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A photographic exhibition at the Hammer Museum, University of California Los Angeles, shows a comparative study between teenage girls and adult male-to-female transsexuals 

Last year, I was nominated for the Stonewall Journalist of the Year award. This seemed fair enough since I write prolifically about sexuality and sexual identity. But I guessed that Stonewall would not dare give me the prize, because a powerful lobby affiliated with the lesbian and gay communities had been hounding me for five years. Six weeks later I, along with a police escort, walked past a huge demonstration of transsexuals and their supporters, shouting "Bindel the Bigot". Despite campaigning against gender discrimination, rape, child abuse and domestic violence for 30 years, I have been labelled a bigot because of a column I wrote in 2004 that questioned whether a sex change would make someone a woman or simply a man without a penis. Subsequently, I was "no platformed" by the National Union of Students Women's Campaign, a privilege previously afforded to fascist groups such as the BNP. As a leading feminist writer, I now find that a number of organisations are too frightened to ask me to speak at public events for fear of protests by transsexual lobbyists. 

The 2004 column was about a Canadian male-to-female transsexual who had taken a rape crisis centre to court over its decision not to invite her to be a counsellor for rape victims. Feminists tend to be critical of traditional gender roles because they benefit men and oppress women. Transsexualism, by its nature, promotes the idea that it is "natural" for boys to play with guns and girls to play with Barbie dolls. The idea that gender roles are biologically determined rather than socially constructed is the antithesis of feminism. 

I wrote: "Those who ‘transition' seem to become stereotypical in their appearance — f**k-me shoes and birds' nest hair for the boys; beards, muscles and tattoos for the girls. Think about a world inhabited just by transsexuals. It would look like the set of Grease."

Gender dysphoria (GD) was invented in the 1950s by reactionary male psychiatrists in an era when men were men and women were doormats. It is a term used to describe someone who feels strongly that they should belong to the opposite sex and that they were born in the wrong body. GD has no proven genetic or physiological basis. 

A review for the Guardian in 2005 of more than 100 international medical studies of post-operative transsexuals by the University of Birmingham's Aggressive Research Intelligence Facility found no robust scientific evidence that gender reassignment surgery was clinically effective. It warned that the results of many gender reassignment studies were unsound because researchers lost track of more than half of the participants. 

The past decade has seen an increase in the number of people diagnosed as transsexual. There are now 1,500-1,600 new referrals a year to one of the handful of gender identity clinics in Britain. About 1,200 receive treatment on the NHS with the rest going private, Thailand being the main country of choice. The largest clinic, at Charing Cross Hospital in London, saw 780 new referrals last year. The NHS carried out some 150 operations in the last year (up from about  100 in 2005-2006). Apart from Thailand, the country with the highest number of sex-change operations is Iran where, homosexuality is illegal and punishable by death. When sex-change surgery is performed on gay men, they become, in the eyes of the gender defenders, heterosexual women. Transsexual surgery becomes modern-day aversion therapy for gays and lesbians. 

In the West, however, supporting the diagnosis and availability of surgical intervention is seen as a view right-thinking liberals should adopt. But no oppressed group ever insisted its emotional distress was the sole basis for the establishment of a right. Indeed, transsexuals, along with those seeking IVF and cosmetic surgery, are using the NHS for the pursuit of happiness not health. 

Treatment is brutal and the results far from perfect. Male-to-female surgery involves removal of the penis and scrotum and the construction of a "vagina" using the skin from the phallus, breast implants inserted and the trachea shaved. Painful laser treatment to remove hair in the beard area and elsewhere and cosmetic surgery to "feminise" the face is increasingly common. 

For female-to-male surgery, breasts, womb and ovaries are removed. Testosterone injections, usually prescribed shortly after the initial diagnosis, result in the growth of facial hair and deepening of the voice. 

Recent legislation (the Gender Recognition Act, which allows people to change sex and be issued with a new birth certificate) will have a profoundly negative effect on the human rights of women and children. Since 2004, it has been possible for those diagnosed with GD to be assigned the sex of their choice, providing that the person has lived as the opposite sex for two years, has no plans to change back again and can provide evidence of the above. 

It is not necessary to have undergone hormone treatment or surgery. In other words, a pre-operative man could apply for a job in a women — only rape counselling service and, if refused on grounds of his sex, could take the employer to court on the grounds that "he" is legally a "she". 

A definition of transsexualism used by a number of transsexual rights organisations reads:

Students who are gender non-conforming are those whose gender expression (or outward appearance) does not follow traditional gender roles: "feminine boys," "masculine girls" and students who are androgynous, for example. It can also include students who look the way boys and girls are expected to look but participate in activities that are gender nonconforming, like a boy who does ballet. The term "transgender youth" can be used as an umbrella term for all students whose gender identity is different from the sex they were assigned at birth and/or whose gender expression is non-stereotypical. 

According to this definition, a girl who plays football is trans-sexual.

A number of transsexuals are beginning to admit that opting for surgery ruined their lives. "I was a messed-up young gay man," says Claudia McClean, a male-to-female transsexual who opted for surgery 20 years ago. "If I had been offered an alternative to a sex change, I would have jumped at the chance." A number of transsexuals I have spoken to tell me how easy it is to be referred for surgery if they trot out a cliche such as, "I felt trapped in the wrong body."

Transsexualism is becoming so normalised that increasing numbers of children are being referred to clinics by their parents. Recently, an 18-month-old baby in Denmark was diagnosed as suffering from GD. Last summer, a primary school headteacher held an assembly to explain that a nine-year-old boy would return as a girl. 

Ten years ago, there were an average of six child and adolescent referrals per year in Britain, but in 2008 numbers had increased six-fold. Although the minimum age for sex-change surgery is 18, puberty-blocking hormones can be prescribed to those as young as 16, and transsexual rights lobbyists want that age to be reduced to 13. 

James Bellringer is a surgeon at Charing Cross Hospital, which has the largest gender identity clinic in the UK. He believes that children should be allowed to self-diagnose as GD. "It is not the doctors saying, ‘You are a transsexual, let's get you on hormones,' it is the children saying, ‘I don't like my breasts, I feel like a girl'." 

There is, however, a dispute within the medical profession about whether puberty-blockers should be prescribed. Some doctors say that children need to experience puberty to know whether they are misplaced in their bodies. I would describe preventing puberty as a modern form of child abuse. Two-thirds of those claiming to be, or diagnosed as, transsexual during childhood become lesbian or gay in later life. "I would be happy living now as a gay man, comfortable in the body I was born with," says McClean. "The prejudice against me for being an effeminate boy who fancied other boys was too much to bear. Changing sex meant I could be normal."

Medical science cannot turn a biological male into a biological female — it can only alter the appearance of body parts. A trans-sexual "woman" will always be a biological male. A male-to-female transsexual serving a prison sentence for manslaughter and rape won the right to be relocated to a women's jail. Her lawyers argued that her rights were being violated by being unable to live in her role as a woman in a men's jail. Large numbers of female prisoners have experienced childhood abuse and rape and will fail to appreciate the reasons behind a biological man living among them, particularly one who still has the penis with which he raped a woman. (Some transsexuals choose to retain their genitals.) 

There is a handful of radicals in the world today who have dared to challenge the diagnosis of transsexualism. Those who do are called "transphobic" and treated with staggering vitriol. There is a form of cultural relativism at play here. Defenders of female genital mutilation or forced marriage often use the argument that such practices can be justified within certain communities (i.e. non-Western cultures), despite the fact that they serve to dehumanise women, because it is the "truth" of that particular community. After I had been shortlisted for the Stonewall award, scores of blogs and message boards filled with a call to arms against me. 

On one, "Genocide and Julie Bindel", a poster wrote, "What would Stonewall's reaction have been had a BME [black and minority ethnic] group nominated Ayatollah Khomeini as Politician of the Year? She is an active oppressor of trans people. I hope she dies an agonising and premature death of cancer in the very near future. It would make the world a better place."

I had some support, some from those who had also experienced a transsexual-led witchhunt. I heard from post-operative trans-sexuals who had been railroaded into surgery and now regretted it. "Do not publish my name," said one, "but if anyone questions the validity of sex-change treatment you are sent to Coventry by the ‘community' elders." 

A police officer who, during the course of his duty, was unfairly accused by transsexuals of "transphobia" was driven to a breakdown by their vicious campaign. An eminent medical ethicist who had dared to defend a fellow professional who had questioned the diagnosis of GD from a scientific point of view almost lost his career and reputation. And several women from feminist organisations have been bullied and vilified for challenging the "right" of male-to-female transsexuals to work in women-only organisations. 

Dr Caillean McMahon, a US-based forensic psychiatrist, defines herself not as a transsexual but as a "woman of operative history. The trans community has an unforgiving global sort of condemnation towards critical outsiders. I have to be suspicious that the insistence of many of those demanding to enter it is not for the purpose of celebrating the spirit and nature of women, but to seek an enforced validation, extracted by force in a legal or political manner." With the normalisation of transsexual surgery comes an acceptance of other forms of surgery to correct a mental disorder. In 2000, Russell Reid, a psychiatrist who has diagnosed hundreds of people with GD, was involved in controversy over the condition known as Body Dysmorphic Disorder (BDD), where sufferers can experience a desperate urge to rid themselves of a limb. Reid referred two BDD patients to a surgeon for leg amputations. "When I first heard of people wanting amputations, it seemed bizarre in the extreme," he said in a TV documentary. "But then I thought, ‘I see transsexuals and they want healthy parts of their body removed in order to adjust to their idealised body image,' and so I think that was the connection for me. I saw that people wanted to have their limbs off with equally as much degree of obsession and need."

In a world where equality between men and women was reality, transsexualism would not exist. The diagnosis of GD needs to be questioned and challenged. We live in a society that, on the whole, respects the human rights of others. Accepting a situation where the surgeon's knife and lifelong hormonal treatment are replacing the acceptance of difference is a scandal. Sex-change surgery is unnecessary mutilation. Using human rights laws to normalise trans-sexualism has resulted in a backward step in the feminist campaign for gender equality. Perhaps we should give up and become men.

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cataria
December 8th, 2013
8:12 PM
that is the typical bullshit a non transsexual being will say. yeah there are problems in the issue, as we don't have full lesbian and gay and whatever acceptance and directions are often shown without alternatives to some that just aren't sure what they are, but if u are a transsexual woman (my perspective) that went through the wrong puberty u would know what real torture and prison feels like. if u don't get diagonsed children on blockers as soon as needed and let them xpress themselves u can start dig a grave for them. as they sure as hell will do anything to stop this torture and if parents and physicians won't do it, then the child will try to end this suffering. i wan't to kill the prison i'm in, because of the wrong puberty and i wouldn't think about it, if i wouldn't have the male puberty results that are unchangeable. imagine being a trans child of julie, hello nightmare. simply said, if u deny a clear diagnosed transsexual child blockers and later hormones u are killing it. there is no grey zone here. there is no life in the wrong body, there is just death.

Verysadmum!
November 7th, 2013
10:11 PM
Would you like to come and comfort my 17 year old FTM son when he is suicidal, Julie? Transsexualism was not 'invented' it's pure torment for anyone going through it. My son knew at 5 years old that he was in the wrong body, and if I and the professionals in this very 'behind' country were more educated then puberty blockers given before puberty would literally save lives. My son suffers daily, with numerous things that go with being transgender. And he is one of the lucky ones that was put on blockers at 15 and testosterone at 16. But it's still destroying his poor worn out mind having to live in the wrong body, with body parts that are alien to him. You need to seriously stop with the 'textbook' clichéd talk and LISTEN. I don't care what transphobic people have to say I would do literally anything to get my son surgery right this minute to end his suffering. You are very stereotypical and immune to humanity.

Charlie23
October 7th, 2013
7:10 AM
Well, am in the middle of it now, been living with a MTF pre op, on hormones for 8 yrs and I know what it is like. Way to many militant attitudes, the worst coming from the Gender Fluid Community. Fact- Gender has everything to do with it. My partner wears the shoes and hair whilst saying she is neither male nor female but is getting the surgery and is fast tracking it with the Phych's help.She wears female attire and wants female anatomy but yells for equality and to not be labeled one way or the other and all the while is developing what I call a groupie following who think they are liberated and fashionable because they know [?] her. Transgender is the latest thing it seems, just take a good look at what is really going on.I accept her in the body she came in but she wants it all regardless of what it takes and who gets hurt and for what at the end of the day? Its becoming fashionable, to many Drs diagnose [...put label here]...without knowing what they are doing. How do I know there is a problem? Its shouting dissenters down, silencing anyone who may question or want to discuss what is going on, even I am put through hell if I suggest anything that is not in full agreement with the Gender Party Line . I am a straight female who loves a man who wants to be a woman or is already a woman with a male body or is it more that he was born with a female brain? The whole thing is becoming a parody .

Mia
September 19th, 2013
12:09 AM
Sigh. I don't even know where to begin, but the author of this article clearly does not understand what it is to be transsexual. Let me dissect some examples: --"Transsexualism, by its nature, promotes the idea that it is "natural" for boys to play with guns and girls to play with Barbie dolls. The idea that gender roles are biologically determined rather than socially constructed is the antithesis of feminism." Julie Bindel: how did you come by this conclusion? Transexualism is about gender, not gender roles. The two are separate. If anything transsexuals highlight the differences between gender and gender roles, forcing people to question their pre-conceptions of gender. That could only help feminists, who are on a similar mission to force society to look inward about gender preconceptions. -- "Those who ‘transition' seem to become stereotypical in their appearance — f**k-me shoes and birds' nest hair for the boys; beards, muscles and tattoos for the girls. Think about a world inhabited just by transsexuals. It would look like the set of Grease." The above statement is ironic is so many ways. A feminist fighting against an overly simplified view of women is professing an overly simplified view of transsexuals! As a transsexual woman I can say the author has no idea who I really am. I never go for birds nest hair, and I avoid heels as a rule in general. The above quote exhibits a very narrow view of transsexuals, one into which I and many other transsexuals do not fall. Does the author judge acceptability based on appearance? If so, then she would never ever guess that I am transsexual. Perhaps it has never occurred to her that we, as transsexual women, not only face social issues toward transsexuals, but we ALSO face social issues against women! Yes, Julie Bindel, I am transsexual AND I also face gender discrimination. I am as aware of it as you are. No, I am more aware because I have spent time on both sides of the social spectrum. I've seen and experienced a drop in authority as a woman. It sucks! Mrs. Bindel , you have lots learn about us. If anything we are allies. -- "Gender dysphoria (GD) was invented in the 1950s by reactionary male psychiatrists in an era when men were men and women were doormats. …. GD has no proven genetic or physiological basis." Firstly, scientific understanding of transsexualism is in its infancy. In fact genetics is still in its infancy. We will see, eventually, what genetic traits causes many human conditions. As a scientist I believe transsexualism will be found to have a physiological cause, but that is just my opinion. I, however, will not draw a conclusion based on a lack of research. Secondly, gender dysphoria is not an invention of man; if anything you might say it was recognised by psychiatrists (not invented). -- "Recent legislation (the Gender Recognition Act, which allows people to change sex and be issued with a new birth certificate) will have a profoundly negative effect on the human rights of women and children." The above is pure speculation, and uses sensational wording to draw a fear-based blanket statement. Julie, do the human rights of the transgendered simply not factor into your thinking? Do our rights count? Finally, how do you know the effect will be profoundly negative? It could very well be positive by, once again, causing society to question its norms and leading to increased tolerance across the board. -- "According to this definition, a girl who plays football is trans-sexual." The author clearly misread the definition. If she’d understood it, then she’d have seen the definition (and the entire nlcrights.org article from which it was quoted ) is actually about two things: 1. “gender non-conforming youth”, and 2. “transgender youth”. If she'd accurately applied the concepts described in the article, then her statement would have read, “According to this definition, a girl who plays football is gender non-comforming, “ (NOT transsexual, as she wrote). Some of the author’s points were valid; however I found this article to be a mostly ignorant editorial view of transsexuality. I am not sure why the author fails to see the parallels between women’s rights and transgendered rights, but we are both fighting for the same ideals. Finally, the author should understand that her expressed views are to transsexuals as the resistant views of some men were to the women’s suffrage movement, and later the feminist movement. It would be nice to see a person like this come around and finally see past their preconceptions, but it would involve a lot of insight on her part.

Anonymous
September 15th, 2013
6:09 PM
I am glad I am not the only person who thinks this phenomenon of transsexualism is anti-feminist and anti-queer. I think a large reason it has become so quickly normalized is that it both reinforces gender stereotypes and is profitable to a lot people.

Inserinna
September 8th, 2013
11:09 AM
Your article shows some horror at the idea of losing a "perfectly functioning penis" and you see transgendered as dressing like drag queens. Transgenderism is not about wanting to be allowed to join the sewing club, or the football team, if we really want that we can break the gender stereotypes even at the cost of being seen as "Genderqueer", but most about the person and their perception of themselves. Personally I have not liked myself (my body and gender) deeply since around 10 years old, but I am a patient person and this has manifested in an indifference to life. Life has not been unkind to me, but truly while I normally do not want to die I don't really fear it and sometimes I get a real black depression for days on end when I do think of suicide. The problem is I do not feel I have something to live for with my life as it is, for that reason I would seek counselling and hopefully get good honest advice. In the end, while more impulsive people will suicide or change to fix what they perceive is wrong with them, eventually everyone has to face that they have one life and they have to make the most of it. For this reason I believe gender reassignment is a very good treatment (after all when 6000 30-44 year olds commit suicide every year we really want to be bring that number DOWN and not up!) The counselling is designed to try to weed out those who want SRS for the ultimate thrill of being the opposite gender, some people will always bluff their way through and truly make an awful mistake. But that should not be held as a reason to deny treatment to those that it will benefit.

Anonymous
August 23rd, 2013
11:08 PM
I wonder why too much people (such as the author of this pitiful article) don't make their own businness? Why they don't let people, who are so different to them, live as they like and want? Do they live to love or to hate? ... I don't wonder that this world is, just because such people, a world of constant conflicts, and of sad and angry living beings...

Merit Coba
August 16th, 2013
1:08 PM
I read this article and it made me feel at peace. Who, except for a small hardcore minority, would even want to listen to Julie Bindel? Perhaps she is right and some profound wisdom can be found in her words, but the sad thing is that there is not one inch of feeling for those she condemns rightly or wrongly. If she is the model of a true feminist, then the world is a sad place, for regardless of right or wrong, to be right is one thing, but to be right without mercy is another. True feminism is colder than the harshest winter. As such feminism loses for Bindels hard cold approach condemns it to be a fringe movement. The more she writes with this hard distant hand the less credible her kind of feminism becomes. I never heard of her till this day and tomorrow I will have forgotten her. And so will 99,99% of the world.

Anonymous
January 3rd, 2013
4:01 AM
Quite curious that this article is all about MTFs and FTMs are not mentioned at all, almost as if they were... erased. Your Janice Raymond is showing.

Anonymous
December 18th, 2012
2:12 AM
i speak as the heterosexual female ex-partner of a trans mtf...julie has a point, but anyone questioning the right to pursue the permanent and drastic body changes should expect some histrionics from the trans community and the trans allies. i am filled with horror at the idea of my partners plans to mutilate herself. if i can accept and love her with a penis, her insistence on having a surgeon remove her perfect, functioning penis, and throw it in a bin, feels to me like the worst kind of rejection and insult to our years of intimacy and lovemaking. when i respect her identity and sexuality , despite being decieved and conned for years that she was in fact a heterosexual man, lying and covering her tracks regarding previous relationships and previous attempts at transition, where was the respect for my sexuality and identity all this time? when i say reassignment surgery would crucify me, i mean it. it is not my body. it is not my decision. but it would still crucify me. maybe im just selfish. or maybe im just a transphobic prude eh? interestingly, while tgs claim it is not a mental illness, that is precisely the reason they get treatment on the nhs and cosmetic treatment at that,(you cant change your chromosomes) which cisgender women are denied. not only that, they are frequently paid disability benefits and the welfare state pays for top of the range cosmetics and cosmetic treatments that cisgender women, slogging away in the real world, could only dream of. the irony is not lost on me, that a mans womanly needs are protected much more fiercely than a womans womanly needs...

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