Doing something is also not a neutral act

A few days ago Jolyon Maugham gave the world his views on the Cass report on gender identity services, in great detail and at much length, because he is…an expert on the subject? No, but he plays one on Twitter. The final point he makes is that doing nothing is not doing nothing.

And so on and so on. This will mean “a lifetime of people discriminating against you and sneering at you.” By not giving blockers “you scar someone with that life.” The purpose of blockers is “to stop those changes from happening whilst the teenager reflects, before further medical interventions which are irreversible.”

That’s all true enough. Not giving blockers has consequences just as giving them has. Sure. You could say that about anything. Not setting fire to people has consequences just as setting fire to them has. But his take on it leaves a lot out. He himself is making blockers sound more neutral than they are – he claims that blockers just “stop those changes,” but it’s not like pausing a podcast or stopping in the middle of a walk. Stopping the changes itself has consequences, major ones. It’s not the case that one can just resume them a few years later and all will be as if there had been no pause.

There’s been a lot of discussion of this lately, especially since the Keira Bell case, so he can’t be unaware of it. So he’s framing himself as sounding a note of caution about this dangerous refusal to give puberty blockers, but what about the possibility that it’s at least as reckless to give them? What about kids who think they’re “gender incongruent” for a year or two and then adjust to puberty and realize they’re not? Are they better off if they get blockers or if they don’t?

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