Injecting children with these drugs permanently sterilizes them, not to mention completely destroys their life and raises their risk of suicide by 50 times.
The government and the media are encouraging this.
It’s almost like they want to hurt us.
The BBC is pushing the boundaries of children’s television by broadcasting a drama about a 12-year-old transgender girl’s move to secondary school.
First Day, which launched on CBBC this week, stars the transgender actress Evie MacDonald as Hannah Bradford, who tries to relaunch her life after being targeted by bullies at primary school.
Charities praised the show as groundbreaking for representing the lives of transgender children but some campaign groups accused the BBC of broadcasting “propaganda”, saying that the series could leave young viewers confused.
The BBC purchased the four-part series from Australia, where it was first broadcast on the ABC this year.
Hannah finds acceptance with a group of friends at her new school but is targeted by a girl who knew her as a boy at primary school.
She is banned from using the girls’ toilets and is unable to attend a friend’s sleepover because the host does not yet know she is transgender, but ultimately shakes off her bully and finds pride in her identity.
Stonewall, the LGBT charity, said it was “thrilled” that First Day was being broadcast in the UK as “representation is so important”.
However other lobby groups which believe that biological sex is observed at birth, not assigned, expressed concerns.
Kate Harris, of the LGB Alliance, said: “It takes a fundamentally one-sided approach to a really complex issue. It’s asking children to accept that a boy who feels like a girl is in fact a girl.
“The way it’s presented is that anybody who doesn’t accept that Hannah is a girl must by their very nature be really mean, nasty and discriminatory against someone who belongs to a vulnerable minority.”
…Navigating the fractious debate between trans rights activists and campaigners who are concerned about gender reassignment being promoted to children is proving difficult for the BBC.
The corporation dropped leading transgender charities from its Advice Line for viewers last month, saying that questions relating to transgender issues and children were “increasingly contested” and the BBC needed to remain impartial.
In 2019 the BBC was criticised over an educational film aimed at children aged 9-12 which claimed that there are more than 100 gender identities. The clip is still live on the BBC Teach website.
Broadcasters across the world are seeking to make their children’s output more diverse, reflecting changing social attitudes. The BBC issued an uncharacteristically bullish response to recent viewer complaints about a lesbian kiss on the Canadian teenage drama The Next Step, insisting that it had a mission to make sure that every child “feels like they belong”.
Disney now has its first ever bisexual lead character, after the creator of the animated series The Owl House confirmed this week that its 14-year-old protagonist, Luz Noceda, is attracted to both sexes. Disney also included a gay storyline in its drama Andi Mack, which is aimed at viewers aged 6–14.
Why is no one trying to stop them from doing this to our children?
Because opposing people who are openly trying to crush the souls of children is “hate”?
Our society is okay with this premise?