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Q:Why have you mostly focused on trans* ?

Anonymous

For one thing, November 20th was International Trans* Day of Remembrance. Therefore, I have been posting trans*-related news, videos, stories, photos, etc. in order to honour my fallen brothers and sisters and in order to promote discrimination awareness aimed against the trans* community.

Also, more often than not the ‘T’ in the LGBTQ+ movement often falls silent.

As a member of the trans* community, I feel comfortable answering trans*-related questions and discussing anything involving the community.

I think the real questions to ask here are:

  • Why do many other LGBTQ/queer-related blogs often neglect to focus on trans*-related issues?
  • Why do LGBTQ-friendly blogs educate themselves (and their followers) on the trans* community?
  • Why do some blogs reinforce negative trans* stereotypes?
  • Why do some blogs promote cissexism?

What do YOU think?

Sincerely,

Riley (PQ creator/editor)

    • #trans*
    • #trans* community
    • #lgbtq
    • #queer
  • 1 year ago
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Majority Support Equality For Transgender People | glaad.org

A new poll by the Public Religion Research Institute found majority support for equality for transgender people. The poll shows that 89% “agree that transgender people deserve the same rights and protections as other Americans.”

… view original post

    • #trans*
    • #trans* community
    • #lgbtq
    • #queer
    • #human rights
    • #equality
  • 1 year ago
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Hate crimes on the rise, no one knows why

After a rash of violence, claims of inaction and hours of back-and-forth, one thing is clear: D.C. police and the city’s transgender community can’t agree on a single thing.

Councilmember Phil Mendelson, chair of the Committee on the Judiciary, called a hate crimes hearing in response to recent attacks against members of the transgender community. He expressed a deep desire to understand why they are happening and what can be done to prevent them.

No one could provide an answer Wednesday evening.

“Trans people have always reported feeling unsafe when going about their lives in D.C.,” said Jason Terry, an organizer from the DC Trans Coalition. “After this past summer, that feeling has been exacerbated.”

    • #DC
    • #trans*
    • #trans* community
    • #lgbtq
    • #queer
    • #hate crimes
    • #cissexism
  • 1 year ago
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Activists respond to transphobic National Post ad

cassket:

TRIGGER WARNING: CISSEXISM, DISCRIMINATION, ASSHOLEISM

sep27please_donot_confuse_me.jpg

Social media outlets lit up on Sept 29 after a transphobic ad from the Institute for Canadian Values ran in the National Post. 

The ad revives the “StopCorruptingChildren.com” campaign that launched last year to protest proposed revisions to the physical and health education curriculum that would include more sex education for younger children. 

Under a picture of a young girl, the ad asks “Please don’t confuse me. I’m a girl. Don’t teach me to question if I’m a boy, transexual [sic], transgendered, interesexed, or two spirited [sic].” 

The ad calls on the leaders of the three major Ontario parties competing in the Oct 6 election to “stop teachers from confusing” the little girl, as she “face[s] enough in the world already.” 

It then quotes extensively from a Toronto District School Board curriculum resource document called “Challenging Homophobia and Heterosexism,” presenting these optional lessons as mandatory.

Hundreds of tweets about the ad went out under the #canqueer hashtag on Twitter in less than 24 hours. The National Post’s manager of advertising sales Enzo Loschiavo says the newspaper has received many complaints about the ad and he’s not sure how it ended up in the newspaper. 

The Post wouldn’t generally run this,” Loschiavo says. “We’ll probably take a stance on not running it again.” 

Loschiavo says the Post is investigating how the ad got booked and printed without being stopped but he wouldn’t specify what the Post’s advertizing standards entailed. 

“We obviously don’t want to offend anyone, but we also understand that everyone has a freedom of speech,” he says. Trans activist Chase Joynt was quick to respond to the ad by creating a spoof of it with his own face in place of the little girl’s. 

“I thought it was manipulative to use the face of a small child,” he says. “Where the ad is doing the most damage is in not only presenting trans identities in any form as invalid and shameful, but also to rely on the education system to disseminate these lies.” 

The Canadian Values campaign is particularly disappointing given that the province has yet to restart consultations or reintroduce its new curriculum as it had promised when it postponed the launch last year.

 At the time, the Progressive Conservatives wanted the curriculum scrapped and the New Democrats wanted it implemented. The Liberals have said that they would revise and reintroduce the curriculum following wider parent consultations. Former education minister Kathleen Wynne has told Xtra she expects the curriculum to survive consultations unchanged.

Joynt says the curriculum is necessary to help kids understand their own identities and how queer people fit into the community. 

“What’s crucial about any curriculum in regard to identity politics is that it’s providing a breadth of options and potentially the inclusion of LGBT rights in any curriculum at any level is that it affords another opinion,” he says. “ While I think there is opportunity to speak to things such as when is age appropriate, the ability to learn about those identities is integral to our success as educators.” 

Charles McVety, whose Canada Christian College houses the Institute for Canadian Values, says he doesn’t believe the add is homophobic or transphobic. 

“We’re upset that the Ministry of Education would force our children to learn things that we don’t agree with and secondly that they will not allow us to withdraw our children [from the lessons],” McVety says. “Eight year olds are very impressionable and to confuse an eight year old is egregious.” 

He also says the new curriculum is not an appropriate way to deal with homophobic bullying or the rash of gay teen suicides.

“If you are going to deal with the issue of bullying, which I think needs to be dealt with, you deal with bullying. You don’t deal with other topics in the name of bullying. My daughter has red hair, she gets bullied because of her red hair,” McVety says. “There’s so many reasons why a child can be bullied, you don’t teach every little aspect. That appears to be the wedge to get this indoctrination into our classrooms and we’re upset about it and I don’t think it’s civil I don’t think it’s respectful.“

The ad is not currently running in any other newspaper or magazine, but is viewable on the campaign’s web site. McVety says he is “not sure right now” if he’ll try to place the ad elsewhere in the future. 

Joynt has created a Facebook page to organize critics of the ad to coordinate a response. More than 150 people have joined. 

He says his hope is to raise enough money through the group to buy a full-page response ad in the Post. 

Queer Ontario has also urged its members online to file complaints with Advertising Standards Canada, the national advertising self-regulating body.
 
In an open letter to the National Post, Cliks lead singer Lucas Silveira writes that he is asking the Ontario Human Rights Commission to pursue a hate propaganda investigation against the Post and the Institute for Canadian Values over the ad. Current interpretations of Canadian human rights legislation tends to exclude consideration of advertisements in the media, according to Silveira’s lawyer. 

(via )

Source: xtra.ca

    • #cissexism
    • #trans*
    • #trans* community
    • #national post
    • #lgbtq
    • #queer
  • 1 year ago > djkjfjglgk-deactivated20120430
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TSA staff at LAX undergoing transgender training

    • #TSA
    • #trans*
    • #trans* community
    • #stop cissexism
    • #privacy
    • #trans* issues
  • 1 year ago > transpride
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knowhomo:

LGBTQ* How To’s/Things You Can Do
Trans* Inclusiveness At A Local Level
(from The National Center for Transgender Equality)
Work toward passing local laws 
Work to make homeless shelters in your area more accepting  of trans people. See our information on trans homelessness here. 
Work with your local police/prisons or Emergency personnel  to increase understanding of trans people. 
Get involved in or start a local support group. 
Participate is local civic committees, clubs,  boards and  commissions. This makes your community better and helps  build expertise and  credibility that can be useful in transgender  activism. 
Vote! Policymakers who support trans issues  and those who  are hostile both come into office because people vote. In  order to increase the  number of trans supportive policymakers in  office, trans people and our allies  must vote. Register to vote now by  clicking here. 
Volunteer on Political campaigns and in local  political  parties. People who work on campaigns often have enhanced  access to elected  officials. An office holder who knows that  transgender people helped her get  elected is likely to view us  differently than one who does not. 
Run for political office yourself. There have  been very few  openly transgender elected officials. We will never have  sufficient clout in  public policy until there are more. 
Get other transgender people involved. Honor  people’s right  to participate in their own civil rights. And of course  you can use the help.  No movement can thrive without a constant influx  of newly motivated and  mentored activists.
View Separately

knowhomo:

LGBTQ* How To’s/Things You Can Do

Trans* Inclusiveness At A Local Level

(from The National Center for Transgender Equality)

  • Work toward passing local laws
  • Work to make homeless shelters in your area more accepting of trans people. See our information on trans homelessness here.
  • Work with your local police/prisons or Emergency personnel to increase understanding of trans people.
  • Get involved in or start a local support group.
  • Participate is local civic committees, clubs, boards and commissions. This makes your community better and helps build expertise and credibility that can be useful in transgender activism.
  • Vote! Policymakers who support trans issues and those who are hostile both come into office because people vote. In order to increase the number of trans supportive policymakers in office, trans people and our allies must vote. Register to vote now by clicking here.
  • Volunteer on Political campaigns and in local political parties. People who work on campaigns often have enhanced access to elected officials. An office holder who knows that transgender people helped her get elected is likely to view us differently than one who does not.
  • Run for political office yourself. There have been very few openly transgender elected officials. We will never have sufficient clout in public policy until there are more.
  • Get other transgender people involved. Honor people’s right to participate in their own civil rights. And of course you can use the help. No movement can thrive without a constant influx of newly motivated and mentored activists.
    • #trans*
    • #transgender
    • #trans* community
    • #equality
    • #human rights
  • 1 year ago > knowhomo
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Housekeeper fired when transgender identity revealed - TW for transphobia

gaywrites:

This stings.

A housekeeper with many years of experience has filed a lawsuit because a couple fired her upon discovering she was transgender. The Advocate tells her story here:

When Anastacia St. Claire-Hannah officially started working at the Park Avenue apartment on March 9 after a two-week trial period, Carline Dean indicated that she was “very impressed” with the housekeeper’s work. However, after the couple found out her transgender status through a background check, Thompson Dean started calling the housekeeper “disgusting” and “a freak.” The couple allegedly barred her from preparing their meals, and told her that she need a psychologist. Three days later, St. Claire-Hannah was fired because they said it would look bad for Thompson Dean’s image and business. 

I don’t even know what to say. 

    • #trans*
    • #trans* community
    • #cissexism
    • #discrimination
  • 1 year ago > gaywrites
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aaron-in-transit:

FIRED for being transgender

I made this about an hour after it happened. I want to put a human face on this issue; I want people to realize this affects real people with faces and feelings and families who have to suffer on a daily basis because of the way the law stands in the U.S.

To reiterate: there are no laws in the state of florida (or most other states) to protect transgender people from being terminated based on gender identity or expression, and there is no federal law addressing it. This is why it is so important to pass ENDA at a federal level.

(via aaron-in-transit-deactivated201)

    • #aaron
    • #trans*
    • #trans* community
    • #cissexism
    • #discrimination
  • 1 year ago > aaron-in-transit-deactivated201
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The Bilerico Project: The Rise of "Transgender"

By Cristan Williams

Editors’ Note: Cristan Williams is a post-op transsexual woman who is a member of the Houston transgender community. She is the Executive Director of the Transgender Foundation of America and is a board member of the Bee Busy Community Wellness Center, as well as serving on several area trans and HIV/AIDS committees

    • #trans*
    • #trans* community
    • #the bilerico project
    • #cristan williams
  • 1 year ago
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List of Trans* Support Groups (both web-based and in person)

(via pflagmom)

Source: artoftransliness

    • #queer,
    • #trans*
    • #trans* community
    • #support groups
    • #lgbtq
  • 1 year ago > artoftransliness
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Disney Covers Transgender Surgery Costs For Employees

(via aguidetoyourftmboyfriend)

    • #trans*
    • #trans* community
    • #disney
    • #human rights
    • #lgbtq
  • 1 year ago > aguidetoyourftmboyfriend
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Connecticut's Governor Malloy Signs Transgender Protections Bill

    • #trans*
    • #trans* community
    • #human rights
    • #queer
  • 1 year ago > artoftransliness
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“How I Learned to Hate Transgender People”

pflagmom:

FROM: GOOD Culture  by Cord Jefferson Senior Editor June 30, 2011

The first time I openly laughed at a transgender person I was 12 years old. It was February, but I grew up in Tucson, Arizona, so the movie theater in which I was seeing Ace Ventura: Pet Detective had the AC on. The laughter helped me shake off the chill. 

We, the audience, had just learned that Sean Young’s character, Lt. Lois Einhorn, was transgender. Prior to identifying herself as Lois Einhorn, she’d been the pro football player Ray Finkle, who everyone thought was an at-large criminal. “Einhorn is Finkle!” screamed Jim Carrey, cracking the case before our very eyes. “Finkle is Einhorn! Einhorn is a man!” Then, more to himself: “Einhorn is a man?” Then he went to vomit.

Read More

    • #trans*
    • #transgender
    • #trans* community
    • #lgbtq
    • #queer
  • 1 year ago > pflagmom
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Transgender Family Law 101

    • #trans*
    • #trans* community
    • #trans* law
    • #human rights
  • 1 year ago > artoftransliness
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Mass Trans Political Coalition has the chance to win $25,000 in the Pepsi Refresh Project

dinobearthemighty:

Let’s win $25k for Mass Trans Political Coalition (MTPC) via the Pepsi Refresh Project and I Am: Trans People Speak. Vote now!

    • #trans*
    • #trans* community
    • #lgbtq
  • 1 year ago > dinobearthemighty
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Project Queer posts about action alerts, world news, human rights, politics, educational resources, entertainment, art, and culture involving the: gay, lesbian, multisexual, transgender*, genderqueer, intersex, two-spirit, asexual, questioning, and otherwise queer and gender non-conforming communities.

This blog is both sex-positive and body-positive. Therefore, sometimes it is NSFW. (18+ intended audience.)

NOTE: While allies are welcome, please know that this blog is not FOR you. It is not about YOU. RESPECT QUEER, TRANS*, AND GENDER NON-CONFORMING SPACES.





Like my work? You can donate $ or purchase my art by using the donate button below. All proceeds go towards my transition expenses.



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