After years of progressive acceptance of gender ideology, reaching a point where many women feel uncomfortable and discriminated against, the United Kingdom has begun not only to put the brakes on but even to go back. The latest example is that the British public health system is going to reform its constitution to affirm that “sex is a biological issue.”
Among the changes being considered are banning transgender women and non-binary people from being patients in female-only hospital wards, and recognizing women’s right to request same-sex doctors for gynecological issues.
After reaching their peak, both England and Scotland have begun to decline in terms of the ease for children and adolescents to change their sex, in the use of different (or non-existent) pronouns and adjectives to refer to or address non-white people. binary, and in the environmental objectives of reducing the carbon footprint. The first, due to the opposition of a large sector of citizens who think that common sense has been lost and language distorted, and the absurdity that many politicians do not dare to answer the question of what a woman is, and if may have a penis. The second, because of the cost.
A trans law quite similar to the Spanish one has been an important reason in the fall of the Scottish Prime Minister Humza Yousaf, and in the decline in the popularity of the SNP (Scottish National Party, pro-independence), not having understood the enormous opposition that the ease for children and adolescents to change sex generated public opinion, and not only among conservative voters. The writer J.K Rowling, author of the Harry Potter series, has been the victim of a harassment campaign on the networks for years by the most radical group in defense of gender ideology, and denounces the radicalization of intellectual and academic circles .
The so-called “Cass report” has been a turning point by suggesting that British children and adolescents were being prescribed puberty blockers too easily, and recommending that this only be done in the course of properly supervised clinical trials. The author criticizes that sex change processes begin without an analysis of possible underlying neurological problems such as autism, or depression.