>>13785975The fucking cope.
>1. 33% is significantly *lower* than 40+%, showing that this variable *alone* accounts for a significant increase in suicidality!The argument is not that that does not account for anything. You're missing the point. You were arguing that a supportive family diminishes and removes any suicide attempts. However, my point is that you cannot compare a follow-up of one year to lifetime suicide attempts. The table I posted showed that once you start waiting more than just 1 year, it starts going up to 33% for those who always have had supportive parents.
In fact, even per your original post, it shows. Within a single year, 34% of those who had supportive parents still considered suicide.
>Your table strengthens my position.You wouldn't need to say that if you had a point. It would show.
>2. It's unknown what percentage of those people received medical careRead the paper.
>Table 5: Lifetime suicide attempts by responses about transition-related health careDo some simple math.
>1963/2480 = 79% received counsellingIn fact, if you look at the numbers, surgery or hormones don't seem to cause any impact at all in suicide attempts.
>, do not regularly experience transphobia, so on, so forth.Your other previous post implied that most do not experience regular phobias. Otherwise, their sample would disproportionately include those who experience routine phobia.
Stop contradicting yourself.
>Can you rephrase that statement?The post you were responding to was saying that all mental problems in the LGBT community is not caused by discrimination, as the disparities persisted even when accounting for discrimination as the study they link states.
Your response was that the study does not account for routine homophobia or transphobia at all when it covers major aspects of discrimination, including simply being at work. The average age in that study is 38.9 for LGBT subjects.
Unless you wanna argue those people still live with their parents?