
"If you are someone that just wants to identify as another sex, but you know deep down that you're not, but you just want to be called he' or she' that's one thing, said Jones. He continued: But if you, from a psychological standpoint, think that you are another sex, you should not have a gun. Something that has been diagnosed as gender dysphoria is a problem. And all of us know it. We all have to fill out the federal gun form that talks about mental you should have to check that box."
"But if you, from a psychological standpoint, think that you are another sex, you should not have a gun. Something that has been diagnosed as gender dysphoria is a problem. And all of us know it. We all have to fill out the federal gun form that talks about mental you should have to check that box."
A proposal asserted that individuals diagnosed with gender dysphoria should be barred from gun ownership. The claim distinguished between people who cross-dress or informally identify as another sex and those with a clinical diagnosis of gender dysphoria framed as a mental-health concern. The argument linked federal firearm background forms and mental-health disclosure to potential disqualification. The claim criticized political reluctance, citing sensitivity about causing offense as a barrier to clearer regulation. The context included a deadly high school hockey game shooting in Pawtucket, Rhode Island, and reference to the suspect using an alternate name.
Read at www.mediaite.com
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