
Lars Larson applauds Kaiser Permanente’s announcement that it will stop so-called ‘gender affirming surgery for minors’ just over a month from now
Lars Larson
The Northwest Nonsense
I have some happy news to start your Thursday: sexual medical mutilation of children stops at one of the largest healthcare institutions in the Northwest.

Kaiser Permanente announced late yesterday it will stop so-called “gender affirming surgery for minors” just over a month from now.
More than 12 million people, mostly on the West Coast, depend on Kaiser for healthcare.
In the last decade, chemical and surgical castration of boys and double mastectomies for teen girls has turned into a multi-billion dollar industry for these medical Mengeles and the institutions they work for.
More than a year ago, Great Britain’s national health service banned chemical and surgical changes in children, calling the evidence it does them any good at all very weak.
Now, Kaiser promises it will stop this criminal assault on children by August 29th.
Sadly, I think money and not moral outrage made all the difference.
President Trump promised to cut federal funding through Medicaid for this horror show.
I’m still waiting for the docs up on Portland’s “Pill Hill” and at Seattle’s University of Washington Medical Center to follow Kaiser down the right path.
Too many kids have been cut up and chemically neutered by this political fad, driven by LGBTQ activists.
I’m sure we will see the lawsuits from that damage for decades to come.
Also read:
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- Opinion: Washington state is blowing up its no-income-tax advantageLawmakers advanced SB 6346 with an emergency clause, aiming to end Washington’s no-income-tax reputation and prevent voters from seeking a referendum.
- Opinion: Labor to hit householdsHouseholds hiring for childcare or cleaning may soon need formal contracts due to a Washington law extending workplace rules to domestic arrangements.
- POLL: What do you think will happen if Washington’s new income tax becomes law?A new poll asks Clark County Today readers to predict what will happen if Washington’s nearly 10% tax on high incomes becomes law.







