CV NEWS FEED // A new book gives the ever-increasing number of detransitioners a voice by calling attention to the lies and the medical, mental, and physical abuse of the “trans” agenda.
The Detransition Diaries, by Jennifer Lahl and Kallie Fell, tells the stories of five women and two men “who felt they were born in the wrong body and believed the lie they were told by peers, teachers, and medical professionals that they could be their “true” selves by medically and surgically altering their bodies to match the opposite sex,” according to an overview from Ignatius Press.
The book describes the short and long-term effects that ‘transgender’ procedures had on these seven individuals, and also investigates the history of the “gender-affirmation movement.”
Lahl and Fell also offer an analysis on how transgender procedures could be stopped, and “what is needed for medicine to regain its obligation to do no harm,” according to the overview.
Lahl is a pediatric nurse as well as the founder and former president of the Center for Bioethics and Culture (CBC), a nonprofit organization that seeks to educate others on ethical issues within healthcare, biomedical research, and biotechnological advancement.
Fell is the executive director of the CBC, a perinatal nurse, podcast host, and program director for the Paul Ramsey Institute, CBC’s bioethics training program.
In addition to co-authoring The Detransition Diaries, the two women have also co-produced several documentaries on the transgender movement, including “Trans Mission: What’s the Rush to Reassign Gender?”, “The Detransition Diaries: Saving our Sisters,” and “The Lost Boys: Searching for Manhood.”The Detransition Diaries is available at Ignatius Press, CBC, and Amazon.