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#23
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06-27-2014, 09:16 PM
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Re: R. Kelly's Son Comes Out As Transgender
Don't they need an air pump and a bunch of tubes to pump up their dicks to have sex when going girl to boy... then they wouldn't be able to blow a load, I guess if they re route the female ejaculate but wtf. Just wtf all around... wtf would someone do 500 years ago. Shits fucked up but w.e to each their own, if they are happy with it then fuck it. |
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#24
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06-27-2014, 10:05 PM
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Re: R. Kelly's Son Comes Out As Transgender
What's worse; Taking hormones for the rest of your life, Cutting off a chunk of your leg and sewing it to your clit as a penis or having sex, pissing and shitting on underage girls? |
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#26
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06-27-2014, 10:13 PM
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Re: R. Kelly's Son Comes Out As Transgender
Well, the human sexual toilet scenario doesn't involve self-mutilation, so I'm gonna go with "having to sit through an entire R. Kelly concert." Besides, I never understood all the hype about R. Kelly. All he is, is Bobby Brown with Down's Syndrome. |
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#28
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09-11-2014, 11:18 AM
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Re: R. Kelly's Son Comes Out As Transgender
is so lacking in good sense as to assume that a child who is still in the throes of puberty actually knows enough about themselves and the world around them to determine whether or not they're actually transgender.[/QUOTE] I disagree. They are well aware of feeling different at a very early age and that doesn't change. Same for homosexuals. |
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#30
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09-11-2014, 03:26 PM
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Re: R. Kelly's Son Comes Out As Transgender
But they could feel "different" for a variety of reasons. There are plenty of tomboy girls and effeminate boys that don't wind up as transgender or homosexual. Sometimes it just comes down to whether or not they like to do what all the other children of the same gender are doing at any given age. Young children and adolescents get their cues from gender role stereotyping, which is not the same as knowing firsthand what it means to be a man or a woman in either the physical or conceptual sense. The key terms there are "man" and "woman," as opposed to "boy" or "girl." One does not have a solid firsthand concept of what it means to be one or the other until one has reached that level of physical adulthood, at which point it becomes easier to determine whether or not one fits the mold represented by those terms. |