The Cultural Marxist Model of Sexuality _ The Biology of Gender Dysphoria
Episode Stats
Length
1 hour and 29 minutes
Words per Minute
135.58696
Summary
Claire Randall is back, but this time we ll discuss the biology and neurology of homosexuality and gender dysphoria, among other related topics. The biological aspect of what makes one attracted to the same sex, or what causes one to feel they were born the wrong sex, is never discussed in gender studies. Why? Because that's where the answers lie.
Transcript
00:00:30.000
This is Radio 314 on the Red Ice Radio Network.
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And it's not simply because of cultural Marxism, although some fall into that category because it's cooler to be gay these days.
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However, it's far more complicated than a simple choice, cultural programming, or sexual abuse from childhood.
00:01:14.560
Claire Randall is back, but this time we'll discuss the biology and neurology of homosexuality and gender dysphoria, among other related topics.
00:01:24.500
The biological aspect of what makes one attracted to the same sex, or what causes one to feel they were born the wrong sex, is never discussed in gender studies.
00:01:37.480
Instead, we're told that sexual attraction is merely a social construct, a choice that has no biological connection whatsoever.
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Just like the biology of race, we used to have an understanding of the biology of sexuality.
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Biology is now swept under the rug because sexuality and race has been weaponized, used for political purposes.
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It's based on physical, testable evidence, not made-up, abstract ideas.
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Gender dysphoria used to be treated as a medical condition because we knew the biological and neurological aspects to it, although the best procedures weren't always taken.
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And research has been halted in the area of what biologically creates gender dysphoria, to discover ways to get positive, healthy results to reverse the confusion.
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I'm not talking about thumping a Bible over one's head.
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None of this has anything to do with religion and whether you think gay or trans is right or wrong.
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I'm talking about the biological aspects and the root causes.
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Because as we know, with gender confusion and homosexuality, there's no offspring.
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That gene would die out if we didn't have surrogacy.
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Today, talking about the biological aspects of what creates LGBT is not allowed.
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Fast forward to today, years of unexplored research later, and we haphazardly cut dicks and boobs off and administer opposite sex hormones without even considering other possible solutions first, without even knowing the cause in the first place.
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I think those in question would gladly try a healthy, positive solution to avoid the hell they feel from being born the wrong sex.
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But these days, the left dismisses science and tells them to embrace their imbalance and instability as though it's something noble and virtuous.
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Something better than the standard model that has sustained humanity since the start.
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We're told to embrace destructive lifestyles that go against the natural order.
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Even though today LGBT is embraced and preferred above the primordial family unit, we must consider the high depression and suicide rate among this group.
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It's a loud and clear sign something is out of whack.
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Part of this, I think, is the unconscious knowledge that they have a body with misfiring wiring.
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Therefore, the acting out in outlandish and unstable ways.
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If gay or gender dysphoria is something that is wired into a baby in the womb, shouldn't we explore the hows and what's?
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You see, even the thought of that is unacceptable to the mainstream because it requires the truth that sexuality is not a social, fluid construct, but a biological reality.
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How would gays or trans feel if they knew this information, that they were hardwired in the womb through hormonal triggers?
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Would it be easier for them to understand their situation?
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Wouldn't it be easier for religious people to know it's not demon possession, but has a biological basis?
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What if we had a way to track the sexual wiring process in the womb and can alter it naturally from going off course?
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You see, we're so far gone from nature that even suggesting this is off the table because we're heading into a destructive, anti-nature-based society.
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What if we learned that certain foods, chemicals, and pills interfere with this natural process even into one's childhood?
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You see, I don't think this info will ever be mainstream because LGBT is used politically to create chaos and division in the West.
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Gender studies was never about getting to the truth.
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It was always about destroying the culture that revolves around the primordial family unit.
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Lots more to say with Claire Randall, who has an honors degree in philosophy and psychology from Leeds University, a post-grad diploma in art therapy, and she worked in psychiatry, mental health, personal development, and taught psychology and further education.
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I'm glad to have you back for part two, which will be an unexpected conversation, I think.
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Oh, thank you very much for inviting me back, Lana.
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This will be an interesting experience for all of us, I think.
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Well, we're going to talk about a lot of things, sexual differentiation, hormones, gender studies, trans, and a lot more.
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But first, you have a warning to give us, don't you?
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Now, some of the listeners who might have heard the previous show, the previous interview, may have read my blog on what's known as the amygdala hijack.
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What this is, for those who didn't read the blog, is that the amygdala is a part of the brain which is involved in, well, it's a trigger mechanism which is taken advantage of by trauma-based mind control, basically.
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What it is, is that when you come across something which has an association of some kind of anxiety, conflict, difficulty, fear, then a fight or flight response can kick in.
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And this was the idea behind what the media are taking advantage of, their picture of that drowned child the other week.
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Basically, when you see something that's upsetting, it quite often can lead to an instant reaction whereby your emotions completely take over.
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And it's really, really important, if you want to get past this, if it's only just information, if it's a tiger, it's probably worth responding to.
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But if it's just information that you're hearing on the internet, it's worth waiting until you get to the end and making a rational assessment of everything that you've heard.
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Because I think there's going to be stuff that we're going to be talking about this evening, Lana, which might trigger a few people's amygdalas.
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Just hang in there and wait until you've heard everything before you reach for that unfriend button on social media.
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It's good to ruffle things up and challenge some of our ideas sometimes.
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Well, for a while now, I've been talking about hormone-disrupting chemicals and their effects on the human body.
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I've also touched upon how I think gay happens in the womb through various hormonal processes.
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So, Claire, let's start by talking about the biology of sexual differentiation since you know so much about it.
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When I was an undergraduate at Leeds University, I had the great pleasure of studying physiological psychology with Dr. John Blundell, who over the years has become professor of the department.
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And he had been involved in a lot of research himself on how the hypothalamus works with hunger, thirst drives.
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And although I don't think he had actually done the experiments himself, back in the 1960s, there had been a lot of work done on sexual development.
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And since rats are very, very similar biologically and neurologically to humans, there was a lot of research done on basically tweaking prenatal hormones in the womb
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so that the rat embryos would have different effects of different hormones, different levels primarily of testosterone or estrogen,
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which causes the development of either the physical sexual characteristics or the neurological differentiation.
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And it was found that what we would call homosexual behaviour can be induced in rats by basically giving them the brain structures,
00:10:09.460
the hypothalamus and other organs within the brain, that would actually be more appropriate to the opposite sex.
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Now, this has been actually studied more since in the early 2000s.
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Some researchers by the name of Goren, Zhu and Schwab did several studies on humans because it had been discovered that in humans,
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a nerve plexus called the striate nucleus was sexually dimorphic.
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In other words, it's different size in males and females.
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But they had also found that the size of the striate nucleus in male to female transsexuals was more like the size in a woman.
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So what this is basically suggesting is that there are brain structures which not only mediate gross, measurable things like hormones,
00:11:26.920
but actually affect the individual's sense of their own self-identity.
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And also, within the last 10 years, I think it was about 2005, 2007-ish,
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Professor V.S. Ramachandran of University of California has done quite a lot of research related to this in brain mapping.
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And he has published studies in the Journal of Consciousness Studies, amongst others, indicating that transsexuals who have a sense of bodily dysphoria,
00:12:16.320
in other words, they have a sense that their body is different from what it really feels like they should be.
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In fact, Ramachandran actually, in his study, he found quite a large number of female to male transsexuals who actually had what he described as a phantom limb phenomenon except for a male organ.
00:12:42.160
So basically, these people had grown up for their whole lives feeling that they should have had a penis and that they just feel that it's wrong.
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And this is a comparable, reversed morphic sense is present in male to female transsexuals.
00:13:05.380
So you have the evidence of Ramachandran, which indicates body mapping in the cortex, which is different.
00:13:17.520
And you also have the Gurren and Shoe evidence, which indicates that at an activation level.
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I think this is an important point to bear in mind is there are probably what we've seen to at least here.
00:13:34.880
And there are probably more structures in the brain which mediate sexual behavior, sexual identity and so on.
00:13:48.060
So we have the also, of course, the work that was done as far back as the 60s on this was primarily more in terms of sexual behavior rather than sexual identity.
00:13:59.100
So we can see from all these different scientific studies that gender and sexual behavior are clearly governed and mediated by sexual dimorphism in the brain.
00:14:17.520
Now, that's something I think that is easy for people to establish this by research.
00:14:27.540
Now, I'd like to then go on to a couple more examples which push this model further.
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There's an absolutely crucial condition known as the androgen insensitivity syndrome.
00:14:49.380
Now, what this is, is that I believe it's a small genetic marker, but I could be incorrect about that.
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The point is that what happens is that an XY fetus embryo, which would normally, with a Y chromosome, would go on and go through the developmental process of developing male gonads.
00:15:15.460
Then they would produce testosterone and then that would androgenize the fetus and the whole sexual differentiation process would proceed.
00:15:31.260
But what happens with a child, an embryo that has this androgen insensitivity is that when the gonads start producing male hormone in the womb, which it does, which is supposed to then govern the sexual differentiation of the embryo, something in the cellular makeup of the child, which is androgen insensitive.
00:15:57.840
So the child then just develops as morphologically female because all fetuses of all mammals and probably reptiles as well.
00:16:12.300
But anyway, of mammals begin as female and then either carry on and become mature females or else they are influenced by male hormone and then they become...
00:16:30.080
They get the testosterone surge, which makes them a male.
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And it gives them, as you've so well spoken a couple of times, the guy brain.
00:16:41.960
Which is, you know, which is quite obviously, there's different stuff going on there in terms of evolution.
00:16:48.980
It is interesting when the sexual brain, as you're talking about, can develop differently from the sexual organ.
00:16:57.300
That's why you have some, there's some gay men that feel like they have a female brain or that they're more like a woman.
00:17:03.420
And there were actually some tests done in Sweden, they were testing gay men and found that they actually had more of a female brain.
00:17:12.600
And the thing is, there is no absolutely fixed template for how this works out because, as you yourself have mentioned more than once, I think, with all the feminizing chemicals in the environment that we're all exposed to...
00:17:40.720
That's correct, bisphenol and I believe soya chemicals are also related to that.
00:17:50.680
So there is an increasing incidence of this feminization that is taking place on embryos, on fetuses before children are born.
00:18:02.500
And it may not always produce obvious external morphology differences, but it can affect the neurology of the brain.
00:18:14.120
And because there are different parts of the brain that may be affected by this, the behavior may be affected, but not the internal mapping.
00:18:25.460
So I think this is probably what's happening with gay men is that...
00:18:31.460
And because the influence of hormones is quite complicated and that's sometimes contradictory,
00:18:42.300
you know, reverse things can happen to females who can themselves then find themselves developing, you know, male hypothalamic drives or whatever.
00:18:54.600
Yeah, some people say, well, there's always been gays and before chemicals, but I'm not saying it's just synthetic chemicals, it's hormones in general that guide these processes.
00:19:03.860
But now we have more of these estrogen mimicking chemicals and it seems that we have more homosexuals, more intersex, more, you know, gender reassignment surgeries happening.
00:19:21.720
I think obviously the chemicals which have been getting into the environment throughout the 20th century and very much more now within the last generation or so.
00:19:33.140
And obviously this is quite a problem and probably lead to lower birth rates, a topic which is not exactly a stranger to your show.
00:19:47.420
But also at the same time, as we so often find with real phenomena, I believe it's very much the case that the cultural Marxists have taken advantage of this.
00:20:01.760
Because even with the increased levels of intersex and these, you know, messing up of the brain structures, it's most people still turn out the way nature intended.
00:20:22.140
And it's still only about three or slightly more percent, perhaps, of people who are actually gay.
00:20:30.060
But as we know, it's particularly something has happened in the last year or two that has now changed the political climate so that what is about three percent of the population and basically neurologically determined,
00:20:52.140
is now turned into a social movement which dominates, well, do I need to say more than that?
00:21:02.560
I mean, obviously, there is obviously something going on here, which is a long way from what, even accepting that these are genuine neurological conditions, that the way that it's turned out, I think, is going a long way away from that.
00:21:22.140
And I will explain why, because over the last eight or so years, I've had quite a lot of association with the Leeds University Gender Studies Department.
00:21:38.440
It just started as a casually meeting one or two of their doctoral students.
00:21:46.920
But then I discovered that their studies have absolutely nothing to do with what we've been talking about.
00:21:57.760
Yeah, they don't even get into the biology, you mean.
00:22:03.140
I remember, I think it was one New Year's Eve when I was at a late night party and one of these students was there and I said,
00:22:12.020
oh, well, you know, so where is gender studies with this biological and neurological differentiation I was talking about earlier?
00:22:21.800
And she said, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
00:22:26.860
So I said, how can the basic biological substrate of how we come about to be, be irrelevant when you're discussing?
00:22:35.800
They're only interested in the social aspects of gender.
00:22:41.520
yeah so i then kind of looked a bit further and i realized that they actually um they're actually
00:22:50.900
hostile to any form of um recognition of of the biological determinants of this um it's very
00:23:00.620
suppressed they keep this information very very quiet they don't want you looking around they just
00:23:06.080
you know no it's a choice it's a choice it's yeah it's just a social thing right yeah well and and
00:23:12.540
they completely uh ignore what has been basically established for about 50 years in terms of uh
00:23:21.300
neurology and um actually uh i looked into this and basically it seems to be the case that um the
00:23:29.460
gender studies department and the psychology department uh have virtually nothing to do with
00:23:35.580
each other they call themselves the gender studies department call themselves the
00:23:39.440
interdisciplinary department of gender studies but it's all from social sciences and um not
00:23:48.040
nothing nothing from the hard end of psychology um you know the biological neurological stuff nothing
00:23:54.860
it's interesting when i've been looking into some gender studies material what's the one connection
00:23:59.160
i always see and it's this anti-white politics goes hand in hand with gender studies have you noticed
00:24:05.260
that uh well yes uh i mean it's slightly slightly uh um it's slightly branching out from what i'm
00:24:14.600
talking about here but i i do actually recall um an instance of that when there was a um half day
00:24:21.520
seminar um earlier this year um put on by the gender studies department and uh um
00:24:29.940
uh one of the perks about being a graduate of leeds university is that you can go along to these
00:24:36.000
things and um there were four speakers and uh one of them was um speaking about well the subject was
00:24:47.160
about what they call lad culture um and and how to deal with it now i don't have a problem with uh
00:24:53.740
you know issues of dealing with boisterous lad culture how do we deal with it okay fair enough
00:24:59.020
um but one of the subjects that came up was that um some research had been done on different groups
00:25:07.460
of students and how they uh behaved to how different groups of male students behaved towards female
00:25:15.420
male students at universities and um establishments of higher learning and i was absolutely appalled
00:25:24.360
to hear the uh the professor or head of the visiting head of this other department um say that um
00:25:35.460
immigrant students had been um found to act in less socially acceptable ways shall we say
00:25:45.360
to the female students than the white students and so to get back to your point um what was
00:25:53.140
really really interesting was that this visiting uh guest lecturers then immediately um excused this
00:26:02.920
uh on the basis of um oh well they will have had different and social expectations so we must
00:26:09.580
make allowances for them but of course um you know i i would think most 19 year old boys probably
00:26:18.040
don't really have much you know sensitivity about social perceptions and such like so it was just
00:26:23.640
it was complete um apologetics for people of uh different cultures not acting uh with the same
00:26:33.200
uh degree of respectability uh responsibility um that the uh the white boys are expected to
00:26:40.880
i wanted to go back and cover uh i wanted to hear about the david ramer case oh yes this is this is
00:26:48.000
another one of the absolutely foundational um uh cases and studies that um right david ramer
00:26:56.360
now david ramer was one of uh two twins uh he was born in the early 60s and this is just such a tragic
00:27:08.500
tale um he and his brother were circumcised uh shortly after birth at the hospital however uh david
00:27:18.940
ramer unfortunately um lost his male organ uh this is you know god it makes you cringe to think about
00:27:26.920
this um now this i i i don't have any you know evidence about this but i i can't help thinking this
00:27:35.320
is a bit suspicious the way that it worked out because this was taken place at um johns hopkins
00:27:42.300
university hospital and when this um medical accident took place dr john money who was then
00:27:53.080
considered to be a leading expert in this who happened to be a professor at johns hopkins university
00:28:01.680
suggested to the parents that it might be better to socially reassign the child as a girl uh to uh
00:28:12.080
basically perform sex reassignment surgery on this child which is probably only a few days old
00:28:18.420
geez um and bring up the child as a girl well you know 1960 61 whatever it was and of course
00:28:27.640
the medical profession had a much higher kind of respect rating in those days perhaps than they do now
00:28:35.280
so the parents were persuaded they thought well what else can we do and they probably got a uh you know
00:28:41.780
generous compensation package um but so when i was uh at university in the mid 70s this um
00:28:54.420
start this particular case now because it was a um because the person had to have their identity
00:29:04.160
anonymized um it was just known as a you know an anonymous case and every few years
00:29:11.180
um john money would publish some update on it and in the mid 70s when this child was apparently in
00:29:18.380
their you know early teens or or thereabouts um john money was uh publishing uh reports that this child
00:29:27.580
was adapting well was taking on the female um identity and this was all going fantastically well
00:29:33.360
and everything and so we all thought oh well this is kind of this is an alternative view
00:29:39.900
to all the brain stuff so we're saying oh well the brain stuff you know the rats and all that um
00:29:46.320
that's one sort of source of information but then they're also saying that oh well perhaps the brain
00:29:52.460
is more neuroplastic to um socialization than we might have imagined so okay so so these two the
00:30:01.460
the uh social plasticity and the neural hardwiring those two um hypotheses kind of were kind of equally
00:30:11.500
balanced against each other but this is not the true story because it uh came out it um well there
00:30:21.140
was a very very interesting documentary broadcast in the early 2000s about this um shortly before david
00:30:28.880
rhymer himself actually committed suicide and not surprisingly for what he'd been put through
00:30:32.880
um because as a teenager he had um an increasing sense that there was something wrong um and that he
00:30:44.260
didn't feel like a girl uh even though uh in fact dr money was actually going through the going to the
00:30:51.440
point of trying to brainwash him in fact uh he would have the two children and he would actually
00:30:56.500
um get them to undress and he would point at the boy and say that's a boy and he would point at david
00:31:01.780
and say that's a girl this is this is kind of almost incredible really isn't it but it actually
00:31:08.340
happened right anyway um by his late teens or in his early 20s david reimer eventually found out
00:31:17.000
what had happened his mother told him and she said you know we're terribly sorry we just didn't know
00:31:22.260
what to do the doctor told him it'd be for the best and everything so david reimer then um started
00:31:27.960
taking male hormones started to get what constructive surgery he could uh which must have been immensely
00:31:36.480
difficult for him and um then in the early 2000s this all kind of went public and uh it was um
00:31:44.420
well basically a horror story um and even though they were you know given compensations uh both of
00:31:55.940
the reimer twins uh eventually committed suicide because it was just obviously such an immensely
00:32:02.380
awful thing to happen for them the whole lives you know even the even the twin brother you know
00:32:07.460
they had their lives taken over by dr john money who i you know i i can't only speculate as to um
00:32:19.380
you know how how he got involved with this whether there was any um you know covert attempt to
00:32:25.020
deliberately mutilate the boys well i mean obviously that's purely speculation one can't say but
00:32:30.120
um anyway the this whole case is is not even discussed it's not in the gender studies curriculum
00:32:41.080
and yet they claim that um gender identity is an entirely socially acquired construct don't we love
00:32:50.760
that word well we know we know how uh gender studies likes to uh see everything as um socially constructed
00:32:57.080
and it's also we've seen so much in uh related areas of feminism um it's very politically um motivated
00:33:08.160
um well i got this uh email from um sally hines who is the director of gender studies at leeds university
00:33:17.100
it's it's it's a bulk mailing i mean i'm just on the mailing list um and um that this was advertising a
00:33:25.800
conference uh at uh university college of college of london anthropology department
00:33:32.440
the cultural anthropology boasian stuff and yes and this took place in june uh conference stream on
00:33:41.900
radical trans feminism uh london conference in critical thought um so they're talking here against
00:33:49.060
a backdrop of social gains by mainstream lgbt movement the reality of uh trans lives continues
00:33:58.040
to be one of struggle and then they go on to um talk about a addressing the social material and political
00:34:06.180
necessity of trans feminism as a radical and potentially revolutionary sphere of thought and
00:34:15.540
practice it will address the importance of a trans feminist critique of the limitations of liberal
00:34:23.440
transgender politics that are being rapidly and unquestionably taken up across the world
00:34:28.900
um it specifically looks to extend trans feminisms beyond rights discourses and uh yeah it gets into the
00:34:39.600
kind of um what a mess it just makes my head hurt what do these people want yeah um well what they want
00:34:48.400
is they want to uh completely um deconstruct all notion of gender um you want to get rid of uh notions of
00:35:00.940
male and female heteronormativity any form of taxonomy in other words categorization of uh
00:35:09.580
differences between individuals um and uh did i mention uh establishment of queer theory um
00:35:18.060
i don't know if you've heard of not yet but yeah tell us about that right okay well i'll just read a
00:35:24.120
quote out from a wikipedia here it says queer is by definition whatever is at odds with the normal
00:35:30.300
the legitimate the dominant there is nothing in particular to which it necessarily refers
00:35:36.120
it is an identity without an essence queer then demarcates not a positivity but a
00:35:44.500
positionality vis-a-vis the normative these things they spread like spider's webs don't they
00:35:51.500
but i would like to pick up on um this business about uh normativity um because one of the things
00:36:00.620
that you hear so much about these days is um the oppression of heteronormativity um does that does
00:36:08.840
that do you think do you understand that you know what i mean yeah i do maybe you can clarify for
00:36:12.100
listeners yes i i think i better um right um okay normativity that is what is the the dominant
00:36:19.820
feature in a society heteronormativity is the fact that 97 of the population are heterosexual and
00:36:28.260
therefore that is normative um now um this is considered to be oppressive by uh gender theorists
00:36:37.640
nature is oppressive of course so what this is all about is breaking down heteronormativity now i i
00:36:47.760
haven't really mentioned much here about um survival adaptation um i think this is one that uh
00:36:57.100
professor uh mcdonald will uh relate to here um because survival adaptation is basically
00:37:03.540
it's the central keystone of life isn't it you know um if we do not have survival adaptive qualities
00:37:13.660
we go extinct now um i saw an absurd piece uh not long ago um in which uh some uh gay rights or
00:37:26.700
lgbt activist was basically claiming that um heteronormativity is wrong because if we had a
00:37:37.780
homonormative society heteronormative people would understand what it's like to be excluded and
00:37:44.520
okay and there was no recognition of the fact that if you had a homonormative society
00:37:53.160
it would be extinct within a generation or two that's right these exotic lifestyles are going to
00:37:59.360
lead to total destruction in the end that's right so while we have to accept that the um
00:38:07.660
the non-normative is a small natural part of the um human ecology that to try to uh
00:38:21.840
make what is non-normative inter-normative obviously the three percent against the 97 percent
00:38:30.040
um it it really simply doesn't make any sense and yet this is what um this is what this conference was
00:38:40.100
trying to do it's trying to basically get uh there was a bit i think wasn't there it said something
00:38:45.800
about um going beyond boundaries we don't want boundaries we don't want um to distinguish
00:38:54.500
between um yeah they would say don't put me in a box when you ask well are you gay or do you like
00:39:00.980
men or what don't put me in a box i you know my sexuality is fluid right well yes yes um so i
00:39:09.300
suppose this is probably the point lana where i have to you know kind of come clean and say that i
00:39:14.960
myself i had uh what's uh known as gender reassignment some 30 years ago or so um and that was in the days
00:39:23.680
when it was considered to be a medical problem and um they recognized the brain structure or evidence that
00:39:29.860
existed at the time um and it's uh an experience that i went through and um i'm not here to uh you
00:39:40.740
know whine to your readers about your listeners about um what a dreadful life i've had because of
00:39:46.240
it it was a it was a medical problem i had and uh i dealt with it and the only reason i'm talking
00:39:51.940
about it now is because it gives me um what they would probably say positionality absolutely yes um
00:40:00.800
because what um i see with this radical trans feminism um what i see with um uh queer theory
00:40:12.240
is um a complete attack on um scientific understanding um we need we need to understand
00:40:25.360
these things and we need to understand them in a scientific way we need to look at what causes
00:40:30.460
them and so that when uh because i think one of the things that's very much happening at the moment
00:40:35.600
is that um while i think we're comfortable with a figure of a say three percent or so of people
00:40:42.220
who are kind of hardwired gay i think that people can acquire um what you might call um
00:40:54.480
recreational habits you know recreational sex is different than procreational sex definitely
00:41:01.320
that's that's right and um uh you and henrik have both mentioned on your shows uh over the last year
00:41:08.180
about how different um uh different uh shall we say activities are promoted so it's a bit like just
00:41:18.340
as uh we're having all these things you know if you're not if you're not engaging in gay sex then
00:41:23.980
you know you're um you're homophobic and you should experiment it's kind of a little bit like the uh
00:41:31.620
the race mixing dating thing as well isn't it it basically what what they have to do is what they're
00:41:38.340
doing is that anything which is uh normative anything which is adaptive has to be deconstructed
00:41:47.860
and uh destroyed um i mean i've heard uh students from our gender studies department talking about
00:41:56.760
um they're saying oh when i go back to um uh uni next term i'm going to join the feminist society and
00:42:04.540
and get them to queer it up a little bit because they're not they're not queer enough um and then
00:42:10.560
they talk about the uh the gayification of society i think you've probably come across that sure now
00:42:16.480
it's interesting because there there is a sector and we know them in the alt-right movement of gays who
00:42:22.320
are very much against this degenerate behavior and but it seems like a lot of gays are really
00:42:28.220
falling for that somewhere they've been programmed to almost hate this primordial family unit or straight
00:42:34.040
people have you seen at what point that started being programmed into the lgbt scene i think having
00:42:40.500
this information come out of the biology could be very very healing all around oh well i think it's
00:42:46.880
important that people understand that that there's a lot more to this than uh simple um you know social
00:42:54.160
fashions i think it's it's very important that people do understand these are this is biology this
00:43:00.800
is hardwired neurology to a large extent um which can't be changed i mean i myself went through i went
00:43:07.240
through uh sorry i said i wouldn't say too much about my my own story i want to know i mean was it
00:43:14.100
difficult for you well the thing is i went through a crisis in my mid-20s thinking because i uh i
00:43:20.820
basically i'd seen all this evidence when i was at university i'd had these feelings since i was the
00:43:28.280
very earliest age as a child and i did think that john money could be right you know if it was possible
00:43:36.480
to reprogram myself i thought is this is this some kind of um sexual perversion i've got here but
00:43:43.460
then i thought well i've had this since i was four my earliest memories and maybe maybe you know
00:43:48.160
there's more to it than that and then it was only after i actually went through well my art therapy
00:43:54.280
training i i realized that this wasn't something i could change about myself so i i you know spent a
00:44:00.520
bit of time thinking about it and researching it and deciding that um well i had to give it a try
00:44:05.440
and if i could manage it uh i would and uh if uh it didn't work uh then i would at least know that i
00:44:15.540
had you know tested the hypothesis uh but actually things have gone pretty well now when it comes to
00:44:21.600
the brain i mean once that sexual part of your brain is wired it can't be rewired right it's it's done
00:44:27.000
yes yes oh if you've got this say this uh the the striate nucleus um it it doesn't change i mean other
00:44:37.840
once it's become an adult i mean one of the things about some of these is that they they can evolve
00:44:42.700
in um in adolescence um so one of the uh controversial um points we're getting at the
00:44:52.200
moment is uh trans children now the thing is that because the hard wiring because the brain
00:45:00.420
if uh develops um the hard wiring kind of matures it maturates during uh childhood and teenage years
00:45:09.340
so that it's quite it is possible that children can grow out of this now it's this is this is a
00:45:20.140
this is a subject which is in the very early stages and it's not really fully understood
00:45:24.080
but there definitely have been people who have grown out of it and um but at the same time
00:45:31.900
there are those you know such as myself who have had this uh impression of oneself since uh earliest
00:45:39.900
childhood um and i i do believe that that people such as myself do have um you know are completely
00:45:49.300
hardwired hardwired in in some kind of morphological recognition or something um so i would say that
00:45:57.120
there are cases where it's hardwired there are cases where it can uh evolve or mature because there
00:46:04.560
are cases too of uh gay men that they don't have the female brain they have the male brain so i wonder
00:46:09.580
what would happen if they got surges of testosterone because we know hormone therapy works one way so why
00:46:15.240
not the other of course this is controversial you get you know scoffed at for even bringing this up
00:46:20.040
well uh the uh giving male hormones to transsexuals i don't know if this is quite what you had in mind
00:46:26.680
um but giving hormone giving male hormones to transsexuals can just would can um is supposed to
00:46:33.820
be able to help some but i would say that it would probably only help those who were actually um
00:46:40.900
in a state of mental confusion now i myself um you know going through this world i i've i've known
00:46:49.540
quite a few people who have um you know been in this this lgbt world and um i've known quite a few who
00:46:57.020
have actually um basically realized that it wasn't for them that it was just a um how you might say well
00:47:07.660
it was like a delusion that they had or um a fantasy um and uh i knew somebody quite well who
00:47:14.960
fortunately uh backed out before they took the medical treatment too far um but there are apparently
00:47:21.060
quite a high proportion of um people who go through this medical treatment and um i mean there was a doctor
00:47:28.680
in uh england uh dr russell reed who had his license revoked to uh recommend a transsexual
00:47:37.820
treatment um because he had been recommending people for transsexual surgeries who later regretted it
00:47:48.260
now my own view on these people who regretted it is that their own kind of mind they should have
00:47:55.080
known better because a lot of them are suicidal so maybe it wasn't right for them in the end
00:47:59.780
well yes exactly um so obviously uh dr russell reed was really being a bit loose um so those people who
00:48:11.140
imagine that uh you can have something like what they call this i mean this this just makes me cringe
00:48:17.900
late onset transsexualism people in their 30s or 40s saying well i just realized i should have been a
00:48:25.720
woman or you know and and you kind of think what you know if because my own view on this is that it's
00:48:33.940
not something that is you haven't been able to get out of your mind since the very earliest memory
00:48:38.080
and you've tried everything but it won't go away then this is kind of you know uh look into it but
00:48:46.000
um there are so many cases of people who can go through personal crises midlife crisis you know
00:48:55.580
uh the the midlife crisis transsexual is a is like you know one taxonomic type um and gender studies
00:49:05.220
does absolutely nothing to clarify this whole field is it a drastic move i mean i think it is
00:49:12.400
actually removing the penis well well yes it is it is it's a very drastic move and i would say that
00:49:20.740
unless somebody has felt that it shouldn't have been there and that it was something that was wrong
00:49:24.860
for them for the whole of their life that shouldn't really be done um it as i say it's a kind of it's a
00:49:32.020
last resort um it'd be so difficult because you're maiming your body so i would think there would be other
00:49:37.980
psychological things attached with that you know well that's why uh responsible um gender clinics
00:49:47.740
will really test uh the individual uh thoroughly you know uh i don't think there is uh without uh
00:49:58.000
without um uh cutting the brain up i don't think there is a yet a uh uh um a test
00:50:07.420
to uh see about these different um brain structures um but obviously you can uh how
00:50:17.540
you can you can test the uh individual's um sense of their own identity um you know by
00:50:25.140
just asking them um about when they first had these feelings how persistent these feelings have been
00:50:32.420
um you know how they feel about um what life would be like if they carried on as they are
00:50:39.720
and all these things i mean obviously um it while if it is a proper if it's a proper
00:50:46.540
neurologically based syndrome then there will be very well there will be nothing that can be done about it
00:50:56.320
um but it's very important that you do have some kind of psychiatric assessment on this because
00:51:03.600
there are so many people get into this with delusional ideas about it like i say you know
00:51:11.020
uh late onset or or um having um it as a kind of sexual fantasy um yeah i'm just i'm curious too with a lot
00:51:23.540
of these sorry to interrupt you there but young kids like there's jazz jennings and then you hear
00:51:28.040
of these other families now uh jazz jennings has a reality show went from a boy to a girl
00:51:33.080
a jewish family there they have a whole reality show about it but what do you think about these
00:51:37.920
little kids that are going through these transitions so young is that is that the best
00:51:42.660
point to do it or i mean how can they decide when they're that age you said you knew when you
00:51:47.680
were four though yeah yeah well the thing is there are people and this is why it's very difficult and
00:51:54.920
i i'm not i wouldn't claim to know what exactly is right for people i think one just has to um
00:52:03.980
take this um as advisedly as one can however i think that doing irreversible treatments on young
00:52:14.740
children is not a good idea um because these can be just short-lived episodes from childhood
00:52:25.000
um i mean i never spoke to anybody about this until i was i think 17 uh and then it was only um
00:52:34.440
was your family accepting about it uh well i didn't speak to my family about it until i was in my late 20s
00:52:41.020
all i know i did once speak to my mother about it when i was a teenager actually and so when i told
00:52:45.620
her when i was uh in my late 20s um she she instantly knew she i said to her uh you know i've got to tell
00:52:54.560
you something mom i'm actually and she just knew so she'd obviously sensed something um and that one
00:53:02.660
conversation i'd had with her when i was 14 had obviously gone in there you know um but
00:53:08.560
um i wouldn't have i wouldn't have pursued this if it hadn't been absolutely the last resort i i
00:53:15.620
because one of the things is that um i realized in my mid-20s that this was something i couldn't
00:53:20.860
change about the way that i felt um so i set about going through it i got an excellent medical library
00:53:28.540
here in leeds um so i read all about it um well how are you so unique because other people don't talk
00:53:35.800
about these things or look into it how are you so different well uh well i don't i don't i'm sure
00:53:43.080
there are people out there like me out there um because not all people that go through these uh
00:53:48.660
assignment surgeries are loud about it like bruce jenner of course right oh well yeah we were going
00:53:53.860
to get around to this well i mean if i wasn't you know using my quote positionality here as a as a
00:54:03.640
as an attack on the uh lgbt and um whole gender studies deconstruction of heteronormativity i would
00:54:14.880
be just keeping myself down and i'd be very happy just to talk to you about my uh book um like i did
00:54:20.940
last time there's a couple of pages in the book about this but you know uh not much um and i think
00:54:28.600
one of the things about the uh the jenner episode is um jenner is actually older than me
00:54:35.380
um so i i i have some kind of slightly illiberal ideas about this if you'll forgive me um one of the
00:54:47.540
things is that um i don't i don't i wouldn't prescribe whether somebody should or shouldn't or how
00:54:55.100
they should deal with this if they have a sense of gender dysphoria i i'm not going to say they
00:55:01.880
should or they shouldn't or whatever um but i do think that uh there are two things here one is that
00:55:10.080
you can't expect the 97 to change to accommodate your own characteristics in fact i would push that
00:55:22.940
further and i would say that you can't expect to deconstruct the entire notion of uh bipolar gender
00:55:31.280
um binary which is a very unpopular word in gender studies in fact i would say that it's contradictory
00:55:37.880
because why why if you feel that you were you know that your brain is hardwired as a one sex and
00:55:46.720
that your body is the opposite well you know it makes sense that if you can to uh normalize yourself
00:55:53.720
in the in the in the sex that appears uh to be what you are hardwired to be um but so why would
00:56:02.520
somebody like me want to deconstruct the notion of uh binary gender i mean why would i want to do that
00:56:11.300
that's completely against what i've always had in my mind what i've always felt has been hardwired
00:56:19.180
that there are women and there are men and that's what i should i should be one but i don't want to be
00:56:27.780
neither um and this is actually this is very very strange because the the lecturers in uh gender
00:56:37.260
studies at the university here they seem to want to deconstruct completely remove this whole notion
00:56:44.540
of uh there even being a sex yes they do yeah you know and and yet um there seem to be an almost
00:56:53.820
like an equal mix in the department of completely normal seeming straight women and completely radical
00:57:01.680
lesbians who want to destroy and tear down everything yeah it's like you said in a lot
00:57:07.220
of gender studies it's like the engine behind the deconstruction of our culture you told me and i
00:57:12.140
think that's a good way of putting it oh yes yeah i mean you look at um well let's see i mean one of
00:57:19.300
the things that comes to my mind when you say about that is uh the femen we've seen the femen
00:57:23.920
recently haven't we i simply don't understand what this is about i mean it's probably time to get into
00:57:29.060
you know branching out into feminism uh a bit more here i mean what what are the femen about they
00:57:35.680
want to just destroy the values of our society i don't really understand what they want i mean
00:57:42.300
they just go and and they're such a minority too because the majority of women they don't speak for
00:57:47.640
us but they get they get all the attention you know george soros is funding them so yeah yeah well
00:57:54.500
i think this um it it does very much uh play into the um destruction of europe thing doesn't it really
00:58:04.540
um because that seems to be um the the feminists
00:58:10.500
uh are very largely um supportive of you know the whole war on um europe and it's it's all about
00:58:22.020
destroying boundaries basically isn't it yeah which is funny because they're like they're letting
00:58:26.580
islam come in um how's that going to work with your ideology here oh well crumbs um aren't they
00:58:34.520
going to kill you know women and gays first if they could have their way well yes yes and that this
00:58:39.880
is really this i mean um this is the point that i feel is really really this is the that this is the
00:58:47.240
reason why i am willing to uh um disclose about myself here because when you think about this
00:58:58.800
and you think about the um the alt-right or the new right or do you want to call it and um and i see
00:59:05.360
in in the alt-right there is a lot of hostility to uh transsexual and transgender oh and if i may
00:59:12.340
just briefly i utterly loathe the term transgender um what's the difference there these nuances i
00:59:20.800
don't know about sure sure well um when i was going through my medical treatment in the mid 80s
00:59:27.940
uh the term was transsexual the alternate word was transvestite the transvestite is somebody who
00:59:33.860
just kind of did it part-time for fun dresses up yeah that's right dresses up sexual kicks and stuff
00:59:39.180
then um then this word so there was the distinction there there was the transsexual who was the the
00:59:45.520
hardcore um trying to come to terms with their life or the transvestite who's just the kind of
00:59:53.840
lightweight anyway uh the word transgender started coming into use in the late 80s and early 90s
01:00:01.520
uh it was coined by a full-time transvestite called virginia prince uh who was goes way back to the 1970s
01:00:11.320
um but it was popularized much more by judith butler who uh some of our uh listeners may have
01:00:20.640
heard of um judith butler was the uh kind of foundational writer uh of this whole uh queer theory
01:00:31.120
uh business and um although i don't think she actually started it um but she's the most um well
01:00:37.960
known um and uh the most commonly referred to um term that she uses is that uh there is a performative
01:00:51.120
element uh in gender display um so this has been although that wasn't actually what she meant
01:01:01.120
this has been used to basically say sexual identity is only display so if uh you have a butch lesbian
01:01:09.440
who acts like a man then that's a man or you get a drag queen well that's a woman so simply by the
01:01:18.460
performative uh behavior or display then we've gone all the way from biological neurology hardwired
01:01:28.560
behavior um two mere social choice um so i just wanted to interject real quick it's really funny
01:01:39.120
how you look at a lot of these gay couples though and you see quickly who's who's the man and who's
01:01:44.900
the woman so they fall into those biological sex roles anyway isn't that isn't that interesting
01:01:52.200
oh well there is also there has been over many years there's been a lot of um controversy within
01:01:59.200
the gay community about this there are still those um in the gay community who like to attack
01:02:08.580
those who are in any way normative you know because they're that you know like the kind of gay couple
01:02:15.600
you've mentioned you know um they are in a sense even though they might not see it themselves they
01:02:21.720
are in a sense fitting into a normative structure by by the fact that you know one is obviously the
01:02:27.180
man and one's obviously the woman um even though they're both men or both be women um but that
01:02:33.640
the gender studies people want to make more out of this um than it than it really is while it is
01:02:41.040
actually they are actually fitting into uh normative structures uh the gender studies people would like
01:02:48.160
to um say it was actually the evidence was actually the other way around um i think i've gone off a
01:02:56.520
little bit from where i was yeah i wanted to ask you wanted to get back on the the new right so how do
01:03:00.940
you see because there are racially aware transsexuals there are racially aware gays they they respect the
01:03:08.240
traditional family unit they're not having children um but they see themselves as nationalists
01:03:13.120
how do you see them fitting in with the the new right or the alt-right um well i think it's a matter of
01:03:20.840
survival um i i'm completely baffled at where the um left uh in britain uh are about this because they
01:03:33.560
seem to be the the left in britain you know it's this kind of uh the liberal consensus of um you know
01:03:40.580
open-mindedness towards uh gays and lgbt and stuff like that well okay that's all right as far as it
01:03:46.940
goes but they're also completely open-minded to the invasion of islam and all that and they're
01:03:53.380
completely completely unaware of the clash between these two different ways of life and
01:04:02.940
i think they just need to realize that um we need to tighten up here um so that we're not um we're not
01:04:16.020
giving away our survival adaptation to to strangers um what i mean by that is the western lgbt movement
01:04:27.540
people they are european people they have the european open-minded um freedom uh kind of mentality but are
01:04:37.900
completely failing to understand that they are sacrificing this by being uh totally leftist
01:04:52.180
degenerate behavior i suppose yes well i was anti-white politics anti-white politics with islam
01:05:00.140
basically that's what i was thinking of um and i think we need to wrap up my thought here what we
01:05:08.780
need here is um a balanced compromise between uh the alt-right and the lgbt world because i know the
01:05:20.760
alt-right they despise the lgbt world and in many senses i i despise it with them i think they do as
01:05:29.100
a as a political movement because they see how it's being used exactly it is it is it's it's used to
01:05:36.420
deconstruct society um i mean it's used to oh well of course there's the whole gay marriage and gay
01:05:43.960
adoption thing which you've gone into with some of your guests recently um and um they
01:05:52.600
don't understand that what they're doing with all these things is making our society uh run downhill
01:06:02.820
um so so so the lgbt left need to get serious about their own survival but at the same time they need
01:06:15.820
to tighten up uh their morality and um um so that it can be more respectable it can that the right can
01:06:27.720
have more respect for it because i i don't you know i'm not surprised that um the way that they are
01:06:36.360
feeding the deconstruction of our society is is you know sneered at by the right i mean why not
01:06:44.060
crumbs is awful um so the right is likely to respect gay people more if they stop flaunting it i mean
01:06:55.180
one of these things is that it's a matter of ethological display um i'll explain that
01:07:02.600
for listeners uh ethology is uh the study of uh animal behavior and uh comparative behavior so
01:07:10.060
uh humans are rational animals uh we have animal instincts uh we have uh we are able to manage and
01:07:18.460
direct our animal instincts but at the same time we respond to the uh instinctual displays um from other
01:07:29.280
human beings so what you're having here and i think this is really really important point is
01:07:34.900
that p went and is that people when they see gay people uh flaunting and i'm not just talking about
01:07:45.540
holding hands in public but that some of these gay pride events and stuff and i you know i've been to
01:07:50.680
them and i've seen them and they're you kind of wonder what it's all about um um it's not surprising
01:07:58.060
that heterosexual people um don't like it because it's basically it is sexual display and particularly
01:08:07.860
you know northern european people are very uh restrained very conservative uh very chaste even i would say
01:08:14.940
um compared to a lot of the values um that you see displayed by uh you know not all but certain
01:08:23.340
elements uh in in the gay community and i think that it's it's an instinctual response it's not
01:08:30.420
homophobic or intolerance if um i mean i personally i don't like to see anybody getting too physical
01:08:41.160
or you know what i mean that's just it yeah it works two ways here yeah um within you know my view
01:08:48.740
i think it's just bad manners i think it's bad manners whether it's heterosexual or um uh homosexual
01:08:55.800
but what you see quite clearly with a lot of people in the gay community is they they deliberately
01:09:02.900
flaunt this they deliberately shove it up people's noses and it creates um ill will and it's not
01:09:13.260
surprising because uh it's what can you do if you have if you have an instinctual response against
01:09:20.080
something then uh you know you're kind of almost into amygdala hijacked it's like bruce jenner you
01:09:27.000
know they're lifting him up as is like some sort of a hero you notice that well i i know i should
01:09:35.060
have looked into this a little bit more lana but i i just see it come up on my uh kind of news feeds
01:09:40.520
and then sidebars and things all the time and i haven't really looked into jenner all that much
01:09:46.240
because it's quite clear to me that it's nothing other than just another reality show um isn't isn't
01:09:54.840
jenner involved with the kardassians or something yeah and the stepdad i believe oh he was an olympic
01:10:02.460
athlete yes yes and i think this is uh i mean going back to my thing i said earlier i don't want to
01:10:08.800
you know stop people living the lives that they want to as long as they don't harm other people
01:10:13.860
but i think when you leave it to the age of 62 and you've been a public figure and that that the nature
01:10:22.200
of being that public figure has been as a male athlete um i think that this is somebody who's
01:10:29.120
trying to have two lives you know what i mean the do you know the phrase having your cake and eat it
01:10:34.840
um because when i mean my my feeling was that i had to get it sorted by the time i was 30 because
01:10:43.520
um you know i'm interested in astrology as well and astrologically speaking by the time you get to
01:10:49.820
when you're 30 you um have passed your saturn return which is the first major rounding of who
01:10:57.900
you are in your life and i knew i had to i had to get it sorted by then otherwise i would have missed
01:11:04.480
that window of opportunity and i think that we do take choices with our lives and even if you might
01:11:11.160
have something that is hardwired if you've chosen to do something else with it um as jenna has evidently
01:11:19.080
done and made a successful life of it you know then i think that it's i just think it's it's kind of
01:11:26.720
trying to have too much out of life by then saying oh well that wasn't really me this is who i am
01:11:32.380
after 62 years i mean you know my first 20 odd years where i was uh you know i'm nobody nobody
01:11:41.060
knows about that other than than what i disclose and um you know i i i didn't establish myself in
01:11:49.260
the way that that jenna did and um so i i think that it's it it's it's kind of just playing into this
01:11:57.160
whole circus hoopla yeah and well i wanted to ask you about that how should heterosexual people deal
01:12:04.520
with some gays and transsexuals that are hostile because it seems to me like there's a lot of
01:12:09.320
hostility out there right now oh i don't know really i mean is it a separation or what what needs to
01:12:16.080
happen here um i don't know uh i suppose the thing is the actual numbers are quite small
01:12:27.140
but the people are very vocal yeah so one jenna or um you know one of these high profile people can
01:12:36.980
be heard by millions upon millions of people and uh anybody who
01:12:42.740
uh wants to convey a more conventional view is just completely sidelined so um i
01:12:53.420
it's it's difficult to know what to do about this because this is not something that's going to go
01:13:01.000
away and uh i don't think it needs to go away but i think it needs to be dealt with in a more
01:13:07.100
constructive way but i do think that the uh lgbt people who get hostile against straight people
01:13:17.320
for you know not being completely accepting of them should also probably just have a think about
01:13:24.000
some of the things that i've said about the fact that you know 97 of the population are
01:13:31.220
heteronormative and they have that right to be so you know um i don't feel that i in any way
01:13:38.920
you know having a a neurological abnormality have the right to try and impose my um neurological eccentricities
01:13:48.840
uh on on the world um so we we we need to accept that this is a reality but we don't need to be
01:14:00.320
emotionally blackmailed and uh dominated for it um in the way that you know gender studies is telling
01:14:09.540
us we're all so dreadfully immoral for you know holding old-fashioned ideas that there might actually
01:14:16.780
be something as you know a reality such as two sexes you know do you think that there can ever be a
01:14:24.560
lgbt alt-right and do you ever see the possibility of that it seems pretty unlikely but i think it's
01:14:32.320
i think it is actually necessary because um it has to start they have to start for themselves uh
01:14:41.860
if all if all the if all that the lgbt movement does is uh claim victimhood and demand to be able to
01:14:51.360
um have a kind of moral high ground um over society then they will be it's like all these
01:14:59.720
things you end up getting a backlash in the end i think there would be a backlash from society in the
01:15:04.600
end because um what we've seen this year i mean as you said at the beginning it's it's quite a kind
01:15:11.000
of timely to be talking about these things because what we've seen this year particularly in america
01:15:16.180
um is really i i find it kind of frightening um that you know so much of this has happened and of
01:15:27.300
course there's the whole um you know adoption and uh issue um which all these things they they do
01:15:38.520
they do antagonize people you know and um so i think i do think that the lgbt movement need to be start
01:15:47.480
becoming more responsible and accepting that they are not you know some kind of morally superior
01:15:57.580
class that can uh claim that you know heteronormativity um is wrong
01:16:07.760
uh because if they don't get more real about this um when the real nitty-gritty comes between um
01:16:19.540
europeans and islam they're going to be thrown to the dogs you know yeah well last question for you i
01:16:27.140
wanted you to mention the transmedia watch lecture oh yes i uh i went this is another one i've been to
01:16:34.240
two or three of these lectures this uh year um i i went to this uh lecture at the uh gender studies
01:16:41.840
department um by um uh woman from transmedia watch which is a an internet a group that uh polices uh
01:16:52.420
transphobia uh on the internet um and what they're very much into this there is no such thing as
01:17:02.340
true transsexualism so there is no in their notion um they again they want to break down all kind of
01:17:11.880
boundaries um so for them trans is not just transsexual um it's it's the entire range which
01:17:22.800
again i think is a it's a it's a taxonomic disaster because you're not distinguishing between any
01:17:28.400
different you know um differences between uh uh someone lifelong transsexual feelings um or
01:17:37.040
somebody who's a weekend transvestite um they simply will not accept so they have a wide uh they draw a
01:17:46.780
wide um um uh kind of what should i say um they have a wide umbrella for this um so that they say
01:17:57.160
she said at this lecture she said that it wasn't just three percent of the population were gay but
01:18:02.000
three percent of the population she reckons are actually trans now that would be trans with an
01:18:07.900
asterisk which is one of these modern terms it means basically inclusive but my view to go right
01:18:14.620
back to where we started would be that if we are to accept that there are neurological determinants
01:18:21.980
of uh behavior and identity then we need to have uh taxonomic uh distinctions um such as this um
01:18:33.720
there is actually a group called the harry benjamin gender dysphoria association which has uh drawn up
01:18:40.020
a list and i think there's six categories going from um extreme um transsexual all the way to part-time
01:18:48.720
transvestite and uh various different levels of of um persistence of uh this um uh in between but
01:18:59.440
within the uh world of the um trans people um this is quite controversial because you again this is the
01:19:10.120
distinction between the what people think of as transgender which is this umbrella as against
01:19:16.320
transsexual transsexual transsexual is uh you get words from some people saying oh transsexual
01:19:21.520
that's problematic because it's too uh definitive and um you know it's elitist um when actually all that
01:19:30.620
we're trying to do with um the correct terminology is to be able to distinguish between the kinds of
01:19:37.020
people who uh really might qualify for uh gender reassignment in that they have the extremist uh forms
01:19:48.340
of these feelings and at the biggest the most evidence for um hardwired um factors in the brain
01:19:57.680
um as opposed to those who would probably regret it at a later stage um so i was very disappointed with
01:20:06.240
the transmedia watch because it's failing it's completely failing to um understand that we actually here
01:20:14.840
have a constellation of um neurological and psychological uh irregularities um which are not all the same
01:20:27.620
basically so um but as so long as people are only concerned with the um social behavior and uh social
01:20:42.140
identification um and uh completely ignore the uh the neurological and developmental factors
01:20:51.100
then um i think i don't think uh the public perception of it will advance a great deal well i hope people
01:20:59.200
look at sexuality a different way after this conversation and i hope people have learned
01:21:03.440
something new it's more complicated than we've been told of course well as we wrap up did you have any
01:21:09.980
closing thoughts for us well there are so many things um um it's it's really hard to it's really hard to
01:21:21.960
kind of sum it up but uh oh well i would just say that i'm very disappointed also with uh lee's gender
01:21:29.200
studies department um with their actual scientific methodologies because i've participated in um a couple of
01:21:38.380
studies with them and uh in both of them um the evidence that i gave uh was either um uh not taken up
01:21:46.640
or was sidelined um and i think this was because they found out that i was giving evidence that would
01:21:52.600
disagree with their um own hypothetical um structures of this it's the university just science is off the
01:22:03.620
table whether it's science of sexuality or science of race they just will not look at it because these
01:22:08.760
things are being used for political purposes oh yeah yeah i mean biology just does not get a look in
01:22:15.300
basically uh they're not interested um it's i i think the um the radical trans feminism cult uh conference
01:22:25.440
um i think really sums up uh what this is about um this isn't about uh what uh when i seven or eight
01:22:38.980
years ago when i thought about um pursuing some uh academic work um in this department uh maybe taking
01:22:46.240
some kind of uh part-time course with them or something um i thought that they were uh interested in
01:22:52.920
um um exploring um not just you know i don't mind exploring uh social aspects of uh feminism and um gender
01:23:03.980
identity uh but in um tandem with uh properly looking at um the biology and uh neurological um evidence
01:23:17.860
um behind it um so when i found that um so when i found that it was actually completely politically
01:23:24.160
motivated um department um we've had a long history of radical feminism uh here in leeds and this
01:23:33.440
seems to be the um current um incarnation um of it but i i'm very very uh grateful lana for the
01:23:44.700
opportunity to um shed some light on this and uh expose what i think are some very um poor um academic
01:23:56.360
standards in the way that they um uh look at this in very very narrow um view and uh pretty much um
01:24:05.760
fixing their ideas in advance uh of the evidence so um i uh i look forward to uh
01:24:14.380
finding out if any of them ever listen to this and uh well claire i appreciate you being so
01:24:19.620
open and honest tonight and sharing a different perspective on this topic well be sure to share
01:24:25.240
your websites with us as well oh yes um there's there's the uh there's the uh the waking uh the
01:24:32.140
monkey dot um blogspot dot com and just let me get this yes um waking the monkey dot blogspot dot
01:24:41.100
uh cold up uk or com um stuff about my book waking the monkey uh which is uh largely about uh breaking
01:24:50.660
out of a mindset of um victimhood and then there's also my uh pc newspeak um dot blogspot dot co dot uk
01:24:59.720
which is uh some of the stuff that i've been talking about today can be found uh in there about the
01:25:04.800
amygdala and a long piece on gender studies and there's also my cosmic claire dot blogspot
01:25:11.600
dot co dot uk which is just about local issues primarily around here in leeds and um the waking
01:25:20.900
the monkey um blog has also got links through to uh where uh you can um find my book on uh lulu
01:25:29.460
um so i think that's uh everything oh yes and i've just recently uh put up a uh talk i gave to
01:25:36.620
a local arts group about my book which was uh filmed earlier this year so i've put up a link
01:25:41.660
to that on the waking the monkey um blogspot dot co dot uk okay claire thank you have a good night
01:25:48.340
thanks a lot lana well were you shocked at claire's big twist did it shut you off or make you consider
01:25:54.680
gender dysphoria in a new way i know many of us have become bitter on lgbt since they've been so
01:26:01.280
loud degenerate and hateful and if you get down to it on some level they're bitter about their
01:26:06.800
situation and want to be like everyone else when there's no resolve internally or truth within
01:26:12.560
oneself people can act crazy but if we know someone is cuckoo we can view it with less emotion
01:26:18.940
there are those like claire who can accept that they are an unusual minority and fully 100 support
01:26:25.560
the primordial family claire has a resolve knowing about biology and psychology and how cultural
01:26:32.120
marxism is being used it makes one stable knowing the truth did you know babies being born intersex
01:26:39.320
are on the rise it's not about the population growth but about what we're consuming in our modern
01:26:44.880
society by being unaware or denying we are furthering this cycle when it comes to the alt-right
01:26:51.820
people have differing views on gays being a part of it if homosexuals are racially aware not degenerate
01:26:58.420
support the family unit and are fighting beside us against cultural marxism what's the problem at this
01:27:04.700
stage we need all the fighters we can get the uncultural marxist model behind the science of sexuality
01:27:11.360
is another topic that both the left and the phony right refuse to look at that's precisely why i am
01:27:18.180
we at red ice record to bring radio three times a week and we really really want to wrap up our video
01:27:24.040
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01:27:28.900
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