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When events such as the Japanese Tsunami are going on it brings other areas of life into focus....
So how does getting bigger breasts solve the issue of this person being 'abused' and put an end to the name calling? I'm not suffering from some mental torment that makes me feel I'm a bloke in a woman's body so perhaps I'm unable to understand and comprehend the position he/she is in and as such I totally fail to see how having bigger breasts will in any way 'help' this person get through all of those issues.
I can see how a woman losing a breast to surgery due to cancer etc may well benefit from surgery to provide an artificial implant. But that woman had something that was taken away. This person hasn't 'lost' anything, they've simply not grown to a size they'd like. It could be argued (and probably is by a number of women), that there are women (born as a woman), who have breasts that have 'failed to develop to a size considered "appropriate" to her frame'. Indeed, there are probably plenty of blokes (born men), out there that feel their penis has 'failed to develop to a size considered "appropriate" to their frame'. Are we going to offer surgical 'enhancement' to anyone who feels a part of their anatomy isn't quite what they'd hoped for?
Perhaps I'm being narrow minded, perhaps I'm not seeing the bigger picture, but my opinion is that that money would be better spent on a breast implant operation for a woman who has LOST her breast or even an operation to save a life perhaps.
http://uk.news.yahoo.com/4/20110311/tuk-transsexual-to-learn-breast-op-cash-dba1618.htmlA transsexual will find out later whether she has won a court battle in her bid to secure NHS funding for a breast enlargement operation.
C, who suffers from gender identity dysphoria (GID) was born "male" but has been living as a woman for more than a decade.
Her breasts have failed to develop to a size considered "appropriate" to her frame despite hormonal treatment which began in 1996.
The 59-year-old, who lives in the Reading area, was described by a QC as left in physical and psychological "limbo".
She has described facing "abuse and hostility" in public because she is still not seen as a woman. She said youths had called her "all kinds of names".
Her lawyers asked the Court of Appeal at a hearing earlier this month to overturn a High Court ruling in May last year that she was not entitled to funding for an operation.
West Berkshire Primary Care Trust says surgery is not an essential part of GID treatment and there is no good evidence that it would be cost-effective or improve C's health status.
So how does getting bigger breasts solve the issue of this person being 'abused' and put an end to the name calling? I'm not suffering from some mental torment that makes me feel I'm a bloke in a woman's body so perhaps I'm unable to understand and comprehend the position he/she is in and as such I totally fail to see how having bigger breasts will in any way 'help' this person get through all of those issues.
I can see how a woman losing a breast to surgery due to cancer etc may well benefit from surgery to provide an artificial implant. But that woman had something that was taken away. This person hasn't 'lost' anything, they've simply not grown to a size they'd like. It could be argued (and probably is by a number of women), that there are women (born as a woman), who have breasts that have 'failed to develop to a size considered "appropriate" to her frame'. Indeed, there are probably plenty of blokes (born men), out there that feel their penis has 'failed to develop to a size considered "appropriate" to their frame'. Are we going to offer surgical 'enhancement' to anyone who feels a part of their anatomy isn't quite what they'd hoped for?
Perhaps I'm being narrow minded, perhaps I'm not seeing the bigger picture, but my opinion is that that money would be better spent on a breast implant operation for a woman who has LOST her breast or even an operation to save a life perhaps.