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The trouble with including gender identity on death records

Trans rights protestors in Edinburgh earlier this year. Credit: Getty

November 25, 2024 - 1:10pm

Britain in the third decade of the 21st century is a very strange place. In Scotland, men can die of cervical cancer, a disease which affects an organ they don’t have. Scottish women may be recorded as expiring from testicular cancer even though they don’t possess — how to put this diplomatically? — the balls.

Up and down the country, “women” are appearing in court charged with rape, an offence that consists of penetration by a penis. Most puzzling of all, official statistics suggest that Muslims in England and Wales are three times more likely to be transgender than the non-religious population. The figures imply that one in every 67 is transgender, revealing a previously undetected surge in interest in gender identity among observant Muslims in Britain.

Is any of this an accurate snapshot of the UK in 2024? Of course not: it’s what happens when institutions tasked to provide accurate data give in to the demands of activists. It distorts the figures governments depend on when they’re making decisions which affect all our lives, such as allocating resources. It inflates the size of the trans population, appearing to bolster activists’ demands for special treatment. And it provides a wholly false impression of who is responsible for violence against women, creating a previously unknown category of the “female rapist”.

The latest example of this dangerous process to come to light affects death records in Scotland. Trans lobbyists have persuaded National Records of Scotland to record the “gender identity” of the recently deceased, rather than sex. The risible outcome is that men with a Gender Recognition Certificate are appearing in official records as female, even if they died of a disease of the male reproductive organs. Even if they don’t have a GRC, they can be recorded on a death certificate as female to avoid upsetting relatives. All we need now is a Radio 4 documentary about the startling rise in “men” suffering from ovarian cancer. Maybe Foreign Secretary David Lammy, who once claimed that trans women can “grow” a cervix, could act as an adviser.

When did this country stop caring about accuracy? When did politicians decide that trustworthy statistics matter less than the sensitive feelings of a small number of people? You might think the Official for National Statistics, at the very least, would be immune to such pressure, but you would be wrong.

After concluding 18 interviews with trans people, the ONS included a question about whether “the gender you identify with” is the same as “your sex registered at birth” in the 2021 census. The results appeared to suggest that the East London borough of Tower Hamlets has the largest trans population in the country, larger even than Brighton and Hove. Dr Michael Biggs of Oxford University pointed out last year, however, that many inhabitants don’t speak English as a first language — and almost certainly misunderstood the question. The ONS has since had to admit, though gritted teeth, that it cannot say whether its estimate of the size of the trans population of the UK is accurate.

Future generations will scratch their heads over what is nothing less than a dereliction of duty on the part of official bodies. Governments need accurate data about their populations. They should never have allowed official records to be skewed — falsified, if we’re being frank — to affirm the fantasies of trans activists.


Joan Smith is a novelist and columnist. She was previously Chair of the Mayor of London’s Violence Against Women and Girls Board. Her book Unfortunately, She Was A Nymphomaniac: A New History of Rome’s Imperial Women will be published in November 2024.

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Tyler Durden
Tyler Durden
4 hours ago

When left-liberals look approvingly on political and cultural Islam, they must find in themselves a spiritual vacuum left by their own abandoned European heritage.
In gender identity, however, they find the equivalent of all the key mystical tenets of Christianity, such as resurrection from the dead, the Holy Trinity, Virgin Birth, and most of all, transubstantiation in naming the communion wine as the blood of Christ.

Lancashire Lad
Lancashire Lad
3 hours ago
Reply to  Tyler Durden

It’s the bread broken at “the last supper” with the attributed words “this is my body” which forms the key part of transubstantiation, plus the wine/blood. Mystical indeed, and designed to enthral believers, which is mainly Catholics whilst other Christian denominations regard it as symbolic rather than actual.
The legacy of such beliefs are part of our European heritage: if intelligent and influential people have believed these things for centuries, the gender identity data manipulation is just following on from this mindset.

David Morley
David Morley
2 hours ago

Future generations will scratch their heads

If future generations of archaeologists uncover a hoard of engineering career posters, they’ll assume all our engineers were female. Strange days indeed.

Stephen Lawrence
Stephen Lawrence
58 minutes ago
Reply to  David Morley

That was quite funny

John Tyler
John Tyler
53 minutes ago

“When did this country stop caring about accuracy?”
I don’t think most of the population stopped caring; just those hooked on postmodernist claptrap and identity nonsense. Let’s remember: accuracy is whatever you perceive it to be in your own lived experience. Wheeeee! I’m a flying porcine!

UnHerd Reader
UnHerd Reader
53 minutes ago

For so many, for decades now, the mantra the morning begins with has been – “Now let’s pretend!”. I only wish now that I hadn’t taken my fellows going completely bonkers so much to heart. I feel like Canute, stood on the beach sopping wet and as if someone had just said to me “Poor thing! Didn’t you realise that tide was coming in?”

Stephen Lawrence
Stephen Lawrence
55 minutes ago

Presumably the record office has to deal with the name change on the Death Certificate somehow, in a non-confusing way, so the gender change probably isn’t such a big deal.

M To the Tea
M To the Tea
34 minutes ago

I think this issue runs even deeper—it’s not just about religion like culture being far removed from reality; it’s the entire speculative financial system that touches much closer. The fact that people are convinced that financial policies are independent of government control, is simply not true. There’s a lot happening behind the scenes just like China…any president or prime minister can sunk or support any industry with one tweet! how is this separate?
The problem is that the entire culture and political system are focused on pointing fingers, while simultaneously engaging in the same behaviors they criticize in others as socialism or communism or blah. This hypocrisy is becoming increasingly visible, especially with the rise of social media and the widespread access to technology.
We need to shift towards being more reality-based rather than myth-based. For hundreds of years, myths like “we rule the world” or “we colonize and gain power” dominated. But just like religion, these myths eventually amount to nothing at critical juncture. While some people profit greatly from an exploitative “free market,” the market isn’t truly free—there’s a great deal of coordination happening behind the scenes. If you can lie so much like that why are we surprised others may also fall for the same style of being?
The resulting inequality has grown too extreme. Of course, other countries are not necessarily better, as their financial systems are often directly controlled by their governments. However, what sets them apart is that their people are not blatantly lied to about this relationship. They understand that economics relies on predictability and that governments control the banks.
In contrast, many in the West are misled, and that deception is the core issue.
This kind of scrutiny will likely extend further—into gender issues and every other aspect of the social fabric…and if we often thought why those countries are corrupt, now we are realizing believing a virgin having babies was nothing like believing markets are free of human interference? Gender, biology, science in general….one can see clearly all things being called upfront. Reckoning time!

Richard Littlewood
Richard Littlewood
3 hours ago

Lots of questions. One simple answer. This is all due to Gender Ideology.
How can you challenge it? Say and explain what it is.
But that’s not going to happen on Unherd. Gender Ideology is Feminist Ideology. It came out of Feminism. And that can’t be criticised.
So what will happen? More questions but no answers. Ad infinitum.

David Morley
David Morley
2 hours ago

You’re right of course, but for many people this is already vanished history. I’d suggest you explain a bit more what you mean – but I fear you’d be wasting your time.

Richard Littlewood
Richard Littlewood
1 hour ago
Reply to  David Morley

I’m saying if you don’t understand what ‘gender’ means then you will get endless articles like this one perpetuating, and validating, a very political, but misunderstood, concept. There will never be any answers. Which, of course, perfectly suits all the supporters of Gender Ideology. Then they can continue their gender narrative unchallenged.

Last edited 1 hour ago by Richard Littlewood
A J
A J
2 hours ago

Oh look! Another man blaming feminism for gender ideology, seemingly unaware of the fact that leading feminist writers have been critical of transsexualism (as it was then called) since the 1970s. See, for a classic example, “The Transsexual Empire” by Janice Raymond, or Gyn/Ecology, by Catholic scholar and feminist author Mary Daly, both published in the 1970s. Or anything by Sheila Jeffries, who has strongly criticised transgenderism in a whole stream of published books, from the 1980s up to 2022.

Blaming women for the harms that men do to them is a very old trope, and its wearying to see that blame popping up in UnHerd comments under any article on this subject.

Lancashire Lad
Lancashire Lad
1 hour ago
Reply to  A J

That last sentence – precisely what happens, and it should be challenged every single time.

Richard Littlewood
Richard Littlewood
1 hour ago
Reply to  A J

Oh look! Someone ignoring what I said!

Last edited 1 hour ago by Richard Littlewood