I’ve got gay friends, a gay cousin, and even transgender children. My stance hasn’t changed: I support gay marriage and personal freedom, but I don’t subscribe to the gay lifestyle. Disagreement isn’t hate—and hate itself is unproductive.
Puberty blockers are not a culture-war toy, they’re a medical decision with real tradeoffs. Here are 17 hard questions I think every parent should ask before anything irreversible happens.
My parental alienation timeline did not start in court. It started years earlier, with threats, smears, and slow isolation. Here’s what I saw and documented.
Kentucky changed child custody defaults to 50-50 shared parenting, and divorce dropped hard. That’s not magic, it’s incentives, and it’s a reminder that keeping families together is a freedom issue.
A father watches his teenage daughter start testosterone and is told the changes are “partially reversible.” He has read the studies, he knows puberty only happens once, and he is not convinced we understand the long term cost. This is his case for honest informed consent, slower decisions, and protecting kids from irreversible changes they may later regret.
After a near fatal car crash, a brutal divorce, and years of quiet parental alienation, I watched my ex remarry a man who now presents as a woman while two of our kids identified as trans and one began medical transition. This is my side of the story, why I believe gender ideology and broken family dynamics collided in my home, and why I am fighting for my children’s long term health instead of short term affirmation.