ftmichael: - at Old Sturbridge Village, 03 July 2008.  Copyright 2008-2009. (Default)
[personal profile] ftmichael2009-08-03 05:57 pm
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DNA Test Outperforms Pap Smear

In a community where people are often very reluctant to get Pap smears, I thought this article might be pertinent.


http://nytimes.com/2009/04/07/health/07virus.html

DNA Test Outperforms Pap Smear
By DONALD G. McNEIL Jr.
Published: April 6, 2009

A new DNA test for the virus that causes cervical cancer does so much better than current methods that some gynecologists hope it will eventually replace the Pap smear in wealthy countries and cruder tests in poor ones.

Not only could the new test for human papillomavirus, or HPV, save lives; scientists say that women over 30 could drop annual Pap smears and instead have the DNA test just once every 3, 5 or even 10 years, depending on which expert is asked.

Their optimism is based on an eight-year study of 130,000 women in India financed by the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and published last week in the New England Journal of Medicine. It is the first to show that a single screening with the DNA test beats all other methods at preventing advanced cancer and death.
Read more... )
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[personal profile] ftmichael2009-08-02 09:34 am
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UK: Transgender cabbie gets second chance

http://www.lep.co.uk/news/Transgender-cabbie-gets-second-chance.5515440.jp

Transgender cabbie gets second chance
Published Date: 02 August 2009
By Chris Visser

A transgender taxi driver has landed a new job within months of being allegedly sacked for wearing nail polish and a skirt.

Andre Edwards, 51, who lives in Rufford, has been given another chance at Leyland-based Eco Cabs, in Mellor Road, where she is receiving a lot of support from punters and fellow staff.

She was hired by the firm's managing director Dean Chapman and was moved after reading about Andre being sacked at Leyland Taxis claiming customers could not deal with her unorthodox lifestyle.

Andre Edwards is back behind the wheel
Andre Edwards is back behind the wheel

Andre, who was born a man but now lives as a woman, said: "I'm delighted about it. I rang Dean and when I went to the interview he said he knew all about me. I am very grateful.

"Like any other business, it's taking time to get started. A lot of people support me and say I have a lot of determination though there will always be people who don't want me and they can ring the firm.

"People ask why I wear a skirt but I am just being myself and I don't do anything in secret."

Her boss Mr Chapman was quick to praise his new recruit.

He said: "Andre contacted me and I didn't have any problems with her. She is an exceptionally brave person who is an extremely well-qualified taxi driver.

"As long as she does the job, I have no problems. Apart from the one phone call, everyone has been very supportive."

When Andre was sacked from Leyland Taxis two months ago he claimed it was because she wore a skirt and nail polish on jobs.

But bosses at the firm argued she was dismissed after four months due to complaints from colleagues and customers about her "bad attitude", including making comments about their hair and weight.

Andre, who was born Andrew, previously spoke of how she knew she was not like other children when she was just 10-years-old.

But she later married a woman in a bid to be accepted and when her wife died of heart failure in 2004, Andre slowly started to live as a woman.

She grew her hair and ordered hormone replacement pills from the internet and has hopes to undergo a full sex change operation.
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[personal profile] ftmichael2009-07-30 04:08 pm
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US, MA: 1/3 of Trans people surveyed thought about suicide in past 12 months

From [profile] pamshouseblend ( http://www.pamshouseblend.com/diary/12280/transgender-identified-in-mass-about-a-third-thought-about-suicide-in-past-12-months ).

The Health Of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual And Transgender (LGBT) Persons In Massachusetts; A survey of health issues comparing LGBT persons with their heterosexual and nontransgender counterparts; Massachusetts Department of Public Health; July 2009

In their article citing a Massachusetts Department of Public Health survey on lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender health, the Boston Herald reported that:

[The study] found that about 31 percent of transgender respondents said they have considered attempting suicide in the past year, compared to just 2 percent for heterosexual residents, 4 percent for gay and lesbian residents and 7 percent for bisexual residents.


Thirty-one percent. In the past twelve months ...

That statistic is sobering, especially compared to the statistics for LGB and heterosexual people. From the report paragraph (that has slightly more detail accompanying in the table with the cited statistic than the Herald article):

Respondents were asked if during the past 12 months they had seriously considered attempting suicide. Among heterosexuals, 2.3% reported having considered suicide and among gay men and lesbians, Massachusetts Department of Public Health: Tbl 10, Mental Health - Considered Attempting Suicide4.4% reported suicide ideation. Transgender persons (30.8%) and bisexuals (7.4%) reported higher rates of suicide ideation.


Again, that number is sobering.

The other statistic cited by the Boston Herald regarding transgender people:

Nearly 35 percent of transgender residents also say they've been threatened with physical violence during their lifetime by a partner, compared to 14 percent for non-transgender residents.


The statistics for that paragraph are found in Table 12 of the report.



~~~~~
Further Reading:
* The Health Of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual And Transgender (LGBT) Persons In Massachusetts; A survey of health issues comparing LGBT persons with their heterosexual and nontransgender counterparts; Massachusetts Department of Public Health; July 2009
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[personal profile] ftmichael2009-07-24 04:06 pm
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US, MA: Another front for fairness

http://www.boston.com/bostonglobe/editorial_opinion/editorials/articles/2009/07/24/another_front_for_fairness/

Another front for fairness
July 24, 2009

AT A HEARING at the State House last week, supporters of a bill to ban discrimination on the basis of gender identity and expression outlined the myriad barriers that confront transgender people - those who are born male but live as females, or vice versa. Unlike those whose religions or sexual orientations expose them to discrimination, transgender people might not be able to avoid the issue when applying for jobs, apartments, or loans. The truth may become evident from a check on a Social Security number or a search of credit reports.

Transgender advocates aren’t looking for sympathy. The goal of the legislation, introduced by Representative Carl Sciortino, is to give transgender residents of Massachusetts space to live without discrimination or violence. The bill responds sensibly to a real problem, and deserves to pass.

Transgender people don’t make the transition lightly; many, though not all, undergo gender-reassignment surgery. The case of Dana Zircher, profiled recently by the Globe’s Bella English, underscores the difficulty of the process, even when individuals have supportive families and employers. Zircher, a software designer and a parent, has undergone a divorce, surgery, and 350 hours of electrolysis.

Instead of addressing the complexities of actual people’s lives, though, opponents are trying to undermine Sciortino’s legislation by calling it a “Bathroom Bill.’’ The difference between a transgender woman and a man who wants to infiltrate a ladies’ room is perfectly obvious, at least to anyone who is not deliberately obfuscating the issue. The difference would surely be obvious to police officers and judges. Thirteen other states, including Vermont, Maine, and Rhode Island, and dozens of cities, including Boston and Cambridge, already forbid discrimination against transgender people - and public washrooms are as safe as ever.

Sciortino’s bill would also add gender identity and expression to the list of characteristics covered by the state’s hate-crimes law, which now targets crimes motivated by the victim’s race, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, and other characteristics. Punishment for crimes motivated by bias against transgender people would be toughened. Some argue against hate-crime laws on the grounds that they single out thoughts. We disagree. In any case, Massachusetts has a law now, and it makes little sense to exclude a group of people who are highly susceptible to violence.

Perhaps the biggest obstacle facing the bill is that the very existence of transgender people makes some others uneasy. Time and again, though, this state has shown a commitment to civil rights - a commitment the Legislature can reaffirm by passing this bill.


© Copyright 2009 Globe Newspaper Company.
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[personal profile] ftmichael2009-07-23 03:08 pm
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Canada, AB: UK officer educates police on transsexualism

http://calgaryherald.com/officer+educates+police+transsexualism/1819330/story.html

UK officer educates police on transsexualism
By Valerie Berenyi, Calgary Herald
July 23, 2009

CALGARY - Members of the Calgary Police Service attended a workshop on transsexualism Wednesday conducted by a transgendered officer from the UK to learn more about diversity issues.

Const. Louise Worsfold, who transitioned from male to female in 2004 while working as an officer for the Metropolitan Police Service in London, told her story to about 30 members of the CPS.

Const. Lynn MacDonald of the service's diversity resources unit said Worsfold, a firearms officer at Heathrow Airport, contacted her six weeks ago. She was planning a vacation in the Calgary area and offered to do a presentation.

"It was a great opportunity for the Calgary Police Service to learn and grow and figure out the best way to support our members should one of them decide to go through a transition," MacDonald said.
Read more... )
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[personal profile] ftmichael2009-07-14 07:56 am
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US Church drops gay bishops ban

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/uk_news/8149248.stm

US Church drops gay bishops ban

Bishops of the Anglican Church in the United States have voted to overturn a three-year moratorium on the election of gay bishops.

The decision seems likely to lead to the Episcopal Church's eventual exit from the worldwide Anglican Communion.

The Communion has been fighting to avoid disintegration since the Episcopal Church consecrated the openly gay bishop Gene Robinson in 2003.

The decision is expected to be confirmed in the next few days.

The Right Reverend Gene Robinson at St Mary's Church
The vote could lead to more openly gay bishops like Gene Robinson
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[personal profile] ftmichael2009-07-10 06:23 pm

Chaz Bono’s First Public Appearance with Girlfriend

From [syndicated profile] thespectrumcafe_feed. See also:




http://nydailynews.com/gossip/2009/07/10/2009-07-10_chaz_bono_shows_off_girlfriend_at_outfest.html

Chaz Bono shows off girlfriend Jennifer Elia at Outfest
BY Joanna Sloame
DAILIY NEWS WRITER
Friday, July 10th 2009, 11:59 AM


Chaz Bono (R) and his girlfriend Jennifer Elia (L) live together in West Hollywood. (Vazquez/Getty)

Who knew Chaz had a hottie girlfriend?

Chaz Bono, who usually keeps his personal life private, showed off gorgeous galpal Jennifer Elia Thursday night at Outfest in Los Angeles.

Outfest is the largest film festival for gay/lesbian/transgender-themed flicks in the country.

The son of Cher and the late Sonny Bono recently revealed he is undergoing a sex change to become a man, and has changed his name from Chastity to Chaz in the process.

A political and social activist, Chaz lives in West Hollywood with the brunette beauty. Bono began the sex change process in early March shortly after his 40th birthday.

"I am excited for Chaz that he will now be able to live life the way he wants to and in a body that is more comfortable for him," Kristen Schaffer, the executive director of Outfest told RadarOnline.com in June. "Chaz's 'coming out' as transgender is wonderful for the LGBT community as it not only increases transgender visibility, but also shows that we should never compromise our own identity."
ftmichael: - at Old Sturbridge Village, 03 July 2008.  Copyright 2008-2009. (Default)
[personal profile] ftmichael2009-07-10 02:28 pm
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To disclose or not to disclose

http://examiner.com/x-16330-Philadelphia-Transgendered-Relationships-Examiner~y2009m7d9-To-disclose-or-not-to-disclose

To disclose or not to disclose
by Joe Ippolito
July 9, 3:21 PM

Disclosing to a potential dating partner can be an anxiety producing experience for many "passing" transgender people. Passing is the ability to present oneself as a gender other than one assigned at birth and to live in an unrecognizable state in society as this new gender.

For some, the notion of being rejected because of their transgender identity is so terrifying they opt to remain "in the closet," and end up not dating at all. For others, telling a potential dating partner may not be something they ever do. However, if disclosing is something you personally feel is important to you then it might be helpful to keep these few points in mind when deciding to open up in this way. For starters, you may want to feel the person out first to see exactly where they stand on similar political and social issues, such as gay and lesbian concerns, and/or determine how they relate to certain gender roles? Is this person more politically conservative then you expected? Do they think lesbians are really women who have merely not "landed" a good man? Do they think it is wrong for men to wear pink and women to wear blue? Depending on what the answer to these questions are, you may want or need to reconsider who this person is and if they really make a good dating partner for you. However, if you decide to go forward with the dating relationship you will then need to figure out a good time to talk with them about your gender identity.
Read more... )
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[personal profile] ftmichael2009-07-05 01:32 pm
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Transgender people are everywhere

http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/06/16/rose.transgender/

Commentary: Transgender people are everywhere
By Donna Rose
Special to CNN
updated 3:20 p.m. EDT, Tue June 16, 2009

Editor's note: Donna Rose is a speaker and advocate for transgender and transsexual issues. She is the author of a memoir, "Wrapped In Blue: A Journey of Self-Discovery." Her Web site is http://donnarose.com/ .

Donna Rose says transgender people don't fit the stereotypes society often tries to impose.
Donna Rose says transgender people don't fit the stereotypes society often tries to impose.

(CNN) -- It was only a matter of time. The real-life drama of being transsexual has come to Hollywood. Chastity Bono, the impossibly cute little blond girl who, for many of my generation, remains frozen in time as the sweet, chubby-faced cherub closing many a Sonny and Cher show in the arms of her doting parents, recently announced that he is transsexual and will be transitioning from female to male. He will go by the name of Chaz.

As shocking as this news may be to some, it is yet another reminder that all is not necessarily as it appears and that each of us is more complicated than simply the skin and bones of our bodies. Rather, it is our heart and spirit that defines us.

Transgender people -- that is, people who may not experience or express their gender in ways that are necessarily typical for the physical sex of their body -- have been part of the fabric of cultures for as long as history has been recorded.
Read more... )
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[personal profile] ftmichael2009-07-01 09:41 pm
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Hungary: Same-sex marriage legalised

http://www.caboodle.hu/nc/news/news_archive/single_page/article/11/gay_marriage/

Gay marriage legal from today in Hungary, but gap in rights persists
By: Hungary Around the Clock
2009-07-01 11:16

Flickr user dimi
Marchers in the 2007 Budapest Pride parade. Today marks the first day gay couples can form legal partnerships in Hungary.

Homosexual couples can forge life partnerships before public notaries from Wednesday.

These life partnerships will be guaranteed the same tax, employment, social and immigration benefits as heterosexual marriages. Gay couples will be barred from adopting children and taking their spouse's name, however.

Constitutional Court spokesman András Sereg told Magyar Hírlap that the Act, which was passed in March, can only now be challenged at the Constitutional Court.
ftmichael: - at Old Sturbridge Village, 03 July 2008.  Copyright 2008-2009. (Default)
[personal profile] ftmichael2009-06-28 04:12 pm
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Call for translators!

Do you read and write well, or even fluently, in a language besides English? T-Vox needs your help!

As ever, T-Vox is striving to be as internationally accessible as possible. The wiki admins are based in the UK, and the overwhelming majority of contributors are English speakers living in predominantly English-speaking countries. This, obviously, leaves out a huge percentage of the world population. While we have managed to translate a small handful of pages into French or German or Italian or Spanish, the majority of pages remain untranslated, and obviously there are many other languages that haven't been introduced at all.

If you can help at all, whether by translating one very short page or a huge amount of content, or by checking the existing translated pages for translation errors, the community will benefit hugely, and those of us who would love to translate but aren't able to will be forever grateful!

See T-Vox: Languages for instructions on how to create a new, translated version of any T-Vox page. You will need to create an account on T-Vox to be able to create and edit pages; it's free and painless, and your e-mail address is never shared with anyone.

Pages that particularly need translating at the moment: Trans 101; Transsexuality; Main Page; A guide to transition (and the pages linked from there); Legal issues

Please cross-post this wherever you feel it's appropriate!
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[personal profile] ftmichael2009-06-28 02:30 pm
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Australia: Transsexual takes to the footy field

http://theage.com.au/national/transsexual-takes-to-the-footy-field-20090606-bz7v.html

Transsexual takes to the footy field
Jill Stark
June 7, 2009

Will, 25, who has been living as a man for two years, hopes to play competition football.
Will, 25, who has been living as a man for two years, hopes to play competition football. Photo: Simon O'Dwyer

LIKE many young Victorian males, Will loves his footy. He dreams of joining the thousands of men who lace up their boots every weekend and play in amateur competitions. He's just like them in every way but one — he was born female.

When the 25-year-old takes to the field he will become Australia's first female-to-male transsexual to play competitive football in a men's team.
Read more... )
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[personal profile] ftmichael2009-06-28 11:53 am
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On the 40th anniversary of Stonewall

'But I will not give up because I won't give the mainstream gay organisations the satisfaction of keeping us down. If we give up, they win. The reason we right now as a trans community don't have all the rights they have is that we allowed them to speak for us for so many damn years and we bought everything they said to us, "Oh let us pass our bill, then we'll come for you". Yeah come for me. Thirty-two years later and they are still coming for me. We can no longer let people like the HRC speak for us. It is not my pride, it is their Pride. I have nothing to be proud of except that I helped liberate gays around the world ... before I die, I will see our community given the respect we deserve.'
-- Sylvia Rivera, a tireless Trans activist who fought at the Stonewall riots in 1969 and passed away in February 2002.

Quote found in Pinned Down By Pronouns (2003, Conviction Books), edited by Toni Amato and Mary Davies.
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[personal profile] ftmichael2009-06-26 08:55 am
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Swedish parents keep 2 year old's sex secret

Sex, not gender. Pop will make Pop's gender known pretty clearly at some point, whether or not it aligns with Pop's sex. Either way, this reminds me strongly of Baby X - A Fabulous Child's Story, which I think is fantastic.


http://thelocal.se/20232/20090623/

Swedish parents keep 2-year-old's gender secret
Published: 23 Jun 09 16:24 CET

A couple of Swedish parents have stirred up debate in the country by refusing to reveal whether their two-and-a-half-year-old child is a boy or a girl.

Pop’s parents [see footnote], both 24, made a decision when their baby was born to keep Pop’s sex a secret. Aside from a select few – those who have changed the child’s diaper – nobody knows Pop’s gender; if anyone enquires, Pop’s parents simply say they don’t disclose this information.

In an interview with newspaper Svenska Dagbladet in March, the parents were quoted saying their decision was rooted in the feminist philosophy that gender is a social construction.

“We want Pop to grow up more freely and avoid being forced into a specific gender mould from the outset,” Pop’s mother said. “It's cruel to bring a child into the world with a blue or pink stamp on their forehead.”
Read more... )
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[personal profile] ftmichael2009-06-26 06:54 am
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US: 40 ’Transgender heroes’ honoured at Stonewall bar

http://baywindows.com/index.php?ch=news&sc=glbt&sc2=news&sc3=&id=92846

Local activists among 40 ’transgender heroes’ honored at Stonewall bar
by Ethan Jacobs
Bay Windows staff reporter
Thursday 25 June 2009

Gunner Scott, Nancy Nangeroni and Grace Sterling Stowell
Stonewall’s legacy: (from left) Gunner Scott, Nancy Nangeroni and Grace Sterling Stowell will be immortalized as ’Transgender Heroes’ at the Stonewall Inn in New York City. (Source:Marilyn Humphries)

Historians have long credited poor and working class drag queens, bull dykes and other transgender and gender-non-conforming people as key participants in the 1969 Stonewall Rebellion, but within the wider LGBT community that defining moment is all-too-often remembered as a gay, rather than LGBT, milestone. The International Court System and the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force hope to change that. On June 25, to commemorate the 40th anniversary of the riots that marked the birth of the modern LGBT rights movement, the two organizations will hold a dedication ceremony at the fabled New York City bar to unveil a plaque featuring the names of 40 transgender heroes past and present.

The plaque will go on permanent display at the bar, and Bay State visitors will likely recognize a few familiar names on the list. Among the 40 heroes are Gunner Scott, director of the Massachusetts Transgender Political Coalition (MTPC); Grace Sterling Stowell, executive director of the Boston Alliance of GLBT Youth (BAGLY); longtime activist Nancy Nangeroni, former president of the International Foundation for Gender Education (IFGE), former co-host of GenderTalk Radio and current host of GenderVision; and Cole Thaler, an MTPC founder who is now the transgender rights attorney for New York’s Lambda Legal.

"It will be permanent, so people going into the Stonewall Inn will be able to see this plaque and see the names of these, to me, true heroes of our community," said Nicole Murray-Ramirez, a longtime San Diego-based activist who presides over the International Court System as Empress Nicole the Great. The International Court System was founded in 1965, four years before Stonewall. Member courts in the United States, Canada and Mexico, including the Imperial Court of Massachusetts, hold events in which members don campy and outrageous costumes and adopt royal titles, all while raising money for LGBT and HIV/AIDS organizations.
Read more... )
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[personal profile] ftmichael2009-06-16 11:13 am
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US: Chaz, 'Good luck, brother!'

http://www.cnn.com/2009/US/06/12/chastity.bono/index.html

Commentary: Chastity, 'Good luck, brother!'
By Jamison Green
Special to CNN

Jamison Green is an educator, adviser and advocate on transgender issues, and the author of "Becoming a Visible Man" (Vanderbilt University Press, 2004).

Welcome, Chaz!

Before the word "transsexual" had been coined in English, an intrepid young person whose family belonged to the British nobility set out to transform herself from female to male. He received a medical school education, obtained hormones -- relatively new substances that were poorly understood at the time -- and independently began living as a man in the early 1940s.

Eventually, he found a plastic surgeon to help him, and his physical changes were complete by 1949, but his family rejected him. The British tabloids hounded him. To escape publicity, he was forced to carve out a life for himself virtually alone. He became a Buddhist monk, and died in Tibet in 1962 at the age of 47.

His name was Michael Dillon, and he one of the Western world's first transsexual people, that is, someone who changes sex and/or gender by medical means. His extensive writings were suppressed and destroyed by his family -- only fragments survive.
Read more... )
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[personal profile] ftmichael2009-06-16 10:50 am
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US: Chaz Bono Gives Voice To An Often 'Invisible' Community

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/story?id=7827428&page=1

Chaz Bono Gives Voice To An Often 'Invisible' Community
Trans Activists Say Chaz Bono Could Be Rare Face for Transgender Issues
By LAUREN COX and RADHA CHITALE
ABC News Medical Unit
June 13, 2009

Transgender men fighting for legal protections say Thursday's announcement by Chastity Bono, child of Cher and the late Sonny Bono, that she will be transitioning from female to a male as Chaz Bono is a welcome break from an all too common "invisible" paradox.

For reasons that are part biology and part society, transgender men say in some ways they have an easier time being accepted and recognized as masculine than transgender women have being perceived as feminine.

Yet at the same time, there has been a virtual black hole in public awareness of female-to-male transgender people.
Read more... )
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[personal profile] auntysarah2009-06-15 12:47 am

Petulant Luvvie Asks, "Why Can't I Get a Nobel Prize For Being a Bit Less Crap Than Prevously?"

Last May, a few of us were involved in protesting outside a performance by the musician, "Bitch", as part of the "Queer up North" event in Manchester. My account of the event can be read here. To give a summary, Bitch is someone who performs at the Michigan Women's Music Festival, which gained infamy for excluding trans women (sometimes by force), and which has become something of a focal point for the fight against transphobia and trans misogyny within the women's and queer movements. Bitch hasn't merely performed there, but has been a vocal advocate of trans exclusion, and has categorised moves to include trans women in women's events as "making men comfortable and satisfying men".

As we've come to expect from an LGB community which makes a habit of turning a blind eye towards transphobia within its own ranks, the reaction of Queer up North to those objecting to them furthering the artistic career of transphobic performers could, I feel, reasonably be summed up as "yeah, whatever". As talking to them produced, at best, complete indifference, a few of went and held a little street protest, during which the artistic director himself came to talk to us, apparently upset that we were spoiling his shiny event. I think he demonstrated quite a lot of cluelessness at the time, by being a cis male trying to explain that a bunch of trans people were mistaken to see transphobia where there clearly was none, and a bunch of women were wrong to see misogyny where there was none.

Fast forward thirteen months, and we're now presented with this petulant bit of whining from Queer up North's IT person, Alan Fleming, which contains the following gems:

Last year, several people in the Manchester transgendered community gave us grief because one of our artists had previously performed in a venue that does not allow transgendered people access. We had protests, we had all sorts of stuff going on.

That’s fine. I might not agree, but I respect completely the fact that there are different viewpoints here, and that public protest is a legitimate way of expressing opinion.


Quite apart from the use of "transgendered community", which suggests to me like a group of people who might have survived some unpleasant accident involving a veterinary surgery, and formed a support group to deal with their trauma (does he refer to those of us who practice the sapphic arts as the "catted and fisted community", I wonder?), it's notable that his view seems not to changed one iota - this wasn't about festival supposedly for the whole queer community rubbing the collective nose of one of its constituent parts in the dirt - it was merely about "different viewpoints". I think it's notable, however, that there were no overt homophobes invited to perform, in order to foster more "legitimate ways of expressing opinion".

But he goes on:

However, forward to this year. QuN had two transgendered artists in leading slots. It had Joanne Meyerowitz, one of the most eminent academics working in the field of transgender studies, lecturing on “A different history of gender.”

And what feedback do we hear from the transgender community this year? Nothing. Not a word.

This leads to an interesting question. Why?


That's right - he seems to be upset that the trans community is not embracing Queer up North with open arms and throwing a public celebration because after making a complete mess of things last year, and then compounding it by being condescending and indifferent, they've apparently manaed to do a bit better this year.

I feel kinda bad about this; I for one, would have been only to happy to proclaim and celebrate their hard work, if only I'd known about it. I must confess my guilt here - I hadn't realised the sheer effort and planning needed to invite fewer bigots to their party this year. Perhaps Alan can forgive this little indiscretion though. As he says himself:

I think it’s because the transgender community in Manchester (at least) is politically immature.


As such political lightweights, I don't think it's entirely fair of Queer up North's IT person to expect us to grasp the complexities of making sure that the people they're thinking of inviting are actually broadly supportive of LGBT rights. I mean, we're obviously the sort of naive and inexperienced people who expect to be able to be able to find this sort of thing out using Google, or something. We simply fail to appreciate the months of careful preparation which must have gone into avoiding inviting, say, Fred Phelps to speak at this year's Queer up North festival.

Alan further drives home his point:

To my mind, a politically mature community gives credit where it’s due. It engages with friends and enemies..


I'll close with two thoughts:

Firstly, I realise this may not seem so sincere after being prompted, but thanks for inviting fewer bigots this year. It's really appreciated, and I mean that.

Secondly, if one is to appoint oneself as the arbiter of "political maturity", perhaps it might be productive to avoid making Freudian slip type gaffes implying that Queer up North sees itself as an "enemy" of trans people, because, Alan, it kinda ruins your point a bit.
ftmichael: - at Old Sturbridge Village, 03 July 2008.  Copyright 2008-2009. (Default)
[personal profile] ftmichael2009-06-03 11:35 am

US, TN: Trans person shot in Memphis

From [profile] transgriot.

TransGriot Note: This news is courtesy of the Tennessee Transgender Political Coalition, and it's less than 24 hours after several Shelby County Commissioners loudly said there was no need for an anti-discrimination ordinance in Memphis.


We were contacted by a reporter with Channel 3 (WREG-TV) who provided a copy of an affidavit of a shooting that occurred in South Memphis on Wednesday, May 27. The man arrested for the shooting, Terron Taylor, told police that he did it because the victim “misrepresented his gender.”

The victim, identified as Kelvin Denton, is in critical condition after being shot in the nose and throat.

At this point, we do not know any details about Denton’s life, but regardless, we abhor this sort of violence for any reason. Our thoughts and prayers of everyone in the Tennessee Transgender Political Coalition go out to Kelvin, family and friends, for a speedy recovery.

We urge Shelby County authorities to prosecute Taylor aggressively and not permit the use of the trans-panic defense.

We also urge members of the Tennessee General Assembly to pass HB0335 by Rep. Jeanne Richardson (D-Memphis) and 21 others, and SB0253 by Sens. Beverly Marrero (D-Memphis) and Ophelia Ford (D-Memphis), as soon as they return in January. This bill would add “gender identity or expression” as a hate crimes sentencing enhancement factor to Tennessee Code Annotated 40-35-114. Passage of this bill will make it easier for state and local authorities to track and prosecute hate crimes against all LGBT Tennesseans.

If you do not know the names of your state legislators, go to http://capitol.tn.gov .

Federal Legislation:

In addition, we urge swift passage in the United States Senate of S.909, the Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act. The House of Representatives has already passed this legislation, which is supported by President Obama, by a vote of 249 to 175.

Please contact both of Tennessee’s Senators, Lamar Alexander and Bob Corker and tell them you want to them to support S.909.

We also ask everyone to continue talking to both Representatives and Senators about the importance of the fully inclusive Employment Non-Discrimination Act. We anticipate that ENDA will be introduced in the coming weeks. It is time to end job discrimination based on sexual orientation or gender identity or expression. If LGBT people can find, and hold, decent paying jobs, then we are less likely to end up on the streets where we become vulnerable to hate crimes.