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Notes -
@Highlandclearances Do you talk politics with the kid at all? Is he mentally developed enough to understand the idea that “there are some things we could get in big trouble just for believing”, & to grasp the severity of “big trouble means that they might even take you away and you'd never get to see us again”?
There are a very small number of cases of kids claiming to be trans and being taken away from parents who don’t ‘affirm’. These cases seem to have other, actual, child abuse going on, but I’ll concede that it’s possibly a legitimate danger to lose a trans child for being opposed to transgenderism.
I’m not aware of any parents losing custody for opposing transgenderism when the child is cis.
I'm not aware of this ever actually happening, but Scotland's recent hate speech bill makes it a legal possibility for someone to be arrested for a political opinion they expressed verbally in the privacy of their own home, and "gender identity" is a protected characteristic in Scotland.
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I agree that the number is small, but how are you getting the idea that there was other abuse in these cases?
California was one step away from legally mandating that possibility. What makes you think that non-affirming = abuse is not a popular belief among social workers?
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How do you factor out / mitigate the toupée fallacy there?
My recommendation was a specific instance of the general case of just giving your (non-abused) kids yearly
don’t talk to the police
training, a great first step towards keeping them out of the clutches of the poorly-run infrastructure that's supposed to target other people. Admittedly the technique isn't exactly “asymmetric”, but to the extent it's cheesing the system — well, if the good parents don't use it, it won't stop bad parents from using it anyway.More options
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