The headline could be understood to mean that there was a 'hamas camera' at the place where, separately, other journalists, including Reuters, also had cameras. It doesn't make it ok, of course, but it would mean that Reuters isn't calling its own journalist a 'Hamas camera'
And the danger does not lie in the existence of mosques in and of themselves, for freedom of worship is one of the basic human rights, a. every person has the right to believe and worship his Lord. The problem lies in the contents that are taught in some of these mosques, a. they are not limited to piety and good deeds, b. rather focus on encouraging escalating violence in the streets of Europe, and spreading hatred for the other and even for those who host them in their countries. a. inciting against them instead of teaching love, harmony. and peace.
Forgive the formatting, I had to use OCR as you didn't provide a text transcription or a link to the post.
Anyway, I wouldn't say this problem is unique to Islam, rather harm is present in all religions. However, Islam is uniquely explosive in its growth, as a combination of accepting converts and having lots of children. And Islam is a harmful religion. It's not 'islamaphobic' to say that, it's misogynistic and wilfully ignorant to not say it.
As soon as puberty starts, they should at least have the option to delay their choice with puberty blockers, and probably soon after to start HRT, if it's clear it's a permanent thing.
I used to have depression before I started HRT. I would dwell on all the world's problems, and feel despair, and cry at night, and be quicker to anger when people annoyed me. Then within a week of starting HRT - not saying this would work for everyone, but it worked for me - my baseline magically got higher, most of the time I felt ok, found it easier to enjoy things, ignored the world's problems, was calmer and less judgemental.
To copy my comment from !ManufacturingConsent@lemmy.ml (since you unhelpfully didn't crosspost it)