Sethbag wrote:I can totally believe and acknowledge that the organization in question in really a political advocacy group. That said, I'm not sure I disagree that much with the particular statement they released.
They are talking about medical interventions on children on the basis of the belief that the biological sex the child was born into is somehow a medical problem to be dealt with using drugs or surgery or whatever. I'm uncomfortable with that too.the ACPeds wrote:Children who use puberty blockers to impersonate the opposite sex will require cross-sex hormones in late adolescence. Cross-sex hormones (testosterone and estrogen) are associated with dangerous health risks including but not limited to high blood pressure, blood clots, stroke and cancer.
One might well object to the use of the word "impersonate," so strike that word if you must and replace it with one you deem more accurate or less offensive, but the medical ethical dilemma still remains: is it medically ethical to subject pre-pubescent children to puberty blockers and sex hormone treatments which might (if their references are correct) bring with them substantial health risks?
If an adult wants to subject themselves to such treatments who I am to say they shouldn't, so long as they are adequately informed and take the responsibility for their decisions personally? But is a child really competent to make such decisions? And is it ethical for parents to make that decision for the child? I very dubious about that.
Again, though, I admit I don't fully understand all of the conflicting claims and ideologies of the whole transgender question. I don't think there is one single ideology against another single ideology. It seems to me more like a morass of various beliefs not easily dissected into two ideologically pure camps.
According to the article I linked, puberty blockers are often used in children who start puberty when they are younger than 8 or 9. Do you think that this is an unethical thing for doctors to do? I do not find this to be problematic. Since I don't have a problem with blocking puberty in a 7 year old I also think it is okay for an 11 year old child who has gender dysphoria.
When a baby is born with ambiguous sex parts a penis or vagina is often chosen for them (usually a vagina because it is easier). Do you think this is an unethical thing for surgeons to do? I do. I actually think we should learn to accept ambiguity and allow children to decide what they want sometime in adolescence. There's no reason to treat a 5 year old boy differently than a 5 year old girl, anyway.