| | I have a friend that I went to High School with who is currently going through the sexual re-assignment process, so I am somewhat familiar with this topic, though surely not as much as Eve. I just have a few comments to make on the general course of this thread
Transgendered people develop psychological problems not only from misguided comments but also from the psychological contradiction of believing one is of one sex but physically being of the other sex. This, obviously, as Eve suggests, can lead to depression and eventually suicide. But this begs the question, why do they come to believe that they *ought* to be of the opposite sex? Do they have certain genes making them feel that way? Did they become enamored by things as a child of things of the opposite sex? Did they have so much trouble fitting in with society in their biological sex role that they need a large life change to restart? Or did they just really get enamored by the idea of being of the opposite sex? The rephrase this question, is the reason they believe they *ought* to be of the other sex a product of their genes (nature), social variables and conditioning (habit) or a product of their own involved volitional development (choice) ? The truth is, it is no doubt a very complicated interaction of all of these things. Would the transgendered person feel similarly “out of place” if they grew up on an island or never even knew an ‘opposite sex’ existed? I doubt it…
If the source of this feeling is genetic, it is possible that gene therapy could ‘cure’ it, if the source is habitual, it is possible that counseling could cure it, if the source is a choice, it is possible that they could change their mind (this is not to say that is an easy thing, choices like these are subtle and made thousands or millions of times over ones life and thus become deeply habitualized) But if the source is not one of these things, or a combination of them, what is it? Even behavior influenced by our genes is not absolute, and we can over-ride genetic tendencies if we so choose. Science empirically verifies this statement as well.
Just because someone *really* needs to have a sex change operation, does not mean that everyone else ought to pay for it. If they ‘need’ it that bad, then they should work hard to earn the money to pay for someone to study a medicine for 12 years and to perform the operation (which is what my friend is doing) Feeling like you need something is not a justification, your feelings may not be accurate, and they certainly don’t necessarily reflect a objective need for something to materially sustain your existence. Little Millie Bush really *needed* braces or she would suffer psychological scars for life, so everyone else was forced to pay for it.
This "need" comes from the fact that transgendered people place, I think, too much of their personal identify value on their sex. Just as homosexuals often base their entire identify on the fact that they are homosexual (I don’t run around talking about how ‘proud’ I am to be straight, and many homosexuals levy the same criticism toward other homosexuals, see the SOLO Passion site for some examples of that) transgendered people often place the value of their identify on their sex as well. It can easily become a recursive positive feedback loop. The feedback loop could start as a genetic influence, or some feeling of misplacement, or just as a small choice one made early on, and build and build through those various avenues. But no matter how important it becomes to a person to get a sex change, no matter how much they cry and plead and demand they need it, they *never* have *any* right to make *me* pay for it. I *need* things as well, things that are far more important to me and objectively to humanity than their individual need for a sex change. So sorry, it sucks that they need it so bad and it is hard for them, but you are going to have to deal with it or earn the money to pay for the change yourself. Psychologically dealing with being the ‘wrong’ sex absolutely pales in comparison to the things the vast majority of humanity has had to suffer through and the things the vast majority of humanity still suffers through. Try telling this kid that your friend “needs” a sex change
A person who takes their own life because they are the wrong sex values their biological sexual status more than their own life. This is certainly not a healthy prioritization of values. Personally, I value over anything else the product of individual volitional choice, I place absolutely *no* value on things people did not choose. I don’t care what race you are, what ethnicity, or what sex, or even which of those *I* am, and if someone chooses to change any of those, more power to them! If you want to change your sex, your height, your hair color, whatever, go for it. It’s your’s to change and having been arbitrarily placed with a particular set of traits is of no particular value to me. Eventually, with genetic technology and stem cell technology, we may be able to change our sex at the biological level, and maybe even go back and forth every few decades and try out both, or even be two sexes simultaneously! Who cares! As long as you are a sentient, life loving entity, whatever package that comes in is irrelevant to me. Similarly, the singular most important thing to any sentient being ought to be it’s own existence (and implicitly a respect of the same granted to other sentient beings, which demanding a difficult and expensive surgery is not) and secondarily (generally) the things conducive to that existence.
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