Its spread into the medical profession is frightening.
For example, while exploring the website of a female doctor who asserted herself as an expert in her field of medicine, the comment section revealed her unprofessional nature.
At one point, she wrote "pregnant people."
Once upon a time, that term was meant in a humorous way.
But it's disturbing when a fully certified doctor uses it in a medical discussion.
Another commenter called her on it. The doctor replied with a defensive:
I respect all people and their genders. Anyone with a uterus can get pregnant.
She showed her stupidity in a couple of other comments regarding completely different topics and I realized she suffered from a severe depletion of common sense.
It's frightening to know that someone like her treats medical conditions, which her lack of common sense can cause a lot of harm.
While searching for authoritative well-researched information, I came across a the website of a university, which hosts a medical school that proclaims itself "an international leader in research, patient care and physician training..."
But then I spotted this (red underline my own):
It's also simply not true. What if a female was born with a certain anomaly and mistakenly assigned male at birth? (All sorts of gender anomalies — verified biological and medical anomalies — exist. They're rare, but they exist.) Or what if someone just made a mistake in the paperwork?
It's that same kind of politically correct muddled thinking that led to the term "African-American" — when not all Africans are black and not all black people originate from Africa (like the black people of Papua New Guinea).
So including terms like "people assigned male at birth" is deplorably unprofessional and unscientific.
Also, I realize they wish to appeal to the younger generation, but the sophomoric allusion to light drugs in this context comes off as unserious and inappropriate.
On the same website, this appeared:
Really, they mean that in hotter weather, one must drink more to avoid kidney stones.
But by attributing it to "climate change," it's like saying "Summertime causes kidney stones. Beware the Ides of July!"
Or "Moving from Finland to Hawaii can cause kidney stones."
It sounds strange, like: "Oh no! What's in Hawaii that causes kidney stones? Is it something in the air? The volcanoes? The pineapples?"
Disturbingly, I saw this "climate change causes kidney stones" tripe on even the most respected university medical school articles.
The nonsensical push of certain politics in what should be a straight-forward medical article is disturbing.
Obfuscation in medicine can cause real harm. It's totally irresponsible.
Yet this whole movement feels unstoppable, like a gargantuan steam roller making its deadly way through society.
And though Israeli society pushes back against this kind of ridiculousness, segments remain affected by it.
For example, just before the Great Horror from Gaza, a man who works at Ben Gurion University told us that some students insisted on calling it "Bat Gurion University."
(Ben means "son" in Hebrew, while bat means "daughter.")
The truth is, it serves David Ben Gurion right.
I think he would resent being known as David Bat Gurion. But it serves him right for all the Commie damage he did to the Jews of Eretz Yisrael.
But in the USA, where is the actual pushback?
Yes, pundits on the right protest all the imposed gender confusion.
But it doesn't look like it's influencing things practically.
How much worse is it going to get?