Instead of apologizing for the quote itself, he wrote, “I apologise to our readers who were offended by the cover quote and the use of those same words in the review.”
Then he acknowledged the real reason for the butchering of the English language:At the same time, I want to emphasise that transgender health is an important dimension of modern health care, but one that remains neglected. Trans people regularly face stigma, discrimination, exclusion, and poor health, often experiencing difficulties accessing appropriate health care.But, of course, their intersectional conflation of two very different issues was the problem. Any healthcare difficulties transgender people face for their condition is quite different from women’s health. To redirect attention away from their erasure of women, he turned the article into a call to serious action “against menstrual shame and period poverty:”
The exhibition review from which The Lancet cover quote was taken is a compelling call to empower women, together with non-binary, trans, and intersex people who have experienced menstruation, and to address the myths and taboos that surround menstruation. The review, like the exhibition, puts these myths and taboos into historical context. The review calls for greater efforts to overcome the lack of knowledge and stigma too often associated with menstruation. These are serious issues that demand serious actions. We encourage people to read the full review and support a growing movement against menstrual shame and period poverty.
I did read the full review and that’s not really what the piece was about. The article “Periods on display” by Sophia Davis was a review of the exhibition Periods: A Brief History at the Vagina Museum in London, UK.
“Period poverty” (lack of access to feminine products) wasn’t mentioned in context of the exhibit, only in a recounting of other recent works about menstruation. There was discussion of historical myths and taboos surrounding periods, but nothing about action taken against shame and stigma as a movement today. If there was any main message or call to action, it was a silly endorsement of “the importance of physical places like museums” and for further funding for the Vagina Museum which is “now threatened with closure.” The article was actually terribly written and sounded more like a middle schooler’s report after a field trip, with sentences like: “Having never seen these objects before, encountering them gave me a deeper understanding of what life was like when menstruating before the convenience of tampons and menstrual cups.” Another eye-roll worthy line:“Punctuating the display are various artworks: enormous custom-made menstrual cups and tampons, complete with red sequins that glitter as if in defiance of the centuries of negativity; standing in front of them felt like a celebration.”I couldn’t believe this article was accepted in a medical journal, never mind featured as the cover story. The Lancet has beclowned itself repeatedly in the name of wokeness and, sadly, it’s not alone. This is just another reason why people don’t trust “The Science.” Read more at: NewsBuster.org and Wokies.news.
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