Hey, no. Are you sure I posted that question? I can’t remember. I definitely don’t agree with your reason why I was banned.
Btw pretty sure “Undatable” just contained comical answers by me about how/why I’m undatable. Basically my answers to “what are qualities in people who are always single?” etc. I deleted it so my boyfriend wouldn’t be reading answers like this:
https://qr.ae/TWtLcG
I have been giving first names of guys I’ve had “relations” with since I have been on Quora. No one has ever told me this is a violation of any of Quora’s policies. Even after trying to go through their policies, I couldn’t find anything on that. If you think Jim got me in trouble, he didn’t. He’d never do that.
I hadn’t gotten a BNBR notice since last August. If any of my comments or answers were deleted or collapsed since, this was without any notification to me regarding any BNBR violation.
If I get back on Quora, I feel like I’ll need an editor or BNBR consultant. Rather than reporting me like passive aggressive, whiny babies, why don’t people just post “Yo BNBR” in response to things I say that offend them? These people were posting screenshots of comments I made months ago.
What I think really happened is that the post about me in the feminist group caused people to start reporting my account en masse. You’ll see that Loretta says, “You’ll continue to see her posts all over Quora of course.” I’m thinking that was a trigger statement which caused all these people to start reporting me for “attacking” the trans person (I actually did no such thing). The irony is the only one being attacked in that post or in the comments is me.
Btw, post this in the comments of Lacy Windham’s answer. Tell her to read the article and look at the photos of the nerves IN the clitoris, clearly not shown in OB/GYN textbooks (but hopefully will be soon, as one of the authors writes for 2).
https://www.ajog.org/article/S0002-9378(19)30844-0/abstract
I did not partly disagree. I 100% disagreed on her answer to the question. And the denial of OB/GYN ignorance of clitoral anatomy is actually worse than denial of the holocaust because it continues to cause harm. Denial of OB/GYN ignorance of vulvar anatomy is more comparable to denial of the holocaust during the holocaust.
Lacy and I agree on the lack of training standards for labiaplasties. We disagree on whether this is in any way defensible given the volume of these procedures and fact they’ve been done, in exponentially increasing numbers, for over 4 decades. With other procedures, regulatory bodies step in to ensure that surgeons have adequate training. But in this case, ACOG actually refuses to offer CME and ABOG assures ambulatory care providers that OB/GYNs are qualified based on residency training alone. They aren’t. But patients blame themselves, and others blame harmed patients, for errors 99.9% preventable with basic training.
But that was irrelevant to the question I was asking. Consider that I’ve gotten a messages from women who lost sensation during other procedures, like biopsies (brought up to me by a doc before I heard directly from patients), and from accidents. Who do you think is qualified to do repairs and how is a patient in need to find them? That’s very difficult. That’s a problem.