Posted on 08/09/2023 6:34:17 AM PDT by texas booster
New voices are speaking out against “the ever-ready molders” of the transgender-affirming world out to change adolescent minds.
Recently, Chloe Cole, a 19-year-old young woman who was pressured to undergo transgender surgeries, challenged a social media video by Neil deGrasse Tyson, the populist astronomer and science personality. Although a legitimate astrophysicist, Dr. Tyson’s public proclamations and videos are not always from his area of scientific expertise. In fact, they aren’t always scientific.
In this particular video, Tyson asserted, in favor of gender ideology, that “no matter my chromosomes today, I feel 80% female, 20% male. I’m going to put on makeup. I’m gonna do it. Tomorrow, I might feel 80% male.” Seemingly to Dr. Tyson, the ability of people of any gender to feel a particular way and then to put on makeup accordingly, proves that “the XX/XY chromosomes are insufficient because when we wake up in the morning, we exaggerate whatever feature we want to portray the gender of our choice.” Dr. Tyson continued in a blatantly non-scientific statement, “What business is it of yours to require that I fulfill your inability to think of gender on a spectrum?”
(Excerpt) Read more at breakpoint.org ...
How about we stop confusing basic human biology with cosmetics? Like, what a weird jump. … I don’t wear makeup most days. If I leave the house without makeup on, does that make me like 70% [m]ale?… If it was only truly about aesthetics, nobody would care. It’s my business because you’re using 1950s gender stereotypes to justify an ideology that leads to the sterilization and mastectomies of 15-year-old girls who just don’t fit in, girls like me.
Cole ends her video with,
The idea that people can be percentages of either male or female just further reinforces the fact that biological sex is a binary. There’s only two. There may only be two sexes, but there are an infinite number of personalities. I mean, it really doesn’t take a degree in astrophysics to understand that.
Watching Dr. Tyson’s video and Cole’s response, I was reminded of something from my childhood. Due to the popularity of Superman in the late 1970s, Mr. Rogers dedicated a week of his daily TV show to helping kids distinguish between what was real and what was make-believe. He was concerned by the reports of children who put on capes and thought they could fly, leaping from staircases or top bunks or balconies and causing serious injuries. He even took his viewers onto the set of the show The Incredible Hulk to show them that the actors involved were indeed only actors.
In other words, he understood that children struggled to distinguish between make-believe and reality. This is exactly what Chloe Cole did earlier this week, only she was instructing an astrophysicist about the harm done to children in the name of “science,” while Mr. Rogers was confronting the harm done to children by cartoons. Cole knows that putting on makeup, a dress, or a muscle shirt cannot transform a man into a woman or a woman into a man. Even worse, she knows that neither did the testosterone she received at age 13 nor the double mastectomy at age 15 make her a boy.
According to Mr. Rogers’ biographer Max King in the documentary Won’t You Be My Neighbor?, Rogers was “angry that it was his medium that was doing this,” i.e., deluding and harming children. What began with his concern about children being misled prompted a new weekly theme for the show Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood that dealt with tough issues such as death and divorce.
Like Cole, Rogers wasn’t a scientist. But he was committed to helping children discern truth from error, the difference between make-believe and reality, between the cosmetic and one’s identity. He even famously sang a song that clarified that kids could not become whatever or whoever they wanted, that only boys could be daddies, and only girls could be mommies. In fact, he once said, “I’ll tell you what children really need. They need adults who will protect them from the ever-ready molders of their world.”
Those are the kind of adults that children still need. What we all need less of is the sort of thinly disguised, condescending, and anti-scientific rhetoric that molds their identities.
What a huckster. And the article misspelled his name. It's Neil Digress Tyson
“What we all need less of is the sort of thinly disguised, condescending, and anti-scientific rhetoric that molds their identities.”
But Socialist Democrats have figured out that this WORKS as a means to an end for their various nefarious schemes! *SPIT*
Mr. Rogers would be cancelled today.
The Socialist Democrats have become the “molders” that Mr Rogers did not want to have influence over our children.
[Mr. Rogers] once said, “I’ll tell you what children really need. They need adults who will protect them from the
ever-ready molders of their world.”
Our world needs more 'Mr. Rogers' and fewer bloviating, farcical narcissists like 'Dr. Tyson.'
I was a kid when this episode of Mister Rogers first aired. There was no doubting the message that there is all the difference between reality and make-believe. I think a lot of Freepers will delight in this segment.
I was a kid when the Incredible Hulk was on TV, but a bit older than Mr. Rogers Neighborhood age at that time. I never saw this one. Excellent episode. I do remember seeing the episode with Margaret Hamilton who played the Wicked Witch of the West in The Wizard of Oz, and it was a similar premise. Showed how nice she really was and that she was playing a character. I was a younger age and probably of the age the target audience would have been when this particular episode aired.
Yeah, uh, no....Neil, that’s not any of this works. Stay in your lane, bro.
I don’t know who the Degrassi guy is, but I miss Jack Horkheimer
I feel 80% wildebeest and 20% common field mouse.
I don’t think so. That movie was more about a guy who was helped by Fred Rogers but didn’t think he needed help.
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