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I still have my male anatomy, but I embrace femininity on my own terms. I don't desire to have a vagina or be like other women. I simply want to express myself in a feminine way.

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If someone desires female anatomy but does not have it, there is a surgical option available. This procedure involves inverting the penis to create a vagina.

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There are over 100 gender identities, apart from male and female. Some individuals may identify as two different genders or as bigender. Others may describe themselves as gender queer, not wanting to be associated with any specific gender.

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Women are either born women or have transitioned to be women. Women are all different, including biological women and trans women. If someone transitions to being a woman, they are no longer a man.

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Children can begin to understand differences in gender at a young age. Some figure out their gender identity early on, which may not align with their assigned sex at birth. The assumption that a child is definitively male or female based solely on their genitals is incorrect.

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All of these women have XY chromosomes and a condition called androgen insensitivity syndrome. Typically, females have XX chromosomes and develop female sex organs, while those with XY chromosomes develop male organs if sensitive to androgens. In this case, the women appear female but also have male organs internally. They usually remain unaware of their condition until adulthood, often discovering it when they don't start their menstrual cycles like their peers. A doctor's examination, such as an MRI, reveals their true chromosomal makeup, leading to confusion as they have identified as women throughout their lives.

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Speaker 0 explains that sex refers to the body parts you’re born with. Speaker 1 adds that gender is who you may be inside, while sex is whether you were born a boy or a girl. Speaker 0 notes that sometimes gender and body parts are the same, and sometimes they are different. The conversation ends with a question about the different gender identities.

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There are 6 sexes/genders mentioned: female, male, intersex, obscure, and aloni. Aloni may be infertile and don't let binaries be a hurdle in life.

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Chromosomes are insufficient to define gender because people exaggerate features to portray their gender of choice. If someone feels 80% female and 20% male, they might put on makeup. The next day, feeling 80% male, they might remove the makeup and wear a muscle shirt.

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Boys stay boys and girls stay girls from birth. As girls grow up, they become women and only they can become mothers. On the other hand, boys grow up to become fathers.

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Transgender ideology claims that people can be born into the wrong body, but this is not supported by the fact that human sexuality is binary. Reproduction requires a man and a woman, as indicated by the sex chromosomes. Gender identity is a matter of thoughts and feelings, which can be factually correct or incorrect. Persistently believing in a false identity is considered a delusion, such as thinking one is Margaret Thatcher or a cat. People with body identity integrity disorder believe they are amputees trapped in a normal body. Wanting to remove healthy breasts and genitals is seen as transgender, not a mental illness. The transgender rights movement is using individuals with disorders of sex development to advocate for a civil right to mental illness, which does not exist.

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The speaker states that despite a doctor saying they were a boy, they knew they were a girl. They acknowledge having male body parts but assert that this is acceptable.

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Boys are boys and girls are girls from birth. Boys grow up to be dads and girls become moms. Everyone's body is unique and special.

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Men who identify as women are taking opportunities from actual women in sports and media. This trend is seen in the best female athletes being men, men representing female products, and a man being named woman of the year. This deception is being challenged by women and men who oppose it, as it threatens society, family values, and women's rights. The speaker emphasizes the importance of addressing this issue before it causes irreversible harm.

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Michigan Medicine strives to be a safe, welcoming place for transgender individuals and to provide excellent health care regardless of gender. The goal of this video is to improve the comfort and competency of frontline staff in caring for transgender individuals. We will start by talking about gender identity, challenges the transgender community has faced in the health care system, and Michigan's policies regarding gender non-discrimination. The second half of this training is job specific. To discuss gender identity, it is important to understand the difference between sex and gender. Sex refers to one's reproductive organs, native hormones, and chromosomes, while gender identity refers to one's internal sense of gender, a person's basic sense of being a man or boy, a woman or girl, or another gender. Gender identity can be expressed by how individuals present themselves socially, including clothing, physical characteristics, speech, and mannerisms. All people, whether they are transgender or cisgender, meaning not transgender, have a gender identity and expression. Transgender is a term for individuals whose gender identity differs from the gender identity typically associated with their sex assigned at birth. There are many identities that fall under the umbrella of transgender. Transgender men, trans men, or trans masculine refer to people who are assigned female sex at birth but identify as men or masculine. Transgender women, trans women, or trans feminine refer to people who were assigned male sex at birth but identify as women or feminine. Other individuals may identify as genderqueer, agender, genderfluid, two spirited, bigender, or another identity that does not fit neatly into the categories of men or women. All major American medical societies, including the American Medical Association and American Psychological Association, endorse gender affirming care as the standard of care for transgender individuals. This means caring for people in a way that supports their gender transition and gender identity. Transgender people may undergo any one of a number of gender affirming medical interventions, including hormonal therapies like estrogen, testosterone, or hormone blockers, and surgical treatment to change body contours or genitalia. However, it is important to note that one does not have to undergo any medical or surgical treatment to be transgender. Some people are easily read as the gender they affirm while others are visibly gender non conforming or androgynous appearing.

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There are 2 genders, male and female. A psychologist's experiment of raising a boy as a girl failed tragically, leading to both subjects committing suicide. Despite the failure, radical gender ideology adopted the experiment into mainstream culture.

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A breakthrough in surgery is the ability to harvest the peritoneal lining. Jazz, a medical case, presents a challenge as her puberty was effectively blocked, preventing normal genital growth. This makes it difficult for surgeons to use a conventional approach. They are using the peritoneum tissue to create what can be described as a patchwork or Franken vagina.

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There's six, sexes, genders in the town but with many mentions. Let's get into what they are. There's the Keva and Zakkarla, two you hear as female and male druggynos for an intersex person with both female male sex characteristics. Doom came a person with upstream or unclear sexual characteristics. You'll know each someone assigned female at birth, but who expresses male characteristics later in life. Sorry, assigned male at birth, but develops female characteristics later in life, and or has their sexual organs ring room. Saris and alony often are described as infertile. And while life has lots of rules, don't let binaries be a hurdle. To loving yourself exactly.

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The Talmud mentions six sexes/genders. These include: Keva (female) and Zakar (male). Additionally, there is the Androgynos, defined as an intersex person with both female and male sex characteristics. The Tumtum is defined as a person with obscured or unclear sexual characteristics. There is also someone assigned male at birth who develops female characteristics.

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Transgender is an umbrella term to describe a person that feels a mismatch between their body characteristics and their gender identity. Until recent years we used to think of a gender as a binary thing, either a female or a male, but now we understand it's a little bit more complicated than that. It's actually composed of four different things. The first one is gender identity, which is how you define your gender in your own hand and how you feel about it. The second one is gender expression and how you express yourself, meaning how you dress up, what kind of a hairstyle you have, and how you talk. The third one is sexual orientation. And the fourth one is actually your body characteristics, including your chromosomes, your genitalia, and other secondary body characteristics like breasts and shoulders and width of your body.

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A doctor states that roughly 50% of the baby girls he delivers require an operation to remove and reshape a penis and testicles, adding that five of his seven daughters had the procedure. He claims Louise, one of the first babies he delivered, has dating problems. Another doctor accuses him of mutilating over 2,000 little boys by performing this surgery. The doctor responds that they weren't boys, but little girls trapped in little boys' bodies, and that boys are bad.

TED

The way we think about biological sex is wrong | Emily Quinn
Guests: Emily Quinn
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Emily Quinn discusses her experience as an intersex person, highlighting the complexity of biological sex beyond the male-female binary. She was born with XY chromosomes and both male and female characteristics, challenging societal norms that categorize individuals strictly by genitalia. Quinn emphasizes that intersex individuals represent about 2% of the population and often face medical misinformation and unnecessary surgeries. She advocates for a broader understanding of biological sex as a spectrum and aims to create a genderless puberty guidebook to educate children about their bodies without shame.

TED

The weird history of the "sex chromosomes" | Molly Webster
Guests: Molly Webster
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In 1891, the discovery of the X element in insect cells led to the identification of sex chromosomes, X and Y. These chromosomes, often linked to biological sex, have broader functions. Misconceptions, like the "super male" theory, illustrate the complexities of gender and biology, challenging traditional views.

The Peter Attia Drive Podcast

374 - The evolutionary biology of testosterone: male development & sex-based behavioral differences
Guests: Carole Hooven
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The episode with Carole Hooven dives deep into the evolutionary biology of testosterone and how it shapes male development, cognition, and behavior, linking human sex differences to a broad, cross-species framework. Hooven traces the embryology from chromosomal sex to gonadal differentiation, explaining how the SRY gene on the Y chromosome triggers testes formation, Leydig and Sertoli cell activity, and the production of testosterone and anti-Müllerian hormone that sculpt the Wolffian and Müllerian ducts. She emphasizes that while males experience high in utero testosterone, females develop in its absence, and that early hormonal milieus can influence brain organization and later behaviors, such as aggression, risk-taking, and play styles. The discussion then moves to the importance of DHT and 5-alpha-reductase in genital development, noting conditions like 5-alpha-reductase deficiency and their implications for gender assignment, sports policy, and our understanding of masculinization. The hosts examine X-chromosome dosage, Turner syndrome, and the escape of a subset of genes from X-inactivation, underscoring how genetics interacts with hormones to shape sex-typical traits. The mini-puberty window after birth is highlighted as a critical period when testosterone surges help set trajectories for later behavior and growth, alongside the idea that puberty is not a simple switch but a cascade of organizational effects on the brain and body. Throughout, they stress that socialization interacts with biology, and that conveying science neutrally is essential to avoid reducing complex human differences to biology alone. They also explore differences in male and female play, aggression, and mating strategies, including how cultural norms, parenting, and societal structures can modulate biological propensities. The conversation rounds out with reflections on testosterone replacement therapy, the role of estrogen in men, and broader themes about masculinity, identity, and how science can inform conversations about gender without erasing variation. In sum, the episode weaves embryology, endocrinology, and evolutionary theory into a nuanced view of how testosterone shapes development, behavior, and society, while repeatedly acknowledging the powerful influence of environment and culture on expression of these biological tendencies.

TED

The biology of gender, from DNA to the brain | Karissa Sanbonmatsu
Guests: Karissa Sanbonmatsu
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What does it mean to be a woman? It's not just about chromosomes; some women have a mix of types. New research shows differences in female and male brains, suggesting a biological basis for gender. Epigenetics reveals how DNA shapes our identity, influenced by experiences. The development of female and male brains occurs at different stages in the womb. Ultimately, being a woman may involve self-acceptance and recognizing our shared experiences.
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