Well my comment was the result of not reading the article entirely and reading subsequent responses which was my mistake.
I don't think it's entirely your fault, since the headline is IMO sensationalistic and misleading.
I have an advantage in that I actually read a lot of extra articles - including one written by the mum - on the subject because the one the OP linked to was far too light on context and facts for my taste.
You wouldn't happen to have a link to that, would you? I'd be interested to read it.
Well then, people are going to gender type Storm IN SPITE of their
not answering the "boy/girl" question.
So then this whole thing is an exercise FOR THEM.
(the parents)
And really amounts to nothing "news" worthy.
"oh well, the parents won't tell, but Storm's a girl.
I saw."
I agree - it's not newsworthy.
Anyone who is close enough to the family to ever be present when Storm's diaper is changed will know whether Storm is a boy or a girl. The whole story really only amounts to two separate issues that have been conflated together by the reporters:
- the parents aren't telling casual acquaintances, extended family and strangers (i.e. anyone who wouldn't find out Storm's gender as a matter of course) about Storm's gender.
- the parents have declared that they don't want to impose traditional gender norms on their child.
Any parent who would respond to a random reporter asking "so... is your kid a boy or a girl?" with "why do
you care?" is pretty close to the first point, and it's the one that the press is playing up.
A person doesn't want to share all the details of their family with a reporter? Stop the presses! That's front page news!