The Transgender Movement In America Is Deluding Many: Where Do We Go From Here?
Years ago it was highly unlikely to hear of a 2-year-old changing their gender. Now, this social transitioning, often cultivated by parents, the media and culture are fast becoming a Civil Rights Movement in America. The Williams Institute at the University of California, Los Angeles School of Law found an estimated "0.7 percent of youth from the ages of 13 to 17, of 150,000 youths, identify as transgender in the United States," and the numbers are increasing—but so are the consequences. Many people who transitioned also regretted their decision and found that they didn't have the contentment or satisfaction they prized.
Transitioning is not a magic wand for instant gratification as the media so heedlessly baits people to believe. Couple this with profound psychological difficulties, many lament their decisions. Why aren't we addressing the dark side of transitioning? People are hesitant to disagree with the transgender movement (or anything that go against society) because it's not politically correct and being called or being considered a "bigot," scares them, which is understandable. But when a child undergoes gender reassignment surgery–well, people need to push back.
We connected with Ryan T. Anderson, a William E. Simon Senior Research Fellow in American Principles and Public Policy for the Heritage Foundation's Institute for Family, Community and Opportunity. He's written extensively on the subject and wrote When Harry Became Sally: Responding to the Transgender Moment to address the trend in America and where it began.
How did we get to this point in our country where a child decides what gender they should be? In your opinion what was the pivot point?
The immediate pivot point was Obergefell. After LGBT activists had redefined marriage, they immediately turned to redefining sex and gender. It's no coincidence that the Obama DOJ/DOE "Dear Colleague" letter on bathrooms and locker rooms was issued when it was. The longer-term pivot has its roots, oddly enough, in 2nd wave feminism. Chapter 7 of my book When Harry Became Sally: Responding to the Transgender Moment goes through this intellectual history. It explains how first-wave feminism was a campaign to liberate women from an overly restrictive concept of gender, so they could be free to fulfill their nature, but it gave way to a movement seeking to make women identical to men. From the error of inflexible sex stereotypes, our culture swung to the opposite error of denying any important differences between male and female. The result is a culture of androgyny and confusion. An agenda of nullifying the distinction between men and women might seem opposed to the insistence on the absolute reality of transgender identity—i.e., an inner sense of being truly male or female—yet both start by severing gender from biological sex.
"It's the children who are now leading us," the director of mental health for the Child and Adolescent Gender Center at UCSF said in an interview with The Washington Post. The Child and Adolescent Gender Center at UCSF treats children as young as three. Have we become so numb as a country, and as a people to not see anything wrong this scenario?
I cite that quote in my book. It's truly amazing. It entirely ignores the reality that children need assistance in the difficult process of sexual maturation. They need parents. As new gender ideologies are promoted throughout America, their lies will impact not only those who suffer from gender dysphoria, but all children who need to mature in their self-understanding as a boy or girl, man or woman, a potential husband or wife, father or mother.
We should be tolerant—indeed, loving—toward those who struggle with their gender identity, but also be aware of the harm done to the common good, particularly to children, when transgender identity is normalized. Transgender activists are not merely asking for tolerance or kindness; they are demanding affirmation, not just from adults but from children and adolescents who are already challenged by the process of sexual development. In a culture where transgender identities are not only affirmed but celebrated, everyone will be compelled to construct their own gender identity, unaided by a common understanding of sex differences and why they matter.
A 2-year-old boy who transition in Australia, told his mother he changed his mind. Isn't this a prime example that children should not be allowed to make these decisions?
Children develop best when parents and professionals help them understand and accept their embodied selves as male or female. Chapter 6 of When Harry Became Sally focuses on gender dysphoria in children and the experimental therapies that have rapidly become commonplace. As recently as 2012, The Washington Post reported that "the very idea of labeling young children as transgender is shocking to many people." Starting a young child on a process of "social transitioning" followed by puberty-blocking drugs was virtually unthinkable not long ago, and the treatment is still largely experimental. Unfortunately, many activists have given up on caution, let alone skepticism, about drastic treatments. They assert that puberty blockers are safe and reversible, but in fact these drugs carry long-term health risks, and development occurring at age sixteen that usually happens around age ten cannot be considered normal. There are psychological consequences, too, since blocking puberty may interfere with the developmental mechanism that normally helps children accept themselves as male or female.
A more cautious therapeutic approach begins by acknowledging that the vast majority of children with gender dysphoria will grow out of it naturally. An effective therapy looks into the reasons for the child's mistaken beliefs about gender, and addresses the problems that the child believes will be solved if the body is altered. Many physicians have found that other psychosocial issues usually lie beneath the child's false assumptions, and thus effective therapy focuses on remedies for those issues. Chapter 6 of my book concludes with case studies of children who received effective therapy that offered strategies for accepting themselves.
Gender-confirmation surgeries are on the rise, but so are reversals according to Newsweek. What are your thoughts?
The most difficult chapter of the book for me to research and write was the chapter on people who have detransitioned. Chapter 3 presents the stories of several people who found that transitioning didn't bring the peace and wholeness they sought, but only new problems. The stories of detransitioners complicate the sunny picture frequently presented in the media. Many of these people recall a feeling of being pushed into transitioning, as if there were no other options, and they wish that medical professionals had made an effort to help them understand the deeper psychological issues that alienated them from their body. Many regret the permanent damage done to their bodies, and some who transitioned as teenagers believe they were not mature enough to make such consequential decisions. Some feel that their dysphoria resulted from social hostility to people who don't conform to gender norms or who have same-sex attractions. In this light, social conservatives (including myself) should take care to be respectful and compassionate toward people who we may disagree with. We should also call on transgender activists to stop trying to silence detransitioners. As the book went to press, the Telegraph (UK) ran a report with the headline: "Sex change regret: Gender reversal surgery is on the rise, so why aren't we talking about it?" The answer to the question is political correctness. But it's better to be correct than politically correct where human lives are concerned.
You said sex changes are based on ideology, not science, how so?
The simple reality is that you can't change your sex. There is no way to "reassign" sex because sex isn't "assigned" in the first place. The best biology, psychology, and philosophy all support an understanding of sex as a bodily reality, and of gender as a social manifestation of bodily sex. Biology isn't bigotry. The most effective therapies for gender dysphoria do not try to remake the body to conform with thoughts and feelings—which is impossible—but rather to help people find healthy ways to manage their tension and move toward accepting the reality of their bodily selves.
Contrary to the claims of activists, sex isn't "assigned" at birth. It's a bodily fact that can be recognized well before birth with ultrasound imaging. The sex of an organism is defined by its organization for sexual reproduction. Secondary differences between the two sexes—attributes that may be visibly altered by hormone treatment—are not what make us male or female. As I explain in When Harry Became Sally, it's impossible even to make sense of the concept of sex apart from the ways our bodies are organized for reproduction. That organization starts to develop well before birth. Chromosomal and hormonal pathologies may disrupt normal development, though in fact these abnormalities have essentially nothing to do with transgender ideology—except insofar as activists want to relabel such abnormalities as mere "differences," in an effort to normalize disorders.
You mentioned that "America is in the midst of what has been called a transgender moment." What do you mean by this?
The subtitle of my book When Harry Became Sally is Responding to the Transgender Moment. Some people think that's a typo; that it should be "movement" not "moment." But I chose "moment" intentionally. I use "moment" because transgender ideology is not here to stay. It's a moment that will eventually pass. So, while transgender ideology may appear to be establishing a firm place in our culture, there are signs of defensiveness among its advocates. Activists have to keep patching and shoring up their own beliefs, policing the faithful, coercing heretics and punishing apostates, because transgender dogmas are so contrary to basic, self-evident truths. The transgender moment may turn out to be fleeting, but that doesn't mean we should expect it to fade away on its own. We need to insist on telling the truth, and on saving lives from being irreparably damaged.
As for the term itself, the term "transgender moment" has been used by people on the left and the right, in secular and religious media. See, for example, Brandon Griggs, "America's transgender moment," CNN,June 1, 2015; Sonali Kohli, "Pop Culture's Transgender Moment: Why Online TV Is Leading the Way," Atlantic, September 26, 2014; Deborah Sontag, "'A Whole New Being': How Kricket Nimmons Seized the Transgender Moment," New York Times,December 12, 2015; Rebecca Juro, "Bruce Jenner and America's transgender moment," MSNBC, April 25, 2015; Justin Peligri, "After marriage, it's a transgender moment," Washington Blade,April 30, 2015; John W. Kennedy, "The Transgender Moment," Christianity Today,February 12, 2008; Rand Richards Cooper, "The Transgender Moment," Commonweal, December 16, 2015.
Where do we go from here?
As I explain in the book, there is work for everyone to do. We need scholars willing to defend the truth in a loving way. We need medical professionals willing to provide effective alternatives to the transgender clinics. We need religious leaders willing to minister to those in need. We need civic leaders willing to stand up to the activists.
What's at stake in the transgender moment is the human person. If trans activists succeed in their political agenda, our nation's children will be indoctrinated in a harmful ideology, and some will live by its lies about their own bodies, at great cost to themselves physically, psychologically, and socially. Lives will be ruined, but pointing out the damage will be forbidden. Dissent from the transgender worldview will be punished in schools, workplaces, and medical clinics. Trying to live in accordance with the truth will be harder.
This doesn't have to happen. Everyone can play a role in bearing witness to the truth and ministering compassionately to people in pain. For anyone who takes part in this important work, Dr. Paul McHugh offers some advice: "Gird your loins if you would confront this matter. Hell hath no fury like a vested interest masquerading as a moral principle."