To what? It will tend to increase instances of child abuse. The exact nature of the mechanism seems unimportant.
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What?? If we know there's trauma, we know they should receive therapy for it. Are you saying we should affirm gender dysphoria in kids with trauma without questioning if it even played a part in them feeling that way??
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I'm saying exactly what I typed, which is that if trauma always disqualifies then parents with gender variant children will more often choose to traumatize them to camouflage the legitimacy of their gender and prevent them from transitioning.
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But no one's saying that trauma always disqualifies? You're strawmanning the argument. Also the point is that trauma isn't equal to being gender dysphoric. There should be rigorous assessment as to which path is the most appropriate. No one's saying DISREGARD abuse or dysphoria.
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The point holds true if trauma disqualifies at a higher frequency. And I didn't say that trauma was equal to being gender dysphoric. Your arguments are pointless.
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No, your point holds true only if we were disqualifying by mistake. Even if disqualification were occurring at higher frequencies, if those were *accurate* decisions that then helped people get proper treatment/therapy for their trauma, that would be a good thing.
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Oh. So if something impossible is true then I'm wrong. I suppose that's valid.
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Impossible? We already know detrans/desist individuals who say they wish there had been a better pipeline to therapy had existed
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No, I am saying "It's ok, we'll just have 100% accuracy", which was your counterargument, is entirely insane.
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Poor wording on my part, fair enough. But you were saying that if trauma disqualifies at a higher frequency it's invalid as an assessment point, which makes no sense if we don't have more data on how often trauma affects dysphoria?
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I didn't say it was invalid, I said it would cause more abuse.
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