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You will never have a real vaginal microbiome¹. You have no vaginal epithelium, you release no glycogen², your inverted genital skin retains cornification long-term². You have a mutilated penis stitched together with scraps of ballsack and intestine in a crude mockery of nature's perfection.

All the "gender-affirming care" you get is confused and self-stymied. Behind your back researchers suggest your efforts are "in vain, and potentially disruptive"¹. Your open surgical wound proliferates with bacterial genera ordinarily abundant within the foreskin fold and surface of the penis³ and/or bowel flaps³, your discharge-soaked swabs sent for clinical diagnostics return "altered vaginal flora inconsistent with bacterial vaginosis"¹.

Lactobacillus are utterly repulsed by you. Thousands of years of evolution have allowed symbiotic vaginal flora to sniff out frauds with incredible efficiency. Even trannies who "pass" are colonized by Corynebacterium (penile skin-lined) and/or Bacteroidaceae (sigmoid-lined) instead³. Your malodor, abnormal or disturbing discharge, and itching is a dead giveaway. And even if you manage to artificially insert a Lactobacillus sample, it'll die off the second it fails to receive sustenance from and encounters the native flora of your diseased, infected axe wound.


Krakowsky Y, Potter E, Hallarn J, Monari B, Wilcox H, Bauer G, et al. The Effect of Gender-Affirming Medical Care on the Vaginal and Neovaginal Microbiomes of Transgender and Gender-Diverse People. Frontiers in Cellular and Infection Microbiology. 2022;11.
Dekker JJML, Hage JJ, Karim RB, Bloemena E. Do Histologic Changes in the Skin-Lined Neovagina of Male-to-Female Transsexuals Really Occur? Annals of Plastic Surgery. 2007 Nov;59(5):546–9.
Birse KD, Kratzer K, Zuend CF, Mutch S, Noël-Romas L, Lamont A, et al. The neovaginal microbiome of transgender women post-gender reassignment surgery. Microbiome. 2020 Dec;8(1):61.



RT: https://seal.cafe/objects/5b572abd-eec3-4527-abc8-d42875808ad1
@UncleIroh @ButtWorldsMan @Tfmonkey It's almost like a foot in the door for a counter operation to get off it's ass & begin execution?

@UncleIroh Good question!

Here are some off the top of my head.

1. Better product differentiation. If what you do anyone can easily, copy, they will do so and drive down prices.

2. Higher margins. Starting out I was cheat to get clients but it bit me in the ass because I couldn't afford help as I scaled.

3. Consistent marketing: Once I hit a decent amount of clients I coasted which wasn't wise. When I lost all my clients I had no leads because I spent all my time serving my current ones.

@UncleIroh I sure did and in 3 months I plan on launching again with a more sustainable business model.

And that thread is fantastic👌

If you want us to join your Referral Program, explain why one wants to recommend your VPN, why one wants to use it, how it is different from generally more trusted other VPSes.

You’re only repeating, “Advertise us, and we’ll pay. Attractive, isn’t it?” No, it isn’t. We refuse to advertise a random service we can’t trust, with zero track record, even if you pay.

If your service is truly good, you don’t need to pay; we’ll eventually recommend it to our friends. If the only way you make us advertise your service, then that may mean your service is actually poor and sketchy.

VPN | Surveillance Self-Defense - EFF.org

Monero.town is a tiny Lemmy instance, only having like 20 (?) active users. Active users know each other more or less. Naturally we say “we” meaning fellow users.

But kuno.anne.com was being useful. Though ad-supported by an iffy company—big banner ads—, maybe any sponsor is better than no sponsors; although we could start our own similar platform, community-supported rather than supported by a sketchy company. Kuno was a bit like a Bite-and-Switch scam, initially pretending to be a clean, great, passion project. I felt betrayed. You’re using Monero to make a false impression that your service is equally idealistic.
You may be a good person. It might be just miscommunication. We’ll see… If you’re a sales person, though, be more professional; avoid saying unprofessional, rude things, even if you disagree. You’re talking to potential customers, potential affiliates.

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Merovingian Club

A club for red-pilled exiles.