ADVERTISEMENT

Transgender woman detained by TSA at Orlando airport

It's a "he". You cannot change your sex. Ever. Just like every other vertebrae species on the globe except for one type of frog. Sociology does not trump biology or zoology. Ever.
Except cuttlefish, garter snakes, spotted hyenas, African bat bugs, anemonefish, parrotfish and hawkfish.

But, yes, nobody else.
 
  • Like
Reactions: USFSucks
Except cuttlefish, garter snakes, spotted hyenas, African bat bugs, anemonefish, parrotfish and hawkfish.

But, yes, nobody else.
You're wrong on the hyena.

Hyaenas are misunderstood. Unless we change the way we see these amazing animals, we soon won't see them at all. Therefore here we debunk some common myths about members of the hyaena family.

Myth: Spotted hyaenas are hermaphrodites.

Reality: Hermaphrodites are animals that are simultaneously both male and female. Although there are many creatures in the animal kingdom that are true hermaphrodites, including some fish and many snails and worms, spotted hyaenas are definitely not among them. This myth undoubtedly arose when people noticed that hyaenas with large pendulous udders (indicating they were obviously females) could suddenly develop impressive phallic erections such that they also looked like males. Interestingly, although a female spotted hyaena has a uterus and ovaries internally, externally she does in fact appear to have “masculinized” genitalia. That is, the female’s clitoris is enormously elongated to form a fully erectile pseudopenis through which she urinates, copulates, and gives birth. Furthermore, her vaginal labia are folded over and filled with connective and fatty tissues to form structures that look very much like the male’s scrotal sac. These male-like external genitalia are obvious even in female spotted hyaena cubs at birth. When spotted hyaenas mate, the male inserts his erect phallus into the female’s flaccid one. The walls of the pseudopenis become relatively thin and elastic late in pregnancy, such that the female can deliver her 1 kg babies without dying in the process. Nevertheless, the posterior surface of the pseudopenis does tear when a female first gives birth, and it is ever after marked by a vertical band of pink scar tissue. Spotted hyaenas of both sexes develop phallic erections when they engage in “greeting ceremonies” with other hyaenas from whom they have been separated for a while.
 
Wrong on bat bugs too.

Researchers have long known that male bat bugs ignore females' conventional parts and instead use their sharp penises to stab the females' abdomens, injecting sperm directly into the bloodstream.

So the females evolved a defense: structures called paragenitals that guide a male's needle-like member into a spongy reservoir of immune cells.

But the females aren't the only ones in need of protection. Observers documented males performing the same injurious sexual acts on other males.

Now evolutionary biologist Klaus Reinhardt of the University of Sheffield in England has discovered that male bat bugs have developed their own versions of female paragenitals to avoid the assaults.
 
No NatGeo did not claim that those two species change their sex. It is in the article you linked to with respect to bat bugs and hyenas. I was interested because it seemed an impossibility that a mammal would change sex and then be able to give birth. Insects and fish seemed feasible but not mammals.
 
Same with cuttlefish and garter snakes. They are using a form of camouflage to win at the mating game. Kind of like dressing like a girl so you can get into the female locker room to do a little hanky panky. So now we've learned that's a strategy approved by nature.
 

National Geographic is not saying anything about actually changing chomosomes from XX to XY...anywhere. These animals often use tactics and traits of the opposite genders.

Does not remove the fact that not one single primate does this in a natural habitat. Bonobos boink each other regardless of sex, but they do not CHANGE their sex.

Also, in biology and zoology, gender and sex are the same, they don't have different meanings.
 
New Wrong on bat bugs too.

Researchers have long known that male bat bugs ignore females' conventional parts and instead use their sharp penises to stab the females' abdomens, injecting sperm directly into the bloodstream.

That's some serious alpha male stuff right there
 
National Geographic is not saying anything about actually changing chomosomes from XX to XY...anywhere. These animals often use tactics and traits of the opposite genders.

Does not remove the fact that not one single primate does this in a natural habitat. Bonobos boink each other regardless of sex, but they do not CHANGE their sex.

Also, in biology and zoology, gender and sex are the same, they don't have different meanings.

Preach it!!

Side note: Many humans are no different the bonobos and if they are no different, it makes them the same...dumb animals.
 
You're wrong on the hyena.

Hyaenas are misunderstood. Unless we change the way we see these amazing animals, we soon won't see them at all. Therefore here we debunk some common myths about members of the hyaena family.

Myth: Spotted hyaenas are hermaphrodites.

Reality: Hermaphrodites are animals that are simultaneously both male and female. Although there are many creatures in the animal kingdom that are true hermaphrodites, including some fish and many snails and worms, spotted hyaenas are definitely not among them. This myth undoubtedly arose when people noticed that hyaenas with large pendulous udders (indicating they were obviously females) could suddenly develop impressive phallic erections such that they also looked like males. Interestingly, although a female spotted hyaena has a uterus and ovaries internally, externally she does in fact appear to have “masculinized” genitalia. That is, the female’s clitoris is enormously elongated to form a fully erectile pseudopenis through which she urinates, copulates, and gives birth. Furthermore, her vaginal labia are folded over and filled with connective and fatty tissues to form structures that look very much like the male’s scrotal sac. These male-like external genitalia are obvious even in female spotted hyaena cubs at birth. When spotted hyaenas mate, the male inserts his erect phallus into the female’s flaccid one. The walls of the pseudopenis become relatively thin and elastic late in pregnancy, such that the female can deliver her 1 kg babies without dying in the process. Nevertheless, the posterior surface of the pseudopenis does tear when a female first gives birth, and it is ever after marked by a vertical band of pink scar tissue. Spotted hyaenas of both sexes develop phallic erections when they engage in “greeting ceremonies” with other hyaenas from whom they have been separated for a while.
fap.gif
 
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT