📚 Megathread TRA Intersex Activists / TRA "Interfakers" - Trans Activists Who Claim To Be Intersex

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Are you talking about Hanne Gaby Odiele? Because she doesn’t have MRKH, but rather CAIS.
Nope, don't recall hearing that name anywhere - and looking her up she does lean into the whole they/them, queer activist thing. The person I'm thinking of seemed rather normal, I think she was a contestant on one of those model shows?
 
Michael Walbridge, better known as Mikey Chanel, is an HSTS TIM who is a TikTok star and pop musician. In late 2020 he announced that he was pregnant (Archive). He revealed he was able to get pregnant due to a condition known as Persistent Müllerian Duct Syndrome, a condition where males are born with uterine structures. PMDS patients are unable to get pregnant, as their Müllerian structures don’t have the ability to carry a fetus. It is unclear what happened to Mikey’s pregnancy story as it was never talked about again. Also, Mikey is no longer on TikTok.

A series of videos exposing Mikey for lying:

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/3nb6XFfRK4YDLXLzrkmDqA
 
Why is it that pretty much ALL of LGBT are always the most degenerate/faggiest types of creatures to exist today? Almost as if it's a mental illness and not a legitimate thing that actually exists.
You're surprised a community built around celebration of degeneracy attracts degenerates?
 
I think that's her! All I remember is there was a notable woman with MRKH syndrome and Tumblr was claiming her as intersex, but there was no suggestion she ever embraced the label or even cared about the LGBTQIA+ crowd.

Found another article (archive) about someone with the same condition claiming intersex status, despite the fact MRKH is an exclusively female condition and many women who have it are sad they have to miss out on pregnancy and motherhood. Wasn't it speculated in Stephanie/Yarrow's thread that she has the kind where a womb is present but the vagina is underdeveloped and that's why she calls herself intersex?
 
Intersex woman arrested after bomb threat made on Mississippi college town
by ZACHARY ROGERS | The National Desk
Tuesday, February 14th 2023

Lily Mestemacher mugshot provided by Oxford Police Department

OXFORD, Miss. (TND) —
An intersex woman has been arrested for allegedly making bomb threats toward a Mississippi college town.
The Oxford Police Department became aware of the bomb threats on January 31, 2023, and initiated a search with an "Explosive K9 unit.
The area in question in Oxford, Mississippi was deemed safe after it was searched, which prompted an investigation into the online threats.
Investigators then discovered that it was 29-year-old Lily Mestemacher who allegedly made the bomb threats on social media while in Conway, Arkansas.

An arrest warrant was drafted for Mestemacher for False Reporting of Placing Explosives, and Mestemacher was taken in by the Conway Police Department.

Mestemacher waived extradition, according to the Oxford Police Department.

On Feb. 10, Mestemacher was transported to Oxford, Mississippi, where a Lafayette County Justice Court judge issued a $50,000 bond for the offense.

A mugshot of Mestemacher shows that she has a beard and dyed-blonde hair with dark roots. Several social media accounts and outlets have falsely identified Mestemacher as transgender.

The National Desk received a press releasefrom the Oxford Police Department regarding the arrest in which police refer to Mestemacher using feminine pronouns.

TND asked in a follow-up question if Mestemacher is transgender or nonbinary, to which the department's public information officer provided clarity.

Link, Archive
 
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I’m Alex, and I'm an intersex young person.

I started puberty a bit late, so I went to a doctor and he ran some tests. He told me that I had high levels of testosterone, and introduced me to the term intersex.

I was really lucky that my first interaction with the medical system and intersex traits was a really positive one, with a well-educated doctor. He was honest with me and used the correct terminology, and that gave me the option of embracing my identity and connecting with other intersex people, which made a huge difference.

Unfortunately, a lot of intersex people don't always have that experience, and may not even know that they're intersex. Sometimes that's because doctors will hide it from us or treat it as something shameful, or because it's hard to access accurate information about intersex traits.

WHAT DOES INTERSEX MEAN?​

Sex is based on a combination of hormones, genitals, chromosomes, and other physical characteristics.

People usually think of sex as two distinct categories. Everyone who has XX chromosomes, higher levels of estrogen, a vulva, a uterus, and breasts in one category – and everyone with XY chromosomes, higher levels of testosterone, a penis, testicles, and no breasts in the other. But that isn’t really accurate.

You might have heard some people associate physical attributes with gender, and use words like "male" and "female" to describe bodies, but gender is actually a largely separate thing. Women, men, and non-binary people can all have a range of physical traits, including varying hormone levels, different genitalia, genetic differences, and heaps of other combinations. No physical trait is inherently male or female at all.

There’s a lot of variety in the physical traits people can have, and unsurprisingly, the two categories we’ve constructed doesn't describe everyone.

WHAT DOES THAT MEAN FOR SEX AND GENDER?​

Being intersex means that I don’t fit into either of these two 'binary' sexes. There are many different ways to be intersex. Some intersex people’s chromosomes might be X, or XXY, or we might have varieties in our hormones like androgen insensitivity syndrome (when someone has XY chromosomes but is resistant to androgens), or lots of other possibilities.

Around 1.7% of the population is estimated to be intersex, which makes people with intersex variations about as common as redheads, who make up 1-2% of the population. If you've met someone who's a redhead, you've probably met someone who's intersex too.

HOW I IDENTIFY​

Gender, sexuality, and intersex status are all totally different things, and they can combine in really different ways. I'm pansexual, which means that I'm potentially attracted to people of any gender, and I'm a trans man.

Other intersex people might identify their body and their gender as being intersex, or might identify with any gender, including female, non-binary, or male. Gender isn’t determined by your body or any physical attributes, so, just like non-intersex people, intersex people can be any gender!

Sexuality is also separate from our bodies and gender identity. Intersex people can also be any sexuality, including asexual, bisexual, gay, lesbian, straight, or anything else!

COMMON MISCONCEPTIONS​

There are a lot of misconceptions about what being intersex is really like. These are just a few of them.

INTERSEX IS THE SAME AS TRANSGENDER​

Some intersex people are also transgender (like me!), but there are also cisgender intersex people. Intersex people can be any gender, be that non-binary, a man, a woman, agender, or anything else!

INTERSEX PEOPLE HAVE “MUTILATED GENITALS”​

This one’s just flat out wrong, not to mention offensive. Describing our bodies as mutilated or wrong is insulting, and based on the absurd idea that 'different’ means ‘bad’.

Intersex people are all mentally ill

Some intersex people are mentally ill, but we aren’t mentally ill because we’re intersex. And there are also intersex people who aren’t mentally ill. Calling intersex traits mental illnesses is inaccurate, and that inaccuracy hurts both mentally ill people and intersex people, and especially impacts mentally ill intersex people.

SUPPORTING INTERSEX PEOPLE​

DON'T USE SLURS​

The term hermaphrodite is a slur. Unless you’re an intersex person talking about yourself, or an intersex person explicitly told you that’s how to refer to them, it’s not okay to use it.

RESPECT OUR PRIVACY​

When I’m comfortable with a person, I’ll tell them that I’m intersex if they ask me about it. I’ve told most of my family and close friends, but sharing this part of my identity can still be difficult. Some people still don’t understand what intersex means, or have really negative ideas about it.

Our bodies can also be quite personal things, so it’s important to respect our right to decide what we tell you. It’s okay to ask questions, but think about how appropriate what you’re asking is. If you wouldn’t ask a non-intersex people who you know, then you probably shouldn’t be asking me either.

INTERSEX INCLUSION IN LGBTQIA+ GROUPS​

Intersex inclusion is really important, but it needs to be led by intersex people. I’ve seen some groups that will tack on an I in the acronym, but won’t even know what it stands for, and that’s really tokenistic and misleading.

If your organisation doesn’t have any intersex staff or volunteers, then elevate the voices of intersex people who are already sharing our stories and ideas. It’s also important to consult with intersex people if you’re working on relevant resources or trainings.
Link, Archive
 
There are exactly two Lily Mestemachers in the US, the other being 77 years old, so I'm guessing this "intersex" Lily is the one who wrote the hilariously illiterate e-book "At A Bar In Oxford":

Screenshot 2023-04-24 at 4.35.37 PM.png
 
Hasn't it been stated that "intersex" is just a fancy way of saying "birth defect"? That no one is truly "intersex", and every "intersex" person is essentially a male or female who has some condition(s) more associated with the opposite sex?

I don't think there's even been a case of a man who had both male and female genitalia that were both simultaneously functioning and or other biology-related stuff that would truly make them a "hybrid" of man and woman.
 
Hasn't it been stated that "intersex" is just a fancy way of saying "birth defect"? That no one is truly "intersex", and every "intersex" person is essentially a male or female who has some condition(s) more associated with the opposite sex?

I don't think there's even been a case of a man who had both male and female genitalia that were both simultaneously functioning and or other biology-related stuff that would truly make them a "hybrid" of man and woman.
Ovotesticular DSD, or true hermaphroditism, is the closest humans get to having both functional reproductive systems. An ovotestis can produce eggs but not sperm. There have been more cases of pregnancies than fathering of offspring in OT-DSD patients. There hasn’t been a case of a patient creating both gametes or having both genitalia.

Link (Archive)
 
One thing that pisses me off about TRAs is when they protest against genital surgeries and say "why are you performing unnecessary surgeries on healthy intersex infants?" Because there is no such thing as a healthy intersex infant as intersex conditions come along with health problems.
 
A new book about growing up intersex has come out. It is titled “Inverse Cowgirl” and was written by Alicia Roth Weigel. Weigel claims to have Complete Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome (where the body doesn’t respond to androgens entirely, so XY males look female and develop female. They have testicles in place of the ovaries which can become cancerous because the heat of the body harms testicles.) Here is her article on Ms. Magazine (Archive), talking about doctors sterilizing intersex people and destroying their reproductive freedom:

‘Inverse Cowgirl’: My Life as an Intersex, Intersectional Activist in the Lone Star State​

9/25/2023 by ALICIA ROTH WEIGEL

Many intersex individuals underwent surgeries in our youth to force our bodies to fit the gender binary. Some, like mine, involved sterilizing us without our consent—stripping us of our reproductive freedom. Sound familiar?​


My-Life-as-an-Intersex-Intersectional-Activist-in-the-Lone-Star-State-1-987x1024.png
Alicia attends a Pride March in New York City in 2021. (Instagram / @xoxy_alicia)
There have been recent significant strides in the awareness of intersex folks—like the recent release during Pride Month of the documentary, Every Body, directed by Julie Cohen, of the film RBG. I also wrote a book called Inverse Cowgirl about my experience living intersex in Texas. Sharing your truth about being a woman born with balls for the first time in front of a panel of Southern legislators makes for a pretty interesting story. Before I publicly came out to the Texas state Senate, I first bared my soul to one of its former members—the former filibusterer and feminist, Wendy Davis—over a glass (or a few) of wine in 2017.
The ‘I’ in the LGBTQIA+ acronym stands for intersex. This descriptor accounts for the roughly 2 percent of the world’s population born with combinations of sex traits (hormones, chromosomes, internal reproductive organs and/or external genitalia) that don’t fit neatly into the M or F box on a birth certificate. That’s around the same percentage of humans born with red hair, though we’re far less visible; in fact, the ‘I’ might as well have stood for Invisible, until this year.
inverse-cowgirl-book-intersex
Inverse Cowgirl: A Memoir, by Alicia Roth Weigel.
She and I founded a nonprofit called Deeds Not Words—after the suffragette’s motto—the year prior to help train the next generation of gender-equity activists here in the Lone Star State. The following excerpt from my memoir finds us cracking a bottle of red to celebrate the successes of our student advocates, until the party got … weird:
“Wendy, I’d like to tell you something before we head back to Texas, in case you want to fire me and look for a replacement.”
Her eyes widened with concern as she took another sip; who knows what she was expecting to come out of my mouth. I continued, “So you know how you sometimes read Vogue magazine?—because you’re so fashionable and all,” I started, attempting to butter her up with a compliment before I dropped a bomb that I was sure would be grounds for my termination.
She nodded, looking more confused than ever, as I forged forward: “Well, I was flipping through a copy in the office and there was a story in it about a model named Hanne Gaby Odiele. Hanne is something called intersex. Do you know what that means?”
This time she shook her head, still unblinking.
“I didn’t either before reading the article.” I took another gulp of red, spilling a bit on the table. “But it basically means that some people are born biologically between male and female, like with certain parts that don’t match what you’d expect just by looking at them—and in the article she talked about these surgeries that were forced onto her as a kid and hormones she has to take because of that and how doctors told her to never tell anyone and how she was always afraid when she was dating that someone would find out. And, well, I’d never heard that word before—they always just told me I have complete androgen insensitivity syndrome—but her story sounded just like mine, so that night I went down a Wikipedia rabbit hole for like six hours and as it turns out, I’m intersex too.”
Then I downed the rest of my glass.
inverse-cowgirl-book-intersex
Alicia helped launch and served as policy and advocacy director of former Texas state Sen Wendy Davis’ nonprofit Deeds Not Words from October 2016 to April, 2018. (Courtesy of Alicia Roth Weigel)
Wendy paused for a moment, her initial concern softening from apprehension to something more caring. “I’m honored that you’re telling me this, truly,” she said, “but I’m waiting for the part that explains why I’m supposed to fire you.”
I took a deep breath. “Oh, well, you know, we do so much advocacy for abortion rights and I can never get pregnant, so I just figured perhaps you’ll be upset that I wasn’t truthful with you and maybe you’ll want to hire someone in my place who actually has experienced an abortion or might one day.”
I sloshed another deep pour from the bottle into my glass. “I’m just so inspired by all of our students’ vulnerability, sharing what they’ve been through in a way that they might heal themselves and help others, but I’ve felt like such a hypocrite the whole time … This is such a big piece of who I am and has colored more parts of my lived experience than you can imagine and it’s gotten to the point where I can’t keep it bottled in anymore.”
This time Wendy grabbed the bottle, emptying it into her own glass as I rambled on.
“So I’ve realized that as much as our work means to me, my story needs to be told and I want to share it in a way that might make some real change for people like me—just like our girls do. They’re honestly the teachers here; I’ve learned so much from their bravery and from yours. So if my ‘coming out’ is going to cause issues for us as an organization, I totally understand. I just can’t stay trapped in the closet. … I’ve been in here 27 years too long. And I hope that if I break free it will give more people the opportunity to do the same, like reading Hanne’s story did for me.”
I averted my gaze into the glass of wine I was gripping with both hands like a life raft. Then Wendy reached across the table and squeezed my hands with her own.
“First off, I am so very proud of you,” Wendy said. “Both for helping me build and run this organization but also for living out Deeds’ mission in the most beautiful way I could imagine.”
I inhaled, realizing I’d been holding my breath for who knows how long.
“This is exactly what we want for our girls and what I want for you—to be free from the shame society places on women’s bodies that weighs on us our entire lives. Your burden is a bit different and yet very much the same.”
I raised my eyes to meet her gaze as she continued: “This must all seem so scary and overwhelming, but if I can relieve at least one fear for you—I absolutely will not be firing you for being born the way you are. The fact that you still advocate so passionately for a woman’s right to choose, even though you’ll never face that same decision, only demonstrates what a beautiful human you are and how valuable you are to this movement.”
I exhaled.
“Can you imagine if men took up the cause, as you have, how much farther along in the work we’d be? Regardless of what anatomy you were born with, you have a place here at Deeds Not Words and I’m honored to have you on our team—today of all days.”

Her story sounded just like mine, so that night I went down a Wikipedia rabbit hole for like six hours and as it turns out, I’m intersex too.

Wendy Davis was right about one thing: We’re all on the same team. We’re all fighting for consent—to make our own decisions about our bodies rather than have someone else make them for us. Many intersex individuals, myself included, have undergone surgeries in our youth to force our bodies to fit the gender binary better. Some surgeries, like mine, involve sterilizing us without our consent—stripping us of our reproductive freedom. Sound familiar?
The first lines of my book read, “I started writing this book the week that half of the United States lost the rights to their own bodies. These are rights I never had in the first place, even before the reversal of Roe v. Wade…”
My body autonomy was taken from me in infancy, from the very first operation that robbed me of my reproductive organs. Yes, that part’s a sob story—but it also gave me a 33-year head start on learning how to reclaim autonomy over your body after it’s been taken from you! I hope this knowledge, along with my experience as a political advocate, might help folks who are struggling to find a path forward in a world post-Roe.
Inverse Cowgirl offers this guidance and advice on healing, finding yourself and owning your voice. I hope you’ll find it valuable and enjoyable, and I ask only for your solidarity in return. The sooner we women break down the silos in our broader fight for body autonomy—joining the battles for abortion access and intersex rights, against sexual assault and human trafficking, all under the same united mantle—the sooner we all win.
From the book INVERSE COWGIRL: A Memoir, by Alicia Roth Weigel. Copyright © 2023 by Alicia Weigel. Published on Sept. 19, 2023, by HarperOne, an imprint of HarperCollins Publishers. Excerpted with permission.
Here she is on CBS Mornings:
 
Yoink. It’s that “as common as redheads” canard from a person with a disorder that affects between 2 and 5 individuals per 100,000 males. (Including polycystic ovarian syndrome and mild hypospadias conditions really helps to beef up that statistic. )

Also, this person was robbed of fertility? Those undescended testes were never going to produce viable sperm anyway. (To be clear, I think surgery for DSD kids should be limited to ensuring healthy function in the peeing and pooping department. Other procedures can wait until the person is old enough to consent.)
 
This chart is so stupid. The presentation of the chart, which mimics an EM spectrum chart, implies that there is the possibility for a person to fall on every single distinct point on the line. Instead, someone has just put a bunch of sexual development disorders onto a chart, placing them on random points on the line depending on how masculine or feminine people with those set of defects are. There is no solid slide between Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome and Klinefelters Syndrome, for example, which that chart implies there is. The reason that chart works for the visible light spectrum is that you can choose any point on the line, and it is possible to have light of that wavelength. Also, with this chart, there is no quantitative way to assign a place on the chart to a specific disorder. It just doesn't work, because "sex" is not a spectrum. Sex is two well defined points that are optimal for human reproduction, and a bunch of rare ways the body can fail to reach one of those points, typically ending up infertile.
 
Yoink. It’s that “as common as redheads” canard from a person with a disorder that affects between 2 and 5 individuals per 100,000 males. (Including polycystic ovarian syndrome and mild hypospadias conditions really helps to beef up that statistic. )
I don’t consider PCOS and hypospadias to be intersex conditions because they don’t include ambiguous genitalia or chromosomal or gonadal defects.
Also, this person was robbed of fertility? Those undescended testes were never going to produce viable sperm anyway. (To be clear, I think surgery for DSD kids should be limited to ensuring healthy function in the peeing and pooping department. Other procedures can wait until the person is old enough to consent.)
I see so many interfakers trashing pediatric urologists because they “fix intersex genitalia” but ignore the fact that they are there to help fix urinary abnormalities.
 
I'm pretty sure Caster Semenya is a male who fathered children with his male semen.
If he got a woman pregnant he's not a female.
 
I'm pretty sure Caster Semenya is a male who fathered children with his male semen.
If he got a woman pregnant he's not a female.
Caster Semenya has 5-alpha reductase deficiency, which means that he is missing the enzyme necessary to help a male fetus grow a penis and cause his testicles to descend. Infants with 5-ARD appear to have female or ambiguous genitalia at birth, so many of them are raised female. During puberty, an increase in testosterone causes the growth of a penis and the descent of the testicles, as well as the other changes seen in males during puberty. However, males with 5-ARD are infertile unless they receive assisted reproductive technology.

Caster lives as female and as a lesbian. His wife got pregnant with donor sperm, which clearly isn’t his as the oldest child looks like a mulatto.
 
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