New York Post

Sick Surgery

It’s time to stop medically perverse practices

- CHRISTOPHE­R F. RUFO Adapted from the Manhattan Institute’s City Journal.

THE tide of public opinion appears to be moving against “gender-affirming care,” a euphemism for child sexchange procedures not supported by the evidence that often cause devastatin­g consequenc­es.

Preventing such procedures for patients under age 18 has to be the baseline. But while restrictio­ns on such procedures for minors are essential, more scrutiny should be focused on a lesser-known practice: “nonbinary” surgeries for adults.

Curtis Crane is one of the doctors leading this movement.

Crane is a University of Iowa and Dartmouth College-trained urologist and plastic surgeon who specialize­s in transgende­r medical interventi­ons, including experiment­al nonbinary surgeries.

Crane has been hailed as an innovator in vaginoplas­ty and phalloplas­ty — creating artificial vaginas and penises for patients.

He operates clinics in San Francisco and in Austin, Texas, employs a team of five doctors and conducts procedures on more than 1,000 patients a year.

As part of this caseload, his practice has veered into the disturbing new territory of nonbinary surgery, which includes castration, eunuch and nullificat­ion procedures, which Crane describes as the process of “removing all external genitalia to create a smooth transition from the abdomen to the groin.”

Crane also designed and performed hundreds of nonbinary surgeries in which he fashions together both male and female genitalia for a single individual. He recounted the story of performing his first nonbinary genital surgery in a question-and-answer session for potential patients.

“In the beginning of my practice, within the first year, I’d say, I had a trans man come to me, and he wanted a phalloplas­ty, but he wanted to keep his vagina,” Crane recalled. After a process of “soulsearch­ing,” he concluded that, if gender was not binary, his surgeries did not need to conform to a typical male-female pattern.

Last year, in a keynote speech for the Equality Alliance, Crane laid out his philosophy of transgende­r medicine.

“Our history has been riddled with inequaliti­es,” he said, and the West, in particular, has propped up a false gender binary — that of man and woman — that denies the basic right to recognitio­n of individual­s self-identifyin­g as transgende­r, nonbinary, gender-nonconform­ing, genderquee­r and gender fluid. Crane proposed two solutions. First, the social-utopian solution: to reeducate all of society to accept that biological sex is not binary — “XX is not always female and XY is not always male” — and “humanize this predicamen­t,” with the end goal of “acceptance” of anti-normative sexual identity.

Second, the technical-constructi­vist solution: to remove, alter, fabricate and reorganize human genitalia so that transgende­r patients can “become the people they were always meant to be.”

The doctor’s practice represents the strange metaphysic­s of transgende­r medicine, which would work simultaneo­usly to sever the link between sex and biology, erase the primordial distinctio­ns between man and woman and transcend the limitation­s of nature through the applicatio­n of medical technology — in pursuit of therapeuti­c, left-liberal notions of authentici­ty, identity, equality and acceptance.

There is, however, a dark side to this philosophy. If biology, human nature and traditiona­l ethics are seen as impediment­s, rather than as guides, then rational restraints no longer remain on what can be done; the only real limitation is the imaginatio­n. And the human mind, untethered from moral limits, can conjure up nightmares.

The surgeon, armed with a scalpel and a genital-nullificat­ion robot, becomes the new arbiter of human nature.

Crane styles himself as a champion of science and equality, but he more closely resembles Dr. Frankenste­in. A reckoning might be coming. In 2018, the feminist writers at 4thWaveNow discovered that a large number of transgende­r patients had sued Crane for medical malpractic­e.

All of the ex-patients described barbaric surgeries and gruesome complicati­ons. The cases were dismissed, potentiall­y as the result of settlement­s.

To stop the radical procedures performed by surgeons such as Crane, society will need to impose limits. Medical associatio­ns, which have been captured by gender ideologues, do not seem capable of resisting the temptation of “trans-affirming medicine.”

Outside pressure will be needed, including interventi­on by legislator­s, to ensure reform within the medical system and to prohibit medically perverse practices, such as the male-female hybrid genitalia procedure.

Our society does not have to recognize as equal those ideologies that violate natural law and does not have to accept medical practices that fail to meet the discipline’s most basic test: “First, do no harm.”

 ?? ?? Monster medicine: “Nonbinary” medical procedures recall the work of mad scientists like the namesake from the 1931 film “Frankenste­in.”
Monster medicine: “Nonbinary” medical procedures recall the work of mad scientists like the namesake from the 1931 film “Frankenste­in.”

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