Winning the trans battle, but losing the trans war?

Trans US

By Carl R. Trueman, Christian Post

Prior to the November 2024 election, trans issues loomed large for many parents, who feared the erosion of parental rights regarding their children’s “gender identity.” The phrase “They are coming to trans your kids” carried rhetorical power because it spoke to what many saw as a very real threat — one that would materialize if politicians beholden to the queer lobby prevailed.

But since the election, the tide seems to have turned. Many have asked me recently whether I find the return of sanity on the issue encouraging.  

The short answer is, “yes.” Five years ago, my answer to whether trans ideology could be defeated was a qualified one: Sanity would prevail but probably not in my lifetime. One can, after all, only make an idiotic and nonsensical notion of the human person a central principle of social organization for so long before reality bites back. And under the current administration, gains have been made in terms of women’s sports, the emerging influence of detransitioners, and the increasing number of public figures willing to speak up for sanity.

Yet for all of the gains of the last few years, I am not ready for a victory lap. First, transgenderism is supported by organizations that are both wealthy and shrewd, such as the Human Rights Campaign. It has also given birth to militant action groups. In the U.K., the emergence of Bash Back, a militant pro-trans direct action group, is significant. It has issued a guide to violent resistance of “transphobia” while claiming to be “nonviolent.” Perhaps this is merely another application of its paradoxical philosophy of body and gender, with its self-identification directly contradicting its reality. Certainly the balaclava-chic of its publicity material is consistent with that of paramilitary organizations. Perhaps the emergence of groups like Bash Back is a hopeful sign — were they winning the culture war, they would not need to adopt the strategies of a guerilla war — but it is still emblematic of a problem that is not disappearing any time soon.

Read here