Ten years ago, it was unlikely that you knew someone who identified as transgender. Today, it’s unlikely that you don’t know someone who identifies as transgender. This is especially true of teenage girls. Abigail Shrier analyzes this disturbing trend and its implications
Abigail Shrier
Book(s) On My Night Table

Our friend, Abigail Shrier, was scheduled to be the featured speaker at the 2020 Ariel Avrech Memorial Lecture. Unfortunately, the Chinese-Wuhan Virus forced us to cancel the annual event. But as soon as we can reschedule, Abigail is standing by as our speaker.
Abigail writes Op-Ed pieces for the Wall Street Journal which are notable for their ability to cut through the vapor of lies and misinformation that passes for elite culture and drill down to foundational truths.
For the past year or so Abigail has been writing and researching her book about the transgender movement, sweeping like prairie fire, through the world of adolescent girls. This new social gospel is spread through social media and preached by radical leftist activists in the public school systems, men and women who seek to erase biology, male and female, and destroy the nuclear family.
I urge everyone to read Abigail’s book. And if you have children in the public school system in California, be warned, your children are being indoctrinated by fanatic radicals cleverly using the smoke screen of anti-bullying programs for their destructive secular religion.
From the publisher:
Until just a few years ago, gender dysphoria—severe discomfort in one’s biological sex—was vanishingly rare. It was typically found in less than .01 percent of the population, emerged in early childhood, and afflicted males almost exclusively.
But today whole groups of female friends in colleges, high schools, and even middle schools across the country are coming out as “transgender.” These are girls who had never experienced any discomfort in their biological sex until they heard a coming-out story from a speaker at a school assembly or discovered the internet community of trans “influencers.”
Unsuspecting parents are awakening to find their daughters in thrall to hip trans YouTube stars and “gender-affirming” educators and therapists who push life-changing interventions on young girls—including medically unnecessary double mastectomies and puberty blockers that can cause permanent infertility.
Abigail Shrier, a writer for the Wall Street Journal, has dug deep into the trans epidemic, talking to the girls, their agonized parents, and the counselors and doctors who enable gender transitions, as well as to “detransitioners”—young women who bitterly regret what they have done to themselves.
Coming out as transgender immediately boosts these girls’ social status, Shrier finds, but once they take the first steps of transition, it is not easy to walk back. She offers urgently needed advice about how parents can protect their daughters.
A generation of girls is at risk. Abigail Shrier’s essential book will help you understand what the trans craze is and how you can inoculate your child against it—or how to retrieve her from this dangerous path.
Order here.
The watch is a Jaeger LeCoultre Reverso, designed in 1931, an Art Deco masterpiece.
Pride and Prejudice
Got loads of time on your hands under quarantine?
It’s a good time to rediscover the joy of books.
And one of my favorites is Jane Austen’s masterpiece “Pride and Prejudice.”
The Borderline Bar and Grill: A Tale of Men and Masculinity
On November 7, 2018, a gunman opened fire inside a crowded bar in Thousand Oaks, California. Lives were lost that night, but lives were also saved. Who saved them? How? What can these heroes teach us? Journalist Abigail Shrier answers these questions in this powerful video.
Abigail is a friend who will be the next speaker for the Ariel Avrech Memorial Lecture in 2020. Details to be published here as we get closer to the event.
Transgenderism and Culture: Abigail Shrier
Transgenderism is the new frontier for LGBTQ activists and feminists, but how does it impact our culture, free speech, sports and the children who transition? Wall Street Journal writer Abigail Shrier expounds on the impact of transgenderism in society on this episode of The Candace Owens Show.