PokeVideoPlayer v0.9-rev1 - licensed under gpl3-or-later
Views : 8,066
Genre: Entertainment
Uploaded At Mar 31, 2023 ^^
warning: returnyoutubedislikes may not be accurate, this is just an estiment ehe :3
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88.55% of the users lieked the video!!
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User score: 82.83- Overwhelmingly Positive
RYD date created : 2023-07-10T17:05:11.667666Z
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Top Comments of this video!! :3
Hell yes. I was 37 when I started transitioning, but the first people I came out to were my parents because I knew their love and support was unconditional. Parents worthy of the title donât need schools to play snitch about something this important. Theyâve already earned their kidsâ trust.
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I was thinking what you said. If the kid felt the need to hide it from her, then they don't trust her. I am a father with two grown daughters. They have never lied to us and they have always been able to tell us everything. It was kind of funny when one told me she is bisexual. I was driving us somewhere and she just said, "Oh! I told Mom that I'm bisexual." I just responded with, "Ok. Where do you want to eat." It was just funny because she told me like I already knew.
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Actually this happened with my Niece quite recently, she's not 100% sure at the moment, she's kinda gender fluid, so she switches back and forth between boy and girl pronouns. Some days she feels like Eve, some days she feels like Jay, she never told anyone, we had to find out by a friend of his/hers mother. Who flatly told my brother that his daughter was trans, though when asked s/he said they didn't know, but didn't really want surgery they were happy as they are. Everyone in the family said they would support them regardless of what they decided but until then, we still love them all the same. But, s/he wasn't gonna tell us just out of general fear, even though the concept of transgender support and talking about it openly isn't something we skirt away from. You never know is the point, I get what you're saying Steve, but having had it happen to my family sometimes it just happens, thru no fault of your own.
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In the tweeters defence; their comment is in response to the UK's government recent decision to publish guidance to schools on 'issues of gender identity' which in my opinion is a reasonable thing to do for the benefit of all people involved including the parents, the teachers and most importantly the individuals who are transitioning. Especially as it has provided reasonable arguments on every (well... most) sides of various topics related to the issue, both big and small.
Because, while I agree that the ideal would be that a child can tell their parents everything going on in their lives; it sadly can't always be that simple. So based of that that tweet alone, it's a tad too simple of a knee jerk reaction 'woke vs anti woke' thing here. As on this side of the pond there are serious discussions going on how best to help everyone, trans or not and not simply judge them.
That said, knowing the news broadcaster Ms Carver has worked for previously, I'm not going going to hold my breath on her seeing the topic is a little more nuanced than good v bad, but I guess not every broadcaster represents the views of the companies they work for.
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@calebleland8390
1 year ago
I am a parent, and I hope my kids know that they can tell me anything. I didn't bat an eye when my daughter said she was bi/questioning her sexuality. I still love my son even though he came out as CIS-HET. (Satire, for those who don't understand comedy). Anyone who would publicly post something like that should have never been a parent.
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