Player1x3 said:
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That isn't what I said, but yes the process by which the human body is sexed with hormones, with relative ease is fascinating. It's presumptuous of you to assume they're "sick" however. The embryo in vitro could have either for genetic, biological, or environmental reasons subjected them to a greater amount of Estrogen causing fundamental changes to who they were before they were even born. The fact that you label a wide range of people "sick" when you have no understanding of their actual circumstance is pure ignorance. A person born with ambiguous genitalia, where they may appear to be male but because they're XXY rather than simply XY, to you is sick if they gender identify with a female. How to fuck do you call someone XXY sick when even their own body can't made up it's mind as to what sex they are?
Are there people who do it for the wrong reasons? Sure. I still wouldn't label them "sick" because I don't agree with what they're doing to their body.
I don't think you understand that there is a slippery slope that exists in human sexuality, where a taboo becomes a kink, and once a kink is used to get off the extremes some will go to get pleasure from it increase.
As an example: Looking at porn is a kink that most of us (guys) use to get off when we don't have the more desirable alternative of sex itself. For some guys, pornography is "sick" and they aren't interested in viewing it at all. I know someone personally where that's the case. Hell, he didn't even masturbate until his first girlfriend told him it was okay for him to do so. Again he felt it was sick. Just because he sees it as sick, does that make him right? No. Just because you see people as sick doesn't mean they're sick. You just have absolutely no understanding of what the motivation behind why they feel compelled to do it. You see it as sexual, it isn't. It has nothing to do with who and how they have sex. However it has everything to do with the gender they identify with.
Broaden your understanding a bit. It doesn't mean you have to think it's "ok", but maybe try to gain an understanding of what many go through long before they even get to the stage of hormone therapy, let alone the hormone therapy itself.
But yes, I do find the process by which the human body sexes itself fascinating. If you have a problem with that I suggest you go read about it in detail and try to find it NOT fascinating.







