Abomination said:
Right, you've been going on a lot about this in the thread, but I remember from the time the article originally aired about issues regarding the bathroom that Coy had been assessed by doctors and psychologists - it was not simply the parents' decision. I'm flagging this up for you as you're the one being most vocal about it, but hopefully the others you have been conversing with will see it too.
It is a little tricky to find some of the original articles in the wake of the new story, but:
According to The New York Times, after consulting with doctors, Coy?s parents informed the school that she identified as a girl and should be treated as one.
http://www.buzzfeed.com/skarlan/transgender-6-year-old-wins-civil-rights-case-in-colorado
A psychologist confirmed that Coy was transgender and her passport lists her as female
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2347149/Coy-Mathis-Transgender-child-6-Colorado-wins-civil-rights-case-use-girls-bathroom-school.html
Prior to the complaint, the first-grader, who dresses as a girl and is recognized as female on her passport and state-issued ID
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2347149/Coy-Mathis-Transgender-child-6-Colorado-wins-civil-rights-case-use-girls-bathroom-school.html
Mrs Mathis said that Coy was just 18-months-old when she started being drawn towards 'everything girl'.
Some of her favorite items included a fairy flower dress with a matching tutu and a Dora the Explorer bathing suit.
'It was starting to be obvious to us that Coy was really uncomfortable being a boy,' Mrs Mathis recalled.
'He wanted to know when we were going to take him to the doctor so that they would give him girl parts so that his body would be a girl.'
It reached breaking-point when Coy refused to leave the house because she didn't want to change into boys' clothes.
A psychologist confirmed that Coy was transgender and when she was four years old her parents let her 'be who she was' and she made the transition from boy to girl.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2347149/Coy-Mathis-Transgender-child-6-Colorado-wins-civil-rights-case-use-girls-bathroom-school.html
The Mathises said Coy, a triplet, showed an early preference for things associated with girls.
At five months, she took a pink blanket meant for her sister, and she later showed little interest in toy cars and refused to leave the house if she had to wear boys' clothes.
Her parents also said she became depressed and withdrawn, telling them that she wanted to get "fixed" by a doctor."
http://news.sky.com/story/1107686/transgender-girl-coy-mathis-wins-toilets-case
At 5 months, she took a pink blanket meant for her sister Lily. Later, she showed little interest in toy cars and boy clothes with pictures of sports, monsters and dinosaurs on them. She refused to leave the house if she had to wear boy clothes. After her parents accepted her identity, they said, Coy come out of her shell.
Coy was diagnosed with "gender identity disorder" ? a designation the American Psychiatric Association removed last year from its list of mental ailments. The removal reflected the growing medical consensus that identification as another gender cannot be changed.
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/24/coy-mathis_n_3488306.html
This issue really annoys me, not only because it seems people with little understanding of GID and transsexual issues weigh in on it, but also because people, for some reason, overlook the intense amount of assessment that people have to go through to be diagnosed with the condition - particularly for children, because of the idea that they may not yet have a sense of gender identity that pervades society. And it ends up with comments like this (not that I am saying you were going that way, but this is why it really touches my buttons):
Mat Staver of Liberty Counsel, which focuses on religious and family litigation, said transgender cases are "a mockery of civil rights." He said his group got involved defending a department store employee who was disciplined for ordering a person who was obviously male to leave the women's changing room.
"How do you know if someone is really thinking this way or not," Staver said, adding that Coy is too young to decide on such a different identity. "How do you know if someone just wants to go in the restroom and be a peeping Tom?
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/06/24/coy-mathis_n_3488306.html
So yeah, kids at 6 (and younger) can have gender identity disorders, and it was not simply pushed on her by the parents.