“These are things people might believe are true, but the truth is they are demonstrably false. Being born with XY chromosomes and testicles and believing you’re a female is a delusion. It’s not true,” continued Dr. Woodall. Now 63, he explained that when he attended medical school, students were taught to recognize biological reality.
[snip]
“We would have been taught 40 years ago that their problem was a problem of thinking,” he said. “They had a disease of thinking and we needed to focus on helping them think correctly, rightly, and truthfully.”
He contrasted that training with what physicians are instructed to do today. Instead of treating the underlying disorder, he said, the medical establishment now tells doctors to affirm the false belief itself.
[snip]
He explained that conditions long understood as psychiatric, emotional, or mental disorders are now reframed as identities, and the recommended response has shifted accordingly. “Now we’re being told to treat this psychiatric disorder, these delusions, with surgery and hormones,” he said.
In an article he published, Dr. Woodall describes a clinic encounter with a vulnerable 14-year-old girl named Jessica who had begun to believe she might be transgender after pressure from older peers and influence from the internet.
He explains that during their conversation he spoke calmly with her about biological sex, emphasizing that sex is determined by chromosomes present in every cell of the body and cannot be changed by hormones, surgery, or self-identification. He contrasted the temporary insecurities of adolescence with the permanent physical harm caused by medical interventions that promise a “sex change” but cannot deliver one.
[snip]
In our interview, Dr. Woodall explained that adolescents are often confused, insecure, and searching for identity, and what they do not need are adults suggesting that their discomfort means they were “born in the wrong body.” He said this claim has no grounding in medicine or psychiatry, and that it is an ideological construct rather than a diagnosable condition.
“What our adolescents don’t need is people telling them, ‘Maybe the reason you’re feeling these things is because you were born in the wrong body.’ There is no identifiable medical condition or psychiatric condition of being born in the wrong body. That is a construct. It’s an ideology. It doesn’t exist,” he said.
He then used sports to illustrate the biological realities that society has long recognized. As a 63-year-old who still competes athletically, he noted that age categories exist because older athletes cannot realistically compete with men in their twenties. He added that weight classes in martial arts and boxing reflect the same principle: no one would argue that a 100-pound man should be matched against a 250-pound man.
“That’s simply recognizing physical reality,” he said. “In sports, men and women should be separated for the same reasons. They are different. And it destroys the competitive opportunities for women when men enter their sports.”
He concluded the point plainly: “Men should be defined as someone with a Y chromosome.”
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“These conditions can look confusing early in life, but puberty reveals the biological truth,” he wrote, adding that male puberty produces permanent physical changes that no hormone regimen can undo.
Woodall points to recent controversies, including XY athletes competing in women’s boxing and powerlifting, as examples of governing bodies prioritizing inclusivity over biological reality, allowing competitors with male physiology to dominate women’s sports. He argues that testosterone suppression policies and hormone-based eligibility rules ignore the irreversible effects of male puberty, which establishes male muscle mass, bone structure, and cardiovascular capacity.
“Once male puberty occurs, the advantages are baked in,” he explained. “You can suppress testosterone, but you cannot reverse the structural changes that make competition against XX women unfair and unsafe.”
He concludes that fair competition requires genomic verification, simple chromosome testing, and that women’s sports must remain restricted to athletes with XX karyotypes to preserve safety, fairness, and adherence to biological reality.
Part of gender ideology is the belief that people can choose to be male or female and that they will be happiest if they select their “real” gender rather than the one they are born with. Dr. Woodall explained how dangerous this construct is and offered one of the clearest examples of how such thinking leads to profound unhappiness and even death.
[snip]
“Despite everything they did to him, David consistently showed male traits,” Woodall said. “He was never comfortable living as a girl.”
Reimer, called Brenda during childhood, suffered severe depression, resisted further procedures, and ultimately reclaimed his male identity at fourteen. Meanwhile, Money continued to publish the case as proof that gender could be reassigned, influencing decades of medical teaching and early sex-reassignment practices on children with intersex conditions.
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Woodall argues that the Reimer case demonstrates the dangers of early gender reassignment, the ideological bias that shielded Money’s theories from scrutiny, and the urgent need for caution, open debate, and accountability as similar practices reappear today under the banner of “gender-affirming care.”
* Original Article:
Medical Doctor Confirms: There Are Only Men and Women – The Rest Is Trans Ideology