Sad News From California

In America, children can’t buy alcohol or cigarettes until they are 21. They can’t get their ears pierced until they are 18 unless a parent is present. They can’t vote until they are 18. So why are children under 18 allowed to have major, life-changing surgery that will leave them sterile for the rest of their lives?

On November 23, The Gateway Pundit posted an article about when can happen when the parents don’t agree on the child’s sex-change operation.

The article reports:

A California judge has permanently stripped Texas father Jeffrey Younger of all parental rights to his twin sons, James and Jude, granting Younger’s ex-wife, Anne Georgulas, the authority to chemically and surgically transition their 12-year-old son, James, against his father’s wishes.

Younger, whose ex-wife, a pediatrician, began transitioning their son to a girl at just two and a half years old, has fought tooth and nail to protect his child. Despite video evidence supporting his concerns, courts in Texas and California have systematically stripped him of his parental rights.

The Gateway Pundit previously reported that a video of James Younger when he was only 3 years old surfaced, revealing that his mother put dresses on him and painted his fingernails when the child was just an infant!

The abuse from the mother all started because James liked a toy from the movie ‘Frozen’ meant for little girls. It is totally normal for little boys to play with girls’ toys; it does not mean they want to be castrated and ‘transition’ into girls.

This is sad for everyone. Jeffrey Younger has stated that he will not agree to supervised visits for a number of reasons. The cost because of transportation and supervision would be approximately $2,000 per visit, the risk of the reports on the visits being skewed, and the idea planted in his son’s mind that Jeffrey Younger was dangerous in some way. Meanwhile, James Younger will be a medical patient on serious drugs for as long as he decides to be a girl. If he changes his mind at some point in the future, he will discover that some aspects of his decision are irrevocable.