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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 "Do not publish my name," said one, "but if anyone questions the validity of sex-change treatment you are sent to Coventry by the ‘community' elders."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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Anonymous
November 13th, 2014
4:11 PM
The problem is simply that one does not get what one is paying for. It doesn't matter how intensely one defends the procedure, in the end one gets nothing more than an elaborate, surgically created costume--much like those who point their ears or have horns inserted. They are still not elves or demons. And that is the crux of the disappointment.

Anonymous
October 14th, 2014
5:10 PM
So, there are edge cases: There are those who mistake mtf for an excuse to feel normal, or for something that will change who they are inside (it won't) or solve their personal and social issues outside (it won't do that either). There are also those who use their new position to put other people in a difficult spot (such as the biological male rapist going in a women's prison). Congratulations! You have just discovered the obvious. The one thing you never even go close to mention in this article though, are those mtf post-op who are mentally stable, perfectly happy with their new life, don't dress up like prostitutes (and what's wrong with that anyway? Last I checked it was neither illegal nor immoral), and still feel like they needed the surgery because they didn't identify as men. The reason why you fail to mention even one of these successful examples is to be found in your stern, superficial and upsetting conclusions, which you know you would't be allowed to reach should you show these obvious truths.

Anonymous
October 3rd, 2014
10:10 AM
The last statement is just nerve wrecking. 'Perhaps we should just give up and become men.' I mostly feel the urge to wear a dress, to kiss a boy on the cheek as a sign of affection and sometimes my younger sister says that I'm a better 'mommy' than our mom because I have a natural maternal instinct to protect and guide her. If only could have I been a mom with a fucking beard would have been lovely. But I can't, and this is the reason why I want & need to make a change. Yes, equality between men and women plays the most important role in our need for change, because we are 'supposed' to behave in a stereotypical manner: shake hands, dress in a specific manner a.s.o I can't bare to live as a man and I simply won't. In the present moment there is no palpable alternative to MTF gender reassignment, so I simply refute even thinking to give up on it, no matter what the consequences are.

Anonymous
September 18th, 2014
5:09 PM
" One" organ doesn't define your sex but you entire reproductive system. Human beings exist today because just like other life forms on planet earth we mate and reproduce. This is fact. Through modern medicine we as a species have discovered many ways of helping this process along ie IVF however sperm and a uterus is still required. Feminism religion politics and society all have an opinion on LGBT community which isn't necessary because nature has already spoken. Here on planet Earth healthy reproduction is required from all species in order to keep our world beautiful and thriving. Unfortunately there are going to be clef palates, deformed or missing limbs, non-functioning ovaries and other situations that are not ideal but this is the exception to the rule not the norm. The sun rises and sets the snow is cold boy bunnies and girl bunnies make baby bunnies these are facts because they are true and correct this is the right way. If the sun decided to be the moon then what?!?! We argue over this today that are painfully obvious. If we all cut of our penises and ripped out our ovaries then what ? Clearly this is NOT what nature intended Clearly this is not rational or logical. Clearly

Anonymous
September 6th, 2014
2:09 PM
What the author fails to say is that while he's right that the ones who protest and make stories tend to look "typical" and maybe strange....the goal is to fit in. So the ones (like myself) who are mentally healthy and there is no real decision to be made.....you don't even notice. Has anyone ever thought of that??? The ones that construct a "stereotype", by definition, are doing a poor job. They are the ONLY ones you notice. The ones doing well (again, by definition) are never noticed....they do not go into your mind as transsexual. And as for the comment about "it's like saying you're an alien or polar bear". You can have your opinion, but I'll ask you this..."is someone born with a cleft pallet supposed to be ugly and will never be anything else? Is someone with webbed feet a freak and should not be corrected? Is a person born with any number of "imperfections" supposed to be defined by them? Sadly....people always say "you are what you are on the INSIDE". Yet if the birth condition occurs with one particular organ....that defines you. It's simply wrong. Everyone is entitled to their views...but I would ask all to be objective......and again, judging by only the noticeable "ones" is "by definition" to judge by the ones that are having a difficult time. You simply don't notice the ones who are fitting in. Makes perfect sense, right? Of course....unless you're biased.

Anonymous
September 2nd, 2014
8:09 PM
Long-Term Follow-Up of Transsexual Persons Undergoing Sex Reassignment Surgery: Cohort Study in Sweden http://www.plosone.org/article/info%3Adoi%2F10.1371%2Fjournal.pone.00168... Somebody posted that the suicide rates are down that was FALSE. In fact suicide rates drug use prostitution and physical and sexual abuse are all still very very high over 5x higher than the general population. Longitudinal studies show that in gerneral most are not happy and that it is not a valid cure for their condition. A person who says they feel like a women but is in fact a boy has a delusion. They are a boy or a girl it is completely impobably for them to feel like something they are not. They express a desire for a alien feeling for which they are incapable. The very idea of that thought is madness plain and simple. It would be as if you claimed to feel like a polar bear or a alien from another planet. You may empathize or desire these feelings but you cannot have them. These are personal identity problems based on notions of what women feel like wear do etc. Those are witnessed externally the person claiming to desire or have them cannot as a matter of fact have that knowledge. They are viewing being a woman from the outside in the case of a man and assuming they too feel the same way or should. There is a very simple test from isolation of the issue. Would this person have this feeling if they were born raised and lived alone without knowing other persons or sexes. The answer is no they neither would not or would they think anything of it. They may have attributes that are different than other men they may dress different or talk different but they could not nor would they attempt to emulate the other sex. The concept is based on logical fallacy and the belief of what is "man" or a "woman" in terms of roles organs and facts that can only be viewed externally. No person can have the knowledge or feeling of what it is to be another person sex identity or other defining characteristics. I like the person who says they woke up hoping to become a boy. Why ? What is a boy or what is intrinsic to a boy that you are envious of ? There can be no transsexualism without deep seated envy and delusion and projection based externalities.

Anonymous
August 9th, 2014
10:08 AM
I'm a female that spent most of my early life wanting to be a boy - I loved playing sports and climbing trees and playing with toy guns and swords.I couldn't imagine anything more horrible than growing breasts. Starting adolescence I hated having periods. I got mocked in school when I wore my first bra with a girlie t-shirt. Until then I'd wore very baggy mens t-shirt. I work in a male-dominated profession, never being "afraid" of getting stuck in to electronics etc. Do I wish I'd transitioned into a female during the first half of my life? No no no unequivocally no. I really just suffered from a mild body dysmorphic disorder and a bit of jealousy because growing the rest of my family was made of males and they got do all those things while I got in trouble for not being more feminine. When I reached a point where I'd lost weight and was a size 8 and wearing t-shirt bras gave me a really nice chest-to-stomach size ratio, etc., I suddenly liked being a woman! I can't comment on anyone else's experience, but personally I agree that so much of gender dysphoria is based on a mismatch of societal expectations and constructs and both men and women, boys and girls, being allowed to be anywhere that suits them on a femininity-masculine gamut.

Anonymous
July 27th, 2014
4:07 PM
This article seems typical of a feminist lol. Its made up of even more misinformation than the so called trans lobby could even muster. And of course all of it pulled from her ass lol no sources or anything. It sounds like she uses the same ploys right wing Christian nut jobs use and we all know how much they love science lol. This chicks got as much credibility as a creationist or a scientologist on the subject. Hope she's not holding her breath for a pullitzer prize hahaha

Pollyanna
July 19th, 2014
10:07 AM
I can understand that Julie Bindel thinks all this and thinks the information she offers is all fact but it does seem a little biased. Also, as someone who has "suffered" from gender dysphoria since five years old, well before the 1950s, I can state as a fact that it was not "invented" in the 1950s. That is a ridiculous statement, rather like saying that electricity was "invented". Just as with electricity, a name was put to something that was already there. Whether or not it is a good name is another matter. Also, about the 1950s, sure some women were cowed by a form of male dominance but to sound as though women's liberation was also "Invented" in the 1950 or 60s is also wrong -- again, it was simply a matter of a word being put to an activity that became a movement. I have fought and often won (since about 1960) for the equal rights of women on an equal basis of capability. I have never been able to understand the concept of "male superiority". Enough of that, what about the idea that a male-to-female sex change operation with appropriate other treatment, simply makes a man into a man without a penis? That kind of puts the many thousands of women in UK who were/are sadly born without the full vaginal to uterus equipment into the same boat as a "man without a penis". Hmmm!

Anonymous
May 7th, 2014
1:05 PM
Iran has it worked out. If your born in the wrong body it's sorted out quickly. No Transvestites shouting there rights there. Why bother to put down Gender on Birt Cift in the western world when you can change it without having a Sex change? Maybe they will just start leaving it blank. I'm thinking of opening a G.I.D. clinic in Iran for the U.K.and U.S.A. free air travel. Wonder how many clients ( Trnasgender) not Trnassexuals i would get.??

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