I'm A Trans Gender Boy A Behind Scenes Look Thailand’s ‘Ladyboy’ Sex Industry

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Soft White Underbelly interview and portrait of Natty and Muk, transgender prostitutes in Bangkok, Thailand. A Behind the Scenes Look at Thailand’s ‘Ladyboy’ Sex Industry. “I got into this type of work to provide for my family. Not just my parents, but my grandparents as well." Thailand is well known for its sex industry. From gogo bars, to massage parlours, karaoke joints, and brothels, the land of smiles is also very much the land of sex. And "ladyboys,” as they’re known to foreigners, are seen as a culturally unique part of Thailand's sex trade.

But who are these people? Most foreigners rarely question how trans people get into sex work, or why.

To find out I headed for Bangkok's bars, where I found a trans woman named Earth willing to talk. Earth is a 22-year old who describes sex work as liberatingly lucrative, despite the significant stigma and danger attached.

“I went to university and graduated with an accounting degree,” Earth explained beneath the pulsing lights of the bar. “But even then I still couldn't find a job anywhere. Even with my degree, employers kept rejecting me almost immediately. It became clear that I didn’t have a lot of options, so my mother sent me to hairstyling school.”

After working at the salon for some time, Earth decided she simply wasn’t making enough money and began contemplating making a shift to sex work. She had friends who'd transferred to sex work and they encouraged her to do the same.

For many transgender people in Thailand, the question is this: why work eight to 10-hour days in a cafe, salon, or restaurant, only to struggle to make ends meet? It’s hard enough to find work as a trans person in Bangkok, even when you're earning peanuts. So Earth decided to give sex work a shot.

“I got into this type of work to provide for my family. Not just my parents, but for my grandparents as well. It’s important for us to know that we can provide for ourselves. We don’t need to rely on anyone else anymore. We make our own money. This job allows that to happen.”

It's clear Earth is intelligent, but even with a strong work ethic and smarts, transgender people have a hard time making a liveable wage in Thailand. And as in most countries, simple economics turns them to prostitution, even if the sex industry is completely unregulated.

Ryan Figueiredo, Founder and Executive Director of Equal Asia (EQUAL AF), an inclusion advocacy organisation, says it’s incredibly important that the rights of trans sex workers are not overlooked, even though sex work is illegal. “The biggest challenge for the LGBTQ community in Asia is ensuring that no one is left behind," he told me. "This includes transgender persons, refugees, persons who sell sex, persons who use drugs, the disabled, the elderly, and others. Our call for action shouldn't be limited to a small set of civil rights for the privileged in our community, but a broader push for sexual citizenship."

In 2016, a study titled Same Same But Different was the first to properly unpack the experiences and dangers for thousands of trans sex workers operating in Thailand. The study compiled material through 60 interviews with transgender sex workers, providing a basis for understanding the unseen vulnerabilities, exploitation, and often physical and sexual abuse transgender sex workers endure on a regular basis.

Researchers found that 81 percent of interviewees turned to sex work due to financial desperation. They also discovered that transgender sex workers were uniquely vulnerable to physical and sexual violence, finding two-thirds of interviewees admitted to being victims of sexual violence within the past year, and one in four had been raped.

When I raised these stats, Earth told me about an experience she'd encountered. It was a guy she agreed to meet who already had a bad reputation in the community. The client wasn’t known to use physical violence, but was instead suspected of intentionally spreading HIV by nipping the top of condoms with a knife. “He would fold and then cut the tips of the condoms to spread the disease, ” she explained, demonstrating how he made the cut with a paper receipt. Then, after sex, she noticed the condoms they'd used were neatly cut across the top. Terrified, she quickly left the room.

After the incident, she immediately visited an anonymous clinic to get the pre-HIV exposure prophylaxis known as PrEP. Since then, she’s become incredibly cautious and inspects every condom before use. “It was really scary, because I knew he would get away with it. I couldn’t go to the police without fear of them coming after me for my work,” she explained.

It’s important to note that it’s not only transgender sex workers who experience marginalization in Thailand. Transgender people in general are persecuted, despite Thailand’s image of being a LGBTQ safe haven. Thailand is often seen as a beacon of inclusivity for the LGBTQ community, especially in comparison to places like Brunei—where the death penalty was recently implemented for anal sex, then rescinded due to international pressure—or in parts of Indonesia—where they still carry out whippings and canings for breaking Sharia laws. But the trans community in Thailand still say they are not truly accepted, just tolerated.

The stigma and marginalization that accompanies working in the sex industry effects boys and men as well, said Celeste McGee, founder of Dton Naam, an organization that focuses on boys and transgender sex workers. “Many cultures view females as 'more vulnerable', whether that implies a belief that girls have a weaker physique, a more timid logic, an expected sensitive persona, or some other contrived fragile flaw,” she told me. But she said this isn't the case at all—and that boys, men, and LGBTQ sex workers are just as susceptible to abuse.

“In a way, boys and transgendered people are actually more vulnerable than girls because they are both so ignored,” she said. But despite the stories of abuse, Earth doesn’t want that to be the image of her work, and she doesn’t want to be pitied either. Although she has plans to save money and open up her own beauty salon one day, she recognizes that sex work as an important mode of survival; a temporary phase where she can be proud to not only support herself, but her entire family.

“I know a lot of foreigners look down on us and don’t like what we do," she says. "But I want them to know that we’re also trying to provide for our families as best as we can. Our work shouldn’t be looked down on. We do it to support our ourselves and our families.”

Ladyboy Sex Industry Sexual Health Tips If you happen to live in Thailand or are planning on visiting the country you might want to sample some of the Ladyboy Nightlife. If sex is on your mind with some of these sexy working ladyboys then this post might give you some tips on how to protect yourself from sexual transmitted diseases while on your stay. First, let me state that I am not a doctor and am only writing this post to help educate you a little more about how things work here in one of the Ladyboy capitals of the world. Through my experience and self-study I think I have a strong grasp on STDs in Thailand but certainly I am not an expert. If you feel like you might have a condition then I would visit your doctor and not try to find a solution on the Internet or avoid it. Doctors have seen it all before so do not by shy, just go and get it taken care of. Sometimes what you think is an STD is not an STD at all. Even if it happens to be an STD then taking care of it the correct way can either cure it or manage it.

The term bareback or barebacking often comes up when talking about ladyboys in the sex industry. You see it on adult sites, forums and chats and that is the first point I will bring up today. For those that are unfamiliar with the term bareback it basically means having anal or vaginal sex without a condom. I am not here to preach on how you should conduct your sexual activities but just going to state some obvious facts. Obviously, using a condom will decrease the chances of developing an STD, is it 100% protection? It certainly is not but it does give you a nice barrier and line of defense to increase your overall protection.

Ladyboys in the sex industry in Thailand can have a lot of sexual partners. In fact I have talked to ladyboys working at popular bars and they can easily have 5 to 10 customers in one day during busy tourist periods. That is a lot of men with unknown sexual histories having sex with the Ladyboy that you decided to choose. Many ladyboys will not tell you that and say you are the first customer they have had in weeks or they are new to the bar and not go with foreign man before. If you question them on their health they will say they are in good health but take note that all of these answers can easily be lies. Most ladyboys at some point have barebacked in their sex industry career. It could have been a man that demanded it and they wanted the money, a past foreign boyfriend, a Thai boyfriend or even because they wanted to. Does that mean every Ladyboy has an STD? Of course that is not true but you have to be aware that most of the working girls are exposed to a lot of sexual partners and they are a high risk sexual partner.

A Ladyboy could say directly to your face that she always uses condom and in some cases that might be true but I would say there is a high majority that have had sex without a condom before. A rule of thumb I personal use is that every Ladyboy has barebacked in her sex career, though it might not be totally true it reminds me to always use a condom.

So here are some tips about some of the main STDs that you should be looking out for.

1. Gonorrhea and Chlamydia – Both of these STDs are probably the most common ones you might get by having unprotected sex. you can get it both from intercourse and from oral sex. They are usually quite easy to cure with antibiotics and not a huge worry of concern if you get one of them. Of course if you are taking antibiotics a lot you might form a resistance to the drug and will have to switch to other antibiotics alternatives. There are also some rare strains of this STD that might be harder to cure but for the most part a round of medicine usually will cure this. Using a condom for both oral and intercourse will seriously reduce your chances of getting these STDs.

2. Herpes – Herpes is usually broken down into two types. You have HSV-1 which is oral herpes and HSV-2 which is genital herpes. Many people in the world already have oral herpes and even those that do not show the signs might still have the disease and have the ability to pass it on to others. Have you ever had a cold sore, the sore that usually forms outside your lips? well that is oral herpes. During an outbreak especially when the sore breaks open and releases fluid is the most infectious time, that goes with Genital Herpes as well. If a person is having an outbreak of oral herpes then they can give you genital herpes if they perform oral sex on you. Once again condoms will help protect you here but if you see a Ladyboy with sores on either her lips or genital area then it would probably be best to avoid having sex with that Ladyboy. Once you have Herpes you have it for life but outbreaks usually decrease each year and can heal faster with medication, creams and living a healthy lifestyle. One should definitely avoid sexual activities during an outbreak.

3. Genital Warts – Warts are another STD that can occur during sexual intercourse. Usually, appearing around the genital area or anal area when it comes in contact with someone who is infected. Once again a condom can help protect you but skin on skin contact can sometimes be hard to avoid. If you see a Ladyboy with warts in that area then it would be something to avoid. You can’t always see the warts either as they can be quite small on some people or even when there is not an outbreak there is a chance you can still get it from someone, though the chances are reduced when there is not an outbreak. Genital Warts is also a STD that you will usually have for life but once again outbreaks can be less frequent with healthy lifestyle and taking the correct medicine and creams if an outbreak occurs.

4. HIV/AIDS – Though not the death sentence that this STD used to be it certainly is still one of the most feared. HIV is transferred from blood to blood transmission. Usually from intercourse or sharing needles such as drug users. Anal sex is a higher risk for blood transmission as the anal area is more prone to tearing during Intercourse. There is also a chance for HIV to be transferred through oral sex such as through cuts in the mouth but the chances are very low and in fact many studies seem to suggest that it is almost impossible. If you happen to have unprotected sex with a person with HIV then that does not mean you will get the disease right away, it is still difficult for the transmission of blood to blood to actually succeed but not wearing a condom obviously increases your risk. Also, being the TOP (the one doing the penetrating) rather than the Bottom (the one receiving the penis) also decreases the chance of transmission.

There are several more STDs that you can contract when not conducting safe practices and you should familiarize yourself with them before you decide to have sex with a Ladyboy sex worker. Condoms can help reduce transmission rates by quite a lot but condoms are not 100% as some STDs can be passed through skin to skin contact and there is also the chance that a condom breaks during intercourse. One thing I like to mention about HIV is if you feel like you have been exposed to the virus there is a period of 72 hours where you can actually take medicine that will help kill the virus before it gets a chance to fully invade your system.

This period of time is called PEP or POST-EXPOSURE PROPHYLAXIS and basically you take the same anti-viral medication that HIV patients take day to day. You take these drugs usually for 4 weeks and if you were exposed to the virus the drugs have a high success rate of killing the virus but it is not 100%. Also, if you feel you were exposed and decide that PEP is warranted then the faster you start the medication the better. I mentioned you have up to 72 hours to start taking the medicine after you have been exposed but it is much better to start the treatment as early as you can, don’t delay.
If you want to learn more about POST-EXPOSURE PROPHYLAXIS then just do some Internet searching to give youself more knowledge or talk to a health professional. The medication taken during PEP can have a lot of side effects and can be hard on a lot of people, also there is a chance you never had HIV in the first place so it is hard to say if the medicine worked in the first place or if your initial exposure failed to infect you in the first place. In any case do not think that PEP is a cure for HIV, it is a prevented measure if you have been exposed to the virus and does not always succeed in stopping the virus.

So have I scared you from having sex with ladyboys in the sex industry? Well that was not my full intention it was just to educate you on what might happen and if you are careless and how the chances of an STD can be increased. I want to stress that not all ladyboys have an STD but due to the nature of their business the chances are much higher. This goes for the gender girls and men working in the sex industry as well, it is not just a Ladyboy issue.

So some points that might help you when you are interested in having sex with a Ladyboy:

1. Condoms will decrease your chances of an STD but are not 100%
2. Some STDs can be transmitted from skin to skin contact
3. Ladyboys might lie about their sexual history
4. Ladyboys can have several sex partners of unknown sexual histories
5. Some STDs can be cured completely with medicine while others can only be controlled
6. Make sure your condoms are in good shape, not expired or crushed in your pocket for example
7. If you see sores, warts, unusual rashes on a Ladyboy then perhaps be best to avoid them.
8, If a person has oral herpes (cold sores) they can transfer genital herpes to you during oral sex
9. If a Ladyboy will not let you see a part of her body, she could be hiding an STD

Many ladyboys do get routine blood checks at local clinics usually through a quick test. These tests usually give pretty good results but are less accurate then getting a full blood work at a hospital. Also remember there is a three month window for HIV where sometimes the virus can’t be detected. That is why most hospitals recommend you check your blood up to 3 months to make sure that the virus is not in your system. If you have not had unprotected sex for 3 months and get a blood test usually that test will be 100% accurate.

So there you have it, a little post about STD in Thailand but really should be applied almost everywhere in the world. As I stated before I am not a doctor nor am I telling you what to do when it comes to sex. Just be aware what is out there, how you get it and what to do if you happen to be exposed. You can easily have a great time with sexy ladyboys and avoid all these problems with just being smart and using common sense.

Huge transsexual prostitute brawl sees hundred-strong 'ladyboy' mob fighting in Bangkok turf war, with escorts clambering over each other to tear off rivals' clothes and throw punches.

Trans prostitutes from the Philippines and Thai ladyboys brawled in Bangkok. More than a hundred local sex workers descended on the city's red light district. Local cops were caught up in the massive brawl.

This is the astonishing moment police were caught up in a mass brawl between Filipino transgender prostitutes and Thai ladyboys over a turf war in Bangkok's red light district.

Officers were called on Monday night when more than 100 local sex workers converged on a hotel being used by sex workers from the Philippines on the city's Sukhumvit Road, part of a sprawling area of gogo bars, street workers and massage parlours.

Footage shows how the first sex worker was dragged from the Citin Sukhumvit 11 hotel, accused of being part of a group that clashed with the locals and stole their customers the night before.

However, the local ladyboys erupted in fury when they saw their alleged attackers - sparking chaotic scenes that escalated into a mass brawl.

In the video, stilettos fly as local transgender women are seen hitting police, climbing on buildings, stamping on other girls, throwing objects, and even having their clothes torn off.

The clash reportedly continued at the local Lumpini district police station, where the Filipino transgender women were reportedly detained for working without the necessary visas and permits.

Police Colonel Yingyot Suwanno, superintendent of Lumpini Police Station, said: 'Upon receiving the report that a large number of transgender workers were gathering, police were dispatched to provide security at the location in Soi Sukhumvit 11 to prevent further violence.

'Officers were armed as is normal procedure. They handled the situation well and kept the crowd under control.

'Those involved were summoned to the police station for questioning. We assured everyone there will be fairness and we will make judgments accordingly.

'We are currently questioning the suspects, some of those who complained, and we will summon anyone else who has been identified, for further interrogations.

'We asked the group of transgender women who gathered at the station to return home, and they eventually complied.'

Bangkok has been home to the world's cheapest and most colorful red light areas since the 1960s when American troops had military bases in Thailand. Many GIs opened bars in the Patpong district and the city now has tens of thousands of strip clubs, gogo bars, massage shops, and street prostitutes.

Despite claiming that prostitution is 'illegal', those inside the industry - including many British expats who run bars - operate with impunity due to regular payments to police, while sex workers from around the world now converge on the city to cash in on randy holidaymakers.

Transgender Military Service in the United States This study uses data from several sources to estimate the number of transgender people who have served in the U.S. armed forces. Estimates are provided for those who are on active duty or serving in the Guard or Reserve forces, and the number who are veterans or retired from Guard or Reserve service.

Introduction

This research brief offers analyses from several data sources to estimate the number of transgender individuals who have served in the US armed forces, including the number who are likely on active duty or serving in the Guard or Reserve forces, and the number who are veterans or retired from Guard or Reserve service.

On September 20, 2011, the military policy known as “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” (DADT) ended, allowing gay, lesbian, and bisexual service members to serve openly. Yet, military medical policies still exclude transgender people from serving openly in the US armed forces.1 These medical policies lay out exclusions for what are deemed to be “psychosexual disorders,” including transsexualism, cross-dressing, or a history of gender transition.2 Therefore, transgender individuals who wish to join the US armed forces are prohibited from doing so if their transgender status is known. Furthermore, those already serving can be medically discharged if suspected of being transgender.

Our estimates suggest that approximately 15,500 transgender individuals are serving on active duty or in the Guard or Reserve forces. We also estimate that there are an estimated 134,300 transgender individuals who are veterans or are retired from Guard or Reserve service.

Data and methodology

The primary data source for the estimates of transgender military service is the National Transgender Discrimination Survey (NTDS), which was conducted by the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force and the National Center for Transgender Equality.3 This 70-item survey was distributed in cooperation with over 900 organizations across the United States and also was announced through listservs and online communities. It was made available both online and on paper in English and Spanish. The survey was fielded over six months beginning in fall 2008 and resulted in 6,546 valid responses, which is the largest sample of transgender people in the US to date.4 Respondents answered questions about a broad array of topics, including whether they had served in the US armed forces in the following question:

Have you ever been a member of the armed forces? Yes Or No ?

I was denied entry because I am transgender/gender non-conforming
As a purposive sample of transgender adults in the US, estimates derived directly from the NTDS could be biased if the true demographic characteristics of the transgender population differ from the characteristics of transgender respondents to the survey. For example, relative to the US population, NTDS respondents are younger and report higher levels of education. Both factors would be associated with lower levels of lifetime military service. Given the lack of demographic data on the transgender population derived from population-based sources, it is not possible to determine if the age and educational attainment levels of NTDS respondents are different from the general US population because younger and more educated transgender individuals were more likely than others to have completed the survey (known as selection bias) or if transgender individuals are, in fact, younger and more likely to have higher levels of education compared to the general population.5

More than 93% of NTDS respondents provided information using an online web-based survey. Samples from online surveys are often biased toward more educated respondents. Reisner and colleagues (2014) found that NTDS respondents who used paper survey forms tended to report lower income and educational levels.6 It is possible that the web-based approach of the NTDS contributed to selection bias toward higher education, which would result in a bias toward lower military service.

To address these possible biases, the estimates of military service among the transgender population in these analyses adjust the characteristics of NTDS respondents such that they have the age and educational attainment patterns of the US population. Military service rates also differ by race and ethnicity. Unfortunately, the race and ethnicity categories used in the NTDS are not consistent with those used in Census Bureau surveys. Educational attainment, like race and ethnicity, captures some of the variations in socio-economic status which may contribute to differences in military service rates.

This adjustment effectively assumes that being transgender is not associated with age or educational attainment. It also leads to estimates of military service rates for the transgender population that are slightly higher than the unadjusted calculations from the NTDS, which includes younger and more educated individuals who are less likely to report military service than older or less educated individuals. Alternatively, if the NTDS age and educational patterns are actually reflective of the transgender population in the US, then the adjustment procedure would produce estimates of transgender military service that may be higher than true military service rates among transgender individuals.

Population age and educational attainment data are derived from analyses of the US Census Bureau’s 2011 American Community Survey.

The estimation procedure also assumes that NTDS respondents who report that they were assigned male at birth share the age and educational attainment patterns of the adult male population in the US while NTDS respondents that were assigned female at birth share the patterns of the adult female population. We make this assumption and report differences based on the sex assigned at birth because it is likely that most transgender veterans and service members would have entered and served in the military according to their sex assigned at birth. Estimates for the total number of transgender individuals who are currently or have ever served in the military are derived separately for those assigned male at birth (approximately 60% of the total NTDS sample) and those assigned female at birth (approximately 40% of the total NTDS sample).

Men are substantially more likely than women to serve in the US military. The estimates of transgender military service assume that, consistent with findings from the NTDS, approximately 60% of the transgender population was assigned male at birth while 40% was assigned female at birth. If, in fact, the transgender population is comprised of a larger portion of individuals assigned male at birth, then the estimation procedure likely understates transgender military service. Conversely, if those assigned female at birth are actually a larger proportion of the transgender population, then the estimation procedure may overstate transgender military service.

The estimation begins by calculating the percent of NTDS respondents who report military service by their age and educational attainment status. Respondents are separated into five age categories and five educational attainment categories as follows.

The percent of NTDS respondents who report service in the armed forces is calculated for those in each age/education category (milae). Data from the 2011 American Community Survey Public Use Microdata Sample (ACS PUMS) are used to calculate the percent of adults age 18 and older who are within each age and education category (Pae).

The adjusted estimate for transgender military service MILadj determines what the military service patterns of NTDS respondents (separated by sex assigned at birth) would be if they had the same age and educational attainment levels of the male and female population in the US by calculating a weighted average as follows.

In the US, approximately 5.8% of all adults who have ever served in the armed forces are currently on active duty and 4.4% are now serving in the Guard or Reserve. An estimated 86.8% are veterans who served on active duty in the past and 3.0% are retired from Guard or Reserve service.7 The number of transgender adults in each category is estimated by applying these same proportions to the estimated number of transgender individuals who report any service in the armed forces.

Transgender military service

Analyses of the unadjusted NTDS data show that 29.6% of respondents assigned male at birth reported that they have served in the armed forces along with 6.0% of those assigned female at birth. In total, 20% of NTDS respondents reported some type of military service.

Assuming NTDS reported rates of military service are true of the transgender population in the US, Figure 2 shows adjusted estimates of military service for the transgender population (separated by sex assigned at birth) and for adult men and women in the US. When figures are adjusted such that the age and educational patterns of the US adult male and female population are applied to the NTDS sample, an estimated 21.4% of transgender individuals have served in the military. The adjusted estimates suggest that 32.0% of those assigned male at birth and 5.5% of those assigned female at birth have served.

By comparison, approximately 10.7% of adults in the US have served. This implies that transgender individuals are about twice as likely as adults in the US to have served their country in the armed forces. Transgender individuals assigned female at birth are nearly three times more likely than all adult women and those assigned male at birth are 1.6 times more likely than all adult men to serve.

Gates (2011) estimates that approximately 700,000 adults in the US are transgender.8 If, like in the NTDS, this group is 60% male assigned at birth and 40% female assigned at birth, then the estimates above imply that there are approximately 150,000 transgender adults in the US who are now serving or who have served in the armed forces.

In the US, 5.4% of men who report any military service are on active duty along with 9.8% of women. Applying these figures to the estimates of transgender military service would imply that approximately 8,800 transgender individuals are currently on active duty, of whom nearly 7,300 are assigned male at birth and about 1,500 are assigned female at birth. The estimates also suggest that 6,700 transgender individuals are serving in the Guard or Reserve forces, of whom 5,300 are assigned male at birth and 1,400 are assigned female at birth.

The estimates also suggest that there are more than 134,000 transgender individuals in the US who are veterans or have retired from Guard or Reserve service.

These estimates imply that approximately 0.6% of adults who report service in the armed forces are transgender.

Discussion

Data that allow for a direct tabulation of the number of transgender individuals who serve in the US military simply do not exist. The estimates in this research brief rely on a variety of assumptions that could affect their accuracy.

Men are more likely to serve in the military than are women. If individuals assigned male at birth are, in fact, more than 60% of the transgender population, then transgender military service is likely understated in these estimates. Conversely, if those assigned female at birth represent more than 40% of the transgender population, then estimates of transgender military service are likely overstated.

The estimates also assume that the transgender population shares the age and educational attainment characteristics of the US population. If the true transgender population is younger and more educated than the US population (consistent with the NTDS sample), then the estimates could be overstating transgender military service.

Despite these possible biases, the estimates certainly suggest that transgender individuals are part of the US armed forces, perhaps in portions that exceed that of the general population.
There is other evidence that transgender individuals represent a larger portion of those in the military than their proportion among adults in the US population. In a survey of transgender people assigned male at birth, Shipherd et al. found that 30 percent had served in the military, which is similar to military service among transgender people assigned male at birth in the NTDS. A recent study by Blosnich et al. reviewed all health records of veterans receiving health care through the Veterans Health Administration (VHA) from 2000 through 2011 and found a prevalence of Gender Identity Disorder (GID) five times that of the US general population.10 Though individuals with GID diagnoses may or may not identify as transgender, the substantially higher prevalence of GID among veterans in the VHA system provides further evidence that transgender people are over-represented in the US military.

This video opened my eyes to a reality I never imagined could be real. It also made me realize the importance of adoption. Powerful video. Thank you, Exotic. Wishing you love, stability, and new life from now on. I see the views on this video and can't help but wonder: Does some of the adsense income generated from this video go to getting her help, rehab, child support, street protection, etc.?

When we talk about being a “prostitute” at 13 years old - we are actually talking about a child who has been a victim of child sexual exploitation. We should be making this clear in our terminology. A pimp is an organized criminal who should be prosecuted and the clients jailed. Children cannot consent when they are being enforced to do something. Hoping she can find the help/support she needs to find freedom from this oppression!

I came from a wonderful family. Fell into prostitution and stripped for 20 years. Drugs alcohol total insanity. Raped, bitten, lit on fire, beat up, guns to my head and knives to my throat and left for dead. It's a life that just gradually happened to me and then it was the norm. I was able to switch off emotions whenever I needed to. I had a madam for years until I went out on my own. Lived that life for 20 years. Thank God I survived. Now I am a proud woman in recovery and I wouldn't change a thing about my past. I get her totally.

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Ladyboys (Thai Trans Prostitutes)-Natty and Muk - https://youtu.be/bfGJ2_QUkbI?si=NETOCKuA6e7_b9jG - Soft White Underbelly interview and portrait of Natty and Muk, transgender prostitutes in Bangkok, Thailand.

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Pandemic Of The Unvaccinated People Will Threaten The Live Of Vaccinated People? - https://rumble.com/v2qf2nk-pandemic-of-the-unvaccinated-people-will-threaten-the-live-of-vaccinated-pe.html

You Will Never Trust Another Celebrity After Watching This Corrupt U.S.A. Governments - https://rumble.com/v2kq5mw-you-will-never-trust-another-celebrity-after-watching-this-corrupt-u.s.a.-g.html

Maxine Waters, Antifa-BLM, God Bless America's Blacks Killing Blacks Candace Owen - https://rumble.com/v3bvmo1-maxine-waters-antifa-blm-god-bless-americas-blacks-killing-blacks-candace-o.html

Why Federal Police, State Police, Local Police Some Are Bad This Federal Propaganda - https://rumble.com/v2ndh2g-why-federal-police-state-police-local-police-some-are-bad-this-federal-prop.html

Why Are Police In The USA So Terrified? What’s the difference between Federal Police, State Police, and Local Police? This video will answer that question for you!

We The People Of The New World Order Year Zero Thank You Let's Stop All Wars Now - https://rumble.com/v3omcs3-we-the-people-of-the-new-world-order-year-zero-thank-you-lets-stop-all-wars.html

U.S.A. Drug Enforcement Administration & Department of Justice With Help From FBI & CIA & Local Police And Sheriff Dept. All Over U.S.A. Our Killing Thousands America Citizens Right Now Today. No One Is A Missing Person At All. If You Get Pulled Over By Police States In A Car Or Truck With Money You Have A 20% Change You Will Be Killed For The Money Or Sold As A Sex Slave. This Statement Is No Joke At All... You Will Be Killed By U.S.A. Government And Yes This Is Real Information From New World Order Today.

Reports suggest that the government has lost track of 85,000 sex slave and migrant children, and some of them are dead now and many have been forced into sex labor in the U.S. The Biden administration has allowed 250,000 and sold unaccompanied minors to cross the southern border in the last two years, and at least 85,000+ of these children have gone missing under their watch real numbers are closer to 132,000+ sold by U.S.A. Government. The Biden Pedophile's Administration has been accused of killing and rape children presiding over the abuse of these unaccompanied minors in federal facilities for years, and local communities are left in the dark about the minors' length of stay or their fate once released. Congress is investigating this issue, and hearings are expected to be part of a series of congressional efforts.

U.S.A. Government & Police States Are Seizing Tens Of Billions U.S. Money And Killing Of Thousands People Our Killed Or Missing Or Dead And All The Money Is Gone Now. Highway robbery with badges. That is what Empyreal Logistics, a national armored car company, has been the victim of multiple times within the last year. Five times, drivers with the company have been pulled over for flimsy reasons with officers seizing the cash they were transporting on behalf of customers a total of three times.

Per DOA-DOJ-FBI-CIA-Etc. Every U.S.A. Person Or America Citizens Right Now Today As of Oct 2023 Need To Be In Jail Or Pay $$$ Fines Now. Per federal and local agencies. All The America People Break The Law Ave. 3 Times Everyday with A Ave. Fine of $512 dollars a day. it add up to 512 x 365 days a year add up to $186,880 Dollars per year in fines per person right now. also federal and local agencies issue an average of 27 rules for every law over the past decade.

However, the rules issued in a given year are typically not substantively related to the current year’s laws, as agency output represents ongoing implementation of earlier legislation. According to a 2020 article, the more than 300,000+ laws and regulatory crimes on the federal law books serve little purpose other than inviting arbitrary enforcement by providing prosecutors the tools to charge nearly anyone with violating some long-forgotten regulation and pay the fines now or go to jail for everyone in the U.S.A..

A Teen who claims to be "gender neutral" is to have her 30D breasts removed to eradicate her female features. Opi Baron, 19, has planned drastic surgery to have her breast tissue removed and become completely flat-chested. She said: "You are brought up and taught from a young age that there is only 'boy' and 'girl' and just two boxes that you can fit into but that's not the case. "Instead of it being black or white, male or female, it's like there are a whole range of shades in the middle which is where I am.
"If you saw me in person I have feminine traits but I have abandoned the attempts to fit into that box of being female." Opi, of St Neots, Cambs, has a form of Gender dysphoria where a person experiences distress because there is a mismatch between their biological sex and gender identity.

Despite being raised a girl, and having been with her boyfriend Phill Abbott for the past year, the 19-year-old is non-binary - meaning she identifies as neither a man nor a woman.

Speaking on her relationship with Phill, a pharmaceutical salesman, Opi said: "The narrow-minded attitude of a large degree of people out stands me because there are many more sexualities than 'straight' or 'homosexual'.

"There's nothing out of the ordinary in my relationship, we do everything that everybody else does."

The teenager is now looking to raise at least £6,000 to pay for the surgery. It would remove her breast tissue but Opi would keep her glands so that she could breast feed in the future if she decides to have children.

Opi, a data entry clerk for the NHS, added: "I'm already excited to take the bandages off. I haven't got my procedure secured and I'm already excited about the 'after' moments.

"Phill being a man said he liked my boobs but if I didn't want them he was fine with that. He is more concerned about me being happy."

We Hope This Video Will Help Someone Girl and Teen and Woman Before Getting Surgery For Your Breast Removal... Thanks

Female-to-Male Top Surgery Cost & Procedure Information
The female-to-male transsexual in Atlanta often desires an aesthetically pleasing male chest as his first and arguably most important surgical procedure to continue the gender transition. This Female-to-Male (FTM) or gender reassignment surgery (GRS) allows the patient to live more easily in the male gender role and facilitates a real-life experience. Top Surgery includes bilateral mastectomy (removal of the breasts) and male chest contouring and is one of the most frequent female to male surgeries performed. Top Surgery is also sometimes referred to as male chest reconstruction or simply, chest surgery. The female to male breast removal surgery removes almost all of the breast tissue and greatly reduces, almost eliminating, the possibility of developing breast cancer. Mammograms are no longer recommended after he transitions FTM. We perform gender transition surgery for patients in Atlanta and surrounding suburbs near Marietta, Cumming, Kennesaw, and Alpharetta.

Female-to-Male Transition Top Surgery
The female-to-male breast surgery is known as a subcutaneous mastectomy and there are several techniques that are used. The patient's breast size and body build determine which technique is ideal for him. On occasion, when breasts are so large as to cause severe and incapacitating back, neck, and shoulder pain, the breast reduction procedure may be a covered service by your insurance policy. We can help you determine if you have these benefits in your plan.

For some doctors performing the female to male transition surgery, the mastectomy is done in two steps, first, the contents of the breast are removed. The surgeon removes the contents through either a cut inside the areola or around it, and then let the skin retract for about a year. After a year the second surgery removes the excess skin. This technique results in far less scarring, and the nipple-areola doesn't need to be removed and grafted. I have developed my own unique female to male breast augmentation procedure because the existing procedures didn't fully address the needs of my patient. It is called the "Comma Procedure" because of the shape of the surgical scar resembles a comma. I take each and every individual's needs and unique attributes into consideration when planning out their procedure to make sure their gender transition surgery goes beyond their expectations.

Male-to-Female Transition Top Surgery
The male-to-female transsexual generally has worn external breast prostheses for several years prior to making a decision to have breast augmentation surgery. She has developed a very accurate image of the size breast that looks best on her body which makes the decision of choosing the proper implant size much easier than for the usual small-breasted woman requesting breast augmentation.

We provide breast augmentation surgery as well for the MTF transition. During your initial consultation, Dr. will review your medical history and answer any questions you may have. You will need to make decisions on breast size (cup size), on the type and shape of implants you will receive, and on the location of your incisions. Dr. will ask you for your personal preferences so he can recommend the right implant size and shape for you. You will also be able to try on breast implant sizers to help you with your decision on breast augmentation surgery.

You may choose either silicone or saline implants. Silicone implants are made from a gel that holds together uniformly while retaining the natural give that resembles breast tissue. Saline implants are filled with a saltwater solution similar to the fluid that makes up most of the human body and has a slightly firmer feel.

Male-to-Neutrois Top Surgery
MTN or Male to Neutrois transition refers to individuals who have been identified at birth to have male genitalia, but whose personal identity falls outside of the binary male gender they've been assigned to. Neutrois is best understood as a non-binary gender that doesn't identify as singularly male or female. Dr. has experience working with individuals to shape their chest to be more gender neutral.

Female-to-Neutrois Top Surgery
FTN or Femail to Neutrois transition refers to individuals who have been identified at birth to have female genitalia. These individual's personal identity falls outside of the binary female gender they've been assigned to. To transition to a non-binary gender, our FTN clients normally want to remove their breasts and shape their chest to be more gender neutral.

How Much Does A Transgender Mastectomy Cost?
The Mastectomy procedure can cost anywhere from $8400 - $8600. The actual costs will be determined after we understand your individual needs and wants for the procedure. We understand plastic surgery is an investment and want all of our clients to pursue it with as much knowledge as possible. Schedule a consultation to meet with Dr. to learn more about the plastic surgery procedures you’re interested in and get a specific quote.

Why do so many teenage girls want to change gender?
In the last 10 years, there has been an extraordinary increase in teenagers seeking to transition from female to male. What's behind it—and has the NHS been too quick to find a solution?

Teenagers looking to transition often describe themselves as having been born in the wrong body. It is commonly acknowledged that while biological sex is genetically determined, gender is a social construct. A human being cannot—and should not—be reduced to their biology, or indeed their genitals, because psychologically we are as much a product of the way that other people treat us as we are of our genetic inheritance. Homo sapiens are social creatures: our ability to cooperate is what gave us the evolutionary upper hand over our stronger Neanderthal cousins.

Without parents, siblings, peers, colleagues, friends and lovers our idea of ourselves would remain ill-defined—we wouldn’t know who we were. Imagine you were raised by wolves in a cave—let’s call you Mowgli—but then later met another human of the opposite sex. You would notice the physiological differences. But as to interpreting those differences, where would you start? Without being exposed to the concept of “man” or “woman”—let alone “laddish” or “girly”—you’d lack any mental map to provide the pointers to the typically “male” and “female” behaviour instilled in us by human society. Precisely because gender is a social construct, the evolution of its boundaries and meanings will tell us something fundamental about our society. And gender-wise something really big is going on in the UK—but it’s not the big something you might think.

Transsexuality is a talking point like never before, and a glance at the figures sheds some light on why. The number of children, in particular, being referred to the Tavistock and Portman Foundation Trust’s gender identity development service (Gids)—the NHS service through which all UK candidates for a sex change under 18 are funnelled—is up from 77 in 2009 to 2,590 in 2018-9. But what’s almost as dramatic as the headline numbers are developments in who is transitioning. In November 2017, the Guardian reported that 70 per cent of referrals were female. This was a surprising statistic because only 10 years previously the overall ratio had been more like 75 per cent males seeking to be female, and indeed it is still the gender traffic in that direction that dominates the increasingly noisy, divisive and panic-inflected debate.

Recently, though, alarm bells have begun to ring among a handful of psychiatric professionals about the number of teenage girls arriving at the Tavistock’s door and the nature of their treatment. Right now a legal case is being brought by Susan Evans, a former psychiatric nurse at the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust, alongside a parent of an autistic female child wishing to transition to be male, arguing that children are not legally capable of consenting to a gender transition. November last year saw the launch of the Detransition Advocacy Network, a UK group numbering several hundred members. And in January, the NHS announced an independent review into puberty suppressants and cross-sex hormone treatments, to be chaired by Hilary Cass, formerly president of the Royal College of Paediatrics and Child Health. But until the end of 2019, you could be forgiven for thinking that a panic about trans women using the “wrong” toilet cubicles was the biggest gender issue of the day (instead of something that could be easily solved by affording everyone the same privacy).

Whenever the issue flares up politically—as when the Labour leadership candidates were asked to sign a pledge that labelled trans rights sceptics as “hate groups,” or the Scottish government proposed reforms to allow a change of legal gender without a medical diagnosis of gender dysphoria—it always seems to come back to loos and changing rooms. These vitriolic debates keep bubbling up—especially online. But there is a much bigger scandal brewing than any Twitterstorm. While there have been a great many thoughtful doctors at the Tavistock, the picture is sometimes disturbing. Marcus Evans, a psychotherapist and former governor of the Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust, resigned in February 2019, citing an institutional rush to prescribe puberty-blocking hormone treatment to children questioning their gender and who may wish to transition. “The Tavistock is behaving recklessly with these kids who are in a distressed state,” he claims.

What’s especially odd about the alleged rush to prescribe rather than consider alternatives, he argues, is that this clinic’s international reputation was built on the quality of its talking therapy. “Over the last five to 10 years there has been a complete change in the profile of the people presenting,” says Evans. “These children believe that they are in the wrong body and they are very persistent and forceful in saying that they want a solution—and that that is physical intervention. But I’ve been in psychiatry for 40 years and when people are in a distressed state they often narrow things down and fix on one thing as a solution, putting pressure on clinicians for a magic bullet.” In psychiatry “generally,” he says, the aim is to “open things out,” and take the time to ask questions about “what is going on.” After all, “adolescence is a moving picture. We move through experimenting with different identities as our bodies change and our role in society changes. An individual has to tolerate a -certain amount of confusion and anxiety and we should be able to help with that through therapy.”

But when it comes to “the Tavistock’s gender identity service,” he says, “this work has not been done… the entire area has become unnecessarily politicised.” It is undeniable that trans people have faced discrimination and abuse from those who don’t understand their experiences. A vocal rights lobby is quick to push back against transphobia—both real and perceived. Sometimes, though, legitimate challenges tip over into intimidation. An American academic, Lisa Littman, encountered strenuous opposition when she published an article that coined the term “rapid onset gender dysphoria.” She lost a consultancy job, though remained an assistant professor at Brown University School of Public Health. Littman identified knots of socially-awkward girls drawn together in online chat rooms who reinforced each other’s self-diagnosis of being transgender before presenting to medical professionals. She had been led there by research involving the parents of some of these children, who had mentioned that their offspring had friends who also identified as transgender.

(The US is experiencing a similar shift towards female transitioners, as are Finland, Canada and the Netherlands among others.) Along with Marcus Evans, Littman has pointed to a high incidence of autism and eating disorders among the same patients who present as trans. That observation raises some obvious questions about the narrowness of an approach that fixates on hormonal treatment for gender dysphoria. The Tavistock pushes back against accusations that it is too quick to assume its patients are transgender and to provide hormones. “Our work with young people is not to affirm or deny,” they told me. “We respect children and young people’s sense of themselves and our assessment process considers gender identity development within the context of a psychological, biological, developmental and social framework, meaning that it is designed to give assessors a broad picture of the young person’s past and current gender identification.”

Their work, they went on, is “cautious” and “considered” and whatever clinical interventions they do undertake are “laid out in nationally-set service specifications.” Hormone blockers are prescribed. But surgery cannot be performed until the age of 18. Anna Hutchinson, who worked at the Tavistock until 2017 as a clinical psychologist and who is now in private practice, isn’t convinced. She believes there is an uncritical “affirmation” of gender dysphoria and the Tavistock is not as “cautious” as it should be. “The young people are making sense of themselves in the best way they can,” she tells me. “They often aren’t aware of anything other than the affirmative approach for managing gender dysphoria.” If they heard “different points of view,” they might be better placed to make “balanced and informed decisions about what they need,” she suggests. She describes a rush to treat: “

Affirmation involves a quick assessment and then you get them into the medical system, on to hormone blockers if this is age appropriate. The next step is cross-sex hormones with their irreversible effects. Nearly 100 per cent make that journey once they start on the blockers.” Hutchinson suggested that I look at an advisory organisation called the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH), alleging that its “best-practice” guidelines in this field, which have been adhered to internationally and spread through professional development courses for practitioners, have often been activist-led rather than evidence-led. Critics charge that senior members of WPATH have been behaving as advocates for transsexuality, rather than dispassionate advisers on mental health. Indeed, such advocacy is included in WPATH’s mission statement.

The WPATH guidelines say that “children as young as two may show features that could indicate gender dysphoria. They may… prefer clothes, toys and games that are commonly associated with the other sex and may prefer playing with other-sex peers.” A very distinct perspective is on show here: one that venerates individual feelings of identity, and yet also regards the social categories of gender with such solemnity that a girl toddler’s fondness for toy tractors is now seen as a marker of dysphoria. There is little room for interrogating either the feelings or the categories: it’s the biology that needs to change. The guidelines add: “Treatment aimed at trying to change a person’s gender identity and expression to become more congruent with sex assigned at birth has been attempted in the past without success…

Such treatment is no longer considered ethical.” While the WPATH guidelines counsel against pathologising gender dysphoria, these guidelines arguably have the effect of pathologising the natal sex of the person in question. WPATH has the level of influence that it does, it has been suggested to me, because until the sudden increase in numbers of people questioning their gender no one paid much attention. WPATH began as the Harry Benjamin International Gender Dysphoria Association in 1979, when there might only have been a few hundred patients a year presenting in the UK and these tended to be adult males. Each could be dealt with on a case-by-case basis. Given the vast and rapid increase in the number of people wanting to change gender, there is bound to be a danger that discretion goes out of the window, and “guidelines” become rigid rules. (WPATH did not respond to questions.) “The WPATH guidelines may have had the effect of de-skilling professionals who have been trained to provide therapy,” says Hutchinson, adding that in Gids the clinic simply “can’t” provide the traditional therapy for which the Tavistock is known, and which medics from across the country might expect when they refer patients here. Hutchinson points to Gids’s own service specification (which doesn’t include talking therapy as a long-term treatment option) and a memorandum about conversion therapy published by the UK Council for Psychotherapy in 2017.

Along with the influence of WPATH it is, I think, the missing piece of the jigsaw that reveals how the “affirmation” approach to gender reassignment has become the norm in the UK. “Different issues may have been conflated, despite the best of intentions,” explains Hutchinson. She argues that a “false equivalence” has been drawn between pro-active conversion therapy for sexuality, where clinicians attempt to alter patients’ sexual responses, and talking people into becoming more comfortable with their bodies. Non-medical therapy for people with gender dysphoria has come to be seen as effectively trying to argue them out of identifying as transgender, as people were once convinced that they shouldn’t be gay. But the distinction between medical acts and medical omissions has been lost somewhere here, a serious matter in a profession whose traditional starting point has been “First, do no harm.” (The Tavistock responds: “We operate with no preconceptions and outcomes for any given young person.”) Traditional ideas about the physician assessing the patient in the round also seem at risk of being forgotten. “We generally don’t talk about the relevance of the incredibly high incidence of autism spectrum disorder among these new, young, female patients,” says Hutchinson. “Autism often also means black-and-white thinking and struggling with the onset of puberty, so we have to ask the question ‘can this simply be a coincidence?’”

And can it be a coincidence, either, that the stampede to transition is so concentrated among girls and young women?
"Read Stephen Whittle on why few take transitioning lightly—and how early treatment could be life-saving"Those of us who have worked with the community as long as I have are not surprised by the numbers.

An instructive parallel case can be found in Eastern Europe. In the former Soviet bloc, and especially in 1980s Poland, more women than men requested sex changes. “Polish sexologists knew about this difference [with the west] and were startled by it,” said Ludmila Janion of Warsaw University, who recently completed a PhD on the subject. Why was this? The experts I spoke to while researching a book in the 2000s suggested that the reverse statistics might have something to do with it being especially awful to be a female under Communism, propelling some to jump immediately from questioning their sexuality—“I’m not sure I’m straight”—to the conclusion: “I must be a man.” Current figures are hard to come by in capitalist Poland, but a 3:1 ratio of women becoming men as against men becoming women has been suggested to me. So perhaps it was actually less about Communism, than more ingrained cultural issues.

Many people “who should not be getting these surgeries are getting these surgeries,” she said. “There are underlying health issues that are being overlooked. People like myself are slipping through the cracks.”

Extreme Plastic Surgeries - 6-Foot-Wide Bum & More Stories
- https://youtu.be/l1OUhdWZX5Y -
From a woman with a six-foot booty to a man who wants to be Britney, they all love surgery.

The Report Was Released In March 2023
The UN report in question was released on 8 March 2023 by UNAIDS. You can download a PDF copy to read for yourself.

https://web.archive.org/web/20230416234047/https://icj2.wpenginepowered.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/8-MARCH-Principles-FINAL-printer-version-1-MARCH-2023.pdf

The International Committee of Jurists (ICJ) along with UNAIDS and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) officially launched a new set of expert jurist legal principles to guide the application of international human rights law to criminal law.

The ‘8 March principles’ as they are called lay out a human rights-based approach to laws criminalizing conduct in relation to sex, drug use, HIV, sexual and reproductive health, homelessness and poverty.

So sad. If they aren’t happy in their body gave them, what makes them think they’ll be happy if they change! Just an evil agenda! People Need Jesus In 2024!

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