The French talk about sex

It will be the plurinational agenda and not any other public interest that will tip the scales in the eventual new general elections.

Oliver Thansan
Oliver Thansan
27 September 2023 Wednesday 04:55
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The French talk about sex

It will be the plurinational agenda and not any other public interest that will tip the scales in the eventual new general elections. The entire European continent could collapse as a large part of the Spanish vote would continue to cling to the idea of ​​territorial unity as a peninsular pasture that faces the elements. National identity is the fig hair that electorally pulls more than the hull of a ship. And just like sexual identity – oh, no, it was gender – does not admit of debate. In addition, it is cheaper, it does not need influencers to create a mass of voters, which is not critical.

And who says voters, says politicians, because the European Parliament has bowed to the environmental pressure exerted by the lobbies on the trans issue and there are already 15 countries that, convinced by the Spanish presidency of the Council of the EU, will promote gender self-determination. The statement urges each member state to guarantee gender reassignment without requirements, which will roll out the door to the sex reassignment industry, which, as Swedish researcher Kajsa Ekis Ekman points out, for every boy it turns into a girl it plans to turn three girls in boy...

In short, it prevents the free and healthy abolition of sexist stereotypes in EU countries. This would be a universal benefit, but it does not seem to have been detected by the correct progressive dazzled by the word rights. No one should be discriminated against because of the way they are or dress, logically – it is the patriarchy that dulls the pen in a man or humanity in a woman – but neither should anyone be urged for this very reason to deny the material reality that is their sex.

Fortunately, in France, where there is a law of secularism that allows the Islamic veil to be kept at bay in public spaces, queer religion is viewed with scepticism. And curiously, now that it is drafting its trans law, the French Senate has called specialists, who have been silenced in Spain, to contribute their point of view. José Errasti, the author of Nadie nace en un cuerpo equivocado, is now there with the feminist Sílvia Carrasco and with David Bell, the former director of the gender identity unit of the Tavistock Institute in London, who exposed the neglect of the "affirmative model" in addressing gender dysphoria in minors.