Whilst watching an otherwise excellent interview on GB news, where Andrew Doyle interviews barristers Sarah Phillimore and Dennis Kavanagh about the Conversion Therapy Bill, SP said something that concerned me. At 15.40, she says:
"A very small minority of children may need medical and surgical intervention."
Says who, which medical experts have decided any child needs medical and surgical intervention for gender dysphoria and can they be trusted not to be shills for the trans lobby and pharmaceutical companies seeking to capitalise on this trend? On what criteria will this happen? Who are the gatekeepers of this? What about Gillick competence with respect to these cases, will the loophole achieved by the Good Law Project allow parents to impose this on their children? What is to prevent these exceptional rules being exploited once again by the trans lobby?
My view is that nobody as a child (i.e. under 18) should be given any hormone/surgical intervention, and that the only medical intervention they should receive is talking therapy and treatment for any co -morbidities that may be at the heart of the dysphoria. I'm quite concerned about throw away remarks like this being made by the GC side, because the slope is a slippery one, and it does tend to suggest that some children may indeed be affirmed as having been born "in the wrong body"; for why else then, would surgery (no matter how exceptional) be advocated for any child?