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[flagged] Alabama legislature advances bills that would outlaw trans medical care (npr.org)
10 points by happy-go-lucky on March 30, 2021 | hide | past | favorite | 31 comments



Click-bait title.

AFAIK this and similar bills outlaw what could be termed “body modification” for under-18 children - which is roughly in line with overall limitations on the freedoms of underage individuals (e.g. regarding technically-consensual sex, or vulva surgery - which is legally “female circumcision” if performed on underage women). Obviously the specific facts differ (the whole point of hormone blockers is to be taken before puberty) but to term it “outlawing trans medical care” is highly politically charged and completely misleading.


Absolutely not click-bait. The title reflects the intent and content of the bills. The Alabama legislature is vocally against the concept of transgenderism.

> AFAIK this and similar bills outlaw what could be termed “body modification” for under-18 children

Surgery recommended by a doctor is not "body modification," it is medical treatment.

Also, this goes far beyond surgery. It also outlaws the use of prescription drugs.

> roughly in line with overall limitations on the freedoms of underage individuals (e.g. regarding technically-consensual sex, or vulva surgery - which is legally “female circumcision” if performed on underage women

First of all, minors can have consensual, legal sex... with each other. Age-of-consent laws are intended to protect children from adults, not from themselves. I don't see what this has to do with anything, because it's unrelated to a medical condition and doesn't require a doctor to carefully manage it.

Second, "female circumcision" is not "vulva surgery," it is usually mutilation of the clitoris intended to eliminate female pleasure. It is not something a minor would (or could) seek as a treatment for any medical condition.


[flagged]


I'm not a doctor, but my understanding is that trans people still have bodies after they transition. Do you disagree?


I don't trust children to make decisions about irreversibly altering their own bodies.

There's a very real chance that this could be viewed by a future generation like 1920s "Progressives" that thought they were agents of goodness and social progress, equipped with science.

This whole unqualified pro-trans push could be hubristic people who're unwittingly "medically fixing" queer kids with internalized concepts and phobias from their social culture.


> I don't trust children to make decisions about irreversibly altering their own bodies.

Neither do I. Neither does anyone. You're attacking something that does not happen. Children who want to transition have to consult with physicians and psychologists.

> There's a very real chance that this could be viewed by a future generation like 1920s "Progressives" that thought they were agents of goodness and social progress, equipped with science.

No, there isn't. You seem to be talking about eugenics, which was people forcing their views of "science" onto others.

In the case of children transitioning, it's not anything being forced on them. Their parents are not coming up with it, and neither are their doctors. It's something they bring up themselves.

Children are almost always given reversible (meaning hormone-based) treatments, and the rate at which they change their minds later is 0.4%[1].

Considering how rare transgender people are in the first place, that is an exceedingly small number of people.

1. https://www.nbcnews.com/feature/nbc-out/media-s-detransition...


> You seem to be talking about eugenics

I'm talking about having a healthy sense of self-doubt.

History shows us that the imprimatur of science is used to advance hubris-driven, pernicious social ideas of a time.

The take-away is that when you're absolutely convinced that some new trend is moral and liberating, you should at the very least try to imagine the possibility that you're not only wrong but actively doing harm.


There are hundreds of studies investigating whether harm is done. You seem to be speculating without doing any research first.


If children bring up wanting to do hard drugs, and they talk with parents, doctors and psychologists, and still want to do it, should we let them? Hell no! They’re not mature enough to really understand the life long consequences. And so many people make bad choices during their emotional and hormone fueled teen years, that alone should be a check against making permanent changes.


If an American doctor provides medical prescription or service in alignment with professional medical standards, such as the American Pediatric Association or AMA, ought we not at least visit their medical reasoning before seeking to ban medical service?

But there is nothing like that here.


> vulva surgery - which is legally “female circumcision”

So, are you saying it's now also outlawed male mutilation too? Because, circumcision serves zero positive purpose and has many negatives.

I don't remember "choosing" to be circumcised, parents weren't even religious it just "kinda happened" nobody "knows why". My kids are NOT circumcised and never will be unless they choose.

Trans alteration on the other hand is a rare, personally chosen procedure - only chosen after due diligence and failure to do the procedure often results in self-esteem issues and sometimes death (suicide). Very low percentages < 1% ever change their mind about it.

It may not even be accurate to say it's a "choice" rather than just the way they're born/wired and an inevitable outcome regardless of what age it occurs.


Vulva surgery. They held women down in Afghanistan and forced that upon them as a punishment and people are actually advocating for it.


The existing standard of care already delays surgery until adulthood. This bill even outlaws prescribing drugs to delay puberty.


I think this is an important issue, but I'm flagging it because it doesn't seem like a fit for HN. Most of the site is currently dominated by culture-war articles, and this unfortunately has never been a venue that generates interesting discussions about those topics.


Jesus, if we can't hope to have meaningful discussion on a topic, who can?


I think that on technical issues, HN has great discussions that far exceed any other place.

On social issues, threads tend to get brigaded, people talk past each other, and generally nothing new/constructive is added.

I think this site specifically attracts people who are not deeply knowledgeable about (or interested in) the nuances of social issues, and the consequence is that the discussions are poor.

I don't think that's a bad thing. You can have great, substantive discussions elsewhere. It would be nice (and consistent with HN guidelines) to have a place that isn't an incessant culture war.


I completely fail to see this mindset. What is it that makes people with tech related jobs feel like they're superior to others?


It is strange that it doesn't seem to allow parents to approve treatment either.

From my perspective, I have been torn between allowing minors to get life-changing treatment without some adult's approval (besides the doctor), just because the longer term consequences are generally not perceivable for the child yet. This has nothing to do with hormones treatments specifically.

But on the topic of transitioning, just like with some other treatments, I understand why it is available in some states, as it can be dangerous for the child if the parent/guardian knows.

I'm still surprised this particular bill would go as far as to not even allow that option. I mean, not surprised by Alabama and I don't respect their people, representatives, legislative process or their courts, but this still seems distinctly malicious.


I think more states and cities should be more biased in their form of opinion. That's really the beauty of what the USA is from the technical perspective. I'd actually split more states into "city" as the highest form of government. That way each group of people can handle law and bias as they expect. Otherwise you are coercing too large of a population into conflicting views. The most agreeable way forward is to respect people's biases and go where you find it most comfortable.

So in this case, cool for them, now find a city/state that allows treatment.


You could make this same argument to support segregation or Jim Crow laws. And, in fact, many Black people did move north to get away from those laws.

But you know what? That doesn't solve the problem. You can't just ask people to leave their family homes, which also costs a lot of money and requires leaving behind a job. You can't just have "discrimination zones" in the country, where local jurisdictions get to decide that they violate human rights.

Where people choose to live is not an Econ 101 "efficient market".


I think you're fighting an impossible problem. Yeah, you can ask people to leave. That's the best way to do it. It will balance out fine this way. You can absolutely have discrimination zones, why do I have to share my space with others I don't want? It's human nature, stop fighting it.

The losing battle is coercing a majority into uniform perspectives which is impossible.


> You can absolutely have discrimination zones, why do I have to share my space with others I don't want?

Just to be clear:

1) You already have the right to do this as long as you're not a government entity or a business.

2) You seem to have a "live and let live" philosophy, which I also do. That's the problem with this bill. It is not letting people live -- it's taking away their right to privately seek medical treatment for a serious, life-threatening issue.

It's amazing how "libertarians" suddenly become very pro-government when the government is enforcing something they like.


> It's amazing how "libertarians" suddenly become very pro-government when the government is enforcing something they like.

Stallman has been vilified for suggesting that young teenagers can consent, which he (fortunately) retracted.

I'm surprised that irreversible surgery is something that teenagers can generally consent to in the USA.


So, again...

Consenting to therapeutic surgery with the extensive oversight of multiple doctors is

ABSOLUTELY NOT ANALOGOUS

to an adult raping a child. If you don't see the difference in those two scenarios, I don't think it's worthwhile to argue with you further.


What a joke of a title. Absolutely disgraceful. They should absolutely be banned for children. Pathetic title


It's to safeguard children. They can do whatever they want as adults.

And of course males should not be on teams for women, what is the point of women's sports then?


> And of course males should not be on teams for women, what is the point of women's sports then?

Why not separate competitors by the physical abilities that matter in their sport, rather than by genitals? We already do this partially within some sports, such as with the different weight classes in boxing. And of course it is routine in school sports to separate athletes by age so that the smaller, less experienced kids don't get totally whomped on.

Besides dealing with the transgender issue, it would also provide more competitive and challenging and fun sports for many non-transgender kids that currently do not get that, either because they are on the smaller/lighter/weaker side of the boy's bell curve and can't get on the team (and would get creamed if they did), or because they are on the taller/heavier/stronger side of girl's bell curve and aren't really challenged on the current girl's team.


> rather than by genitals

Human biology is binary in terms of gametes.

Gametes are intrinsically linked to hormones and human development.

It makes sense to separate leagues in terms of natural, general groups like women/men.


Why should the government insert itself between these patients and their doctors? How are lawyers writing legislation qualified to pre-determine the outcomes of these doctor visits?

Do you have evidence that this safeguards children?

> And of course males should not be on teams for women, what is the point of women's sports then?

There is no "point" to any children's sport. It's a way to get exercise, entertainment, and a better understanding of teamwork.

If a child identifies as a girl, looks like other girls, and has been treated by a doctor to have a body that matches their brain, why should anyone force them to play on a boys' team?


> Why should the government insert itself between these patients and their doctors?

Because this is what we've accepted and allowed for many decades? The government controls prescriptions, standards, certification, etc. You may not like some of the laws, but probably agree with others.

I'm making no statement on the topic from the article, just pointing out that we've long given government the power to regulate health care decisions.


The difference is that doctors are given discretion with any safe treatment. They can give drugs off-label, for example.

Alabama is trying to ban all known treatments for trans people. There is no analog for that because it is based on the underlying condition, not the treatment.

Even in the war on drugs, where drug use is often criminalized, there is not a blanket ban on all treatments for drug addiction. In fact, doctors can give people highly addictive drugs to get them off of even-more-addictive drugs.


They’re banning them for _minors_ so it’s not a complete ban either.




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