Trans activist who shut down women’s rights lecture provides 'trans kids' with tiny prosthetic penises

The Canadian trans activist who led the protest to shut down a university lecture critical of gender identity ideology last week is director of an organization that provides trans-identified children and teens with prosthetic penises.

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Mia Ashton Montreal QC
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The Canadian trans activist who led the protest to shut down a university lecture critical of gender identity ideology last week is director of an organization that provides trans-identified children and adolescents with prosthetic penises, a report by Reduxx has revealed.

Celeste Trianon, a trans-identified biological male law student at the University of Montreal, succeeded in assembling a mob and preventing Robert Wintemute, a professor of human rights law at King’s College London, from delivering his talk titled The Sex vs. Gender (Identity) Debate In the United Kingdom and the Divorce of the LGB from T. 

The talk had been scheduled to take place at McGill University in Montreal on January 10 and was organized by the university’s Center for Human Rights and Legal Pluralism (CHRLP). According to the event page, Wintemute was to talk about “whether or not the law should be changed to make it easier for a transgender individual to change their legal sex from their birth sex, and about exceptional situations, such as women-only spaces and sports, in which the individual’s birth sex should take priority over their gender identity, regardless of their legal sex.”

This provoked the ire of local trans activists who believe that any criticism of gender identity ideology is transphobic bigotry that must be shut down immediately. Trianon, who self-describes as a transfeminine sapphic jurist and activist, took to Facebook and with the help of a student association, organized the protest, claiming that McGill’s decision to host a “TERF” lawyer would “contribute directly to the systemic elimination of trans voices and trans lives worldwide.”

In an open letter published in the days before the protest, Trianon even went so far as to suggest that by hosting the distinguished professor of human rights law, McGill was “actively contributing to the genocide of trans people across the world.”

On the day of the talk, over 200 students crowded into the halls outside the lecture theater, screaming at those attempting to attend and violently shoving and blocking women who tried to enter the theater. Other protesters stormed the venue and reportedly threw flour at Wintemute, and allegedly attempted to disable the projector he had set up for his presentation. McGill was forced to cancel the event.

When Trianon isn’t whipping up an aggressive mob to silence political opponents, the trans-identified student of law devotes time to advocating for child sex changes, and oversees an organization that “provides trans, non-binary, and questioning people with access to products that are not widely available in the areas, such as binders, packers, gaffs, and breastforms,” Reduxx reports.

Trianon is the director of TransEstrie, which supplies female children and adolescents who have been led to believe that they are boys with prosthetic penises called “packers” that can be placed in the child’s underwear, as well as “stand-to-pee” devices. These accessories are deemed necessary to help the young child be their true self.

Other products on offer through the organization are dangerous chest compression devices known as “binders” that are worn by teenage girls who identify as boys to give the appearance of a flat chest. Binders can damage the development of a teen’s ribs, cause breathing difficulties and lung issues, as well as rashes and a risk of overheating.

Part of Wintemute’s talk was to address the conflict of rights between the transgender community and the gay community. Trans activism has redefined homosexuality to mean same-gender attraction rather than same-sex attraction which opens the door for the concept of the male lesbian, meaning heterosexual males who identify as women and therefore believe themselves to be lesbians. Actual lesbians are routinely called transphobic for not wanting to accept male “lesbians” as partners.

Trianon, however, believes that discussing this conflict amounts to transphobia.

“The T (trans) is so much more vulnerable than the rest of LGB. I think there's tons of scientific evidence speaking to that,” Trianon said in an interview with the CBC on the day of the protest. “It's just so sad to me that someone who should, in theory, be open to this, is so closed-minded about trans women and has the idea that if you give rights to trans women you're subtracting from the rights of cisgender women. There's no ceiling on rights."

Wintemute told the CBC he was there to promote the idea that women have human rights too, and that he believes many do not speak up because they feel intimidated by the trans rights movement.

“So I have to thank the protesters for giving me first-hand experience of that intimidation,” said Wintemute. “Probably the majority of women in this country disagree with some of transgender demands but they refuse to say so because they will be seen as intolerant.”

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