Trigger warning: This article contains subject matter that some will find disturbing or triggering.
What is a woman? If you were asked that question on the street by a guy with a microphone, would you know how to answer it? In a clip on YouTube, interviewer Will Witt asked this question to college students and they were largely unable to answer. The way they struggle, the way they dance around the question, is alarming and disconcerting to watch.
Think about it. They can’t reference chromosomes, appearance or physical characteristics, sex organs, or preferences, as all of these realities have been socially forbidden from being spoken about. They just can’t do it.
The children’s science show Bill Nye the Science Guy answered the question very clearly in the 1990s. Millions of Millenials saw this clip in childhood while doing homework or spending time with their family. Now, it’s been removed from replays and on-demand streams of the episode. Oddly, if I remember correctly, this episode wasn’t even about gender or reproduction — it was about probability, and gender happened to be an easy and universally understood way of illustrating 1-in-2 or 50/50 probability (along with coin flips).
John Money
If any individual can be said to be responsible for modern gender ideology, it is John Money. He coined the terms gender role, and gender identity. He coined the term sexual orientation as a replacement for sexual preference. He also popularized the word paraphilia to replace the word perversions in the diagnostic and statistical manual.
Money was highly educated. He married briefly in the 1950s, but never had kids. He had a long and illustrious career full of awards and recognition. He died in Towson, Maryland at age 85.
Money was also a vocal defender of pedophilia. He claimed that there was a lack of distinction between sadistic pedophilia and what he called “affectional” pedophilia. He asserted that “affectional” pedophilia was not sinister, but was about love. He refused to classify it as pathological.
In 1966, twin boys were born named Bruce and Brian Reimer. Bruce suffered from a botched circumcision and was left without a penis. John Money persuaded Bruce’s parents to transition him to Brenda. At just under 2 years old, Bruce underwent an orchiectomy, having his testicles surgically removed.
Money continued to see Bruce, now Brenda, and his twin brother, Brian, for years. During these visits, Money forced young Brian to simulate sexual acts with Brenda. He also forced the two children to strip naked for “genital inspections”. Sometimes he would take photos. He justified this by saying “childhood sexual rehearsal play” was important to form a healthy adult gender identity.
For years, Money reported Reimer’s case as a success. This proved it, at long last: gender was a social construct.
Notes by a former student at Money’s lab state that, during the annual follow-up visits, Bruce/Brenda’s parents often lied to staff about the procedure’s success.
Brian developed schizophrenia. Bruce, Brenda, was 14 years old and in extreme psychological agony. His parents told him the truth. He quickly transitioned to David, and had surgery to remove the female bodily modifications.
In 1997, David was persuaded by Milton Diamon, a sexologist, to go public with his story, so that physicians might be persuaded from treating infants similarly. David’s story was published in Rolling Stone magazine on December 1997. Later, the story became a book called “As Nature Made Him: The Boy Who Was Raised as a Girl,” which was released in 2000. In the book, the author describes how David never identified as female, even when forced to live as such. He was often bulled and mocked, he developed the nickname “cavewoman,” and he never felt female, even with hormones and total environmental saturation.
Testosterone poisoning
The effects of low testosterone on a biologically male body are disastrous. Physical changes occur including increased body fat, reduced muscle mass and strength, fragile bones, decreased body hair, swollen or tender breast tissue, hot flashes, fatigue, high cholesterol, depression and anxiety, poor decision making, depression, increased aggression, anger, and poor impulse control.
In 2002, David Reimer’s twin brother Brian died of an overdose of antidepressants. Two years later, Bruce, Brenda, David, the victim of overzealous gender activism, shot himself in the head with a sawed-off shotgun. He was 38 years old.
John Money argued that the public reaction to his research was due to right-wing media bias and, quote, “the anti-feminist movement,” saying that his detractors merely hated and wanted to oppress women.
Today, modern gender activism has maintained John Money’s positions, nearly unchanged, and continues to force them by legislative fiat on the public, since these ideas can’t stand on their own by evidence or outcomes. John Money’s gender fluidity fantasies were proven conclusively false and extremely harmful to his victims.
Why don’t we know anything about this?