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Trans ideology still has a dangerous grip on our elites – and here's the shocking proof

Trans ideology still has a dangerous grip on our elites – and here's the shocking proof

Telegraph01-05-2025

After the Supreme Court revealed to an astonished nation that women are female, a reader emailed me to say that we seem to be living though a 21st-century re-enactment of The Emperor's New Clothes. The parallels are certainly close. But I would say there is a crucial difference between the original fairy tale and our bold modern retelling.
In the old version, after the little child has pointed out that the emperor is naked, all the grown-ups immediately accept that the child is right. In our re-enactment, however, quite a lot of little children spent years pointing out that the emperor was naked – only for lots of furious grown-ups to cancel them, while continuing to reassure the emperor that he was fully clothed, and that his lovely pink frock suited him down to the ground.
But there's more. Because even now, after the Supreme Court's historic ruling, all too many grown-ups are still defiantly gushing over the emperor's finery. And, incredibly, some of them are doctors.
Yes, that's right. Doctors. Baffling though it may seem, our hospitals are apparently staffed by people who, despite holding degrees in medicine, refuse to accept the most rudimentary facts about human biology. Or so I conclude from the staggering statement issued last week by a group of 'resident doctors' (formerly known as junior doctors) from the medical trade union the BMA (British Medical Association). In the statement, these doctors condemned the Supreme Court's ruling as 'scientifically illiterate' and 'biologically nonsensical' – because, according to them, it 'has no basis in science or medicine while being actively harmful to transgender and gender-diverse people'.
Amazing. All I can say is, I hope that this sort of thinking – for want of a better word – is not endemic throughout the medical profession. Otherwise, the next time I need to call my local surgery, I might ask for an appointment with a Supreme Court judge rather than a GP, because at least the former can be relied on to know the difference between a man and a woman. Which is something that tends to be rather important, in medical matters. After all, if I go in complaining of stomach pains, I don't want a doctor to tell me I must be going through the menopause, or book me in for a hysterectomy.
Well, you can't rule it out. Three years ago, this newspaper reported that an NHS trust had taken to asking men awaiting MRI scans whether they might be pregnant. At the time, though, I assumed that this approach had been instigated by some trendy twit in HR. I didn't think that actual doctors went in for such nonsense.
Anyway, even if the BMA statement is drivel, we need to realise that it's also highly significant. After the Supreme Court's ruling, many ordinary people will have breathed a sigh of relief, and told themselves that the toxic gender wars are finally over.
But they're not. Far from it. Because, regardless of what the law says, large numbers of people in influential roles remain fervent adherents of gender identity doctrine. You'll find them throughout universities, the BBC, publishing, the arts, politics, the Civil Service – and even high-street cosmetics chains. (Staff at Lush, it was reported this week, slipped booklets promoting 'trans allyship' into party bags for seven-year-old children – so that they too could learn about the joys of being 'gender-queer, gender-fluid, agender, nongender, third gender, bi-gender…'.)
All of this is troubling enough. But when you see doctors – people who are supposed to be grounded in rationality and fact – promoting such fantastical beliefs, and claiming that any disagreement is 'scientifically illiterate', you know we're really in trouble. The truth is, trans ideology still has a dangerous grip on our elites – and this is the shocking proof.
On the upside, though, perhaps I can turn it to my financial advantage. We keep being told that Britain is suffering from a terrible shortage of doctors. So I'm going to throw on a white coat, sling a stethoscope round my neck – and look forward to collecting my fabulous NHS pension. Admittedly I don't have any medical qualifications, but I don't see why that should stop me. If I say I'm a doctor, that means I am a doctor. And if anyone from the BMA disagrees, I'll call them scientifically illiterate bigots.

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