Family planning: our taxes, their intox

It is with the utmost seriousness that Family Planning, a popular education organization, strikes us with scientific absurdities

Family planning: our taxes, their intox

It is with the utmost seriousness that Family Planning, a popular education organization, strikes us with scientific absurdities. First there was this poster campaign: two men embracing, the belly of one of them exhibiting a strange roundness. And above this caption: "At Planning, we know that men can also be pregnant. "Never mind the biological impossibility. Then there was the Planned Parenthood trans lexicon, "lexicon organized with a view to progressive learning". Small anthology.

"Sex: A social construct based on mean observations of biological gender differences." It is commonly accepted scientifically that gender is a spectrum. May also refer to the genitalia.

Assignment at birth: At birth, doctors decide, based on penis/clitoris length standards, whether the individual is a boy or a girl.

Changing gender: The sex characteristics of people, whether cis or trans, are non-binary and can change throughout their lives."

We would be happy to know the "science" that admits that in Homo sapiens sex is a spectrum. There is probably confusion with crepidules or other animals that naturally change sex during their lifetime. We would also be happy to know the critical length of the sexual organ to differentiate a boy from a girl.

If you haven't understood correctly, after a few Newspeak terms such as "Cis-passing, Stealth, Out, Dicklit, Femmis/Ladyck, or Morinom", the Planning graciously presents a list of "Terms not to use" among which come first "Male/female" and "Masculine/feminine". Well-known insults... It is from this anti-scientific, quasi-sectarian dogma of intersectionality - a "scholarly" word that adorns the woke ideology - that Planning prides itself on "educating" the children of the kindergarten to high school. For "Talking Lgbtphobia with college students" adding cautiously "...in the presence of a professional from the establishment during sessions with the Family Planning facilitator" and inviting teachers and students to "consult the aforementioned trans lexicon! Inclusive writing, this writing that cannot be read, is of course essential!

Our children, our teenagers are in danger. Adolescence is a physiological, morphological and psychological earthquake. In this critical period, the adolescent is weakened, prey to doubt. He seeks support from his peers but also from various sources, unfortunately not necessarily reliable or well-meaning. It is this fragility that exploits the (so little) social networks where untruths abound. With disastrous results.

Just look at the results of the recent Ifop survey conducted for the Jean-Jaurès and Reboot Foundations. We learn, for example, that 16% of young people aged 11 to 24 surveyed believe that the Earth is flat, a proportion that rises to 29% among regulars of TikTok. It is also through this channel that outrageous messages encouraging children and adolescents to change sex are conveyed. Hence the staggering explosion of requests for transition among young people, especially girls, that Western countries have known for a few years. Some countries, initially liberal, now frightened by the magnitude of the phenomenon, are backtracking and laying the groundwork. France does not yet seem to be moved by this new health scandal.

How can an organization such as Planned Parenthood be allowed to stray into a policy that is the opposite of its original purpose? Where are the struggles that enabled the Neuwirth Law and the Veil Law? What happened to the Planning that helped many young girls and many women (dare we say) to access contraception and abortion? Since 2018 and its conversion to intersectionality, it is no longer a drift but a shipwreck. The Planning has become the refuge of transactivist militants. Added to this social scandal is a financial scandal. Because the Planning is an organization financed by the State and the various communities to the tune of 2.8 million euros per year. That is to say, financed by the taxpayer. At a time when it is necessary to control overabundant public spending, it is urgent to condition family planning subsidies to strict compliance with their original orientations and purposes.

Family Planning is one of the three associations that have sued the State to force it to respect the law concerning sex education at school. These associations seem to be unaware that for many years health and sexuality education has been included in school curricula at different levels. It appears, however, that Family Planning has disqualified itself and should no longer be authorized to intervene with schoolchildren, college students and high school students. At least as long as the organization cannot guarantee the overhaul that we recommend, and the rigorous scientificity of its remarks, the formations of Family Planning constitute a danger for public health.

The subsidized dissemination of such scientific untruths to suffering teenagers, waiting for help, is a real scandal. It is urgent that responsible elected officials and the ministries concerned take up this social problem. Hence our cry of alarm.

Signatories:

Claudio Rubiliani – reproductive physiologist, state doctor and former national education inspector

Céline Masson, university professor in clinical psychopathology

Caroline Eliacheff, child psychiatrist

Elisabeth Badinter, philosopher

Jean-François Braunstein, emeritus professor of philosophy at the Sorbonne

Nathalie Heinich, sociologist

Xavier-Laurent Salvador, HDR lecturer, LAIC president

Pierre Vermeren, historian and president of the LAIC scientific council

Pierre-André Taguieff, philosopher and political scientist, CNRS

Jean Szlamowicz, linguist and university professor

Claude Habib, Emeritus Professor of Literature

Marie-jo Bonnet, historian, feminist, writer

Nicole Athea, gynecologist endocrinologist

Gérard Rabinovitch, philosopher, essayist

Leonardo Orlando, Doctor of Political Science

Jean-Pierre Winter, psychoanalyst, essayist

Béatrice Guilbault Finet, teacher-researcher

Caroline Valentin, lawyer

Israel Nisand, Emeritus Professor of Obstetrics Gynecology

François Richard, professor emeritus at the University of Paris Cité, psychoanalyst, trainer member of the Psychoanalytical Society of Paris

Patrick De Neuter, Emeritus Professor at the University of Louvain

Marianne Baudin, professor emeritus of psychopathology

Nicole FARGES, psychologist, psychoanalyst

Christian Godin, philosopher

Louise L. Lambrichs, writer

Nadia Geerts, Belgian secular activist and author

Stanislas Korczynski, assistant specialist in psychiatry at CPN Nancy

Catherine Jongen, couple therapist and sex therapist

Caroline Calba, associate professor

Robert Naeije, physician, former university professor

Maurice Berger, child psychiatrist, former associate professor of child psychopathology

Fadila Maaroufi, director of the Observatory of fundamentalisms in Brussels

Hala Oukili, journaliste

Paul Denis, neuropsychiatrist, member of the Psychoanalytical Society of Paris

Véronique Segonne, psychoanalyst, former AP-HP hospital attaché

Michaël Saada, psychiatrist, psychotherapist

Jean-Marie Lacroix, university professor (microbiologist)

Monette Vacquin, psychoanalyst

Nora Markman, psychoanalyst-clinical psychologist

Sonia TIMSIT, psychiatrist and psychoanalyst.

Anne-Laure Boch, neurosurgeon

Beryl Koener, child psychiatrist, MD PhD

Isabelle Denys, medical gynecologist, hospital practitioner Valenciennes Hospital

Michel Bruno, psychologist-psychoanalyst

Laurent Le Vaguerèse, psychiatrist-psychoanalyst

Celine Pina, journalist

Guillaume Gillet, clinical psychologist, psychotherapist

Jacqueline Schaeffer, honorary training member of the SPP (Psychoanalytical Society of Paris)

Fabienne Ankaoua, psychoanalyst-playwright

Dominique Hof Mouzin, psychoanalyst

Jean-Daniel Lalau, PU-PH at the University Hospital of Amiens (endocrinology-nutrition)

Marie-Laure Léandri, psychoanalyst full member of the SPP

Annie Sugier, President of the International Women's Law League

Anne Paulsen, pediatric endocrinologist

Yana Grinshpun, lecturer in language sciences

Georges Lecoq, psychologist

Anne Verheggen-Lecoq, psychologist

Houria Abdelouahed, psychanalyst

Geneviève Bourdellon, psychiatrist, psychoanalyst, trainer member of the SPP

Assaf Gérard Fitoussi, medical psychologist and psychoanalyst

Olivier Halimi, psychologist, psychoanalyst. Member of the Psychoanalytical Society of Paris

Rhadija Lamrani Tissot, psychoanalyst

Caroline Calba, Certified and Associate English Teacher.

Christian Mosbah, psychiatrist, psychoanalyst

Monique Lauret, psychiatrist, psychoanalyst. Member of the SPF

Anne Santagostini, psychiatrist and psychoanalyst

Catherine Jongen, couple therapist and sex therapist

Sophie Audugé, general delegate and spokesperson for SOS Education

Kerel Proust, psychologist

Michel Tibayrenc, geneticist, research director emeritus, research institute for development

Irène Nigolian, psychiatrist, psychoanalyst

Anna Cognet, clinical psychologist

Laetitia Petit MCF-HDR Aix-Marseille University

Dany-Robert Dufour, philosopher

Marie-Pierre Sicard Devillard, psychoanalyst – SPF

Frédéric Jongen, philosopher, couples therapist and sex therapist

Dominique A. Crestinu, gynecologist

J-Y Chagnon, psychologist and university professor

Joseph Ciccolini, professor of pharmacokinetics

Patrice Lévy, clinical psychologist

Jean Marie Brohm, Emeritus University Professor

Brice Couturier, journalist

Brigitte Letombe, medical gynecologist

Georges Lecoq, psychologist

Ghada Hatem-Gantzer, hospital practitioner and chief physician of the Maison des Femmes

François Roudaut, university professor

Gilbert Abergel, Republic Secularism Committee

Mikhayl Kostylev, journalist

Emmanuelle Henin

Renée Fregosi, philosopher and political scientist

Gilles J. Guglielmi, professor of public law

Pierre-Henri Tavoillot, philosophe

André Tira, Emeritus Professor of Economics

Michel Fichant, Emeritus Professor, Sorbonne University

Albert Dojan, professor of anthropology, University of Lille

Mireille Quivy, academic

Michel Messu, sociologist, honorary university professor

Alain Silvestre, doctor

Catherine Louveau, sociologist, professor emeritus

Guylain Chevrier, trainer and teacher at the university. Former social worker

Frank Muller, University Professor Emeritus

Catherine Louveau, sociologist, professor emeritus

François Vazeille, research director emeritus

Dominique Triaire, Emeritus Professor, University of Montpellier

Jean-François Mattei, doctor, former. health Minister

Anne-Marie Le Pourhiet, Emeritus Professor of Public Law

François Rastier, linguist, research director, CNRS

Vincent Tournier, lecturer in political science

Michèle Tribalat, demographer

Aurélien Marq, senior civil servant

Jean-Pierre Sakoun, Lay Unit

Michèle Vianès, President of Regards de Femmes

Pascale Belot Fourcade, psychiatrist

Sophie Dechêne, child and juvenile psychiatrist

Luis Fernando Macias Garcia, Professor of Social Sciences and Philosophy

Ypomoni – collective of parents of teenagers in gender questioning

Liliane Kandel, sociologist and feminist essayist

Sylvie Zucca, psychiatrist

Didier Sicard, doctor, former head of the internal medicine department

Gilles Falavigna, author

Patrick Miller, psychiatrist and psychoanalyst

Laurent Jolissaint, physicist, PhD

Fabien Ollier, director of QS editions and of the magazine Quel Sport?