FFS. You're parading studies that don't even say what u claim. Studies that ask kids how happy they are Studies that take girls w/ dysphoria
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touch their breasts (um, sort of the symbol of their dysphoria; I'm sure these assholes would have touched vaginas if they could) and claim,
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that it means something that the girls w/ dysphoria don't react as expected when their breasts are touched. It's the same circular reasoning
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React neurologically? Are you saying that if how someone feels and what a scan shows corresponds it's not real? Cause.....?
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Come on. Why don't you try to think. I am not trying to claim the girls don't have dysphoria. They are basically proving that girls w/
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dysphoria have dysphoria! Not a surprise. But they or folks using studies to "prove" s/t claim that the research means the girls are "trans"
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Yes. That is what is known as confirmation bias. Starting from a premise that hasn't been proven & building one's whole argument around it.
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Replying to @4th_WaveNow @nosoyyo7 and
Kristina Olson is the darling of trans activists. Her first study "proved" that some kids really do prefer lifestyle of opposite sex but
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Replying to @4th_WaveNow @nosoyyo7 and
...she then made the (il)logical leap that that meant they were true trans, aka arguing from a hypothesis already "in hand."
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Oh - this is really cool. Thanks for the tip. http://www.psychologicalscience.org/news/releases/transgender-kids-show-consistent-gender-identity-across-measures.html#.WORmuPnyu03 …
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Should be used in research design classes to teach about confirmation bias. Good night.
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