by
Wendy McElroy
The little boy that Bruce Reimer was never had a chance. As an adult,
he chose suicide on May 4 rather than live in unbearable torment. Underlying
his death is a theory that still impacts children across North America:
that sexual identity comes from nurture not nature and, so, can be entirely
determined by proper social conditioning.
In 1966, Reimer's mother took her 8-month-old identical
twins to a local doctor in Winnipeg, Canada, for circumcision.
The procedure went badly for Bruce, leaving him without a sex organ.
Although the Reimers were working-class parents, they took their
mutilated son to a string of doctors until finally arriving at the
door of medical psychologist Dr.
John Money of Johns Hopkins Medical Center in Baltimore.
Money was out to prove a theory that would subsequently bring him
fame and fortune. He maintained that Bruce was young enough to be
successfully raised as a girl because gender was not determined by
DNA but by environment. For Money, Bruce was a perfect candidate for
the experiment because his identical twin brother would act as a control
for the experiment.
At that time, surgery to reassign gender had never been performed
on a boy born with normal genitalia. Bruce's testicles were removed,
and he underwent 12 years of social and hormonal treatment to become
"Brenda."
The transformation became internationally renowned as "the John/Joan
case." Dr. Money's research was offered as proof positive that sexual
identity was learned behavior. He declared, "The child's behaviour
is so clearly that of an active little girl and so different from
the boyish ways of her twin brother."
Every textbook on gender included Money's experiment and grants poured
into his pocket. Doctors began to surgically "reassign" the gender
of babies born with ambiguous genitals. Feminists declared human beings
to be "psychosexually neutral" at birth and campaigned to change everything
from children's stories to the curricula of schools in order to change
the gender identity being taught to children. Money's research supported
their contention that patriarchal conditioning, not nature, was entirely
responsible for women's roles in society.
Behind the scenes, Reimer's mother told
Money that Brenda ripped off dresses, rejected dolls, insisted
on standing up to urinate, and asked to shave like her father. Nevertheless,
Money's 1972 book "Man and Woman, Boy and Girl" declared the experiment
to be a success.
Indeed, Money urged the Reimers to complete the gender experiment
on the pubescent Brenda by having a vagina surgically constructed.
When she threatened to commit suicide rather than undergo more treatment
by Money, the Reimers revealed the truth. Brenda adopted the name
David and began to live as a man.
Of his childhood, David later stated:
"It was like brainwashing ... I'd give just about anything to go to
a hypnotist to black out my whole past. Because it's torture. What
they did to you in the body is sometimes not near as bad as what they
did to you in the mind with the psychological warfare in your head."
For years, David remained silent while Money's version of the research
was applauded by feminists and continued to influence public policy
on gender. Then, in 1997, biologist Milton Diamond and psychiatrist
Keith Sigmundson published
a report in the Archives of Pediatric & Adolescent Medicine,
which exposed the John/Joan case as a failure and fraud. To the extent
that the case proved anything, it proved the opposite of what Money
claimed. John/Joan suggested that maleness developed in the womb;
gender could not be reassigned through medical and social conditioning.
Money's response?
The report was "part of the anti-feminist movement."
In 2000, Rolling Stone journalist John Colapinto published "As
Nature Made Him: The Boy Who Was Raised as a Girl." The book created
a sensation by popularizing the findings of the Diamond-Sigmundson
report.
Shortly thereafter, the Johns Hopkins Children's Center released
two scientific studies
that indicated "prenatal exposure to normal male hormones alone dictates
male gender identity in normal XY male babies, even if they are born
without a penis." If true, this utterly discredits the medical practice
of reassigning the gender of babies.
The studies came too late for David Reimer. Although he endured four
reconstructive surgeries to reverse Money's experiment and to rebuild
his penis, David was unable to overcome a tortured past. After several
setbacks in his personal life, David committed
suicide at the age of 38. It was the last of several attempts
to die that dated back to his teenage years.
Although Money's research has been widely discredited, the belief
that sexual identity is socially constructed still deeply impacts
our culture. A good first step toward reversing the damage this belief
can inflict is to reclaim a word usage that has been virtually abandoned.
We should use the word "sex" and reject the word "gender" when discussing
sexual identity.
Wendy McElroy
DISCUSS
THIS ARTICLE IN THE FORUM!
Wendy McElroy is the editor of ifeminists.com.
She is the author and editor of many books and articles, including her
new anthology Liberty
for Women: Freedom and Feminism in the 21st Century
(Ivan R. Dee/Independent Institute, 2002). She lives with her husband
in Canada. Other articles by Wendy McElroy
can be found in the MensNewsDaily.com archive.