agreed that they were unicorns. Others could go elsewhere to make their arguments. The unicorns would recognize no commentary that would be made by any who did not accept that they were unicorns.
Provided I owned the printing press, web space, radio station, tv station or whatever media I established as the place for unicorns to discuss the legitimacy of unicorns then I would be able to limit discussions to other unicorns and would, therefore, probably not receive a lot of input from those who did not so identify.
I'm sure that I would be very secure in my ability to view myself as a unicorn, simply because I would see no arguments that unicorns are mythological creatures that were a cross between what others might call a mixture of horse, goat and narwhal.
Inductive and deductive reasoning require certain logical parameters in order to determine 'truth' through words. Logic does not have a one-to-one relationship to what most of us refer to as 'real-life,' a series of events and thoughts/feelings that we experience through the medium of what we refer to as time. Instead such reasoning is founded on words: the symbols and signs we use to approximate descriptions of what we experience as 'reality.' A fairly large collection of 'logical fallacies,' their uses and determinants may be found here:
http://logicalfallacies.info/Alas, I own no space that allows such a discussion to remain the purview of myself and other unicorns. Thus, to make this argument and limit it in the ways I wish I would have to buy such a venue and maintain it, making certain that no one who was not a 'unicorn' was given access to it.
I might obtain 35 or 45 thousand like-minded people and we would all discuss the value and veracity of our existence as unicorns. Or refusing to accede to the demands I made of others I might well venture forth to establish 'unicornism' among the media owned and operated by others.
The 'answers' to questions as laid down in the OP are personal and can be validated only by myself. They may or may not be accepted and embraced by others. But to limit such a discussion to only those who agreed with me on another's space would be a sore breach of etiquette and good taste. Much like the taking over of a worship-grove of a different coven and demanding that the members of the other coven desist from ever setting foot in that grove again.
It's bad form and will generally only lead to hard feelings and a fight. I can do such things, my question to myself is simply this: does the value of the action justify the taking of the action and the sowing of the discord that almost surely will result?
Nichole