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The New York Times is caving to trans activist pressure

"Trans Youth Prom" organisers in front of the Supreme Court Building in Washington, D.C. this week. Credit: Getty

May 26, 2023 - 1:15pm

Earlier this week, US Surgeon General Vivek Murthy warned that social media may pose a “profound risk of harm” to children and adolescents. But before the ink could dry on that story, the New York Times rushed to print a defence of social media for a subset of young people who identify as LGBTQ. 

This article provides yet another example of what I’ve come to think of as the mainstream media’s underside narratives. Alongside the official narrative (“for one group of teenagers, social media seems a clear net benefit”), the reporter provides all the material necessary to support a subversive reading: that the risks of social media might outweigh the benefits for LGBTQ youth — especially young people who come to identify as transgender — too. 

Online communities provide unrestricted — and, conveniently, disembodied — spaces for adolescents to test-drive new identities. As one researcher put it, “the Internet’s ability to empower users in various ways – from online support to testing and expressing different selves – makes it almost an ideal medium for transgender individuals.” 

But what matters when it comes to evaluating the role of online communities in LGBTQ “self-discovery” is the direction of travel. Are there some children and adolescents who are innately transgender, who struggle with their identities in isolation until they find a language for their experiences and a place to belong online? Or do online spaces that constantly prompt youth to question their gender identities — and then tell them that questioning their gender means they’re trans — precipitate such gender “revelations” and set young people on the path to irreversible body modifications? 

Take the story of Cassius O’Brien-Stiner, who “had some negative and even dangerous experiences online” — but, the reporter notes, “it was also where he first learned the word ‘trans.’” Other passages are strongly suggestive of social contagion:

At Roosevelt High School in Portland, Ore., members of the Queer-Straight Alliance, a student group, said social media had accelerated their understanding of their identities, and their acceptance among peers. “Representation on social media is a huge part of it,” said Regan Palmer, 16. “It’s more accessible to see the different variations you can be, and know that sexuality is not a binary, it’s a spectrum.”

Her classmate Jareth Leiker, 16, said seeing people come out online helped young people do it in their own lives: “To see someone else have the courage to do something, you have the courage.”

- New York Times

My research on online trans communities paints a messier picture than the Times does. Sometimes, social support can look more like love-bombing. Online trans communities can drip-feed new sources of anxiety and obsessive fixation. This kind of endless negative co-rumination can have devastating effects on mental health. Members who run afoul of community attitudes and beliefs may find themselves ostracised for wrongthink

Online trans communities also provide tips on how to evade clinical “gatekeeping” — often by concealing important information from medical providers — or push young people to go it alone with black-market hormones. “Nonbinary” influencers like 45-year-old Jeffrey Marsh encourage kids to go “no contact” with loving parents who dare to question whether transition is right for their children. Exposure to disordered-identity influencers — whether they promote tics, multiple personalities, or “top surgery” — can send young people struggling with ordinary challenges of adolescent development down the road to dysfunction. Some young people even claim to experience grooming by adults who tell them it’s wrong to be gay but that transition can fix all that. 

A lot of what happens in online trans communities looks more like online radicalisation than anything else. According to the National Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Children, signs of online radicalisation include: “isolating themselves from family and friends, talking as if from a scripted speech, unwillingness or inability to discuss their views, a sudden disrespectful attitude towards others, increased levels of anger, [and] increased secretiveness, especially around internet use.” 

Concerned parents link trans identification to a sharp increase in Internet use, discarded interests and hobbies, isolation from family and friends, disruptions in mood and behaviour, increased intolerance toward differing viewpoints, and increased levels of anger and conflict within the home. A recent survey of Canadian young adults identified transgender and gender-diverse youth as at particular risk of radicalisation, outstripping their peers in expressing severe alienation and sympathy for the use of violence against perceived antagonists. 

After a brief foray into serious coverage of gender, the New York Times appears to have caved to activist pressure, running a series of pieces that are impressive in their ideological compliance but shameful when judged by the ordinary standards of journalism. When the Times decides to return to reporting, it would do well to re-examine all of its coverage that contributed to this troubling climate.


Eliza Mondegreen is a researcher and freelance writer.

elizamondegreen

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Mike Doyle
Mike Doyle
1 year ago

Might I suggest that we reconvene the Doctors’ Trials, last used at Nuremberg, where all those involved in the medical and surgical mutilation of children can be tried for their crimes against humanity.

Studio Largo
Studio Largo
1 year ago
Reply to  Mike Doyle

Absolutely. That we are expected to accept the mutilation of children as being part of some humanitarian mission is beyond outrageous, as is the cowardice of the parents of the victims of this sick, sick cult.

Sharon Overy
Sharon Overy
1 year ago
Reply to  Studio Largo

It’s sometimes the parents’ doing. There’s a high correlation of supposedly ‘trans’ boys with mothers diagnosed with Cluster B personality issues.

I’m not sure if something similar maps onto supposedly ‘trans’ girls.

Sharon Overy
Sharon Overy
1 year ago
Reply to  Studio Largo

It’s sometimes the parents’ doing. There’s a high correlation of supposedly ‘trans’ boys with mothers diagnosed with Cluster B personality issues.

I’m not sure if something similar maps onto supposedly ‘trans’ girls.

Studio Largo
Studio Largo
1 year ago
Reply to  Mike Doyle

Absolutely. That we are expected to accept the mutilation of children as being part of some humanitarian mission is beyond outrageous, as is the cowardice of the parents of the victims of this sick, sick cult.

Mike Doyle
Mike Doyle
1 year ago

Might I suggest that we reconvene the Doctors’ Trials, last used at Nuremberg, where all those involved in the medical and surgical mutilation of children can be tried for their crimes against humanity.

Jim R
Jim R
1 year ago

There may be no group of people more addicted to social media and more intellectually compromised by its echo chambers than journalists. The fact that they produce these editorials defending and espousing the benefits of social media is not unlike drug addicts justifying the use of drugs. Garbage in, garbage out.

Jim R
Jim R
1 year ago

There may be no group of people more addicted to social media and more intellectually compromised by its echo chambers than journalists. The fact that they produce these editorials defending and espousing the benefits of social media is not unlike drug addicts justifying the use of drugs. Garbage in, garbage out.

Lindsay S
Lindsay S
1 year ago

One aspect of all this craziness that is rarely considered is that young people, encouraged by social media and their inclusivity groups run by schools and suchlike (LGBQT) are outing themselves to parents and when it doesn’t go down as well as hoped, the family breaks down and the young person ends up in care. Children in care are more vulnerable simply by being in care and its frankly wholly irresponsible for these young people to be encouraged to out themselves at an age when they can never be self sufficient! There was a time when the gay community had the good sense to wait till adulthood to out themselves to parents! The care system is already overwhelmed and the last thing we need is young people needlessly coming through from loving homes where the only issue is that the young person is putting themselves at risk because they believe (belief reinforced by trans community) their parents should accept their new identity.

Lindsay S
Lindsay S
1 year ago

One aspect of all this craziness that is rarely considered is that young people, encouraged by social media and their inclusivity groups run by schools and suchlike (LGBQT) are outing themselves to parents and when it doesn’t go down as well as hoped, the family breaks down and the young person ends up in care. Children in care are more vulnerable simply by being in care and its frankly wholly irresponsible for these young people to be encouraged to out themselves at an age when they can never be self sufficient! There was a time when the gay community had the good sense to wait till adulthood to out themselves to parents! The care system is already overwhelmed and the last thing we need is young people needlessly coming through from loving homes where the only issue is that the young person is putting themselves at risk because they believe (belief reinforced by trans community) their parents should accept their new identity.

Simon Denis
Simon Denis
1 year ago

Who cares about the New York Times? Were it published in Britain, I would regard it as one of Andrex’s competitors.

Ben Jones
Ben Jones
1 year ago
Reply to  Simon Denis

I suppose it’s an early warning system, alerting us to the type of BS we can expect here in 18 months’ time.

Peter Kwasi-Modo
Peter Kwasi-Modo
1 year ago
Reply to  Ben Jones

This is sad, but true. No matter how nonsensical an American fad might be, we Brits will be copying it sooner or later. To make matters worse, when we Brits do start copying, it is usually a cheap, sordid version of the American original.

Peter Kwasi-Modo
Peter Kwasi-Modo
1 year ago
Reply to  Ben Jones

This is sad, but true. No matter how nonsensical an American fad might be, we Brits will be copying it sooner or later. To make matters worse, when we Brits do start copying, it is usually a cheap, sordid version of the American original.

Steve Murray
Steve Murray
1 year ago
Reply to  Simon Denis

Indeed, i couldn’t give a broadsheet.

Andrew Dalton
Andrew Dalton
1 year ago
Reply to  Simon Denis

It’s not known as the Toilet Paper of Record for nothing.

Derek Smith
Derek Smith
1 year ago
Reply to  Simon Denis

You should care because the NYT is an elite newspaper read by the elite. That’s how and by whom these ideas are mostly propagated across society.

Andrew F
Andrew F
1 year ago
Reply to  Simon Denis

You are unfair to Andrex. It is rather good…

Ben Jones
Ben Jones
1 year ago
Reply to  Simon Denis

I suppose it’s an early warning system, alerting us to the type of BS we can expect here in 18 months’ time.

Steve Murray
Steve Murray
1 year ago
Reply to  Simon Denis

Indeed, i couldn’t give a broadsheet.

Andrew Dalton
Andrew Dalton
1 year ago
Reply to  Simon Denis

It’s not known as the Toilet Paper of Record for nothing.

Derek Smith
Derek Smith
1 year ago
Reply to  Simon Denis

You should care because the NYT is an elite newspaper read by the elite. That’s how and by whom these ideas are mostly propagated across society.

Andrew F
Andrew F
1 year ago
Reply to  Simon Denis

You are unfair to Andrex. It is rather good…

Simon Denis
Simon Denis
1 year ago

Who cares about the New York Times? Were it published in Britain, I would regard it as one of Andrex’s competitors.

Jim Veenbaas
Jim Veenbaas
1 year ago

We’re supposed to be surprised by ideological nonsense coming from the NYT? Anyone who reads the publication has been lost for a long time now. It’s nothing but an echo chamber anyway.

Jim Veenbaas
Jim Veenbaas
1 year ago

We’re supposed to be surprised by ideological nonsense coming from the NYT? Anyone who reads the publication has been lost for a long time now. It’s nothing but an echo chamber anyway.

Derek Smith
Derek Smith
1 year ago

Another example of the needs of a minority outweighing the needs of the majority.

Derek Smith
Derek Smith
1 year ago

Another example of the needs of a minority outweighing the needs of the majority.