The invention of intersex
The Light|Issue 48, August 2024
Controversial sexologist a pioneer in transhumanism
NIALL MCCRAE
The invention of intersex

FEW people know the meaning of the symbol in the latest version of the rainbow flag, which flies triumphantly on public buildings.

In the previous change, pink, white and blue bands were added, representing transgender categories of boys, girls and anything between. On the left side of 'Progress Pride' there is now a purple circle on a yellow background.

The new kid on the block is intersex. Take the cross away from the symbol for female, or the arrow for male, and the circle is neutered.

This is the ultimate design of critical gender ideology: denial of the dichotomy of biological sex.

For years, we have been introduced to a myriad of genders, while people having either XX or XY chromosomes was incontestable truth.

However, a rare genetic anomaly is regarded by the LGBT lobby as evidence that sex, like the social construct of gender, is not the straightforward binary fact that we were taught.

The third category of sex was proposed a long time ago, by Magnus Hirschfeld. Born into an affluent Jewish family in Prussia in 1868, Hirschfeld embarked on a career in subversive sexology.

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