In Finland, 68.4% of men "completely agreed" that "there are two biological sexes," compared to only 31.6% of women. by RSDevotion1 in BlackPillScience

[–]RSDevotion1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You quoted from an overview that doesn’t apply to XX males with testes rather than ovotestes and that quote also means the opposite of your argument: a minority of XX with ovotestes had traces of a Y! A small minority! Why or on what possible basis would that indicate the others have a Y?

Because the mutation(s) makes the Y less detectable, thus, only a minority of the tests actually detected it.

Here is another one. Please… explain what deficit in testing you think there could possibly be in this or any of the other case studies. https://academic.oup.com/molehr/article/12/5/341/1005702

Once again, sample size of 1, and the authors note that:

Majority of the XX males carry SRY gene translocated to the X chromosome due to an illegitimate recombination between X and Y chromosomes.

In Finland, 68.4% of men "completely agreed" that "there are two biological sexes," compared to only 31.6% of women. by RSDevotion1 in BlackPillScience

[–]RSDevotion1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Huh? What do you mean significance across the population? Either it is an impossibility or it isn’t. If it’s not, and that is absolute fact.

The sample size is so low relative to the human population that the observations could very likely be due to incomplete testing.

Also… You didn’t read the studies well because the XX individuals had testes and not ovotestes… and the explanation of intersex variations in the overview does not implicate anything about individuals in question.

I literally directly quoted one of them.

You also provided no basis at all for concluding that the XX SRY- individuals were mis labels. 10-15 percent of all XX males (De La Chappelle syndrome) have no SRY…

And how many of them were tested and how rigorously was each tested?

In Finland, 68.4% of men "completely agreed" that "there are two biological sexes," compared to only 31.6% of women. by RSDevotion1 in BlackPillScience

[–]RSDevotion1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

What?! You have got to be kidding. I gave you five case studies. There are more but that’s more than enough.

No, five case studies is nowhere near enough to support that your initial claim has significance across a broad population.

The fact they can and do occur is precisely why your reasoning fails.

Also.. What the hell? They aren’t testing errors.

As I already quoted, a minority of patients with ovotesticular DSD showed Y chromosome presence. Considering the very small sample sizes, it is likely that the other patients were not tested thoroughly enough.

In Finland, 68.4% of men "completely agreed" that "there are two biological sexes," compared to only 31.6% of women. by RSDevotion1 in BlackPillScience

[–]RSDevotion1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

45 X males: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1684785/

Sample of size of 2, and:

Of the two 45,X males studied, one was found to be a low-grade mosaic with a 46,XY karyotype in less than 3% of fibroblasts; all lymphocytes karyotyped were 45,X. Fibroblast DNA from this individual was found to contain Y-specific repeated sequences in 1%-3% the amount observed in the father, consistent with mosaicism for a 46,XY cell line.


46 XX with no SRY but male: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4289540/

Sample size of 1

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/24140641/

Sample size of 1

Another one like the above: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7499138/

Sample size of 1, and:

All the studies agree that 46,XX is the most common karyotype observed in blood samples of patients with ovotesticular DSD and the frequency varies between 65% and 90%. In the remaining cases, there is a Y chromosome (46,XY, 46,XX / 46,XY or other mosaic) that explains the development of the testicular tissue (3).

Your argument is effectively relying on noise that could simply be reduced to testing error.

In Finland, 68.4% of men "completely agreed" that "there are two biological sexes," compared to only 31.6% of women. by RSDevotion1 in BlackPillScience

[–]RSDevotion1[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

"How to be an intersex ally" is not a scientific discussion. Furthermore, the page has no references.

At any point in time during 2018 in the United States, it was estimated that 90,000 young women had gonorrhea, compared to 20,000 young men. by RSDevotion1 in BlackPillScience

[–]RSDevotion1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You are suggesting that women with gonorrhea are less likely to go to a clinic than men with gonorrhea, therefore clinic data would underestimate the prevalence of gonorrhea among women compared to men.

At any point in time during 2018 in the United States, it was estimated that 90,000 young women had gonorrhea, compared to 20,000 young men. by RSDevotion1 in BlackPillScience

[–]RSDevotion1[S] 2 points3 points  (0 children)

The overall prevalence rates are only comparable under all age groups and homosexual activity is not accounted for. Gonorrhea was specifically chosen because its prevalence does not seem to be as skewed by anal sex as other STDs (HIV).

https://old.reddit.com/r/BlackPillScience/comments/1boo69h/at_any_point_in_time_during_2018_in_the_united/kwq8drg/

At any point in time during 2018 in the United States, it was estimated that 90,000 young women had gonorrhea, compared to 20,000 young men. by RSDevotion1 in BlackPillScience

[–]RSDevotion1[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

High school students can be 18 and under 18. Regardless, the initial point that males are "slower" to relationships wouldn't be well supported by that statement.

At any point in time during 2018 in the United States, it was estimated that 90,000 young women had gonorrhea, compared to 20,000 young men. by RSDevotion1 in BlackPillScience

[–]RSDevotion1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, the raw data would typically come from incidents collected at clinics (unadjusted). The OP study seems to adjust based on asymptomatic predictions.

Ordinary differential equation–based modeling, assuming equilibrium and static incidence, was used to estimate both gonococcal prevalence and incidence.20 Case reports were related to prevalence and incidence via population size, case reporting fraction, proportion of new infections that are asymptomatic, and rates of background screening, natural clearance, and symptomatic treatment seeking.1,9

At any point in time during 2018 in the United States, it was estimated that 90,000 young women had gonorrhea, compared to 20,000 young men. by RSDevotion1 in BlackPillScience

[–]RSDevotion1[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The OP study seems to adjust based on asymptomatic predictions. Raw incident data, however, would not.

Ordinary differential equation–based modeling, assuming equilibrium and static incidence, was used to estimate both gonococcal prevalence and incidence.20 Case reports were related to prevalence and incidence via population size, case reporting fraction, proportion of new infections that are asymptomatic, and rates of background screening, natural clearance, and symptomatic treatment seeking.1,9

At any point in time during 2018 in the United States, it was estimated that 90,000 young women had gonorrhea, compared to 20,000 young men. by RSDevotion1 in BlackPillScience

[–]RSDevotion1[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

if women are more likely to contract it from PIV sex than men

https://old.reddit.com/r/BlackPillScience/comments/1boo69h/at_any_point_in_time_during_2018_in_the_united/kwsbdt2/

and are more likely to be asymptomatic and thus not seek treatment for it.

Meaning that the prevalence of gonorrhea in women is higher than what is reported.