Summary

Ling’er, a 28-year-old transgender woman in China, won a record 60,000 yuan ($8,200 USD) in compensation after being subjected to involuntary electroshock conversion therapy at a hospital.

Her parents admitted her in 2022, opposing her gender identity, and she endured seven sessions over 97 days, causing lasting health issues.

The court ruled her personal rights were violated, marking the first legal victory for a trans person against such practices in China.

LGBTQ+ advocates hailed the decision, highlighting persistent challenges and legal grey areas surrounding conversion practices in the country.

  • Jumuta
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    6 hours ago

    it’s a w for the trans people in china not a w for china

    • parpol@programming.dev
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      4 hours ago

      I mean sure, if you don’t consider the people of china to be China, but we’re going down semantics here.

      • AbsoluteChicagoDog@lemm.ee
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        3 hours ago

        Believe it or not, people who happen to be born in a place are not interchangeable with the authoritarian government that rules over them.

        • parpol@programming.dev
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          3 hours ago

          And government does not equal country. However both the goverment and the people are part of the country. When Chinese people win, the country wins. I said China, I.e. the country, not the government. If I had been talking about the government I would have said the CCP, which I am not trying to lift up in my comment. Fuck the CCP.

          • AbsoluteChicagoDog@lemm.ee
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            1 hour ago

            A country IS a government, it’s just an organization represented by an arbitrary line on a map run by people who embrace violence to take power and resources from other people.

      • Jumuta
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        3 hours ago

        yeah nah the people of china aren’t the same thing as the judicial system of china

        • parpol@programming.dev
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          3 hours ago

          I never said the judicial system of China, I said China as in the country, people of China are a subset of China the country, therefore a Chinese people W is a China W. Can we stop this pointless conversation now?

          • nomous@lemmy.world
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            2 hours ago

            It’s impossible to have a conversation here without a half dozen people chiming in with "ackshually!

            I, and every other neuro-normal person knew what you meant. I’d wager the commenter did too they just didn’t know how to contribute because the social skills thing.

          • Jumuta
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            2 hours ago

            you kinda implied it’s a w by the judicial system of china when you made that first comment, otherwise it doesn’t make much sense. A ‘w’ imo usually refers to good brought as a result of a party’s active actions, and if you meant the people when you said china it really wouldn’t make sense because it’s mostly a dictatorship.

            anyway I’m good to stop having the argument now, you don’t have to reply