As far as being a "trans sympathizer" I try to have sympathy for those who suffer. Is that ridiculous and evil bull *****Mothra said:You once again illustrate the logic problem with your comparison in the first paragraph by referring to the two bills as "mirror images" of one another, when they are decidedly not to any reasonable observer. Their only similarity is that they are bills that are aimed at "protecting" children, but that's where the comparison ends. You appear to think that evidences some sort of hypocrisy on the part of conservatives - allowing the govt. to step in and tell parents what's best - but I think even a partisan and trans sympathizer such as yourself realizes that it has long been the position of the conservative party to protect children. So, again, your little "gotcha" comparison remains a bad one.Frank Galvin said:Wow, really hit a nerve here.Mothra said:And as others pointed out, the analogy was a bad one - not the first by you. Your analogies in the other thread were terrible as well, and were rightly mocked.Frank Galvin said:
For people who attended a Christian school, you guys are big in name calling and insults.
I never agreed with the Cali legislator, I pointed out the equivalence of the state action ( in Cali potential, in Texas actual) inserting itself in the parent-child relationship.
And as I said on the other thread, for the therapies you are afraid of to happen, they have to be prescribed and administered by doctors.
State interference into medical treatment of children as directed by their parents is not a good thing. It is certainly not a " small government" policy.
It is, however, consistent with the theocracy you are trying to build.
The issue with "state interference into medical treatment of children," as you conveniently call it, is that there is no universally recognized treatment agreed on by the medical community for said mental condition. The way you describe it, it's as if the state is telling parents they can't allow doctors to prescribe chemo for kids with cancer. We both know that's intellectually dishonest.
The mental disorder of gender dysphoria is a separate animal altogether, and what one doctor diagnoses as gender dysphoria, another doctor may say is a nothing burger. The "treatments" for the mental conditional may also vastly vary. Most medical associations have gone on record as saying prepubescent kids should not be administered puberty blockers. And hormone treatments after puberty are highly controversial, and not generally accepted by the medical community.
In short, this is not an issue as cut and dried as you would like to make it, though I of course understand your attempts to do so, as they are self-serving, albeit ridiculous. There is simply no valid comparison between these two sets of bills.
Several problems with your post. First, you keep calling it a bad analogy when all I did is compare the fact that both state legislatures (if the California law passes) were making decisons for parents. I understand that conservatives who spend their time chanting about freedom and parent's rights become uncomfortable when they realize that they are acting as the mirror image of their hated enemies. But uncomfortable or not, that is what is going on-conservatives are using the power of the state inside of a family.
Your real response is not that it is a bad analogy, but that there is a reason for the different approaches. Simply put you are right and "they" are wrong. Generally, however, we let parents be wrong when parenting their children. So to make your argument work it has to be we are really right and "they" are really wrong. Like bigly wrong. State interference with parenting is ok in Texas because it protects kids while state interference with parenting in California would be a disaster because it might not protect kids.
But your third paragraph cuts directly against that argument. If there is no generally accepted medical protocol, how can you be certain that gender affirming care of one type or another is "wrong," let alone really, really wrong? Finally, I haven't read the California bill, I do not know what it says. But in the video in the first post the legislator was not arguing for puberty blockers, she was saying that parents should not devalue their children's expression of gender confusion. The thread then transform the woman's word into something else. They have to because aggressive medical treatment of pre-pubescent gender dysphoria is exceedingly rare. Yet this thread, GOP politicians and Fox News would lead one to believe that there are endless lines of woke liberals eager to transform their children.
The truth is that in a very small group of people, children experience something that is unsettling and portends difficulty no matter what road they go down. As you own post acknowledges, there is no cut and dried answer that will work for all kids in that population. I am comfortable that, because any therapy to treat this condition will be prescribed by a doctor, adminstered by a doctor, (doctors who are subject ot professional regulation and legal peril for malpractice) and authorized by a parent, the state needs to step back. You are comfortable that you know better. So we are not going to agree. No problem with that, it is how the world works.
As an aside, I was amused by your "rightful mocking" comment. You seem to present yourself as the thnking man's Christian. In that vein, when is it right to mock someone?
As for bad analogies, I was referring to your little doozie of a strawman on the Calvin Klein thread wherein you stated that "the amputation of a legal mutilates a minor's body...should we outlaw that procedure too," trying unsuccessfully of course to compare the outlawing of gender reassignment surgery in children to procedures that may be medically necessary. As I asked rhetorically in response to your strawman, can you give us an example of an instance in which a child's healthy leg is amputated merely because the child doesn't want it anymore? Of course you couldn't, which is why your comparison was so ridiculous and worthy of mocking.
Not sure what a thinking man's Christian is. When I see ridiculous and evil bull ****, such as the type you propagate, I typically call it out. It's not terribly difficult or challenging.
And you seem to think that anytime any one makes a comparison the are saying the two thinkgs are exactly the same. If they were, there would be no need for the comparison But your analysis of the comaprison beween leg amputations and trans surgeries is pretty shallow. No one has a trans surgery for trivial reasons, just as noone amputates a leg for trivial reasons. Your question, not my comparison, was weak.