Read this and weep.........................The woman just approved for the Supreme Court couldn't answer because....."I'm not a biologist"
Anatomy Texts Prove Women Exist
May 2, 2022
Catholic League president Bill Donohue settles the argument over whether women exist:
Women exist. It's true. The controversy is over. Anatomy texts
settle the issue.
"Can you provide a definition for the word 'woman'?"
This question was asked of Supreme Court nominee Judge Ketanji Brown
Jackson during the confirmation hearings. She could not. "I'm not a
biologist," she said.
It is hard to believe that as recently as a decade or two ago
that this question would even be raised. But we live in strange times. Not
only is our newest Supreme Court Justice not sure what a woman
is—ironically she was chosen partly because the president thinks she is a
woman—lots of well-educated persons are puzzled.
Alia E. Dastagir is a reporter for USA Today.
"Scientists, gender law scholars and philosophers of biology said
Jackson's response was commendable, though perhaps misleading." They
"note that a competent biologist would not be able to offer a
definitive answer either."
So who are these people? Rebecca Jordan-Young teaches at
Barnard College and claims to be a scientist. She says Jackson was not
nuanced enough. "I don't want to see this question punted to biology
as if science can offer a simple, definitive answer." But wouldn't we
punt to a dentist to explain what a root canal is? For that matter,
wouldn't we punt to an auto mechanic to explain what a car is?
Sarah Richardson is a Harvard historian and philosopher of
biology, and she believes that science is not best suited to define what a
women is. "As is often the case," she says, "science cannot
settle what are really social questions." That's funny. When I was
studying for my doctorate in sociology at NYU, I was never taught that
sociology was the best suited to know what a woman is. Maybe I missed that
class.
Sometimes this issue gets very messy. St. Louis University
identifies as a Catholic school, yet last year a student group was
investigated by the Office of Student Responsibility and Community
Standards because it raised the question in a social media video,
"What is a woman?" Why they weren't expelled remains a mystery.
So what do they teach in medical school? Surely no one wants
to go to a doctor who doesn't know the difference between a man and a
woman. I hate to get technical about this, but guys being treated for
prostate cancer don't want to go to a gynecologist.
Anne M. Gilroy is the author of Anatomy: An Essential
Textbook, Third Edition, published in 2021 by Thieme Medical
Publishers. Richard L. Drake, A. Wayne Vogl and Adam W.M. Mitchell are the
authors of Gray's Anatomy for Students, Fourth Edition, published in
2020 by Elsevier.
These textbooks are among the most widely used by medical
students in the United States and abroad. Both clearly identify what a male
and female are and what constitutes their biological status. Those who
claim that there are sexes other than male and female find no support in
these books. Here is what we found.
Thieme's Anatomy: An Essential Text Book, Third Edition
· References to Female: 40
· References to Male: 25
· References to Transgender: ZERO
· References to Intersex: ZERO
· References to Other Sexes or Genders: ZERO
Gray's Anatomy for Students, Fourth Edition
· References to Female: 8
· References to Male: 10
· References to Transgender: ZERO
· References to Intersex: ZERO
· References to Other Sexes or Genders: ZERO
Both books make it clear that there are female bodies and male
bodies, and that's it. There is no special transgender body or any of
the other pantheon of sexualities or gender identities.
Intersex is a real medical condition where an individual is
born with irregular chromosome patterns, gonads, or genitals. In the wake
of the passage of the Florida Parental Rights in Education law, left-wing
activists and teachers quickly latched on to the notion that young children
need to know about intersex because some of the students might have this
anatomical anomaly. However, the textbooks did not offer a section on this
category, so unusual is this condition.
In other words, those elites who are not sure what a woman is
made the right decision not to pursue medicine. They would have flunked out
of medical school.
Phone: 212-371-3191
E-mail: pr@catholicleague.org
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