Mario Lopez: It's 'dangerous' for parents to support transgender kids

Started by Kalifornia., July 30, 2019, 09:13:58 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Sinpool

Quote from: Genesis2 on July 31, 2019, 06:53:53 PM
Facts vs feelings  :kii:

Pulled that hypocrisy card real quick  ;-)

d

woo $100 bill! $1! Transcurrency! boy



𝖘𝖖𝖚𝖎𝖉


Amazing


Naomi Hit Me

Quote from: Gilgamesh. on July 31, 2019, 01:38:30 PM
Quote from: Genesis2 on July 31, 2019, 11:34:59 AM
If I owed you $100

And gave you a $5 bill and told you I identify it as a $100 bill, you BETTER accept it as $100 or else you're a transphobic piece of shit.

See how stupid all of this shit sounds? Stop mainstreaming delusion.

SnanNjsjshsgdgsbs

See y'all? this is why I don't debate with this gal no more  :plzstop:
She really thought she DID something with this  :dead:

Vonc2002

Quote from: Omi on August 01, 2019, 07:13:40 AM
Quote from: Gilgamesh. on July 31, 2019, 01:38:30 PM
Quote from: Genesis2 on July 31, 2019, 11:34:59 AM
If I owed you $100

And gave you a $5 bill and told you I identify it as a $100 bill, you BETTER accept it as $100 or else you're a transphobic piece of shit.

See how stupid all of this shit sounds? Stop mainstreaming delusion.

SnanNjsjshsgdgsbs

See y'all? this is why I don't debate with this gal no more  :plzstop:
She really thought she DID something with this  :dead:
:plzstop: :plzstop: :plzstop:
Gen was a mess for that
I think ur salary is $1
:udontlookok:
Unintelligent kwee was on to sumn with the Rachael Dolezal mess tho, guys
This is my pass to say WHATEVER tf I wanna say about the mess she releases so I don't wanna hear SHIT! Baby mama is a mess of a song btw





Naomi Hit Me

Quote from: Vonc2002 on August 01, 2019, 07:26:12 AM
Quote from: Omi on August 01, 2019, 07:13:40 AM
Quote from: Gilgamesh. on July 31, 2019, 01:38:30 PM
Quote from: Genesis2 on July 31, 2019, 11:34:59 AM
If I owed you $100

And gave you a $5 bill and told you I identify it as a $100 bill, you BETTER accept it as $100 or else you're a transphobic piece of shit.

See how stupid all of this shit sounds? Stop mainstreaming delusion.

SnanNjsjshsgdgsbs

See y'all? this is why I don't debate with this gal no more  :plzstop:
She really thought she DID something with this  :dead:
Unintelligent kwee was on to sumn with the Rachael Dolezal mess tho, guys
No, no she wasn't

Vonc2002

Yea, gen shoulda drove the Rachael Dolezal point home. Really, REALLY comparable mess
This is my pass to say WHATEVER tf I wanna say about the mess she releases so I don't wanna hear SHIT! Baby mama is a mess of a song btw





Naomi Hit Me


Vonc2002

This is my pass to say WHATEVER tf I wanna say about the mess she releases so I don't wanna hear SHIT! Baby mama is a mess of a song btw





Naomi Hit Me

QuoteKat Blaque, a transgender black woman says, "Gender is not a biological trait passed from parent to child, whereas race is." In other words, racial features are passed on, but gender is innate. Blaque explains that darker skin is the result of melanin, which was an evolutionary trait to protect people from the sun. Race is something that is only available to certain people. Blaque points out that Dolezal can wash off her makeup and resume life as a white woman any time she wants to, but transgender people can't do that. They are not defined by what they are wearing because it is an innate part of who they are.

For one thing, the brains of males and females are different. Scientists describe it as sexual dimorphism, or the difference in brain size and neuron densities when comparing male and female brains. In transgender people, research has shown male-to-female transgender brains are more likely to resemble female brains in size and the placement of neuron density. The reverse is true for female-to-male transgender brains.


Additionally, one twin study, which looked at transgender siblings, found that 33 percent of male and 23 percent of female identical twins were both transgender, compared to just 2.6 percent of fraternal twins. And in a genetics study, male-to female transgender people were more likely to have a longer version of a receptor gene, which reduced the gene's ability to bind testosterone. The gene's binding of testosterone helps form male sex characteristics.


Though still in its infancy, the science of sexuality and gender are producing results, which show a solid connection between biology and behavior. The same cannot be said for someone who declares herself "transracial."

However, if Dolezal's account of her childhood is true, that she was molested by her brother and made to eat her own vomit, it makes sense that she would identify with an oppressed culture, which also represents resiliency and strength.


Wendy Danbury, in a comment on social media, noted, "When I was 12 or 13, I envied the African American girls at my middle school (in mostly white Orange County, [where] there were only a very few people of color). I wished I could be part of their group, because they seemed so warm and chummy with each other. I didn't realize at the time that I was looking at an out-group creating their own in-group; I was just drawn to the intimacy of their community."


Sadly, much of the transgender community goes it alone when they come out. Most lose jobs because they are transgender, not get them. The Human Rights Campaign reports transgender unemployment rates at twice the rate of the rest of the population, while 44 percent are underemployed. And transgender workers are four times more likely to have household incomes of under $10,000.

There are no benefits to declaring oneself transgender other than relieving the psychological dissonance of feeling gender dysphoria and seeking treatment to resolve the issues. The consequences of such a declaration are unpredictable, but there is no turning back. Dolezal, on the other hand, made a living as a presumed black woman working for the NAACP and teaching college classes on a topic she only tangentially knows about, after appropriating an identity that doesn't truly belong to her


She put it better than I ever could  :scrumptious:

Gilgamesh.

Quote from: justcommenting on July 31, 2019, 06:38:12 PM
Quote from: ᴍᴏᴏᴅ 4 ᴇᴠᴀ on July 31, 2019, 03:44:37 PM
Quote from: MoonPrismPower on July 31, 2019, 02:26:46 PM
this backpedaling beaner





Well isn't that rich?! When will ya tell ya truth, Deven? Funny lookin self

:hmph:

See what happens when you put ugly people on a pedestal because you're fascinated with "trade"?  His ugly ass should have never been a conversation. I hope his baby has Down syndrome. I'm pretty sure the gene already runs in the family looking at his ugly ass.

Just playing devil's advocate here, but why should he not comment? Because he's closeted or whatever?

Frankly as a Father-to-be his opinion is more valid than alot of y'all on here.

𝖘𝖖𝖚𝖎𝖉

Quote from: Omi on August 01, 2019, 07:35:57 AM
QuoteKat Blaque, a transgender black woman says, "Gender is not a biological trait passed from parent to child, whereas race is." In other words, racial features are passed on, but gender is innate. Blaque explains that darker skin is the result of melanin, which was an evolutionary trait to protect people from the sun. Race is something that is only available to certain people. Blaque points out that Dolezal can wash off her makeup and resume life as a white woman any time she wants to, but transgender people can't do that. They are not defined by what they are wearing because it is an innate part of who they are.

For one thing, the brains of males and females are different. Scientists describe it as sexual dimorphism, or the difference in brain size and neuron densities when comparing male and female brains. In transgender people, research has shown male-to-female transgender brains are more likely to resemble female brains in size and the placement of neuron density. The reverse is true for female-to-male transgender brains.


Additionally, one twin study, which looked at transgender siblings, found that 33 percent of male and 23 percent of female identical twins were both transgender, compared to just 2.6 percent of fraternal twins. And in a genetics study, male-to female transgender people were more likely to have a longer version of a receptor gene, which reduced the gene's ability to bind testosterone. The gene's binding of testosterone helps form male sex characteristics.


Though still in its infancy, the science of sexuality and gender are producing results, which show a solid connection between biology and behavior. The same cannot be said for someone who declares herself "transracial."

However, if Dolezal's account of her childhood is true, that she was molested by her brother and made to eat her own vomit, it makes sense that she would identify with an oppressed culture, which also represents resiliency and strength.


Wendy Danbury, in a comment on social media, noted, "When I was 12 or 13, I envied the African American girls at my middle school (in mostly white Orange County, [where] there were only a very few people of color). I wished I could be part of their group, because they seemed so warm and chummy with each other. I didn't realize at the time that I was looking at an out-group creating their own in-group; I was just drawn to the intimacy of their community."


Sadly, much of the transgender community goes it alone when they come out. Most lose jobs because they are transgender, not get them. The Human Rights Campaign reports transgender unemployment rates at twice the rate of the rest of the population, while 44 percent are underemployed. And transgender workers are four times more likely to have household incomes of under $10,000.

There are no benefits to declaring oneself transgender other than relieving the psychological dissonance of feeling gender dysphoria and seeking treatment to resolve the issues. The consequences of such a declaration are unpredictable, but there is no turning back. Dolezal, on the other hand, made a living as a presumed black woman working for the NAACP and teaching college classes on a topic she only tangentially knows about, after appropriating an identity that doesn't truly belong to her


She put it better than I ever could  :scrumptious:
:receipts:

BigDawg

I was reading one comment in TSR post and this woman said that her friend was born male but identified himself as female at a young age and with the parents encouragement began the process of taking hormones at the age of thirteen. Her friend later changed his mind and wanted to revert the process back to being a male. He got married to a woman and they are now having difficulty conceiving due to the hormones the guy was taking as a teenager.

Naomi Hit Me

Quote from: BigDawg on August 01, 2019, 07:43:35 AM
I was reading one comment in TSR post and this woman said that her friend was born male but identified himself as female at a young age and with the parents encouragement began the process of taking hormones at the age of thirteen. Her friend later changed his mind and wanted to revert the process back to being a male. He got married to a woman and they are now having difficulty conceiving due to the hormones the guy was taking as a teenager.
g
yh sure