| Common Transmedicalist Claim | Fallacy | One-Sentence Refutation | Where to Read More |
|---|---|---|---|
| “Only dysphoric, medically transitioning people are 'really' trans” | Gatekeeping + False Dichotomy | Gender dysphoria is not required for trans identity; non-dysphoric trans people have authentic, stable identities. | Chapter 2: Claim 1 |
| “Non-dysphoric trans people dilute our legitimacy” | Scapegoating + False Cause | Backlash comes from organized anti-trans movements, not from trans diversity; gatekeeping weakens unified advocacy. | Chapter 2: Claim 3 |
| “If we don't restrict definitions, we'll lose medical resources” | Zero-Sum Fallacy + Appeal to Fear | Resources aren't zero-sum; unified trans advocacy secures more access than gatekeeping does. | Chapter 2: Claim 3 |
| “Informed consent and self-ID lead to regret and harm” | Appeal to Fear + Inversion of Evidence | Informed consent produces better outcomes than gatekeeping; most detransition is driven by external pressure, not regret. | Chapter 2: Claim 4 |
| “Visible, non-dysphoric trans people invite backlash that harms us all” | False Cause + Blame-Shifting | Organized political movements cause backlash, not trans visibility; gatekeeping doesn't prevent legislation—it enables it. Yes, optics are a strategic thing and no, this is not that. | Chapter 2: Claim 3 |
| “We need gatekeeping to prove we're not a trend” | Respectability Politics | Respectability politics have never secured liberation for any marginalized group; rights came through visible resistance. | Chapter 3: The Fragility of Gatekeeping |
| “Transmedicalism protects trans people by ensuring authenticity” | Gatekeeping as Protection | Gatekeeping harms trans people by delaying care, increasing distress, and creating divisions that weaken community. | Chapter 3: The Strategic Failure |
| “Non-binary identities aren't real trans” | Denial of Lived Experience + False Dichotomy | Non-binary trans people have authentic gender identities and benefit from community support. | Chapter 1: The Architecture of Oppression |
| “The 'transsexual' vs. 'transgender' distinction is legally necessary” | Appeal to Authority + Void for Vagueness | Narrow definitions create constitutional problems; broad “gender identity” protections are legally sound and enforceable. | Chapter 2: The Constitutional Problem |
| “TS Separatism is just community autonomy, not gatekeeping” | Reframing | Separatism functions as gatekeeping by excluding people from category membership; it weakens political power. | Chapter 3: The Strategic Failure |
| “I'm not transphobic, I'm just defending dysphoric transsexuals” | Tokenism + False Balance + Respectability Politics | Excluding non-dysphoric trans people from validity and protections is transmisic; you can't advocate for one group while excluding another. | Chapter 4: Tokenism |
| “Gatekeeping is a filter for authenticity” | Circular Logic + Survival Bias | Gatekeeping is a filter for suffering and conformity, not authenticity; surviving gatekeeping doesn't prove it was necessary. | Chapter 3: The Wound Becomes the Weapon |
| “Separated trans categories are medically necessary” | False Necessity | Medical necessity for what? Research shows broad categories serve medical needs better than narrow gatekeeping. | Chapter 2: The Constitutional Problem |
| “The backlash comes from non-medical trans people, not from organized anti-trans movements” | False Cause + Blame-Shifting | Anti-trans backlash is coordinated and intentional, driven by far-right funding and organizing around a very long-term strategy in place circa 2010s; diverse trans visibility and 'optics' is not the cause. | Chapter 2: Claim 3 |
| “I'm not gatekeeping, I'm just saying dysphoria and medical transition are real” | False Equivalence + Ideology Masquerading as Medicine | Acknowledging dysphoria as real ≠ requiring it for identity. Transmedicalism weaponizes medical reality into gatekeeping ideology | Chapter 2: Claim 6 |
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