4-year-old Boy Reverses Gender Transition After 2 Years
09-13-2017, 02:06 PM
Quote: (09-13-2017 12:58 PM)Remington Wrote:
I didn't know/see a single tranny when I was growing up in school. From kindergarten through college graduation; nothing. When I was younger, I did know a kid who was a bit off balanced, he was very feminine and had a high pitched voice, turns out, he enjoys dick. Big deal.
...
Ditto, and I'll expand on this. I knew this kid from kindergarten. Probably before. He was BFF with the girls in our class. I have a vivid memory of him running around playing with the girls and even being slightly jealous knowing there was something special about chicks I didn't yet understand.
Anyway, besides this kid and another admittedly gay kid in high school...neither of them were bullied or hassled at all. I was fairly in tune with what went on, and it wasn't a huge school. There was zero harassment toward these homos. Actually, I never confirmed the former was a homo, but the writing was on the wall.
Like Remington said, big deal. Nobody cared. We're homobored of the discussion and always have been, as Gavin McInnes said.
I'll go on further with this. I grew up in Hickville USA. All white (until high school when a black family moved to town, rocketing us to 3 state track championships, but I digress).
I had a couple friends in high school with Confederate flags in the back window of their trucks. They smoked cigs and chewed tobacco. The one played baseball and football. I also recall this badass friend got a bit of poon.
No one, not even us back country farm boy tractor driving hicks would ever have thought of physically harassing someone because their sexual orientation or skin color. And we were idiot testosterone-filled 17 year old dudes.
Sure, you have clicks. Everyone is insecure to some degree in high school and trying to find identity. But even when the black family moved to town, there was no harassing Jim, the kid in my grade. I can only think of a few moments where I pushed the envelope on a few race jokes, and it was only awkward because of this massive social pressure from school and media about how race isn't funny. We all got along fine and if I ran into him, I'd have a nice little catch up. We were all just trying to get by.
That's what I think most (95%) of Americans are doing right now. Just trying to get by. We care too much about our job, family, sports team, hobbies, girls, boys, etc, etc...to think much of race or sexual orientation or whatever.
And that's from a real back country hick.