Comments by "marie parker" (@marieparker3822) on "" video.

  1. If you are transitioning 'from MALE TO FEMALE' it means you have been born with sex chromosomes XY. Even a school student of elementary biology knows that you will not get, developing as a fetus, a female internal genital tract, consisting of ovaries, fimbriae, fallopian tubes, a uterus and a vagina. This requires the chromosomal constitution XX, ie two X chromosomes and a complete absence of Y chromosomes. With chromosomal constitution X0 (Turner's syndrome), one X chromosome, the small-stature, cognitively impaired female would be sterile. With chromosomal constitution XXY, the person has Klinefelter's syndrome, ie has male genitalia, is tall, 'etiolated' and physically weak, and sterile. Another rare (genetic) abnormality is Swyer's syndrome, where all the tissues of the body are unresponsive to male hormones, so, even though the person has chromosomal constitution XY, the fetal primordial gonad does not develop as a testis, and the external genitalia look female at birth. Of course, without two X chromosomes, a female internal genital tract does not develop, but the child does not know this. In the past, they were discovered at what ought to have been puberty because they failed to start menstruating. Typically, they think of themselves as female - none of their tissues are responsive to male hormones. They have a short 'vagina' ending in a dead end. They can be assisted in a female direction by construction of a full-length vagina so that they can have intercourse with a man. Often they do not require augmentation of breasts. They often marry men and adopt children. These are rare abnormalities. Swyer's syndrome, in particular, cannot be cited to 'prove' that 'not all women have two X chromosomes'.
    2