In today’s Wall Street Journal, EPPC President Ryan T. Anderson explains the controversy over Amazon’s decision to ban his book When Harry Became Sally, and argues that “because the book is changing minds in a continuing debate about how best to help patients who experience gender dysphoria,” that “makes it unacceptable to the woke.”

Amazon Won’t Let You Read My Book

The Wall Street Journal    //    March 17, 2021

A decade ago, most Americans had never had a conversation about transgender issues. Now a question few had asked has only one acceptable answer. “Transgender equality is the civil rights issue of our time,” President Biden tweeted in January 2020. “There is no room for compromise when it comes to basic human rights.”

Can we talk about that?

We might want to talk about what policies are best when it comes to athletics, for example. Should high-school girls be losing championship races to boys who identify as girls? How about female-only spaces, like shelters for victims of domestic violence? Should women in dire straits be forced to spend the night with men who identify as women?

And what’s causing the surge in the number of girls seeking sex-reassignment procedures in the past decade? Might we want to find that out before we rush to conclude that puberty-blocking drugs and cross-sex hormone therapies—and even double mastectomies for 13-year-olds—are a human right?

Subscribers to the Wall Street Journal can read the rest of this op-ed by clicking here.

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