Griffin Sivert aka Gruffin Instagram post thread. These posts were only available to followers. I'm posting these as a testament to how much pain she went through. #JusticeForGriffin
Nov 21, 2021
Caption for Nov 21, 2021:
December 25, 2021:
February 27, 2022:
March 9, 2022:
April 22, 2022:
April 25, 2022:
May 17, 2022:
June 15, 2022:
June 19, 2022:
July 22, 2022:
July 28, 2022:
October 12, 2022:
January 2023:
June 2023:
My guess is that last photo was posted June 7, 2023.
My source is this post from "Jack Torrence" from Kiwi Farms:
Previous information posted by Griffin would indicate testosterone at approx age 15, top surgery at 18, hysterectomy at 20, and phallo at 21. (I don't know Griffin's exact birthday)
On TikTok, Griffin claimed to have a genetic predisposition to developing blood clots, which sounds like a good reason not to perform these surgeries
It was Boston Children's Hospital and Dr Oren Ganor, judging from these bills.
*Sigh* Episode 3. I can't be as detailed. I'm losing energy.
We start with audio of Scarlet talking to police. It sounds like her criminal complaint was about the bath tub incident only, which I think is important to note, not the times he alleged he anally raped her.
This despite her saying that the abuse didn't really start until after the bath tub incident.
In other words, if what she says is true, instead of reported the worse instances of abuse, she just reported the tub thing.
The Neil Gaiman allegations, episode 2 liveblog thread:
"The former nanny who alleges Neil Gaiman sexually assaulted her shares her WhatsApp messages with him. The messages appear friendly and affectionate. He says they’re evidence that she consented to sex with him. But is there another way of reading them?"
I've been researching this for a couple of hours and as far as I can tell it's BS - but I'm not sure.
I can find plenty of publications on this topic from Louis Gooren but none of the numbers come close to matching
For example, this paper from 2021 on every transgender person in the Netherlands who was treated says there were 361 deaths among 4568 people from 1972 to 2018.
In addition to detransitioning, there are other crucial aspects of transgender medicine that haven't been studied adequately: the long-term outcomes of medical transitioning on mental and physical health.
People who detransition are the most vocal and obvious failures of transgender medicine, but there's a lot of people in between who aren't satisfied with their transitions or who are worse off than they were before they transitioned. There's actually very little evidence
aside from anecdotal evidence that transitioning improves mental health outcomes for patients with gender dysphoria. I've been researching this pretty heavily the past couple of days, and I've found plenty of accounts from people who say that they don't regret SRS, *but*