- Fri Jul 21, 2023 1:09 am
#49182
I've been thinking about this issue again. Thinking back to my developing years, which I guess would have been the mid-to-late 1970s and early 1980s, I can recall seeing a TV documentary about a particular individual who was grappling with gender identity issues, and felt that he, (ostensibly) a man (their assigned gender at birth) had been assigned a gender that was a terrible mistake and that (s)he was, in their own words, a "woman trapped in the body of a man". I had never heard of this before, and it seemed to me profoundly strange. I'm somewhat ashamed now to admit that I presumed that this individual was suffering from some mental illness. The documentary showed how this person had been obliged to "live as a woman" for however long it was then in order to demonstrate their commitment, and went on to describe the gender re-assignment surgery that (s)he was about to undergo - something the idea of which viscerally appalled me (it does not now) and which I found quite incomprehensible.
Nowadays, of course, the issue of gender identity is a commonplace, far more than it ever seemed to be when I was growing up in the 1970s. What interests me is whether this is actually true - that there are far more trans people around now than ever before (and if so, why?) or whether there are just as many trans people around, but nowadays it's just far more prevalent in the zeitgeist. What does the panel think ?
"The opportunity to serve our country: that is all we ask.” John Smith, May 11, 1994.