Affirming 4 kidz

The wording. You always have to look closely at the wording. Like this NPR headline:

Supreme Court hears challenge to law banning gender-affirming care for trans kids

Calling it “gender-affirming care” is glaringly tendentious. Is it really care to remove healthy breasts or invert healthy penises in order to “affirm” a minor’s belief that she/he is the other sex? Is affirming children’s fantasies with drastic medical interventions really care? Is NPR really so confident that “yes” is the right answer to both questions that it doesn’t worry at all about encouraging teenagers to wreck their bodies?

If so, why? How? How do otherwise reasonable adults convince themselves that maiming teenagers is a good idea?

Front and center at the Supreme Court on Wednesday is the battle over the rights of transgender children. At issue is a state law in Tennessee that blocks minors from accessing gender-affirming care in the state.

But minors are minors. They generally do need parental permission for medical procedures, because they’re minors. It’s not obvious that “transgender children” should be an exception. It’s more obvious that they shouldn’t be.

In the last three years, more than two dozen states have enacted laws that ban puberty blockers, hormones and other treatments for minors seeking gender-affirming care. The issue has become highly politicized, as anyone who watched election ads this fall can attest.

But it’s already politicized. The whole idea is politicized. It’s a political fad encouraged by political enthusiasts and enforced by political bullies…and promoted by political idiots like NPR. The claim that there is such a thing as “gender-affirming care” is a gruesomely political and harmful claim. “First do no harm”: remember? Disrupting children’s puberties=harm.

Challenging Tennessee’s law in the Supreme Court are three trans kids and their parents.

“Kids” again: first in the headline and now in the story. What happened to the word “children”? Calling them “kids” is 1. part of the toe-curling folksiness and forced intimacy that NPR is so devoted to, and 2. careful avoidance of admitting that the “trans kids” are children.

The word “kids” appears nine times in the article. “Children” appears twice.

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