Robin
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Apr 29, 2004
- Messages
- 14,971
Non intervention has worked for most of 700 million years.
What makes you think so?
Non intervention has worked for most of 700 million years.
But that would imply that we should now be seeing fewer gender dysphoria diagnoses since autism is now better understood and being diagnosed more frequently and earlier.
Also any stigma about being on the spectrum is quickly evaporating.
Since there doesn't appear to have been any dramatic decrease of diagnoses of gender dysphoria then it seems highly unlikely that there was ever any significant misdiagnosis of autism as GD.
Has someone suggested that autism is being misdiagnosed as GD?
Did someone actually say that?"Labels are evil" but "Identities are holy and sacrosanct" is a center that cannot hold.
Ziggurat #534 above.
I don't see it myself.
It was "labels are silly," but the contradiction remains. Either you think labels are silly or you think misgendering and deadnaming are sinful.Did someone actually say that?
Since there doesn't appear to have been any dramatic decrease of diagnoses of gender dysphoria then it seems highly unlikely that there was ever any significant misdiagnosis of autism as GD.
Even if all the right steps are taken in a timely manner for a child with gender dysphoria, a gender transition is not always the answer. The child might not be struggling with being born in the wrong body, but rather dealing with sexual identity, abuse, an eating disorder, or a plethora of other things that should be explored and addressed long before puberty blockers are considered. In fact, the right decision might not be to administer puberty blockers to any child, instead letting them make the decision for themselves when they reach adulthood and have more time to explore their place in the world before committing to a big medical intervention that will change their body forever.
The physical and psychological ramifications of undergoing a gender transition are enormous and stressful, and real children are being spoken about in this paper. But with all the possible complications, and the risks that are yet to be discovered, I believe it is irresponsible to allow children to make a lifelong decision at such a young age when the effects are still largely unknown. As one study pointed out, “asking a child or adolescent to make a decision on whether they wish to put at risk their fertility, their genital development, their capacity for full sexual function and their brain development, in a context of an expressed need to resolve their immediate distress is… ethically problematic” (Pilgrim and Entwistle).
So, what’s worse? Dysphoric youth who identify as transgender into adulthood wishing they had transitioned sooner, or adolescents that were given puberty blockers growing older and living with regret over medical decisions that were made for them?
Well that's the point. If condition A is being misdiagnosed as condition B and there is a dramatic increase inthe understanding of and detection of condition A them.you should see a drop in the diagnoses of condition B.This doesn't seem to be what has been happening.
Well that's the point. If condition A is being misdiagnosed as condition B and there is a dramatic increase inthe understanding of and detection of condition A them.you should see a drop in the diagnoses of condition B.
Since autism is being understood and recognised more than ever and we are not seeing a drop in diagnoses of GD then it is extremely unlikely there was ever any significant misdiagnosis of autism as GD.
If that's what they meant, then they need to be more clear.I don't think the claim was that autism was being misdiagnosed as GD so much that autistic traits were contributing to children and adolescents to think they were trans.
In which case what I said applies to your claim too even if you don't see it yet.If we didn't know they had autistic traits we wouldn't be able to report the association.
The big problem is that neurotyps do their social processing mostly at an unconscious level and are mostly unaware that this is what is happening.
On the spectrum we do our social processing largely at the conscious level yet, became neurotyps are the majority, have to navigate a social landscape created by the unconscious processes of neurotyps a landscape which most neurotyps themselves don't understand.
Might be easier if people didn't arbitrarily change.'silly" into "evil" don't you think?It was "labels are silly," but the contradiction remains.
It's not obvious to me why you should think so. Can you walk me through the inference?Either you think labels are silly or you think misgendering and deadnaming are sinful.
Only human beings have struck on the idea they are in the wrong body.What makes you think so?
Only human beings have struck on the idea they are in the wrong body.
You didn't understand what I said there?Gibberish
It can be inferred from the study of linguistics, people like Noam Chomsky.How do you know?
It can be inferred from the study of linguistics, people like Noam Chomsky.
If someone is upset about deadnaming or misgendering, they are upset about a verbal act of mislabeling. Thus, they lack a casual attitude regarding labels. While they might well say "labels are silly," they are not living it.Can you walk me through the inference?
Only human beings have struck on the idea they are in the wrong body.