Sex is not “assigned at birth.” It’s observed. Because it’s biological reality, not something arbitrarily pronounced.
Sex is not “assigned at birth.” It’s observed. Because it’s biological reality, not something arbitrarily pronounced.
@ChristinaPushaw Regardless of the language they used in their post, the NAIA did the right thing. Good for them.
@ChristinaPushaw When they say “assigned,” who are they claiming assigns it?
@ChristinaPushaw dont only biological males have to register for selective service?
@ChristinaPushaw It's "assigned" far before birth, shortly after conception. It's often observed far before birth also, like halfway through a pregnancy. Even if you don't let the doctor tell you, they observe it.
@ChristinaPushaw We really SHOULDN'T have to keep repeating this. And yet... here we are...🤷♂️
@ChristinaPushaw Pretty much. Human biology itself is far more complex, but even with the different abnormalities, chromosomes are pretty straightforward and simple
@ChristinaPushaw This is the best way I have seen this stated to date. It’s a biological reality that is observed at birth.