Transgender Remorse
Transgenders in Society
The statistical reality is that chromosomal anomalies affecting sex determination are incredibly rare—less than 0.3% of the population—yet media and cultural narratives often exaggerate their prevalence. The same thing applies to LGBT representation in media. While Gallup polls estimate that around 7% of Americans identify as LGBTQ+, their presence in movies, TV, and advertising is often far higher than their actual demographic proportion.
This overrepresentation serves an agenda—normalizing fringe cases as if they are everyday occurrences. While acknowledging that these individuals exist is reasonable, the way Hollywood and corporate marketing push it can distort public perception, making it seem like sex and gender ambiguity are far more common than they actually are.
In reality, the vast majority of people will never encounter someone with a chromosomal disorder in their daily lives. The push to redefine biological categories based on these statistical outliers ignores the fundamental truth that the human species, across all cultures and history, operates on a male-female binary.
Mental Illness
Gender dysphoria should be treated like other body dysmorphic conditions—with therapy, not surgery.
If someone with anorexia falsely believes they are overweight, we don’t affirm their belief and let them chop off their delusional fat; we treat the underlying psychological distress. Some argue that gender dysphoria should be approached similarly, focusing on mental health interventions rather than drastic medical procedures.
Self Harm
Studies indicate that while gender-affirming treatments can reduce distress and improve quality of life for many, they do not eliminate mental health struggles entirely. A well-known Swedish study (Dhejne et al., 2011) found that post-op transgender individuals still had a higher suicide rate than the general population, even decades later.
Mentally Ill Mothers
There is a pattern in many cases, where mentally unstable, attention-seeking, or ideologically driven mothers push their kids toward transitioning—often at very young ages. This raises serious ethical concerns about parental influence, medical gatekeeping, and the long-term well-being of these children.
The World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) emphasizes the importance of comprehensive mental health assessments before initiating medical interventions. Their Standards of Care recommend that healthcare providers evaluate and address any co-existing mental health conditions, as research indicates that individuals with gender dysphoria often have co-occurring psychological disorders.
Fact:
The study found that males with gender transition surgery were:
120% likelier to have depression
388% likelier to have anxiety
than males who had gender dysphoria without surgical intervention.
Gender dysphoric females were 56% likelier to have depression
48% likelier to have anxiety
if they had undergone gender transition surgery.
Fact:
study following 324 transgender individuals who underwent surgery between 1973 and 2003 found higher risks for mortality, suicidal behavior, and psychiatric issues compared to the general population, suggesting that surgery alone might not suffice as treatment for transgender individuals.
NYP Link: Click Here
Fact:
Study found higher risks of depression, anxiety, suicidal ideation, and substance abuse post-surgery compared to those who didn’t undergo surgery. This challenges the mainstream narrative that surgery is an automatic solution to gender dysphoria.
This aligns with past research showing that while some people benefit from surgery, others still experience mental health struggles afterward. The Swedish study (Dhejne et al., 2011) found that transgender individuals who had undergone surgery still had significantly higher rates of suicide attempts and psychiatric hospitalization compared to the general population.
Oxford Journal Link: Click Here
Fact:
You can’t physically be fully transgendered.
You will be stuck with the biological brain you were born with. Why is that an issue? Clearly, you haven’t read my other articles on male vs female brains.
Women are not built mentally to be alone, aggressive, or live the life and advantage they feel men have.
Link: Click Here
Male vs Female Bodies
Even after hormone therapy, it is well documented that females born as males have advantages over women.
- Trans women retain male advantages, making competition against biological women unfair.
- Trans men face biological disadvantages, making competition against biological men difficult.
- A fair solution? Maintain biological sex divisions or create separate categories for trans athletes in competitive sports.
Category | Men | Women |
---|---|---|
Muscle Mass & Strength | Higher muscle mass, stronger tendons, greater grip strength. | Lower muscle mass, less absolute strength. |
Bone Density & Structure | Thicker, denser bones, wider shoulders, longer limbs. | Smaller bone structure, narrower shoulders, wider hips. |
Heart & Lung Capacity | Larger heart & lungs, better oxygen circulation. | Smaller heart & lungs, lower oxygen intake. |
VO₂ Max (Oxygen Utilization) | Higher VO₂ max, allowing better stamina at high intensity. | Lower VO₂ max, limiting sustained power output, increased endurance |
Hemoglobin Levels | More hemoglobin, leading to higher oxygen transport & stamina. | Less hemoglobin, making endurance sports harder at high intensity. |
Fast-Twitch Muscle | More fast-twitch fibers, better sprinting, jumping, explosive power. | More slow-twitch fibers, slightly better endurance efficiency at low intensity. |
Neuromuscular & Reflexes | Faster reaction times, better neuromuscular control. | Slightly slower reflexes but better fine motor control. |
Stamina | Higher stamina in power-based & high-speed sports. | Lower stamina in explosive efforts but recovers well. |
Endurance | Still strong, but fatigue sets in faster at extreme distances. | More fatigue resistance in extreme endurance (100+ mile events). |
Performance Gap in Sports | Outperforms women in 100m sprints, weightlifting, combat sports, and most high-speed events. | Excels in ultra-endurance and some skill-based sports. |