Science Why more teens feel safe identifying as trans

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In our recent analysis of the Youth Risk Behavior Survey, a representative health survey of high school-age Americans at the school district, state and national levels, we found that about 1.4% of youths ages 13 to 17 identify as transgender in the U.S. That proportion amounts to approximately 300,000 transgender young people.

The results update those from our 2017 study, which, at the time, suggested that 0.7% of teens ages 13 to 17 openly identified as transgender.

While some people might assume that this means the number of trans teens has doubled in just five years, our results shouldn’t be read that way. There are a few possible reasons for the larger estimate this time around.

Not necessarily a trend​

When compiling the 2017 report, we didn’t have relevant survey data from American teens. The Youth Risk Behavior Survey did not include a transgender status question until 2017, and the results of that survey were still being compiled when we published our report. So we relied on patterns among young adults who openly identified as transgender to arrive at a credible estimate of 0.7% for the younger cohort.

In its 2017 and 2019 studies, however, the Youth Risk Behavior Survey did include a question about transgender status on the questionnaires administered in 15 states.


We used the survey responses from youths in these 15 states to create a statistical model that takes into account both individual- and state-level characteristics, and combined the results with census data to arrive at credible estimates for all states and the District of Columbia, along with a national estimate.

This process is called multilevel regression and poststratification, and it’s an increasingly popular modeling strategy in the social, political and health sciences.

This method is an improvement upon the methods we relied upon in our 2017 report. Therefore, it’s possible that the higher proportion in 2022 is less an indication of change over time and more a reflection of better measures.

Open minds​

Nevertheless, both studies found that young people are more likely than older people to identify as transgender. We found only 0.5% of adults 18 and older identified as transgender, which amounts to about 1.3 million adults.

Why the discrepancy?

There is no single reason that explains it, but studies have shown that younger people tend to have warmer attitudes toward transgender people than older individuals. At the same time, adults in the U.S. are becoming more open to transgender rights.


Together, these two trends suggest that transgender young people are in an environment where it is safer and less stigmatizing to openly identify.

Furthermore, the language around trans identities has evolved over time, creating new identity categories – such as nonbinary, gender nonconforming or genderqueer – that fit under the umbrella term “transgender.” This may influence how people respond to surveys. For example, the 2015 United States Transgender Survey found that among those who identified as nonbinary, 61% were 18 to 24 years old, while only 5% were older than 44.

A snapshot of affected teens​

Numerous state legislatures have proposed – while others have passed – policies restricting the ability of transgender young people to participate in sports or receive gender-affirming health care. Stigmatizing policies can adversely affect transgender people and have even been linked to suicide attempts.

It’s worth noting that our estimates are only of those transgender young people who said “yes” to the question of whether they were trans in the Youth Risk Behavior Survey. It’s possible that some of the respondents would not want to disclose these aspects of themselves in a survey setting. There may also be some people who have a current gender identity or expression that is different from their assigned sex at birth who do not currently identify as transgender.

Our estimates, then, provide a snapshot of what could be be an even larger population that may be affected by legislation.
 
Together, these two trends suggest that transgender vulnerable or just plain weird young people are in an environment where it is they are safer and less stigmatizing incentivized to openly identify.
Fixed. They don’t feel “safe,” they feel rewarded. If they feel “safer” now, it’s because declaring themselves trans brings the rewards of being able to pretend it wasn’t your ugliness or unappealing personality alienating people, they’re just transphobes, and since everyone knows after the big Pronoun Reveal Party they’re no longer allowed to do anything but praise and affirm, they feel socially safer. And they are. Just like they felt safer on play dates mom arranged with advance agreement that the other kid would play the games they wanted and would pretend they aren’t weird and offputting than they did trying to fit in with other kids on the playground. Because trans is kevlar.
 
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Stigmatizing policies can adversely affect transgender people and have even been linked to suicide attempts.

no they fucking haven't
they've been linked to faggots saying 'herr durr i totally felt like SUICIDAL man' because that's all these 'studies' ever measure

show me rates of hospital admissions and deaths and you might have a point
 
Oh look, a study saying public schools are ripe with grooming and abuse of young minds.
 
Why more teens feel safe identifying as trans

Because any normal person who even suggests anything negative towards them will have their entire life destroyed.

Anthony Fremont felt safe and accepted too.
 
no they fucking haven't
they've been linked to faggots saying 'herr durr i totally felt like SUICIDAL man' because that's all these 'studies' ever measure

show me rates of hospital admissions and deaths and you might have a point
Worse they’ve been linked to anonymous internet surveys with no controls whatsoever on multiple submissions or anything else to prove more than one individual or in fact not just a bot was responding…publicized on one of their troon sites, and iirc it was still only a handful of supposed respondents anyway.
 
Come back in 15 years and see how many of them are now straight, married, and parents. I’m guessing something like 90%.
 
Come back in 15 years and see how many of them are now straight, married, and parents. I’m guessing something like 90%.

The ones that pumped themselves full of hormones and mutilated their genitals probably aren't going to be having any kids. It's certainly a LARP for a lot of teens and since there's no actual diagnostic criteria it's quite easy to claim to be trans. Unfortunately there are plenty of ghouls that will push some of those kids towards taking estrogen and lopping their cocks off and teenagers trying to fit in or find friends aren't known for making the best decisions.
 
I used to know happy go lucky kids who would suddenly turn into mental wrecks after listening to grunge for 2 years.
Now they're like 40 years old and they regret all the shitty tattoos they got during that phase.

This shit happening now is totally a trend and it's already going out of style.
All these genderkids will be clean cut suit wearing corporate slaves by 2035.
 
no they fucking haven't
they've been linked to faggots saying 'herr durr i totally felt like SUICIDAL man' because that's all these 'studies' ever measure

show me rates of hospital admissions and deaths and you might have a point
Seriously. Suicide is a lot like drowning - the kid who can scream “oh, I’m drowning” isn’t the one at risk. They might be in pain and choking, but they can still breath so they’re alive. Likewise, kids who constantly threaten suicide are usually doing it to get some sort of attention. They might be miserable(many are), but they might also be manipulative assholes.

The ones you actually have to watch out for are the kids who aren’t saying anything because they’ve already given up.
 
Come back in 15 years and see how many of them are now straight, married, and parents. I’m guessing something like 90%.

That all depends on how many of them survive that long.

Seriously. Suicide is a lot like drowning - the kid who can scream “oh, I’m drowning” isn’t the one at risk. They might be in pain and choking, but they can still breath so they’re alive. Likewise, kids who constantly threaten suicide are usually doing it to get some sort of attention. They might be miserable(many are), but they might also be manipulative assholes.

The ones you actually have to watch out for are the kids who aren’t saying anything because they’ve already given up.

I'm of the opinion we should institutionalize anyone who threatens to kill themselves.

If being a manipulative asshole (or trying to be one) can earn you some time in a padded cell and a blot on your record that could potentially stop you from possessing firearms or do other things, that'll put a stop to it real quick. And we'll actually be able to help the people who are actually suicidal.
 
The answer is because it's become trendy to do so and gets attention. The easiest way to measure this shit is look at people like Chris Chan who don't have agency of self, they'll catch onto these trends long before others do. That and a lot of them are trend chasers for attention like Digi, Narcissa/Cosmo, Jessie Slaughter (or at least she was for a while), and so on. Amusingly enough Hollywood is now behind the times to lolcows.
 
ah, i remember when being gay was the trendy thing
for women, at least
there's always a natural revulsion to faggots, even the non-degenerate ones
 
When compiling the 2017 report, we didn’t have relevant survey data from American teens. The Youth Risk Behavior Survey did not include a transgender status question until 2017, and the results of that survey were still being compiled when we published our report. So we relied on patterns among young adults who openly identified as transgender to arrive at a credible estimate of 0.7% for the younger cohort.

"We totally had incomplete data which we hadn't even completely looked at yet,,, but the estimate was totally credible"
 
Come back in 15 years and see how many of them are now straight, married, and parents. I’m guessing something like 90%.
This is rather optimistic and depends wholly on how many start "gender affirming 'tratement," which is nothing less than irreparable bodily mutilation and self imposed sterilization. From what I gather detranstion efforts can only do so much.
"We totally had incomplete data which we hadn't even completely looked at yet,,, but the estimate was totally credible"
This is not a research paper,, but activist propaganda masquerading as such.

I once again recommend Leor Sapir's paper on this, which I posted here:


Abigail Shrier's Irreversible Damage is also jaw dropping as it is illuminating.

Finally, I also recommend at least select chapters from Robert Bork's Slouchibg Towrds Gomorrah, as he discusses Defining Deviancy Down and the Durkheim Constant in relation to why society should never be accepting of vices of other behaviors that are harmful to society. As soon as society days, the periphery of society just moves on to the next fringe thing, ie Defining Deviancy Down.
 
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