
A man who believes he is a woman criticized Milei because he can no longer live off the state.
The young man reported that at the public hospital 'they're not providing' the hormones and that he now has to pay for them out of his own pocket
Tiziana, a man who believes he is a woman, 16 years old, is known for being the first person from NOA to obtain her ID with a gender change at 10 years old, and caused controversy by criticizing President Javier Milei for his policy of fiscal adjustment, reduction of state subsidies, and elimination of privileges without true reasons.
In interviews with various media outlets, the young man reported that at the public hospital he attends "they aren't providing" the two hormones he needs for his treatment and that now he must pay for them out of his pocket.
These statements caused controversy on social media. Is it fair for Argentine taxpayers to pay with their money for Tiziana's personal and ideological treatment costs?

The teenager, who claims to have dedicated "half of his life" to the LGBT struggle, expressed his frustration: "They are taking away opportunities from me". According to him, President Milei's policies, such as the elimination of the trans labor quota (that is, being hired simply for being "trans") reflect "ignorance".
He also confessed to being "afraid to go out on the street" after the statements of the Argentine president, something that evidences the constant victimization of the left, which accuses Javier Milei of saying things he never said and attacks him accordingly.
But while Tiziana demands that the State, with taxpayers' money, cover his personal needs, many Argentines wonder why they should be the ones, with their taxes, to finance his particular motivations.
Javier Milei, since his rise to power, made it clear that his priority is to reduce public spending, return to citizens the freedom to manage their own resources, and end the privileges of some sectors of society.
In this context, Tiziana's demand that the State provide free hormones clashes with the new idea voted by the majority of Argentines, which holds that state interventionism is the origin of Argentina's economic problems.

Why, then, should the working people subsidize hormonal treatments that only benefit a small group of people?Will "trans" people have more rights than other citizens?
Milei's stance is not an attack on minorities, as Tiziana suggests, but a defense of individual responsibility and the end of an welfare model and privileges that broke the country.
Criticizing President Milei for not guaranteeing these treatments is ignoring reality. If Tiziana expects Argentines to pay for his hormone process, he should consider the cost this implies for millions of families struggling to make ends meet.
Eliminating privileges like the trans labor quota is not discrimination, but a step toward a labor market based on merit, not on quotas imposed by the State.
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