
"Little girls don't want to grow up to be women," says sexologist Hana Fifková of the "epidemic" she blames on "trans propaganda" and feminists
Are we witnessing an "epidemic" of reluctance to grow up?
It is to be expected that we will now see and hear Dr Fifková more often in the media - a book interview with her, "Will we be who we are? The two women are said to have been brought together by "a debate about the growing number of girls and young women who are considering gender reassignment", which, combined with the fact that the annotation begins with the sentence "girls who do not want to grow into women", does not bode well for the liberal reader. The same topic is touched on in the podcast chat between Pechinka and Fifka - in case you needed a "trigger warning".
"What do you think of the rise in transsexuality among young girls? It's almost an epidemic in some Western countries," Pechinka notes, without citing the source of the information. "Isn't a lot of it also cultural imitation?"
"Definitely," Fifkova agrees, " My colleagues and I have been dealing with this in our office for a year now, it started sometime during the pandemic. It only affects one group, and that's adolescent biological girls. The sexologist said a "mosaic" of factors is leading to the alleged "epidemic."
Those "evil" activists again...
"One of the things is what I'm not afraid to call trans propaganda. That is: activist associations. They've managed to make the trans issue really a media issue," continues Fifkova, who is apparently not happy when the issue of gender reassignment is being mediaised by trans people themselves.
"I don't quite know why this is happening, but I think that maybe the activist associations had exhausted the gay and lesbian agenda and then needed some other minority to start caring about in quotes," Fifkova follows up with another observation, without giving specific clues that led her to this belief. The fact that organizations like Trans*parent are mainly staffed by people who are trans themselves, i.e., they actually work on their own, is somehow overlooked.
Laughter as a reaction to crying
"I once heard a joke that when one anorexic girl appeared in a classroom fifteen or twenty years ago, two others immediately appeared, and they were in solidarity in a strange way, subconsciously... Is it true?" asks the expert Pečinka at the beginning of the paid part. "It's a fact. And the same thing is happening with the trans theme," Fifkova lets herself be heard. "One teacher said to me, 'What's going on, doctor? I have ten girls in my eighth grade class, four are trans, two are pansexual.' And so," the doctor laughs, as if the idea is hilarious.
"The boys, poor boys, in the eight, are wondering what they're going to do then, if all these girls are going to define themselves like this. But it will pass," the sexologist quips with another quick judgment. (By the way: from what should we actually conclude that all the boys in the class will be heterosexual? Because they are immune to the "epidemic"? And why should the fact that their partner is pansexual hinder them from forming a relationship?)
Another alleged sinner? The feminist agenda
Fifková sees another "culprit" of the "epidemic" in the phenomenon of social networks, although she admits that she is not on them. "The moment a client, a 14-year-old girl, tells me that she was already in second grade figuring out whether she was asexual, bisexual, pansexual, demiboy, non-binary, and so on, I guess it's not okay. Because the minute you have that many boxes at that age, you're going to be trying to find yourself somewhere." Why it's wrong to know that there are diverse identity options (though, of course, TikTok isn't always a relevant source of enlightenment) is beyond explanation. "I think there's basically something epidemic at play, like there was an epidemic of mental anorexia a while ago," the sexologist adds.
"The feminist agenda that makes women and girls victims of men who treat them inappropriately also plays a role. And I think that a lot of little girls don't want to grow up to be women who are objects of men's sexual unsolicited interest," Fifkova elaborates on another of her worldviews, which she will probably elaborate on in more detail in the book (if this "taster" still isn't enough for some).
Well, shouldn't every physician today be somewhat armored with patience in the sense that Dr. Google and the AI doctor are "practicing" in virtually every field of medicine, and thus, in short, patients and clients are coming in far more informed than when they could, at most, flip through the Home Doctor years ago?
In the words of one subscriber to the podcast Bullshit & Politics, who was apparently so "enthralled" by the content of the interview that he had to comment on Forendors, "Next week, please a sexologist from this century."