The Daily Telegraph - Features

The cowards of the trans debate have been exposed – now is the time for bravery

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“We simply do not know the long-term impacts.” How long we have waited for the words and wisdom of Dr Hilary Cass. Now that the world-renowned paediatric­ian and chairman of the independen­t review of gender identity services for children and young people has submitted her report to NHS England, we have 400 pages of them, and every sentence should feel like vindicatio­n; every recommenda­tion providing us with the light-headed relief that only comes when someone finally states the obvious. When the child at the end of The Emperor’s New Clothes says: “But the emperor has nothing at all on!” When common sense finally cuts through the madness.

“For most young people, a medical pathway” is not the best way to deal with gender-related issues, summarises Dr Cass. There is “no good evidence on the long-term outcomes of interventi­ons to manage genderrela­ted distress”, and young people questionin­g their gender identity should be given “a holistic assessment”, including screening for neurodevel­opmental conditions such as autism. Moving forward, “extreme caution” is advised.

Other voices echo Dr Cass’s views. At dinner parties where the “wrong” opinion could once silence a room, people agree “we took our eye off the ball”; on panel shows where any “off message” assertion was once steeped in caveats, there’s a new stridency.

Public figures are speaking out with renewed vigour. Teachers must no longer allow themselves to be “bullied” by transgende­r campaigner­s, the schools minister Damian Hinds told this paper on Sunday following a report that he said “draws a line in the sand”. Mark Russell, chief executive of The Children’s Society, called this “a watershed moment” while Rishi Sunak insisted that “the wellbeing and health of children must come first”.

The tragic truth is that for years it has come last – after the egoism of gender ideologist­s, agendapush­ing clinicians and virtuesign­alling politician­s. So while many of us welcome this moment of clarity, there is no sense of vindicatio­n or relief. How can there be, when we are only now beginning to assess how much damage has been done?

Consumed by toxic debates, activists never stopped to consider the impact of their lofty ideologies on innocent children. Why? Because these gender warriors were too hopped up on the idea of their own bravery. They’d cast themselves as modern-day heroes. Now, history will judge the “brave” as being the most cowardly of all.

This should never have been a trans debate, but a completely

Activists never stopped to consider the impact of their lofty ideologies on innocent children

separate conversati­on about the safeguardi­ng of children, and there is nothing brave about complying with the accepted narrative – especially when that narrative involves highly vulnerable children being given irreversib­le drug treatments.

Every “brave” teacher who failed to tell a parent that their child wanted to change their name, pronoun and gender was a coward. Every “responsibl­e” adult who actively engaged in helping that child do so without consulting their parents demonstrat­ed shocking cowardice, as did every “brave” BBC trailblaze­r who thought it right to put out video resources to middle-school children claiming there are “over 100 gender identities”, and all who ignored evidence that an alleged 97.5 per cent of children seeking sex changes at the scandal-ridden Tavistock clinic had autism, depression or other problems that might have explained their unhappines­s.

Cowardice is a revolting trait, especially where a child’s health is concerned. As Hinds said on Sunday, nobody working with children should be “vilified or called a transphobe” for making “difficult decisions” in their best interests. I’d go so far as to say that making “difficult decisions” is every responsibl­e adult’s job.

We may not be able to undo the damage done to thousands of children “let down by the NHS”, in the words of Dr Cass, but we can learn from our failings and show bravery wherever we have fallen asleep at the wheel.

Two current threats to children made headlines on Sunday. The first involves social media and the Government’s proposed ban for the under-16s. The plan is at odds with the guidance of most tech platforms, who for purely cynical reasons (get them addicted young) largely have a minimum age limit of 13. But it’s a no-brainer. We know that social media is responsibl­e for a wealth of ills in children, which is why the right thing to do is to ban it.

The second is Rishi Sunak’s “controvers­ial” smoking ban making it impossible for anyone born after 2009 from buying cigarettes and vapes. It could only be deemed controvers­ial by people not realising that smoking kills and unaware that vapes – currently sold alongside toys to children – can permanentl­y impact brain function.

If you’re still on the fence with either of these issues, ask yourself whether, as with using children as guinea pigs in gender experiment­ation, you really want to wait for that “line in the sand” to be drawn – or whether you want to support the right decision, the brave decision, now.

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