Malcolm and Simone Collins dive deep into a provocative new hypothesis: Could some trans urges in humans be driven by the same evolutionary mechanism seen in other species — the “sneaky copulator” strategy? Low-status males in certain animals change their physiology to mimic females in order to infiltrate harems and reproduce covertly. Could a similar adaptive response explain elevated rates of extreme brutality, sadism, and aggression observed in trans respondents compared to cis counterparts (drawing from Aella’s massive dataset and historical sexology research)?
We explore:
* Why trans individuals show significantly higher interest in violent and brutal sexual categories
* Historical links between cross-dressing/transvestism and sadomasochism in early psychology
* How modern cultural signals of disempowerment might trigger these ancient fallback strategies
* Connections to mass shooters, sexual violence patterns, and more
This is a controversial, evidence-based exploration of human sexual adaptation — not hate, but an attempt to understand complex phenomena through evolutionary biology.
Episode Transcript:Malcolm Collins: [00:00:00] Anyway, so, the point that I’m making here is he might have actually been, ironically, right, the phenomenon that drives trans urges.
In humans might be the exact same phenomenon that drives trans physiological differences in other species. Wow.
Would you like to know more?
Malcolm Collins: Hello Simone. I’m excited to be here with you today. We have done a video in the past where we document with extensive notes how extremely overrepresented trans people are among mass shooters. And at the video we joke, you know, when somebody says I’m trans, they might as well be.
Speaker 7: Nice to meet you, . Listen, if you ever need anybody murdered. Please give me a call and you, you’re giving him card. No.
Code of ethics. I will kill anyone anywhere. Children, animals, old people, doesn’t matter. I just love killing
Speaker 6: you.
Malcolm Collins: And in that video we go over some hypotheses on what could be causing this, but I have since dug into more research on this particular [00:01:00] topic, and I’m going to expand my hypotheses on this. In a way that expands an entirely new section of my hypothesis on human sexual behavior.
So specifically if you look at because ALA is the best source of data on this. If you look at like really, if you’re looking at any sort of data on sexuality. You either have to look at data sets that came from before the eighties because after that, you know, the, the gender police took over all of the gender science departments and they weren’t able to publish anything that made any of their preferred peoples potentially look questionable.
So you’re either looking at those data sets or alas which is why, just so people know her dataset is enormous.
Simone Collins: Yeah. Her sample sizes are. Extremely enviable. It’s, it’s
Malcolm Collins: around half a million responses, by the way. And people are like, oh, they’re, no. I think now I was just
Simone Collins: reading one of her pe it was in the 800 thousands now.
Malcolm Collins: Wow. Yeah. And, and people will say, oh, her data sets are highly biased. And I’m like, actually they’re not highly biased because she’s [00:02:00] normalizes them all the time. And she finds that they match mainstream statistics. And the vast
Simone Collins: majority of respondents are not her followers. Her survey has gone viral.
Several times on multiple different platforms. Plus it is really good SEO So again, that’s not it either.
Malcolm Collins: Sorry, I’m writing something I wanna ask her to add to the s
Published on 2 days, 10 hours ago
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