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Men's News Daily Online -
CommentaryWhen Feminist Dogma Met Dr.
MengeleMen's News
Daily Online, by Carey Roberts, May 19, 2004
The death certificate listed suicide as the official cause of
death. But the real cause of his demise was a controversial
gender experiment lead by one of the most influential sex
researchers of the 20th century.
Bruce Reimer was born in 1965 to a blue-collar family in
Winnipeg, Canada. Eight months later, he was victimized by a
botched circumcision, and baby Bruce ended up without his sex
organ.
The distraught family eventually contacted John Money, a
charismatic psychologist at Johns Hopkins University in
Baltimore. Dr. Money was a leading advocate of the idea that
sex-role identification is determined by one'
s environment,
not one'
s genetic make-up.
Money recommended sex re-assignment surgery, a dubious
procedure that had never been performed on a boy born with
normal genitalia. Bruce would be given a vagina, his name
would be changed to Brenda, and he would be raised as a girl.
It would be as easy as that.
So one month before his second birthday, little Bruce was
wheeled into the operating room as a boy, and came out as a
girl.
But back in Winnipeg, Brenda had other plans. When her mom put
a dress on her, little Brenda tried to tear it off. Later she
informed her startled parents she wanted to become a garbage
man when she grew up.
Enrolled in school, she was more competitive than her female
classmates. When girls got into fights, they used their open
hands. But Brenda used her fists. Then Brenda'
s girlfriends
discovered that she urinated standing up.
Dr. Money was apprised of all this, and more.
But when Money released his book, Man and Woman, Boy and Girl
in 1972, he portrayed Brenda'
s sex-change operation as a
resounding success. The book reviewer at the liberal New York
Times wrote approvingly: if you tell a boy he is a girl, and
raise him as one, he will want to do feminine things.
Feminists were elated. They needed to prove that women were
just as determined as men to ascend the corporate ladder.
Women just needed to overcome the oppressive conditioning of
patriarchal society. And Money'
s research was just the ticket.
Meanwhile things in Winnipeg went from bad to worse. When
Brenda reached puberty and her voice deepened, the folly of
the charade could no longer be denied. About to undergo her
annual breast exam one day, Brenda refused to disrobe. When
asked by the doctor, Do you want to be a girl or not?, she
defiantly answered No!
Brenda'
s parents knew the time had come to tell her the truth.
Brenda immediately reverted to her male identity. Choosing the
name David, he underwent penile reconstructive surgery. In
1990, David put the past behind him when he and Jane Anne
Fontane tied the knot.
During all these years, John Money was the toast of the town.
He was hailed as the world'
s leading expert on sex
reassignment. Media interviews, professional awards, and NIH
grants all were showered on him. After all, he had proven
that gender identity is a product of nurture, not nature.
He just didn'
t bother to tell anyone that Brenda was no longer
a she.
John Money'
s world began to collapse in 1997 when a journal
article finally revealed the truth of his ill-fated
experiment. Money could only sputter, It'
s part of the
anti-feminist movement.
Money'
s demise was sealed three years later by the book, As
Nature Made Him, which revealed the psychologist to be a
charlatan, tireless self-promoter, and intellectual fraud.
Two years ago, David'
s life began to unravel when his brother
unexpectedly died. Then he separated from his wife. After 38
years of indignity and torment, David Reimer took his own life
on May 4.
The feminist dogma that gender is socially constructed is
still widespread in our society. Boys receive constant
messages that they should start acting more like girls. The
sad tale of David Reimer should make us pause to reconsider
our mass experiment in gender re-education.
Carey Roberts
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