So, letting people be who they want to be is a good thing. Thatβs shocking I tell you, just shocking. All I want to know is, how much time and money went into this research when you couldβve just asked trans folks how they felt for free
The way research works is they probably did ask trans folks, and then systematically collected their responses. Research often is the collection of many many peopleβs responses, collected in a rigorous standardized way. They are not just saying βthis is the case for some trans kidsβ they are saying βthis is the majority experienceβ for the trans kids they studied/ which is a powerful and useful thing to be able to say.
Yes it seems obvious but especially with social justice and medical research even if it is well known having a peer reviewed paper saying means that when some cis person is arguing the opposite you have a peer reviews paper to go, βlook itβs been studied you are wrongβ.
Research studies inform policy and medical practice. It is a good thing that this paper has been made because it can be used as evidence.
Minority groups benefit from research that looks at how things affect them and gives them a voice that is harder for policy makers to ignore. Bashing this study because it is obvious isnβt helpful, this study could seriously help trans kids, especially if it had been published in main stream media, because parents who are cis and donβt know anything about trans issues or donβt know if anyone they know is trans might find out their kids are and search for info and this will pop up. And because itβs from a trusted source, itβs research! they might think βoh maybe the best thing I can do for my kid is let them transitionβ.
Poo pooing research that gives minorities a voice because itβs obvious for the maringalised group but not the hegemonic one hurts the marginalized group because the hegemonic group is the group that needs to learn how βobviousβ it is.