Nealithi wrote: ↑Wed Apr 17, 2024 5:28 pmThank you, that gives me a what. A very thought provoking what. But why? I mean from context it would be to assist transition?
It's mostly used to "buy time" in a manner of speaking. Say you got a boy-child, aged 10. Puberty hasn't hit yet, but will inevitably do soon. The boy has expressed in some way that he doesn't feel to be a he, but a her. Now it would obviously be sensible to help that child by supressing the natural development of all the not-yet-fully developed man-parts in that potential girl, because he isn't a he and it's obviously better for the transitioning process in the long run, if hormonal therapy can start before the child's body is well on it's way to become a fully grown man. But you don't really wanna do that to a 10 year old child for, what I feel is, obvious reasons. You'd wanna give that child some time to figure out it's place in the world and develop mentally into a state, where it could sensibly decide and comprehend, what it means to transition.
Nealithi wrote: ↑Wed Apr 17, 2024 5:28 pmAs a poorly understood medical practice I would put my concern that this will be viewed on the same level as eugenics in a few decades. Ethically you can't test this on people can you? But how would animal testing for long term effects be possible. Since the primary concerns for something like this is medicinal and I do not have a medical background. I would have to defer my opinion to medical professionals.
I dunno if medical professionals are the right adress in general. I feel this is more of a psychological issue. And this is right where the best arguement against the usage of puberty blockers comes in, in my opinion. You're gonna arrest the natural development of a child. A child that, by all accounts, isn't yet fully able to comprehend what is happening to it, both physically and mentally and none of us really comprehended what it means to be an adult male or adult female, before we're actually there ourselves. So it can easily be argued, that this trans-child isn't capable of understanding it's decission yet and neither can you really easily tell from "the outside", whether that's a flight of fancy, a psychosis, a wierd result of a wierd education or some actual "wrong body"-phenomenon, for lack of a better word.
In essence, the primary arguement there is, that an adult could make an informed decission, while a child can't. But you are argueably preventing the child to become an adult through the use of puberty-blockers, even though the individual will develop into a sex-less adult (so to say), if you just supress the puberty. At the same time, the hormonal changes we undergo when becoming a full adult during puberty are so fundamental, that it's kinda hard to argue that you really reached adulthood without undergoing puberty in the first place.
Personally, I am very much on the fence on that particular issue. It's both the best means we have to support pre-puberty or early-puberty transsexuals, while at the same time the process is so poorly understood, both on a medical/pyschological level, as well as a philosophical/societal level, that it's quite the minefield to traverse. There's no clear right or wrong on that issue. Though I think it's best to allow the useage of puberty blockers, as long as the individual gets all the psychological counceling that is necessary and possible. In most cases I feel though, that we fail fundamentally on the later part, for various and obvious reasons (argueably more in the US than, say, Germany or the EU in general, where health care is more of a public concern, rather than a playing field of quacks, capitalists and religious nutjobs of any colour).
"If you get shot up by an A6M Reisen and your plane splits into pieces - does that mean it's divided by Zero?
- xoxSAUERKRAUTxox