YouTube FTM social media influencer Chase Ross and her friends were introduced in Cutting through the Chase. Please read for background. Chase and the tech industry have been busy in recent years so do not pass this one up. Chase’s popular YouTube channel, uppercaseCHASE1, is further discussed here with a focus on the growing marriage between “trans,” the political apparatus, and the tech, medical, and pornography industries.
Testosterone use can lead to sexual deviancy. For Chase and other FTMs, it has. Products for this novel lifestyle are created to hide female sex characteristics. They also lure victims into activities once unthinkable. Many become users of sex industry goods and services and adhere to harrowing medical protocols as their flesh is carved into synthetic features. Some dig in deeper creating online content. For some it might be peddling products, for others performance. Chase does it all. The money flows cementing them in the lie and markets thrive.
Launching in December of 2005, YouTube has been Google's most successful acquisition to date turning clicks to cash with masterfully orchestrated ad management. If trending, anything can be monetized, and the transgender lifestyle is trending aplenty. The identity of a “transman” demands allegiance to bizarre practices requiring products like breast binders and synthetic phalluses known as packers or peens, some of which have functional attributes for use in urination or sex. It also requires a medicine cabinet of pharmaceuticals and surgical procedures to complete the look. Chase peddles the medical stuff too but that will be addressed in a future post.
Thanks to the internet the FTM lifestyle has scaled to an algorithmic frenzy that knows no bounds. Chase stepped into the YouTube spotlight not long after Google’s acquisition. Her most popular channel is fast approaching 200k followers and 1k videos. Adult content creator is her recent claim to fame. Is Chase now trying to emulate FTM Buck Angel? In the early 90s few young women took the leap to “transition.” But Buck did. Today, she has been transformed into a pioneer of transman pornography and creator of sex products for a once unimaginable cohort. On uppercaseCHASE1, the adult content platforms are only a click away. Chase has also graced the company of important people making this all the more concerning.
Grooming the Young
A recurring offense in Chase’s content is interaction with underage followers. Once young females declare their new identity, they are in the “secret club.” The transgender industry is dark but since the age of 15 Chase has been lured step by step into the darkest side.
In 2016 Chase celebrates with “10 Years on YouTube!,” recounting her first decade on the platform. She tells the audience she regrets deleting her earliest videos in 2006. That date marks the beginning when a 15-year-old girl’s life was truncated by the movers and shakers of all things “trans.” She lets viewers know she is happy to be part of the first generation of trans YouTubers exclaiming, “I have viewers who are literally 13 years old!” She recounts her loneliness and stress and the subsequent years when her family did not accept her.
Chase walks viewers through her channels. Choosing the name “EllenDegeneres26” for her first channel, she and FTM pal and fellow YouTuber Aydian Dowling seem to have common interests. Snippets from a collaborative channel called MighTMen (2008-2009) are inserted into the 10-year video. Viewers can watch as an awkward teenage girl gets pulled into the swift undercurrent of trans. Other collaborative channels include FTM Transtastic, a channel Chase launched in 2010, now with over 1.7k videos and approaching 5m views. Viewers can watch other confused young women audition for this once inconceivable phenomenon. FTM lifestyle topics range from pre-teen transition, hysterectomies, makeup, having children, testosterone and acne, and more.
Also in 2010 Chase launched uppercaseCHASE1 and in front of the camera she begins to “transition.” With drugs coursing through her system and power betrothed by YouTube, Chase’s transformation has begun. By 2012, Chase gets a big break. Her video, “Sh*t trans* guys say" gets thousands of views. Today it is age restricted but it has reached more than half a million views. In 2013, her chest is surgically altered for a lie.
In Chase’s 2016 “The Trans Enough Project,” the tables have turned and her young audience now takes center stage. Chase solicits video submissions revealing times when subscribers felt “not trans enough.” Chase accepted more than 60 submissions over parts one and two for this project. Participants hailed from all over the world. As US gender clinics manufacture transgender youth faster than any other nation, it is no wonder US participants figured the most at 66%. Over 40% of the participants were under the age of 18. 15 and 16-year-olds were the most represented.
The term “trans enough” was hardly Chase’s brilliant idea but had infected the online world long before. By 2015 the term could be found at elite academic centers like in Duke’s Transgender Studies Quarterly. Influencers and gullible youth just needed to spread the message, and this is Chase’s specialty. Today the term is ubiquitous enough that AI recognizes it. AI informs “trans enough” is, “a harmful and elitist notion that implies there is a specific standard or criteria for being transgender.” In other words, there is no standard. Just take some drugs, have some surgery, and join that “secret club.”
In 2016 Chase and FTM influencer Aaron Ansuini started a podcast titled “You’re So Brave.” Here they bring together the “older trans guys” and the “younger trans guys” (pre-transition). Over 133 episodes from 2016 to 2018 were created and subscribers reached 22k. The channel banner still exists but no playlists. There is though a link to a facebook page with a link back to a YouTube video requiring sign in.
In 2017 Chase began a “Trans 101”series that ran for 31 episodes guiding youth to be their “authentic” selves. The first video starts with definitions, as in redefining what it means to be human. The last is on “gatekeeping.” Chase acts as though topics are her own, but Chase is a good actress and she follows a script. Definitions are a must and “gatekeeping” is a growing talking point. There should be none according the masterminds in charge.
In 2017 Chase also began giveaways in an arrangement with the binder company gc2b.co. 5 binders per month soon became 30 binders. This was followed by New York Toy Collaborative getting in on the action providing packers and stand-to-pee (STP) devices. In January of 2018 Chase proudly tells viewers that 1,383 products had been given away valued at almost 30k.
Things got even better. By July 2018 Chase did “The Biggest Trans Giveaway Ever” with over 23k worth of items in one event. She tells her viewers it does not matter how old they are and that she wants to avoid age restriction. Using a friend’s address is suggested for transphobic parents. “I just want to give the opportunity for everyone to be able to get these life-saving binders that they desperately need for their dysphoria,” she says in a video.
Extracurricular Activities
Along with commission on sales and paid sponsorships, YouTube creators can promote extracurricular activities in their content. Chase gets around with appearances at universities, VidConUS, and even medical conferences.
Pennsylvania Work
Chase has made noteworthy appearances in eastern PA. In 2016 Chase and her FTM friends sold stickers at the annual Trans Philly Conference, an event that began in 2002. Chase even documents the occasion with FTM friends in their hotel room. By 2021 she was invited to present at the conference. Her talks were titled “Prosthetics for Sex” and “The In’s [sic] and Out’s [sic] of Masturbation Sleeves.”
In January of 2017, Chase was invited to give a talk at the Bradbury-Sullivan LGBT Community Center in Allentown. Chase documents her trip. The center was founded in 2004 as the PA Diversity Network and is among hundreds of LGBTQ centers in the country. One of the founders, Adrian Shanker, introduces Chase to the audience. Chase’s topic was, “Transgender Men in a Cisgender World: Identity, Masculinity, and Sexual Health.”
Speaking in the new gendered language, Chase gets in all the usual talking points that have become common to the times. Definitions come first. Chase says she has “male privilege” because she “passes.” She claims no “heterosexual privilege” though claiming she looks “queer.” Birth assignments, trans invisibility, trans murder, trans family acceptance, and others all get mentions.
“YouTube has been like therapy,” says Chase. “So when I was 15 I found a YouTube video of someone who was…” she begins another sentence. She goes on about her confusion over not knowing if she was or was not. She talks of stealing her dad’s credit card for products, then hiding them in disgust only to come back to them later. She mentions growing up with only a dad and about changing her birth certificate. She recounts the things she loved in the past like knitting and musicals. She informs her audience, “and that’s how it starts and I'm not saying like YouTube makes you trans, because I feel like a lot of people think that. Like I'm trans. I found out on YouTube.” Any parents out there nodding along?
Her talk highlights her “trans enough” projects and her research on tattoos and passing. At the time of her talk Chase was on her way to becoming an official “expert” thanks to academia. Chase was working towards a degree in sociology in her hometown of Montreal with a thesis on transmen, identity, and tattoos.
The talk was organized by the center’s health director. Chase’s sexual health topics are kept on the clean side despite her YouTube content. A urinary tract infection becomes a talking point. Chase claims she was treated badly for being “trans,” of course. During the event HIV, STD, and anal cancer screenings get mentions.
The evening marked the launch of a new group for trans guys in the Lehigh Valley and another for the under 21 cohort called “Project Silk.” The young “guys” would be led by the center health director. Where might this person lead these girls?
Perusing the center website it is clear the medical political machine has this place in its claws. Today it is monkeypox vaccines. The people though, they think they are being cared for.
Trans is Political.
In 2022 Adrian Shanker, the Bradbury-Sullivan center director, got a big promotion. He became senior advisor on LGBTQI+ health equity under the US Assistance Secretary of Health, Rachel Levine. Rachel Levine is the man who gained office in 2021 and dons a female military uniform to work in the White House. Before getting the national spotlight, Rachel Levine was PA Secretary of Health from 2017-2022.
A year after the LGBTQ center talk, in 2018 Chase gets invited to speak at the sixth annual NEPA Trans Health Conference held at Geisinger Health. Here she comes together with a trans teen, transgender medical program employees, PA school district educators, the PA Youth Congress, and parents. The most prominent speaker though was none other than Rachel Levine, the MTF in the White House. Are influencers like Chase being groomed to hold such esteemed company?
The PA Youth Congress participating in the conference is among one of over 50 LGBTQ organizations in a PA coalition. It is a giant network leading to the top.
YouTube, Politics, Medicine
Rachel Levine and the lead of YouTubes’s new health partnership team have something in common. In 2021 YouTube tapped the former Assistant Secretary of Health Garth Graham to lead the partnership. "How do we work to build out health on YouTube as an informational and motivational source for health and public health?" he asks in an article put out by the Healthcare Information and Management and Systems Society (HIMSS) who abide by the “one health” paradigm. Technocratic Gender Harmony is the name of the game. YouTube has partnered with the American Public Health Association (APHA), Cleveland Clinic, the Harvard School of Public Health, Mayo Clinic, and the National Academy of Medicine, as well as physician content creators, the Association of Healthcare Social Media (AHSM) and others. So who does Chase work for?
From APHA to AHSM, all support gender lies. AHSM is a non-profit birthed in the Covid era when telemedicine was deemed an “emergency.” It was first funded by the American Board of Internal Medicine. They too, are all for gender lies. AHSM founding member Dr. Natalie Crawford is the co-founder of a boutique fertility practice in TX, Fora Fertility. She is on YouTube too. Check out the transgender services offered. “Diversity and inclusion” equals business opportunities!
Levine would go on to be featured on STAT’s Status List in 2022. In a discussion sponsored by YouTube, Graham introduces the new mission across Google. Levine discusses all the trending agendas of modern day like transgender, Covid, monkeypox, climate change, and intersectionality. So Youtube, is it clicks for cash or clicks for harm?
Pornography
The push for female testosterone use should not be surprising considering the perversions of those who first fueled the modern US trans industry. Consider also Dr. Norman Spack, the man who brought gender transitioning to Boston Children’s Hospital in 2007. He once gave a talk at a conference sponsored by the New England Leather Association. Or consider the CEO of an adult sex toy company who founded an organization to support a gender clinic at Cincinnati Children’s Hospital. How many connections are there?
UppercaseCHASE1 informs users what her YouTube channel is about:
Reviewing trans products like packers, STPs, prosthetics for sex, and masturbation sleeves—and doing it with a dose of humor. Because getting informed should also be fun!"
Chases’ online footprint reeks of porn. She digs in deeper as monetization increases. In 2010, in a video titled “chase. porn,” the word slowly rolls off her tongue, “…porn…porn…porn…porn…I like that word porn.” The porn websites she frequents are shared with her followers. As she wraps up she mentions, “…oh there is also a lot of, um trans porn.” Then she mentions Buck Angel claiming her dislike for the “man with the pussy” referring to Buck’s trademark name. She ends by teasing followers, “and, uh, what kind of porn do you watch? Make me a video as well.”
Buck Angel, born in 1962, is the top brass of FTM porn stars as well as an entrepreneur of the first sex products for transmen. Despite Chase claiming her past distaste for the star, in 2018 Buck Angel’s products are peddled in an uppercaseCHASE1 product giveaway. Buck Angel’s Kiss-X (for pre-transitioners), Fun Boy, and Buck-Off are mailed off to hypnotized followers. “Just the joy that it brings me to know all the people that are getting these,” gushes Chase.
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Chase's cherished goods are displayed on her “peen wall.” There are hundreds of disturbing products reviewed on her channel. Here are a few to give readers a taste:
· the Hot Rod, a squeezable silicone phallus complete with fluid
· The Buck Shot and KissX by Buck Angel, sex toys for transmen
· the Moveable 4skin – Emisil, a packer with some realistic features
A Slippery Slope to Performance
Chase has taken her work beyond YouTube. She is also an adult content creator on OnlyFans. It is unclear when she started her OnlyFans channel but the platform has only been around since 2016. Creators make money through subscriptions, tips, and pay-for-view content. In 2021 when OnlyFans announced upcoming restrictions on content, Chase and many other creators moved to a new platform called fansly. Today Chase keeps both channels, calling her OnlyFans content “educational” and her fansly content “explicit.”
Gendermapper has exposed OnlyFans and the FTM connection. Readers who can stomach it, can hear what gendermapper has to say about Buck Angel.
Testosterone Defense?
Testosterone use was part of the defense in the trial of FTM Jace Wong who was accused of creating and distributing online child porn while working at a San Francisco daycare in 2023. Although Wong might also have a genetic disorder (Triple XXX), she is female. Doctors prescribed it anyway for Wong’s “gender transition,” a scene playing out for young females across the country. Wong is serving 25 years in prison. The medical and technocratic executioners of this madness, they got off scot-free.
Chase’s final words in “10 Years on YouTube!” are, “No one even knew what trans was, so I had YouTube, ….” She goes on, “I will continue to make videos for the next 20 [expletive] years, next 50 years! When am I ever going to leave YouTube? I have built my life on YouTube.” Today Chase is 33 years old and remains on YouTube and other platforms spewing her filth.
In May of 2024, Chase uploaded a video featuring a “premium sex machine.” Exclaiming “screw the rules,” she explains the device in graphic detail not forgetting to repeatedly put in a pitch for her fansly channel and the explicit content there. Who is responsible for this? When is enough enough?
And behind each one of these "influencers" (I prefer predators) is a family left behind, broken, and in mourning for the child they lost. Now their former child is destroying other people's children. What a sick and evil ideology this is.
And this is what YOUTUBE considers acceptable, appropriate and positive content for viewers… Disgusting 🤢 despicable 👿 SHAME ON THEM