Thursday 15 June 2023

The “Trans-Confusion” of Gender, Race and Everything Else!

Thanks to Bruce “Caitlyn” Jenner and many others, we’re all familiar with the concept of being transgender. But what about being transabled or transracial or transspecies or transage? Are these all valid and real? Or are all of them — including being transgender — based primarily on mental or emotional disorders?

We are also conditioned by media propaganda to accept the idea that transgenderism is here to stay.  One of the ways the “trans” rights movement does this is to attempt to show us that we are helpless to stop it. But transgenderism is not the end of the endless progression of new victim groups demanding special rights; it is only the beginning.  


Source: https://www.hli.org


1. Transableism

Even other “trans” people consider the “transabled” movement to be the strangest of all — and some of the other “trans” rights movements oppose it.  Transableism is, in fact, the precise opposite of transhumanism and might be seen as a form of negative eugenics.  Transableism seems opposed to transhumanism in principle because the goals of the two movements seem diametrically opposed.  However, in reality, transableism is just another movement that insists that people may do whatever they want with their own bodies, and so it is helping to set the stage for transhumanism.

Transabled people are otherwise healthy, but they desire to be mutilated or crippled in some way in order to eliminate what they feel is a foreign limb or ability.  Usually this means the person wants to be blinded, paralyzed or have one or more limbs amputated.

Motivations for such drastic mutilations stem from the actual feeling that one is not at home in one’s own healthy body, or from an unhealthy desire for the sympathy and help that crippled people receive from others.

2. Transethnicity

It is an oddity that transgenderism is accepted by a large portion of the population, but that “transethnicity” or “transracialism” is not.  

Rachel Dolezal is white woman who was born of white parents.  But she calls herself “unapologetically black.” Her thesis is comically out of touch with reality: “What I believe about race is that race is not real.  It’s not a biological reality.  It’s a hierarchical system that was created to leverage power and privilege between different groups of people.”

She began masquerading as black in 2004 and eventually became the head of the Spokane chapter of the NAACP.  But her parents, growing tired of her public attacks on them, “outed” her as White in 2015.  She subsequently lost her NAACP leadership position and her position teaching African Studies at a local college and eventually became an object of derision across the political spectrum.  Despite nearly universal condemnation, she still insists that race is a social construct, comparing herself to Bruce/Caitlyn Jenner.

3. Trans-speciesism

Some people suffer from what psychologists now politely call “gender dysphoria” — when a person’s mental sex does not match his or her physical sex.  But what do we do with someone who claims to have “species dysphoria,” who believes that they are a non-human species trapped in a human body?

Some people are so preoccupied with certain species of animals that they have an obsession to become one of them.  There are no authoritative studies on the motivations behind such mutilations, which usually require hundreds of thousands of dollars of complicated surgery and which appear to be an obsession with body modification that is the province solely of the distracted rich.  

All of this silliness may be very amusing — for the moment.  But I can guarantee that, within ten years, it will be defined as a “basic human right,” and liberal politicians will be demanding that those who laugh at people who mutilate themselves to look like animals be charged with hate crimes, and that “furries” and others be a protected class.  And why should the taxpayer not foot the bill?  

There are other variations of this concept that attempt to bridge the gap between some of the other “trans” movements and transhumanism.  They are so bizarre that they do not even have names yet.

The great danger of such people is that their ideas may seem silly to us now, but the more people hear about a new idea, the more they get desensitized to it.  After all, shortly before the turn of the millennium, we laughed at the absurdity of two people of the same sex getting married to each other.  And now we have homosexual “marriage” legalized in many nations. Even the Church of England wants to bless same sex couples. So, where do we go from here? The Bible does not support the “trans” development and the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah is a good testimony of God’s wrath on such deviations. Yes, there are a small number of people who may feel “queer” which may require some special attention. But not this fad thing of being a “Trans”!


References:

Bridging the gap between transgenderism and transhumanism, Brian Clowes, lifeissues.net, 23 June 2020

What’s the difference between transgender, transabled, transracial, transspecies and transage? Michael Brown, The Stream, 2 February 2018




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