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Throughout our country, atrocities are taking place in doctor's
offices and hospital operating rooms. Physically healthy children
and adolescents are being permanently disfigured and sometimes
sterilized. Those youth say they're transgender, and we--their
parents, teachers, therapists, and doctors--are supposed to agree
with their self-diagnosis and take a back seat as they make the
most consequential decision of their lives: to alter their bodies
in order to, we are told, "align" them with their minds. Medical,
educational, and government authorities advise us to support the
"gender journeys" of still developing kids, including medical
interventions with poor evidence of long-term improvement. This
would not be acceptable in any other field of medicine. Indeed, the
treatments our medical authorities and Washington call "crucial"
and "life-saving" have been banned in progressive Sweden, Finland,
and Britain. Dr. Miriam Grossman is a child and adolescent
psychiatrist whose practice consists of trans-identified youth and
their families. In Lost in Trans Nation, she implores parents to
reject the advice of gender experts and politicians and trust their
guts--their parental instincts--in the face of an onslaught of
ideologically driven misinformation that steers them and their
children toward risky decisions they may end up mourning for the
rest of their lives. The beliefs that male and female are human
inventions; that the sex of a newborn is arbitrarily "assigned";
and that as a result the child requires "affirmation" through
medical interventions--these ideas are divorced from reality and
therefore hazardous, especially to children. The core belief--that
biology can and should be denied--is a repudiation of reality and a
mockery of what hard science teaches about being male and female.
Dr. Grossman believes that parents know their child best; they
especially know if they have a son or daughter. But currently in
our country when it comes to gender identity, everyone knows better
than mom and dad. Schools enable students to live double
lives--Patrick at home, Patti at school. Activists tell kids their
loving homes are "unsafe" when parents voice doubts about the
child's new identity. For refusing to see their son as their
daughter, parents might be reported to protective services, a
development that can lead to a family's destruction. Lost in Trans
Nation arms parents with the ammunition to avoid, or, if necessary,
fight what many families describe as the most difficult challenge
of their lives. Parents will learn what to say and how--at home, at
school, and if necessary, to police when they appear at the door.
"Don't be blindsided like so many parents I know," warns Grossman,
"be proactive and get educated. Feel prepared and confident to
discuss trans, nonbinary, or whatever your child brings to the
dinner table." Whether it's the "trans is as common as red hair"
claim, or the "I'm not your son, I'm your daughter" proclamation,
or the "do you prefer a live son or a dead daughter' threat, says
Grossman, no family is immune, and every parent must be prepared.
No child is born in the wrong body, Dr. Grossman reassures us,
their bodies are just fine; it's their emotional lives that need
healing. Whether you're facing a gender identity battle in your
home right now, or want to prevent one, you need this book to guide
you and your loved ones out of the madness.
Our campuses are steeped in political correctness?that's hardly
news to anyone. But no one realizes that radical social agendas
have also taken over campus health and counseling centers, with
dire consequences.
Psychiatrist Miriam Grossman knows this better than anyone. She
has treated more than 2,000 students at one of America's most
prestigious universities, and she's seen how the anything- goes,
women-are-just-like-men, ?safer-sex? agenda is actually making our
sons and daughters sick.
Dr. Grossman takes issue with the experts who suggest that
students problems can be solved with free condoms and Zoloft. What
campus counselors and health providers must do, she argues, is tell
uncomfortable, politically incorrect truths, especially to young
patients in their most vulnerable and confused moments. Instead of
platitudes and misinformation, it's time to offer them real
protection.
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