(moved here because the Trans Question is political, and hotly contested right now in the USA)
I'd like to point out that Strongpoint is arguing for access to HRT, and so is moderately [slur] on-side despite all the words we've exchanged.
Death before detransition. Literally.
I can't do it again- the decade and a half as a scared adult, repressing, or the couple months where my hormones didn't work. F'ing castor oil.
I can't do it again. I won't.
All the changes to my sex, they're just gravy.
I lived a half-life until I started hormones. So, so late.
Somehow missed this the first time around, and noticed only after rereading.
I miss that time, where I thought we were just having an abstract conversation about sociology.
I am most definitely not against access to HRT for adults. If someone I care about would ask me if should they do HRT or not, my advice would be strong no (not going to give a breakdown why because it is a very wrong place to do for obvious reasons) but my opinion is irrelevant because A) it is not my decision. B) They know what they need for their mental health far better than I do.
I support your right to an opinion, of course. The disinformation on this issue is fierce and well-funded and I don't blame anyone for listening to it.
One could imagine a well-funded lobby pushing transition, but they'd have to imagine (and oh buddy, they do). The advocacy position is for the same freedom you're describing. The opposition is trying to criminalize trans adults.
Not just kids. Even now, they are coming after adults like me in Tennessee and my own state of Slightly-Less-Worst Carolina.
Body autonomy is an important right and any mentally healthy adult person should not be denied using it. I find it especially idiotic when people are denied routine cosmetic surgeries like breast-size reduction or changing their face to a more masculine\feminine. More serious stuff like... cutting off body parts is something close to my limits of body autonomy but within it.
Again this would be great... except that you have limits on it. That's not respecting bodily autonomy, it's permitting them a certain range of actions.
If someone wants a unicorn horn, you're welcome to think they shouldn't. But arguing that they shouldn't
have the right is very different. I hate to quibble, but there's a fundamental difference between freedom and a long leash.
But this isn't a unicorn horn, they're natural hormones which are present in EVERY human body to some degree.
But the story is very different when we talk about children. They are not mentally stable enough to make such decisions. Furthermore, to know that they don't want to be of the same gender as their sex, they need to have experience of being the same gender as their sex.
Do you say you suffered? I totally believe you. Problem is that your personal experience should not be a basis of a policy. Doing it without proper care will result in the suffering of other people. Society should minimize Stories of people who transitioned and then changed their minds and went for detransitioning are also not happy and fluffy.
Teenagers are... stupid unexperienced. Maybe that boy who thinks he is trans. is just a gay, maybe that girl thinks she is a trans because she finds existing gender roles idiotic and wants to dress like a man and not bother with makeup. Or maybe that teenager wants to be like a celebrity they follow on Tik Tok. Or maybe that young person went too hard into politics way earlier than they should and was convinced that being straight white and cisgender is lame and close to something to be ashamed of. Or...
No, I don't trust children to make such decisions. Not at all. They feel discomfort growing as a gender they dislike. Well, growing up is always uncomfortable, we can't shield young people from all possible discomfort.
I agree that we shouldn't make policy based on feelings.
In my opinion we should default to liberty, and step in to protect people when science justifies doing so. People will make bad decisions, influenced by their peers and role models. They will also make good decisions. We have to weigh the results, with a bias towards personal freedom.
Allowing social transition is a freebie, or should be: It saves lives and costs nothing. I think we're on the same page there.
Allowing hormone therapy clearly helps people. It also helps kids. In a perfect world, no one (trans or otherwise) would have to suffer a wrong puberty.
We don't live in that world.
My position
is the compromise position: We can't allow tweens full bodily autonomy. It's too risky, and we don't have enough understanding yet (thanks to fascists- literally Nazis then others- destroying and blocking research).
We can't even allow a tween and their guardians to make a joint healthcare decision for affirming hormone therapy. I guess. It's a balance- we would save 9 trans people from a fucking nightmare puberty with PERMANENT HARM, but 1 cis person would suffer similarly until they desisted.
What we
can do is pause puberty. Liars will constantly claim that these blockers are "untested", by which they mean "off-label", by which they mean they worked just fine on cis kids for decades but they hate trans kids and want them to die.
...
I think younger-me would have been deliriously happy to accept this compromise. I can't speak for the current generations growing up, though, who might be a little bit more radical than me. They're clamoring for more freedom than what I'm arguing for, and I have to say I sympathize.
Before I approve any medical transitional steps for children, I need ways to prove that someone is trans BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT. And I fail to see such methodology.
Imagine the opposite: Before I deny a child access to hormones, I must know BEYOND A REASONABLE DOUBT that they're cis.
JK. This is the actual equivalent argument: "I will force every child to take hormones unless I know they're cis."
See how vile, how authoritarian, that is?
"It's different, being cis is normal!" - Being trans is normal, as is being homosexual or red-haired or intersex or left-handed.
etc.
Again: Death before detransition. That's just a fact. But this time I have a taste of life to fight for.