May 28, 2022 at 11:40PM

Oli London: Caucasian male who identifies as Korean. Underwent various surgeries to appear more Korean. Immerses himself into Korean culture.
But we can all agree that he will never truly be Korean.

Hence, while I would never discriminate against people with gender dysphoria, I cannot support the extremist trans-movement that pushes dysphoria upon the rest of the world, especially children.


As a younger teenager I hated my race because I couldn’t separate it from what I hated about my culture.

Once upon a time, I actually did wish I was born white. I felt like I didn’t belong in an Asian body.
You could say I was “transracial”.

Eventually, I grew to realise that my human dignity was much more innate, and that I had the God-given freedom to be the best person I could be regardless of my race.

Some might say I was just affected by colonialism, but are trans-men then just affected by patriachy?
Moving on.

While I now live life on my own terms, I have also long come to accept and embrace the reality that I will always be an ethnically Chinese male who was born and raised in Singapore.

Because while the facts don’t have to define me, the facts will always be reality.

Truth is, when I get asked “Why don’t you speak with a Singaporean accent?” or why my last name isn’t Lee, Chan, or Tan, I can somewhat sympathise with the daily struggles of trans people.

But the difference is, that I do not expect society to conform to me.

I do know of trans people who indeed, do not expect society’s conformity, nor would they ever wish it upon a child.

But this is a far cry from today’s demands.
If you don’t use preferred pronouns, you’re a bigot!

New rule: Gender is a social construct.
But if gender is a social construct, why can’t race be a social construct?

I’m an Asian male, both of which I can do nothing about.
I could change my last name, but there are certain fields on the ID card that one just cannot change.
Fields you just have to learn to love.

Because while certain fields are indeed, “social constructs”,
other fields are indeed, God-given.

I could not imagine living life wishing I was something I could never be.

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