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kestrel9 ago

Add the recent pushing of puberty suppressing drugs with irreversible effects! Sick. Not to mention brain-fried parents wanting to encourage PC tranny toddlers /s

It's like Globalist Pedos are designing a world utopia for Pedos and Satanists. Delay puberty long enough and the child-like body still excites the pedo freaks while they continue promoting the lowering of (or abolishing) the age of consent.

fogdryer ago

I agree puberty is coming too soon However under what guise do you give that drug ? What parent would allow that!

kestrel9 ago

I just saw a video discussing it the other night, how, due to the culture of PC obsessing over gender, some parents want their kids to be gay or transgender...because of their politics and because it's cool for them...(like having an exotic pet imo). I had not realized the prevalence of puberty blockers, but apparently they are used at ages 9-11? I couldn't find the video unfortunately so I'm going off of memory. The key info had to do with the fact that many seemingly transgender young people eventually 'grow' into their biological sex...and the downside of the hormones is that the changes can not be reversed, there's no going back (micro penis), and there are health risks involved, physical (blood clots, infertility, bone loss) and mental (depression). Risk of suicide can increase even more than if no treatment happened. One of the scariest things about the subject (besides the pedo angle), is how the culture has turned into a circus side show, kids are becoming the products of their parents 'searching' for gender, or their teacher's 'searching' for gender...etc...how is it that there is a sudden Explosion in numbers of transgender kids? Either there is something in the food we eat screwing with hormones or the country is under some serious psyops with medical experimentation happening on kids.

I looked up an article: http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/frontline/article/when-transgender-kids-transition-medical-risks-are-both-known-and-unknown/

"The use of puberty blockers to treat transgender children is what’s considered an “off label” use of the medication — something that hasn’t been approved by the Food and Drug Administration. And doctors say their biggest concern is about how long children stay on the medication, because there isn’t enough research into the effects of stalling puberty at the age when children normally go through it. ..their use in treating transgender children is a relatively new practice, first prescribed in the United States by the Gender Management Service at Boston Children’s Hospital in 2007, and recommended in the Endocrine Society’s guidelines for the treatment of transgender people in 2009."

"What makes treatment tricky is that there is no test that can tell whether a child experiencing distress about their gender will grow up to be transgender. The handful of studies that do exist suggest that gender dysphoria persists in a minority of children, but they involved very few children and were done mostly abroad." and what can make a kid stress over gender more than having gender obsessed parents?

'...doctors caution that estrogen and testosterone, the hormones that are blocked by these medications, also play a role in a child’s neurological development and bone growth. “We do know that there is some decrease in bone density during treatment with pubertal suppression,” Finlayson said, adding that initial studies have shown that starting estrogen and testosterone can help regain the bone density. What Finlayson said there isn’t enough research on is whether someone who was on puberty blockers will regain all their bone strength, or if they might be at risk for osteoporosis in the future.

Another area where doctors say there isn’t enough research is the impact that suppressing puberty has on brain development.

“The bottom line is we don’t really know how sex hormones impact any adolescent’s brain development,” Dr. Lisa Simons, a pediatrician at Lurie Children’s, told FRONTLINE. “We know that there’s a lot of brain development between childhood and adulthood, but it’s not clear what’s behind that.” What’s lacking, she said, are specific studies that look at the neurocognitive effects of puberty blockers."