BIOLOGY, IDENTITY & HUMAN RIGHTS: Gender Issues Part 2
Gender issues are being weaponized in one of the most effectively divisive, corrosive campaigns the 1% have so far deployed against humanity.
Last week I talked about how sex and sexuality are being manipulated to support a “divide and conquer” globalist agenda.
In “Weaponizing Sex,” I talked specifically about how trans people and their very real and painful issues are being deliberately used to create an artificial trans “movement” that looks like a biological evolutionary event, but is not. (Please see the stats in the article.)
Yes, there are little boys and some little girls occasionally born who truly feel they're in the wrong sex body. Yes, it helps some of these young people to transition physically once they are of age and old enough to have some idea of the permanent consequences of radical sex reassignment—including sterilization. And yes, genuinely body dysphoric people should be supported and respected for their choices.
But is the epidemic of gender dysphoria sweeping the youth of America indicating a true biological evolution? No, it is not.
Going the wrong way
When transgender issues first started being seriously talked about ten or so years ago, I had a couple trans friends who had adopted hormone therapy, but who never physically transitioned via surgeries. They were both born male but identified as female and lesbian. There didn’t seem to be a whole lot of issues around sexual identity for them. (At least we didn’t talk about it.) And I simply accepted them as they were—two intelligent, kind human beings I enjoyed hanging out with
I was, however, delighted by the concept of “gender fluidity” because it substantiated my long-held spiritual knowing that we humans are far far more than just our physical bodies. I thought that identifying with a state other than the body’s actual sex was indicating a growing awareness of humanity’s overarching spiritual nature. An evolutionary awareness that would help get humanity out of its obsessive fixation on the body, consumeristic materialism, and an overall limited expression in life.
Not so.
“Biological identity” is the foundation for the whole trans movement. Okay. But then, much to my dismay, I started hearing that young people were starting to believe that having a certain gender identity meant that they were actually now the sex they identified with. That their belief made it so and that they should now be accorded automatic rights and legal status that aligned with their belief. I was even hearing that many young people actually believed (and were being taught) that men who identified as women could become pregnant and have babies.
As the whole trans issue became an ever-more notorious socio-political hot potato, it became obvious that young people were becoming even MORE obsessed and more narrowly identified with their bodies and body parts than ever.
Even to the point of delusion.
An offensive meme
As you will see in Part 3 of this series ,“Sacred Sex and the Man/Woman Thing,” I explain why this obsession with the body is part of the globalist agenda pushing the Not-So-Great Reset, and why it is so extremely dangerous.
But for now, I want to talk about human rights.
A few months ago, somebody sent me a trans-oriented meme. After considerable internal debate, I posted it on Facebook—not because I thought it was funny (I didn’t), and certainly not because I wanted to hurt some people’s feelings.
I posted it because my enormous desire to stimulate a lucid conversation around the gender insanity being perpetrated upon humanity in the last few years outweighed my sense of kindness.
The same is still true. So here we go again.
Outrage
The meme showed trans swimmer Lia Thomas next to a dolled up Lynda Carter and said:
“My generation had Wonder Woman. Your’s has ‘Wonder if it’s a woman?’”
Predictably, the original post got major pushback. One reader wrote: "Bigotry isn't witty, cute or funny. You're a better person than to post something like this." Another commented: "I don't find this humorous. For those who are insisting that only those who are assigned female at birth truly have the right to identify as women, you are missing the mark. Using the word 'it'? WTF?"
In response, I said I posted it because I thought it was a message worth talking about. That the sentiments it expresses directly speak to millions of people's perceptions and mental/emotional difficulties wrestling with the enormous gender issues being thrown at us these days.
I asked: “Are the very real, lived perceptions and thoughts of masses of people not supposed to be accurately expressed? Are the social difficulties such perceptions and thoughts inspire (including offensive memes) not supposed to be aired and addressed because some people might find them hurtful?”
To the "woke" crowd, of course, the answer is a vociferous and violent "YES!" A sentiment opined by every radically self-centered religious and political cult that has ever wrecked havoc across the annals of human history.
Biology vs identification
But let's put aside the issue of freedom of thought and speech for a moment and get to the topic at hand.
Just because I identify as a sexy 29-year-old doesn't take me back four decades in time and make me 29 again. (Dammit!) I can do hormone replacement therapy and erase my wrinkles with Botox and dye my hair and shop at Forever 21 and hang out at the mall ... but that doesn't make me 29.
Does this rude biological fact cause me pain and suffering? Actually, I confess that it does. From a purely physical perspective, getting older sucks.
Not only is the body subject to more aches and pains and stiffness, I live in a shallow society that values youth and physical beauty above all things except money. As an older woman I am not just marginalized—I am rendered invisible.
I can hear the words now: "Oh God! I'm so sorry I ran over you with my shopping cart/golf cart/automobile. I just didn't see you standing there!"
I turned male heads for decades. Now? Nada. And yes, that hurts. But what's worse is I truly feel 29. (Well, maybe 35.) The real me is ageless. Perpetually young and vibrant and beautiful. Why can't people (men) see that anymore?
Sigh.
Am I free to pretend I'm still biologically 29? Am I free to gete plastic surgery and wear miniskirts? Absolutely. Are people going to judge me for my Botox-stretched face, dress-style, and actions? Most likely. Will some people say mean things? Most likely. Although probably behind my back.
Is it going to be fun knowing that some people will laugh at me? No. But that's just life. Sometimes it's hard. Sometimes our choices reap unpleasant consequences—especially when they take us up against mainstream consensus reality.
Does my being hurt by others' opinions give me the right to shut them down, make them wrong and require them to shut up? Attack people who post memes about mutton being dressed up as lamb?
I might wish it were so. But the answer is plainly "no."
This clearly begs the question: What's so different about gender identity? Why is the issue so emotionally fraught? Why are trans people so special that society has to bend around them, allowing biological males into women's bathrooms and vice versa, changing birth certificates and other forms of identification, just because they mentally/psychologically/emotionally "identify" as a different gender than the one to which they were born?
A matter of human rights
In the Facebook conversation, I received answers like this: "People that are in their 60s and act 20 do not suffer the same persecution and misunderstanding as trans people. Your human rights are not threatened. It is not the same argument."
Well, let's look at this.
Some of the synonyms for "persecution" include the words "ill-treatment, oppression, exile, and murder."
Would you consider being treated as a non-entity, being automatically dismissed as irrelevant and senile because you have wrinkles and grey hair, and being basically viewed as if you have no physical or mental capacity "ill-treatment and oppression?"
How about "exile?"
Most certainly, in the West, elders are misunderstood and consigned to the hinterlands as far as relevance is concerned. Certainly the "woke" crowd doesn't consider older peoples' outdated, old-fashioned opinions and sentiments as valid.
What about murder? Well, all I can say is, it's pretty damn soul-killing being viewed and treated as an invisible, irrelevant fossil just because of your age. But let's move on and ask ourselves:
What are the most important basic human rights?
In the US we're used to hearing the answer "life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness." Personally, I believe we are ALL in terrible danger of losing all three of these inalienable human rights. But I'll pass on that political hot potato for the moment and point a few others things out instead.
Humanity still hasn't advanced in consciousness to the point where food and shelter and safety are considered basic human rights—which IMO is unconscionable. I would also say that basic human rights to clean water, clean food, clean air and health care are inarguable—although many argue.
In the realm of socio-political rights, the Equal Rights Amendment, first introduced to Congress in 1923 to give equal rights to women, STILL has not been ratified in 100 years. Why? The excuse is it is now presumed that all people are considered equal. That sufficient safe guards are in place guaranteeing women's rights and that it's not an issue anymore. Which is patently not true.
For god's sake, women still don’t get paid the same amount of money for the same job as men. And now we’re at the point of not being able to take our pants down and pee in a public restroom without biological males (supposedly) identifying as female around?
Talk about violating safety and basic human rights … and dignity!
A little common sense, please
Black people, White people, Red, Yellow and Brown people, gay people, trans people, people with special needs—ALL have the same basic HUMAN rights, (or they damn well should) which are what I stated before: Life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. Access to food, shelter, safety, clean water, clean air, clean food and healthcare.
How about we take care of the most basic of rights that are pertinent to ALL humans and not get side-tracked by issues like public recognition of my identity as a woman or a man, and having my personal pronouns agreed with and granted by all?
This is not to say that trans people aren't marginalized, demeaned and hurt in this world. They are. But they don't have the corner on the market. So are women. So are children with Downs Syndrome. So are Blacks and Native Americans and every other person of color. Even White males are now getting bashed.
This doesn't make any of it right. Frankly, it's ironic to realize that about the only thing everyone seems to have a "right" to on this planet at the moment is the right to being hurt.
It's going to take some serious growing up on all our parts—some serious, edgy-yet-non-threatening conversations like this one that are open to exploring the human condition—so that we can unreservedly find our way forward to creating a world that is designed to work for the honor and benefit of ALL by ALL.
In other words:
How about a little common sense and concern for the welfare of humanity?
And how about asking ourselves who benefits the most by keeping people divided, distracted and focused on deeply personal issues? Who benefits by keeping us traumatized, thin-skinned, easily triggered and wounded? Who benefits most by keeping us all on edge and pissed at each other, preoccupied with gender issues instead of tending to the Big Picture?
Hmmmm ... I wonder.
Much Love and Aloha ~
Cate
PS - HOLY MOSES! I just watched the BEST answer to all of this in a 15-minute video on Systems Science with Dr. A. Shiva. It explains exactly how the elite gain, keep and expand control over the masses. And it also briefly addresses how gender is being weaponized for elite gain and profit.
PLEASE WATCH! You’ll be SO glad you did!!
SHATTER THE SWARM. How The Few Control the Many with DR. A. SHIVA
Check out the book:
Cracking the Matrix: 14 Keys to Individual & Global Freedom
For thousands of years, every culture on Earth has described a hostile, invisible Intelligence bedeviling humanity, dragging us down. The Archons, AshShaytān, wetiko, windingo, e'epa, antimimos, Satan ... the names are legion.
Cracking the Matrix explores the astounding history and nature of what humanity has erroneously labeled "evil" on this planet, helping people finally see the very real, negative, interdimensional influence that exists behind historic and current global events and our social decline.
The book outlines how to break free of this Force's ancient controlling agenda and how people can stand up in the power of their true spiritual nature, ready to create the New Heaven and the New Earth that have so long been prophesied.
About Cate Montana
A professional journalist specializing in alternative medicine and health, Cate is the author of several other books, including Unearthing Venus: My Search for the Woman Within [Watkins 2013], and The E Word, Ego Enlightenment & Other Essentials [Atria 2017], and a spiritual novel titled Apollo & Me. She has a master’s degree in psychology, and is a highly informative and compelling speaker and guest on radio and TV shows and podcasts. She is very grateful to be able to say she lives in Hawaii.
For more information www.catemontana.com
Phrasing it & putting it together so seamlessly....you really know how to get to the crux of it here. We’re all hurt’n.
Cate,
Some very astute obsevations, observations that ripple through my inarticulated thoughts. I look forward to part three. By the way, my 49 year old self often wonders who that white-haired, double-chinned, wrinkled image is that stares at me in the mirror.
Carlos