Sick Stamford Doctor Argues For Early Gender Surgery, Reveals Ugly Truth About Treatment! [Video]
Dr. Tandy Aye is a pediatric endocrinologist at Stanford Children’s Health and is the Medical Director of their Pediatric and Adolescent Gender Clinic (that's a mouth full) probably didn't realize this at the time, but while giving a TedTalk she revealed an ugly truth. We have all been told that the hormonal treatment of gender reassignment is reversible but Dr. Aye says that the treatment renders male testicles 'useless'.
She slipped up while she was trying to argue for removing the 'useless' testicles while children are still young. Just chop them off like you would 'any other nonfunctioning organ.'
Dr. Aye used a young boy who reportedly identified as a girl named 'Avery'. According to Dr. Aye, 'Avery's testies never developed because of the treatment'. She later went on to say that 'Avery would never become a biological parent', so why not chop them off?
Holy hell...
I wish I could tell you that the doctor, at least once, considered that 'Avery' might want to be a parent one day, but based on her TedTalk, I don't think the child's future needs were considered. The robotic doctor went on to argue how the useless testies should be removed as if Avery wasn't a person at all.
Stanford Children's doctor says "the demand for transgender surgery has increased by five-fold" and suggests that if a boy takes hormones and "her testes are non-functional," doctors should surgically remove them—even if the child is a minor. pic.twitter.com/tpc6xwpiRV
— Christopher F. Rufo ⚔️ (@realchrisrufo) October 11, 2022
TedTalks offered the following explanation for their recent speaker:
"Gender affirmation surgery is currently reserved for those who are 18 years or older. Tandy Aye argues for why it may be more beneficial for surgery to occur during older adolescence. Dr. Tandy Aye is a pediatric endocrinologist at Stanford Children’s Health and is the Medical Director of their Pediatric and Adolescent Gender Clinic. This multidisciplinary clinic provides pediatric endocrinology, urology, gynecology, psychiatry and psychology, general and plastic surgery and adolescent medicine services to affirm and support patients and their families. Dr. Aye’s research examines the impact of hormones on the developing brain, bone and body composition, particularly in peri-adolescents who are receiving gender affirmation therapy. This talk was given at a TEDx event using the TED conference format but independently organized by a local community."