J.K. Rowling has accused officials of “snuggling up” to controversial trans activists, harming the “very vulnerable children and women” in their own eyes.
The author of Harry Potter also demanded that an analysis get launched into why pro-trans groups like Stonewall and Mermaids were given “privileged places at the table” and their vocabulary and opinions were accepted by political parties.
Her remarks come just days after neonatal consultant Dr. Hilary Cass published a review that found that there is already “remarkably poor evidence” in gender care.
The Cass Review noted that treatment with puberty blockers “may alter the path of psychosexual and gender identification enhancement,” but that it does not, thoroughly, alter a patient’s brain distress or frustration.
The statement called for “unhurried” maintenance of those under-25s who think they may be transgender.
In a series of remarks posted on social media, Rowling rounded on Stonewall, which advocates for the LGBTQ community, and Mermaids, a trans support group, for their pieces in promoting the transgender tale.
She stated on Saturday that Stonewall actually told schools to cut up study packs because they believed there were risks for puberty blockers.
“In 2022 Stonewall told the globe that ‘study’ suggests two-yr-olds may become trans. It advocated for nurseries to start teaching children that there are more women than boys and girls.
Officials have “snuggled up to Stonewall and Mermaids,” given them special seats at the table, and adopted their talking points, to the expense of extremely vulnerable babies, younger people, and people.
“When are we going to see this entirely investigated? When will this conclusion?”
Gender Prejudices
Even though they may be too young to understand the implications, Mermaids have been accused of encouraging young people to move because they do not adhere to female prejudices.
In the midst of the Cass Review, Rowling had even criticized famous people who “used their systems to clap on” the transition of children, implying that she would not forgive film stars yet if they offered an apology.
Emma Watson and Daniel Radcliffe have both recently spoken out in support of trans people in response to comments made by the 58-year-old artist.
Rowling responded to a blog that suggested Radcliffe and Watson may be “safe in the knowledge that she would accept them if they offered her a common explanation.”
But she replied saying: “No healthy, I’m scared. Celebrities who supported a movement that wanted to undermine women’s hard-won right and who supported the transition of minors can keep their apologies for traumatized detransitioners and vulnerable women who rely on single-sex spaces.
Rowling added: “Even if you don’t feel ashamed of cheerleading for what now looks like severe medical malpractice, even if you don’t want to accept that you might have been wrong, where’s your sense of self-preservation?” Rowling wrote, in a series of articles on Wednesday.
The wagon you joined is hurling toward a mountain in awe of its cheerfulness.
She added that the document was “not a defeat, it’s the laying plain of a drama”.
Through the LGBT suicide prevention donation The Trevor Project, Radcliffe, who played Harry Potter in all eight of the movies, said that “everything that contradicts the definition of a woman is a woman.
Watson, who played Hermione Granger, and Rupert Grint, known for the role of Ron Weasley, in the Harry Potter film series, as well as Eddie Redmayne, who stars in Rowling’s Fantastic Beasts films, even spoke up during this period.
In a number of tweets from June 2020, Watson wrote that trans people are who they say they are and deserve to live their lives without being constantly questioned or told they aren’t who they say they are.
“I want my transgender fans to know that I and so many others around the world respect and love you for who you are,” he said.
Previous Prime Minister Boris Johnson has been one of Rowling’s supporters. He called her a “modern saints” who had been “demonized” at a Traditional conference on Wednesday, while claiming that the majority of people share her views.