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Transgender People are Not Sick

by Jennifer Roback Morse

This article was first published at The Blaze on August 3, 2016, under the title, “Under
Obama, Transgenderism Is Not Medical Condition. It’s a Political Stepping Stone.”

This may seem to be a remarkable headline for a well-known social conservative.

But I must defer to the authority of the Obama administration’s Department of Justice. A careful reading of their “Dear Colleague Letter on Transgender Students,” has convinced me that the proper understanding of transgender people is not to view them as sick.

I generally like to make a thorough study of an issue that is new to me. I thought I would have to inform myself about medicine and psychology. But the
DOJ’s letter, and the press release that announced it, “U.S. Departments of Justice and Education Release Joint Guidance to Help Schools Ensure the Civil Rights of Transgender Students” have convinced me that no such careful study is required. Anyone who wants to weigh in on the controversy over “bathroom bills” can do so, with no
particular scientific expertise.

Gender neutral signs are posted in the 21C Museum Hotel public restrooms on May 10, 2016 in Durham, North Carolina. Debate over transgender bathroom
access spreads nationwide as the U.S. Department of Justice countersues North Carolina Governor Pat McCrory from enforcing the provisions of House
Bill 2 that dictate what bathrooms transgender individuals can use.


By contrast, Intersex is a medically diagnosable condition. According to the Intersex Society of North America, the term “intersex” “is a general term used for a variety of conditions in which a person is born with a reproductive or sexual anatomy that doesn’t seem to fit the typical definitions of
female or male.” The Intersex Society of North America does not advocate that intersex
individuals be treated as a third gender or as having no gender. Instead, they advocate that parents of children born with these conditions work with
their physicians to make a long-term, individualized plan for that particular child.

Intersex children are nowhere mentioned in the “Dear Colleague Letter.”

Gender Dysphoria is defined this way in the Fifth Edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual:

Gender dysphoria refers to the distress that may accompany the incongruence between one’s experienced or expressed gender and one’s assigned gender.
(pg. 51).

The term “assigned gender” is what most people would call “biological sex,” which of course, is not “assigned” at all. Rather biological sex exists from
conception and is literally in every cell of the body. Biological sex reveals itself at birth for all to see.

Gender Dysphoria is nowhere mentioned in the “Dear Colleague Letter.”

The “Dear Colleague Letter” is not about the Intersex medical condition or the Gender Dysphoria psychological condition. The “Dear Colleague Letter” makes
this very clear when it states on page two, under the heading Compliance with Title IX:

Under Title IX, there is no medical diagnosis or treatment requirement that students must meet as a prerequisite to being treated consistent with their
gender identity.

Ah. We see that for purposes of law, children of any age can diagnose themselves as transgenders. Elsewhere, the guidelines make it clear that students
may present themselves as a different sex at school without telling their parents. Students of any age can change their self-identification as they
wish. The “guidelines” offer no guidance whatsoever about this possibility.

A student can suddenly decide transgender is cool, after a binge on social media. They can decide to irritate their parents. They can decide they want to fit in with the kids they meet at the LGBT after-school program. And yes, some boys can decide they want to see the inside of the girls’ locker room.

We are on one hand, meant to think that transgenders are unfortunate souls who need special attention from society in order to fit in and feel better about
themselves. But on the other hand, we are told that no medical or psychological diagnosis is needed.

On one hand, we are told that the unique situation of these children requires special accommodation from the entire society. On the other hand, we are
presented with a one-size-fits-all legal commandment. The federal government hands down the mandate telling each and every school district in America
how they must handle the unique needs of these children.

Children with either Intersex medical conditions or Gender Dysphoria psychological conditions need more privacy and parental help. But the Department of
Justice “Dear Colleague” letter will limit parental involvement and give children less privacy.

Allowing a child to define themselves into the “transgender” category without parental involvement or knowledge does accomplish one thing, though. It allows
kids to become part of the political Transgender movement at the lowest possible cost. It requires the schools to become part of the ideological destabilization
of the concept of innate biological sex differences.

This is why I say that transgenders are not sick. Oh, some of them may be. But some of the kids who define themselves as transgender under these guidelines
will be lonely kids trying to find friends. Some will be horny and predatory. Some will be conformist to the newest ideological fad. Some will just
be ornery.

Under the Obama guidelines, “transgender” is a not a medical or psychological term. “Transgender” is a political term.

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