By Rich
Lowry
Tuesday,
March 28, 2023
We are
going to look back years from now and wonder how we failed young girls so
badly.
Between
social media and fashionable gender theories, we are making teenage girls
depressed, anxious, and trans.
In a
Substack essay the other day, a mother wrote of her daughter: “She was
among the last of her small group of biologically female friends to socially
transition. It was mid-pandemic, and she spent most of her time with her best
friend, who had, unbeknownst to me, shown her hours upon end of transgender
entertainment on YouTube and TikTok.”
Of
course, that is going to have an effect, although there is a massive effort to
deny it among trans activists and in much of the media.
The Geico
gecko can convince us to buy car insurance. Trump can post a meme on Truth
Social and it can convince someone to go take a baseball bat to Manhattan
District Attorney Alvin Bragg. Someone can use the wrong pronoun and it can
convince a trans person to harm himself or herself. But what can’t possibly
happen, we are supposed to believe, is that the constant discussion and
celebration of transgenderism might convince confused young people to decide
they are nonbinary or trans.
Even
some trans advocates are willing to admit this makes no sense. Marci Bowers, president of the World
Professional Association for Transgender Health, told the progressive New
York Times columnist Michelle Goldberg: “There are people in my community
who will deny that there’s any sort of ‘social contagion’ — I shouldn’t say
social contagion, but at least peer influence on some of these decisions. I
think that’s just not recognizing human behavior.”
Bowers
is an exception, though. It is taken as an article of faith among trans
activists and much of the Left that social contagion is a pernicious myth.
This
denial is based on the idea that people, especially young people, aren’t
suggestible. As if what we are told, what our friends do and say, what signals
we get from society aren’t enormously important. And as if awareness and
encouragement of transgenderism, nonbinary status, and heretofore unknown
genders haven’t increased dramatically.
Internet
searches for anorexia in recent years have declined while searches for
transgenderism have soared. There are transgender and nonbinary celebrities.
Schools have started teaching kids gender ideology, and some will “transition”
children without telling parents.
The
trans advocates argue that a more permissive environment is simply allowing
people to embrace their true identities, the same way more people admitted they
were left-handed when the taboo against lefties gave way in the 20th century.
That analogy falls down, though, since the spike in trans and other
identification is particularly pronounced in areas that are particularly
encouraging.
As
Madeleine Kearns of National Review points out, young people in California
identify as trans at a nearly 38 percent higher rate than the national average.
And in the Davis Joint Unified School District, in a heavily progressive city
outside Sacramento, the rate is three times that of California as a whole.
Girls
are particularly sensitive to peer pressure. This aligns with the trend.
According to Kearns, there used to be more gender-dysphoric boys than girls by
about a two-to-one margin. Now, there are more gender-dysphoric girls than boys
by three to one.
Such
suggestibility was evident in the TikTok–driven phenomenon during the pandemic
of teenagers developing strange tics. According to a Canadian study, the New
York Times reports, “the adolescents were overwhelmingly girls, or
were transgender or nonbinary — though no one knows why.”
In light
of all this, other countries have pressed the brakes on aggressive treatment
for trans-identifying minors. In urging that so-called gender-affirming care be
used only in “exceptional cases,” Sweden’s National Board of Health and Welfare
cited “the uncertainty that follows from the yet unexplained increase in the
number of care seekers, an increase particularly large among adolescents
registered as females at birth.”
If
Sweden can acknowledge reality, so should we.
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