Culture Tranny News Megathread - Hot tranny newds

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https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...school-attack-caught-camera-says-bullied.html

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A transgender girl accused of assaulting two students at a Texas high school alleges that she was being bullied and was merely fighting back

Shocking video shows a student identified by police as Travez Perry violently punching, kicking and stomping on a girl in the hallway of Tomball High School.

The female student was transported to the hospital along with a male student, whom Perry allegedly kicked in the face and knocked unconscious.

According to the police report, Perry - who goes by 'Millie' - told officers that the victim has been bullying her and had posted a photo of her on social media with a negative comment.

One Tomball High School parent whose daughter knows Perry said that the 18-year-old had been the target of a death threat.

'From what my daughter has said that the girl that was the bully had posted a picture of Millie saying people like this should die,' the mother, who asked not to be identified by name, told DailyMail.com.

When Perry appeared in court on assault charges, her attorney told a judge that the teen has been undergoing a difficult transition from male to female and that: 'There's more to this story than meets the eye.'

Perry is currently out on bond, according to authorities.

The video of the altercation sparked a widespread debate on social media as some claim Perry was justified in standing up to her alleged bullies and others condemn her use of violence.

The mother who spoke with DailyMail.com has been one of Millie's most ardent defenders on Facebook.

'I do not condone violence at all. But situations like this show that people now a days, not just kids, think they can post what they want. Or say what they want without thinking of who they are hurting,' she said.

'Nobody knows what Millie has gone through, and this could have just been a final straw for her. That is all speculation of course because I don't personally know her or her family, but as a parent and someone who is part of the LGBTQ community this girl needs help and support, not grown men online talking about her private parts and shaming and mocking her.'

One Facebook commenter summed up the views of many, writing: 'This was brutal, and severe! I was bullied for years and never attacked anyone!'

Multiple commenters rejected the gender transition defense and classified the attack as a male senselessly beating a female.

One woman wrote on Facebook: 'This person will get off because they're transitioning. This is an animal. She kicked, and stomped, and beat...not okay. Bullying is not acceptable, but kicking someone in the head. Punishment doesn't fit the crime.'


FB https://www.facebook.com/travez.perry http://archive.is/mnEmm

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I wonder if the surrogate is some bleeding heart liberal with tons of money or a person that has to rent her womb to make ends meet. Considering the surrogate was treated in the article as some alien machine I'd say the latter.
 
The British couple first discussed their intention to have a baby in 2018 before brimming with pride as they announced to the press that they used a surrogate for Jake who froze his eggs before his gender-affirmation surgery when he was 36.
Trannys man, they have to announce everything to everyone, they even have to announce somebody elses baby to the media kek.
So they welcomed someone else's baby to the world.
or a person that has to rent her womb to make ends meet.
I found some footage that depicts this exact situation
 
I wonder if the surrogate is some bleeding heart liberal with tons of money or a person that has to rent her womb to make ends meet. Considering the surrogate was treated in the article as some alien machine I'd say the latter.

It's illegal to pay someone for surrogacy in the UK. Maybe the surrogate just didn't want her name all over the media.

I don't have a problem with trans people having kids but I do have a problem with activists having kids. Those kids are gonna be commercialized etc and dragged into the spotlight a ton. Just a toxic environment to raise a child. i agree, someone will be dead by 2030.
 
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The heartwarming story of a mother that lets her underage daughter be her authentic self by allowing her to go through a horse piss hormone induced "menopause" (even if she hasn't entered or completely gone through puberty) https://www.essentialkids.com.au/he...pause--and-im-so-proud-of-him-20200416-h1nfe0
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Oh, so the side effects are only menopause and brittling bones. On a 15-year-old. Sounds perfectly natural, and definitely a thing to be encouraged. jfc
 
I wonder if the surrogate is some bleeding heart liberal with tons of money or a person that has to rent her womb to make ends meet. Considering the surrogate was treated in the article as some alien machine I'd say the latter.

But But. Fuck The Poor, Its all about that performative differsity of looks and gender. They are doing their best to convert Far righters into Islamists. Because What do you choose when faced with choice between degeneracy and Islam ? Isis is missing major propaganda pipeline here.
 
But But. Fuck The Poor, Its all about that performative differsity of looks and gender. They are doing their best to convert Far righters into Islamists. Because What do you choose when faced with choice between degeneracy and Islam ? Isis is missing major propaganda pipeline here.
The greatest con of the 21st century is making people think that identity based inequality is far more important than any economic based inequality.
 
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sounds serious, don't it?

Oh you poor thing I think I'm crying. No wait those are tears of laughter.
Overdramatic trannies, drag queens, gays and mentally ill LARPers rely heavily on going out into society and showing the world "their true self". Well society is on hold! So now what? If you're queer but not here, how can we get used to it? The WuFlu has given people like this a free DIY therapy session. Question everything you've done up to this point and MAYBE be better for it. (Part of me doesn't want them to be depressed from being alone with their own thoughts but I really want this fad to die already. Carving your body up and stuffing hormones in it is not stunning or brave. It never was. You have been lied to.)
So trannies are trying to have gay men murdered now, using Grindr.




AFAICT the thinking is:

Naoufal Moussa is a (trans) woman. Who likes to fuck men.

This is not at all gay, not even a tiny bit, it's man on woman.

OTOH, men having sex with men is gay and an abomination and they should all be thrown off buildings.

So Naoufal is doing the world a favour by ridding us of those beastly faggots so it is only men having sex with women, as Allah intended.



Another extreme case of "suck the girldick, you bigot" with a side of death. Funny how they'll swear up and down being gay isn't a choice but force gay men, who have their own fucking space, to stop being gay or die. What inhuman scum, leave the gays alone. :heart-empty:
https://www.aclu.org/press-releases...ging-idahos-law-targeting-transgender-student (archive)

The ACLU is suing Idaho in federal court for recently passing the law keeping male troons from being allowed to compete against girls on school teams.

They're citing Title IX. I have no clue how likely this is, but I'd love for a case like this to hit the Supreme Court and set a precedent establishing Title IX to be specific to biological sex, not troonery.

The Virgin ACLU vs. The Chad Idaho? Part of me believes this is just something to write about and not pursue (like their constant bitching about 4Chan) but if they do go for it, GO GO IDAHO!

Any lawyer kiwis know how good or bad Idaho's chances are?
 
It's illegal to pay someone for surrogacy in the UK.
Someone desperately poor and being promised 5+ years of income for one year of (crippling) work would definitely refuse the money and call the bobbies on the troons.

(Also, lizardpeople do surrogacy tourism, and the British border doesn't appear to be on total lockdown. It's not illegal to rent a slave elsewhere.)

Yeah, it's the surrogacy is what people have an issue with....
In case that's sarcasm: why not? People who are pro blood- and organ donation (so, most everyone except Jehovah's Witnesses) still don't want the donated blood or organs to be given to cannibals to eat. Even some pro-surrogacy people may only want surrogates to risk their lives for young infertile women - not a centennarian hag who wants a baby with her new teenage boytoy, or an instagram influencer who doesn't want to "ruin" her figure, or a horrortroon who intentionally made itself infertile.

It's not even a thot who had her tubes tied at 20 but had a change of heart at 30 - I can sort of sympathize with a change of heart. No, this thing harvested its eggs when it made itself infertile, knowing that they will necessarily have to be carried to term in a healthy woman's body, poisoning and deforming her, while it paid for its own body to be poisoned and deformed for shits and giggles.
 
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first, i don't buy the part about "perfectly reasonable people whose lives were destroyed either by drug laws or by the drugs themselves" ending up in supermax facilities. from what i know supermax prisons are where they put people like ted kaczynski and the guy who helped tim mcveigh build his bombs, not random druggies unless they are in for serious shit like murder or have attacked guards at other prisons

That's what they're supposed to be but there just aren't that many Ted Kaczynskis out there. People end up in Supermax in some cases for absolutely ridiculous reasons like some series of small disciplinary violations, which can include being punished because you got attacked yourself. They have to justify the existence of these really expensive facilities so it isn't just wall to wall Mansons.
 
Trannies can't get their life-saving hormones, trannies are literally dying everywhere.

(More on why covid-19 hurts trannies more than everyone else in the whole world, as 21 year old shemales are obviously the key demographic for dying of Kung Flu)


Evelyn was growing nervous as she watched her supply of spironolactone dwindle while the city of Boston, where she lives, started its coronavirus lockdown in mid-March.

Evelyn, 21, takes spiro as part of her hormone-replacement therapy to treat gender dysphoria, which happens when a person feels their body doesn't match their gender identity. She's had a steady routine since starting on hormones last September; every three months she goes to Planned Parenthood for a checkup and a new prescription.

But by March 15 she was getting increasingly anxious. She's found it hard to find a good doctor who treats transgender patients, let alone one accustomed to video visits.

Evelyn started to worry about withdrawal symptoms from her HRT, like fat redistribution, hair growth, and mood swings.

A week and a half after lockdown, she was out of spiro and, with her appointments cancelled indefinitely, she had no idea when she would next be able to fill her prescription.

"It was rough," Evelyn said. "It's always anxiety-inducing to run out of a medication that you know has very significant effects on your body."

With few options and no time, Evelyn turned to a friend for help.

Her friend had an access supply of spironolactone she was willing to part with. It was expired and a lower dosage but Evelyn said she could make it work until she could schedule an appointment with her doctor.

"It's a beggars-can't-be-choosers thing right now," Evelyn said. "I'll take what I can get."

Evelyn was eventually able to schedule a video appointment four days later with her doctor, who wired her hormone prescription to her pharmacy. But for many transgender and nonbinary people, unofficial pathways to obtaining hormones like friends, community social-media pages, and unregulated grey-market pharmacies have become the only options during the pandemic.

The coronavirus has spurred the creation of hormone-sharing lists
Since the lockdowns came into effect across the US, mutual-aid networks for queer and transgender people have popped up, including grocery delivery and resources for people with lost incomes.

Among them are efforts geared toward redistributing hormones and needles to those in need, including hormone-sharing Google Docs, and grey-market pharmacies, which buy and sell unregulated hormones.

The Google Docs are particularly useful for finding testosterone solution, which is tightly regulated and expensive, and clean needles, which aren't so easy to buy, and can be pricey too.

Testosterone can cost between $40 and $90 for a two-month supply (a 10 ml bottle of 200 mg/ml solution) without insurance. The expenses quickly add up when you consider the costs of gender-affirming clothing like binders (upwards of $35), prosthetics (hundreds of dollars), and syringes to administer the testosterone, which can cost between $15 and $20 for a 100-count box depending on the supplier.

Free needle exchanges exist, but the pandemic has caused many to shutter. If people opt for AndroGel, the topical form of testosterone, a month's supply can cost between $30 and $80 without insurance.


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People further along in their transition may not need to take hormones as regularly, so some are sharing their excess
Syd, a 23-year-old living in Berkeley, California, was browsing through lists of queer coronavirus mutual-aid pages when they stumbled upon an anonymous two-page Google spreadsheet titled "HORMONE SHARE." One page of the sheet is for people to list the specific hormones or equipment they need; the other is for people to list items they have to share.

Syd felt compelled to put their information on the list because they had an excess supply of "T" (testosterone) to share.

Syd, who uses they/them pronouns, has gotten to a point in their transition where they don't take testosterone as regularly as they did when they started on HRT a few years ago. Their body has gone through the physical changes they wanted. Rather than taking their prescribed .5 mL every week, Syd takes .5mL about every two weeks to maintain the physical changes.

"I don't really need it that much, and someone else can use this. I can't get the intended effect that I want from hormones, and I also just really hate injections," Syd told Insider. "For the time being I assume I'm still going to be able to get in touch with my doctor, so it won't be an issue for me."

A few days after posting on the spreadsheet, Syd got an email from an unfamiliar address. The sender said he'd seen their listing and was in need of testosterone because his usual HRT clinic in Philadelphia was not responding to phone calls. The sender was scared that he'd start to see side effects from being off HRT too long, like the return of his period.

Breaking a nervous sweat while walking to the post office, Syd wondered about the legal consequences of shipping hormones across the country, and what they would say if post office workers asked about the contents of their padded envelope.

Sharing hormones and needles is a legal grey area
Most testosterone medications are classified as steroids under the Controlled Substances Act and the Anabolic Steroid Control Act of 1990, so they are illegal to sell over the counter. But handing out hormones for free, though not recommended by doctors, doesn't break any laws.

It is not illegal to share needles if there is no reason to believe that they would be used to inject illicit drugs.

According to Harper Jean Tobin, Director of Policy for the National Center for Transgender Equality, while people should not take medications that aren't prescribed to them, hormone exchanges and grey-market pharmacies aren't new.

"We strongly recommend that people should only take medications prescribed by their doctor, at the dosages prescribed," Tobin told Insider. "But like anyone else with regular prescriptions, it's not unheard of for roommates, friends, or partners on the same medication to trade a few doses until they can get to the pharmacy again."

Syd felt compelled to share their hormones because of the deep impact dysphoria can have on the mental health of transgender and nonbinary people. Studies have linked dysphoria to depression and anxiety and significantly increased risks of substance abuse and suicide.

"A lot of people who don't have dysphoria may not see it as essential, but I know that, for some people, it really makes them feel a lot more OK existing in their body," Syd said. "For some people it really is necessary to be taking it all the time. If they miss it, it can mean certain things can start to come back like menstruation, or facial hair growth, fat redistribution."

Some have turned to grey-market pharmacies where people can buy hormones
Estradiol and spironolactone, HRT medications typically used by transgender and nonbinary people assigned male at birth, can legally be sold online.

While they can be found on list-shares, people also can buy them online via a network of grey-market pharmacies, shipping medication that is not illegal to sell, but medical professionals would not recommend taking it without a doctor's approval.

That's what Callie, a 24-year-old in the United Kingdom, uses to get progesterone — a hormone that can stimulate breast development and decrease testosterone production in people assigned male at birth.

Callie has always used a mixture of official and unofficial sources to access her hormones because of the legal grey area some of her medications exist in.

"I take finasteride and estradiol, both of which are prescribed by a UK doctor with GenderGP, a private trans healthcare service," Callie told Insider. "However, I also take progesterone, which I obtain from the grey market because it cannot be prescribed in the UK but has been very beneficial to me."

These markets carry clear risks — it's not as clear where your medication has come from — but they are generally more reliable and cheaper than official channels. There's also a tight-knit community of people on Twitter and subreddit /r/TransDIY who discuss the safest ways to get DIY HRT, and which online pharmacies have worked for them.

A 5 ml bottle of depo-estradiol, an injectable hormone, costs upwards of $120 for a two-month supply. There is a generic version, estradiol cypionate, which costs between $40 and $100 for the same amount, but it needs to be taken more often, so runs out quicker, and there are often shortages.

Soon, Callie may have to turn fully to grey-market sources because she has been unable to get an appointment with her doctor for another hormone prescription.

"I'm running out very soon and so far my doctor hasn't responded to communication, so potentially very soon I might be turning to unofficial channels," Callie said.

These unofficial channels have existed for years to help trans and nonbinary people get around red tape

The pandemic has made hormone and needle sharing more visible, but it isn't new.

Access to gender-affirming care — whether it's surgery or access to medication — has never been an easy proposition for transgender and nonbinary people.

Medical insurance companies refused to cover gender-affirming care for decades and many primary-care physicians were unwilling to provide HRT, a medication also prescribed for menopause, to transgender and nonbinary patients because medical guidelines had not changed to include them.

Until 2017, "gender identity disorder" was categorized as a mental disorder in the American Psychiatric Association's Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders. And it wasn't until 2018 that the World Health Organization removed "transsexualism" the International Classification of Diseases — a move that, the WHO conceded, would allow for better "access to necessary health interventions."

Still, access to gender-affirming care like HRT through official channels like a primary-care provider is fairly new, and therefore challenging. The pandemic has brought in even more obstacles.

The pandemic may force more people to rely on hormone trading and grey markets
Job losses, delayed paychecks, and loss of health insurance have stripped many transgender and nonbinary people of their access to HRT, or their means to pay the full cost or the co-pay, which can range from $10 to $85 a month, on average.

Evelyn, the 21-year-old from Boston, still has access to hormones through her insurance, but she's still concerned about how she will continue to afford the co-pay for her HRT prescriptions without income. Like many Americans, she lost her job because of the economic downturn caused by the pandemic.

"The big financial problem is I don't have income anymore and I'm sure a lot of people don't have income anymore," Evelyn said. "Even if costs don't change, I'm working with less and less total funds as time goes on."


Lol

Callie has always used a mixture of official and unofficial sources to access her hormones because of the legal grey area some of her medications exist in.

"I take finasteride and estradiol, both of which are prescribed by a UK doctor with GenderGP, a private trans healthcare service," Callie told Insider. "However, I also take progesterone, which I obtain from the grey market because it cannot be prescribed in the UK but has been very beneficial to me."


'I get my drugs from a crazy criminal who had to run away to Spain to continue to operate her illegal business, but even she wouldn't hook me up with this shit'


Just to understand, progesterone probably gives trannies cancer but these crazy faggots just talk about this stuff like it's literal Skittles.

Soon, Callie may have to turn fully to grey-market sources because she has been unable to get an appointment with her doctor for another hormone prescription.

"I'm running out very soon and so far my doctor hasn't responded to communication, so potentially very soon I might be turning to unofficial channels," Callie said.


Dear Abbie, My drug dealer isn't answering her email, what should I do?

Maybe next week we'll hear from those who get butt injections from back street 'doctors' about how covid-19 is affecting them? 'Having a huge butt is vitally important to the mental health of many but with coronavirus blah blah blah suicide online blah'
 
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