
TheAmazingMsM
53.3K posts

TheAmazingMsM
@OhDoBoreOff
Women are adult human females. Digital ID, assisted dying and surrogacy are despicable in their own ways Supporter of 🇮🇱 and the people of 🇮🇷












This Observer article references a six-year-old “trans girl” who reportedly tried to cut off 'her' penis after being told they couldn’t join Rainbows. We are talking about a very young child. A little boy who is clearly in distress. I’m aware of this case from my reporting for the Sunday Telegraph. And, quite frankly, I find it deeply concerning. I wrote and edited for the Guardian for many years - and I struggle to understand how it is being framed in this way. Because the focus here should not be on a little boys’ exclusion from a girls’ organisation. It should be on the welfare of a child expressing distress in such extreme terms - and what support is in place. That is where the adult responsibility lies. Not with affirming a six-year-old child's gender identity.



Male refugees from Afghanistan and Syria in Germany show a keen interest in forming relationships with local women, but the local women show little interest in forming relationships with them. Germany, in particular, received over 1,4 million refugees between 2014 and 2016, predominantly from Muslim-majority countries such as Syria and Afghanistan. The majority of these arrivals consisted of young, single men within prime marriageable age brackets. This study examines partnership preferences of male refugees from Afghanistan and Syria who arrived in Germany between 2014 and 2016 and female residents of similar age. Overall, our results indicate a high level of openness among male refugees towards partnering with female members of the resident population, but a comparatively low level of openness among the latter towards partnering with recently arrived male refugees. This implies a substantial incongruence in partnership preferences among the two groups. Regarding the educational level of a potential partner, we found that all respondents prefer highly educated partners over those with lower levels of education. This suggests that, for refugees, securing a highly educated partner might serve as a means of upward social mobility and integration into higher-status networks in the host society. Furthermore, it is possible that highly educated women, due to their greater exposure to diverse social environments and potentially less discriminatory attitudes, are perceived as more open to intergroup partnerships, making them a more attractive choice for refugees seeking acceptance and social integration. On the other hand, the reluctance of resident women to accept partnerships with refugees is largely explained by their rejection of the ‘imported’ religious Islam. It is possible that resident women perceive the religious practices of newly arrived refugees as different from their own, reinforcing a social distance that limits intergroup partnerships. Moreover, this reluctance might not only reflect religious differences but also concerns about gender norms or perceived lifestyle incompatibilities.













