Texas Taxpayers Funding Harmful Transgender Medical Experiments On Kids

Texas taxpayers are funding doctors that are providing harmful experimental sex change services to minor children.  The GENder Education and Care Interdisciplinary Support (GENECIS) Program at Children’s Health in Dallas was the first so-called “gender clinic” for children in the Southwest United States.  GENECIS provides “feminizing therapy, masculinizing therapy, menstruation suppression, and puberty suppression therapy” for kids.  The clinic also provides referrals for sterilizing sex change surgeries. 

The clinic is staffed by, among others, Ximena Lopez, M.D., Pediatric Endocrinologist and Director of the GENECIS Program, Jason Jarin, M.D., Pediatric Gynecologist, May Chi Lau, M.D., Meredith Chapman, M.D., Pediatric Psychiatrist, Director of Mental Health Services – GENECIS Program, and Laura Kuper, Ph.D, Clinical Psychologist.

Based on the Texas Tribune’s Government Salaries Explorer:

Dr. Lopez is an assistant professor at the state’s UT Southwestern Medical Center and makes $150,000.

Dr. Jarin is an assistant professor at the state’s UT Southwestern Medical Center and makes $190,000.

Dr. Lau is an assistant professor at the state’s UT Southwestern Medical Center and makes $145,200.

Dr. Chapman is an associate professor at the state’s UT Southwestern Medical Center and makes $214,000.

In 2017, the state allocated $188 million to UT Southwestern Medical Center.  Texas taxpayers pay doctors who are providing harmful experimental sex change services to kids.  GENECIS admits the dangerous effects of “feminizing therapy” and links to information stating, “Taking estrogen increases the risk of blood clots, which can result in clots traveling to the lungs; or clots may go to the brain causing strokes or the heart leading to and heart attacks. Taking estrogen can increase the risk for diabetes, heart disease and high blood pressure.”  Another page warns of the “masculinizing therapy” effects of testosterone, “The major risks include concerns about heart health as testosterone is associated with earlier heart disease and a less favorable cholesterol profile.”

Regarding whether testosterone causes infertility in females, GENECIS information advises, “The effects of testosterone on fertility (the ability of an egg to get fertilized by a sperm or to carry a pregnancy) are not fully predictable.” Regarding whether estrogen causes infertility in males, GENECIS information advises the testes will “shrink to half the initial size” and that “sperm may no longer reach maturity.” 

GENECIS is the same clinic mentioned in the tragic story of a six year-old Texas boy named James – whose mother recently made him the focus of national media attention.  She has charged the father with child abuse for not affirming the boy is a girl.  In the divorce proceedings, she is also seeking to require the father to pay for the boy’s transgender treatments which may include hormonal sterilization starting at age 8.

Because Texas does not yet have laws in place prohibiting these unproven and experimental services from being provided to children, Texas taxpayers are subsidizing child abuse.  Texas needs to quickly take action to pass a law prohibiting the provision of gender and sex change services to minors and defunding doctors, clinics and organizations that provide such services.

Millions Of Texas School Kids As Young As Kindergarten Exposed To Transgender Sex Ed Content Without Parental Notice Or Consent in Public School Libraries

A recent report revealed that Fort Worth ISD libraries contain shocking amounts of transgender sex ed content that is available to kids as young as kindergarten without parental notice or consent.  But this is a Texas-sized problem from Amarillo to Brownsville and from El Paso to Texarkana.

Here’s a sampling of results from some of the state’s largest school districts when searching for the keyword “transgender” in the District’s library catalog (a “record” is typically an individual title):

(El Paso ISD, Fort Bend ISD, Katy ISD, Garland ISD, Lewisville ISD, Frisco ISD, Northwest ISD, Tyler ISD, and Mansfield ISD had transgender content but the library catalog could only be searched by campus.)

The listed school districts educate over one million Texas kids!

As an example of content, several districts have copies of the kindergarten level picture book I Am Jazz, described as, “From the time she was two years old, Jazz knew that she had a girl’s brain in a boy’s body.”  Many districts  have copies of the fourth-grade level Lily and Dunkin. This innocuous sounding title talks about hormone blockers, sex change surgery, and taking estrogen.

But did you also know thousands of Texas school children from third to sixth grades have been exposed to transgender content without parental notice through the Texas Bluebonnet reading competition?

Each year the Texas Library Association (TLA) nominates 20 books for third through sixth graders called the Texas Bluebonnet master list. Thousands of public school libraries participate in the program which encourages kids to read at least five books on the master list and vote for their favorite to win the Texas Bluebonnet Award.

Participating libraries typically make all of the 20 books available and  feature them in a prominent place to encourage kids to read them.  Extra programming activities occur throughout the year to highlight the books including book discussions and author presentations.

For the 2017-2018 school year one of the 20 books was The Best Man by Richard Peck.  The story “is bookended by weddings. In the first, Archer is 6, a ring bearer and clueless about love. By the second, he’s 12, a best man and a lot more enlightened: the uncle he idolizes is marrying a teacher he idolizes. The newlyweds are men.”

The book promotes transgenderism with a scene from a sixth-grade class where the students instruct a substitute teacher that she cannot call them “boys and girls.” One can get a sense of the book’s age-inappropriate topics in the suggested discussion questions like the following:

“Mrs. Stanley calls the class ‘boys and girls’ instead of ‘people’. Why is this a mistake? What do you want a teacher to call your class by? Why?”

Transgender and gender identity sex education content is medically and scientifically inaccurate and educationally unsuitable for school-aged children.  And such content certainly should not be provided to students without parental notice and consent.  The inaccuracy of this content is a legitimate pedagogical reason for the removal of the material.

Thousands of taxpayer dollars have filled Texas public school libraries with sex-ed content that promotes hormone blockers and sex change surgery.  Texas public schools need to be more focused on preparing students for the workforce – not a sex change.