Categories

Search

Some Questions Of Language

June 8th, 2008 by Stephanie Stevens

I couple of trans-related items in the news today caught my attention …

This may or may not be as egregious as calling someone an “it” (see Autumn’s post from Friday about the Tanya White incident), but I would have preferred that the writer or an editor at the Telegraph could have chosen the more appropriate pronoun in the headline at least …

After a life of travel, Jan Morris is back where he started

Some of us might have different opinions about how to handle pronoun use in the article, but which pronoun to use in the headline seems pretty clear to me (see the AP Stylebook on transgender).

Another article from the Telegraph (”Waste watch“) also caught my eye, specifically this line …

Homosexual, bisexual and “transgender” people are being offered £20 vouchers by their council to take part in a survey about their housing needs.

I wonder what the reason is for the use of quotation marks around the word, transgender?

There’s an interesting article in Saturday’s Guelph Mercury about words and language (”If the word fits . . .“) Again, it’s an instance of differing views on how to properly handle a matter of language …

The changing nature of language surfaces in my work world as well. It did days ago when we published a story about the flag-raising to open Pride Week in Guelph. Its lead sentence asserted: “The queer community can look skyward for a sign of city hall’s support and celebration of Pride Week.”

“Queer” jumped off the page for some readers. Some were appalled by it and challenged the paper’s use of the term suggesting it was offensive and an injustice to deploy it.

We responded to this feedback and encouraged those offering it to share it in a letter to the editor for publication. None has taken us up on the invitation.

But the use of queer spurred a rich newsroom discussion.

We abide by The Canadian Press Style Guide in terms of language use. It offered no opinion on whether queer was appropriate to use in any circumstance. We employed it to be inclusive, to identify a wide community — not only gays and lesbians, but others such as bisexual people, transgendered ones and transsexual individuals.

As I’ve done facing previous language flaps and grey areas, I contacted The Canadian Press Style Guide’s editor for clarification.

That editor, Patti Tasko, e-mailed advising: “the controversy over queer” is unresolved in the world of media language police.

“Gay spokesmen have told me in the past it is acceptable and used widely in the community. At the time I told them I felt queasy about recommending it as it is just a little too out there for the general community, who assume it has derogatory connotations (since it is often used as a slur in the straight world),” she stated.

Her next guide will recommend “that the word queer is likely best avoided, except in quotations, as the straight and gay communities use the term differently,” she continued.

Her guess is that advice will hold for a spell and then require revision just as “gay” overtook “homosexual” in a previous style guide.

We’ll abide by Tasko’s counsel. But there won’t be an apology from the paper for using queer — as has been demanded.

The majority view of our journalists is that “queer” has been rehabilitated and stands as the right term for the context where we deployed it.

It’s in press releases we receive and in the titles of popular mainstream television programs. If it hasn’t arrived, queer seems to be en route.

Posted in LGBT, bisexual, gay, in the media, language, transgender | Comments Off

Per Huckabee, Gay People Are Choosing Aberrant Sin, and that means?

December 31st, 2007 by Autumn Sandeen

Gov. Mike Huckabee was on Meet The Press this past Sunday.Gov. Mike Huckabee He appears to be using some obfuscating language to explain his beliefs about LGB people, and not explain how his beliefs would translated into policy within a Huckabee administration.

Tim Russert asked Huckabee about a statement in Huckabee’s 1998 book, where Huckabee wrote:

It is now difficult to keep track of the vast array of publicly endorsed and institutionally supported aberrations–from homosexuality and pedophilia to sadomasochism and necrophilia.

Russert wanted to know what he meant — Huckabee claimed that he really wasn’t equating “homosexuality” with “pedophilia” and “sadomasochism,” he was just pointing out that these all were sin.

When Huckabee later commented on marital infidelity, he stated:

The perfection of God is seen in a marriage in which one man, one woman live together as a couple committed to each other as life partners. Now, even married couples don’t do that perfectly, so sin is not some act of equating people with being murderers or rapists…

So, I’m not sure what Huckabee is stating. Is he arguing James 2:10,11

For whoever keeps the whole law and yet stumbles at just one point is guilty of breaking all of it. For he who said, “Do not commit adultery,” also said, “Do not murder.” If you do not commit adultery but do commit murder, you have become a lawbreaker.

…Or is Huckabee arguing that some “sins” are worse than others? (He seems to be arguing that in his answers to Russert questions about whether he equates homosexuality to pedophilia and sadomasochism.)

Frankly, I can’t figure out what Huckabee is stating. It seems to me that he’s trying to confuse non-Evangelicals as to what a Huckabee administration’s policies would be towards LGBT people.

Take a read the Meet The Press transcript of Huckabee’s comments on “homosexuality” below the fold, and you can decide for yourself what voters were supposed to take away from his comments on the show.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Christianity, LGB civil rights, LGBT, bisexual, employment - housing - public accomodation, faith, gay, hate crimes and hate violence, law and legislation, lesbian, politics, religion | Comments Off

Hillary Leaves Off The T

November 29th, 2007 by Autumn Sandeen

This is what Hillary Clinton’s campaign put out as a press release today:

New Poll Shows Hillary Leading Among LGB Voters

In a new survey released by Hunter College, Hillary Clinton leads all Democratic candidates in support among lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) Americans. According to the poll, Hillary leads with 63 percent, 41 points ahead of the next candidate.

“I’m honored to have the support of so many in the LGB community,” said Clinton. “Together, we can end the divisiveness of the past seven years and change the direction of this country so that we embrace the full diversity of our nation.”

The poll also found that 72 percent of LGB likely voters consider Senator Clinton a supporter of gay rights. As President, Hillary will also work to end discrimination in adoption laws, sign hate crimes legislation and ENDA into law, and put an end to the failed policy of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell. She will work to make sure that gay and lesbian couples in committed relationships have the same rights and responsibilities as all Americans.

I’m posting this specifically show that the Hillary Clinton for President Campaign left out the “T” when referring to the “LGB Community.” The first two paragraphs of the press release might not have mentioned T’s because they didn’t find enough T’s to be statistically significant for their poll, but I would think that in the last paragraph — where she mentions what she would do as president — she certaintly could have added that she was for LGBT civil rights/equality.

As it is, it looks like she’s just for LGB civil rights/equality.

Given the recent mess with ENDA, I find it noteworthy that her campaign’s messaging about the “alphabet soup” of communities was one that left off the T. Whether or not leaving off the T out this media release was intentional or not, to me it sure seems to be pretty poor form.

Posted in LGB civil rights, LGBT, bisexual, civil rights, diversity, employment - housing - public accomodation, gay, law and legislation, lesbian, politics, transgender, transgender civil rights | 9 Comments »

Stryking Back

October 11th, 2007 by Stephanie Stevens

Susan Stryker gets equal time in Salon today to respond to John Aravosis’ “How did the T get in LGBT?” …

Pity poor John Aravosis, the gay rights crusader from AmericaBlog whose “How Did the T Get in LGBT?” essay, in reference to the controversy over gender identity protections in the pending Employment Non-Discrimination Act, was published on Salon a few days ago.

To hear Aravosis tell it, he and multitudes of like-minded gay souls have been sitting at the civil rights table for more than 30 years, waiting to be served. Now, after many years of blood, sweat, toil and tears, a feast in the form of federal protection against sexual orientation discrimination in the workplace has finally been prepared. Lips are being licked, chops smacked, saliva salivated, when — WTF!?! — a gaunt figure lurches through the door.

It is a transgender person, cupped hands extended, begging for food. Seems somebody on the guest list — maybe a lot of somebodies — let this stranger in off the streets without consulting everyone else beforehand, claiming he-she-it-or-whatever was a relative of some sort. Suddenly, what was supposed to be a fabulous dinner party starts surreally morphing into one of those OxFam fundraisers dramatizing third-world hunger whose sole function is to make the “haves” feel guilty for the plight of the “have-nots.”

Maitre d’ Barney Frank offers an elegant pretext for throwing the bum out. The establishment’s new management, Speaker Nancy Pelosi, is caught off-guard by the awkward turn of events, but deftly shuffles the hubbub into the wings and starts working the room, all smiles, to reassure the assembled guests that a somber and long-sought civil rights victory will be celebrated in short order.

Aravosis and those who share his me-first perspective are not so sure. Seeing half a loaf of civil rights protection on the table before them, and sensing that the soirée might come to a premature and unexpected denouement, they make a grab, elbows akimbo, for said truncated loaf. This is, after all, their party.

In my line of work — teaching history and theory of sexuality and gender — we’ve invented a polysyllabic technical term applicable to Aravosis & Co., which is homocentric, whose definition Aravosis supplies when he asserts, as he did in his recent essay, that gay is the term around which the GLBT universe revolves. By gay he means gay men like himself, to which is added (in descending order of importance), lesbian, bisexual and transgender, beyond which lies an even more obscure region of poorly understood and infrequently observed identities.

Aravosis isn’t questioning the place of the T in the GLBT batting order; he’s just concerned with properly marking the distinction between “enough like me” and “too different from me” to merit inclusion in the categories with which he identifies. His position is a bit like those kerfuffled astronomers not too long ago, scratching their noggins over how to define Pluto’s place in the conceptual scheme of the solar system. Sure, we’ve been calling it a planet for a good number of years because it’s round and orbits the sun just like our Earth, but now it appears that if we keep doing so we’ll have to let a bunch of the bigger asteroids into the planet category, as well as some other weird faraway stuff we only recently learned about, which stretches the definition of “planet” into a name for things we don’t really think of as being much like good ol’ Earth, so let’s just demote Pluto instead. In Aravosis’ homocentric cosmology, men may not be from Mars, nor women from Venus, but transgender people are definitely from Pluto.

Transgender people have become this political season’s version of the unisex-toilet issue that helped scuttle passage of the Equal Rights Amendment back in the 1970s, of Willie Horton’s role in bringing the first Bush presidency to the White House in the 1980s, and of the “Don’t bend over to pick up the soap in the barracks shower room” argument against gays in the military in the 1990s — a false issue that panders to the basest and most ignorant of fears. This is unfortunate because protecting the rights of transgender people specifically is just one welcome byproduct of the version of ENDA that forbids discrimination based on both sexual orientation and gender expression or identity. This full version of ENDA, rather than the nearly introduced one that stripped away previously agreed-upon protections against gender-based discrimination and would protect only sexual orientation, is the one that is of potential benefit to all Americans, and not just to a narrow demographic slice of straight-looking, straight-acting gays and lesbians. It doesn’t really even do that much good for this group, as Lambda Legal points out, because of a loophole big enough to drive a truck through.

Aravosis, not being one to mince words when it comes to mincing meat, wants to know what he, as a gay man, has “in common with a man who wants to cut off his penis, surgically construct a vagina, and become a woman.” The answer is “gender.” The last time I checked my dictionary, homosexuality had something to with people of one gender tending to fall in love with people of the same gender. The meaning of homosexuality thus depends on the definition of gender. However much Aravosis might wish to cut the trannies away from the rest of his herd, thereby preserving a place free of gender trouble for just plain gay guys such as himself, that operation isn’t conceptually possible. Gender and sexuality are like two lines intersecting on a graph, and trying to make them parallel undoes the very notion of homo-, hetero- or bisexuality.

Now here’s the rub — but it requires another of those fancy words my academic colleagues and I like to throw around: heteronormativity, the idea that whatever straight people do is really what’s what, and that whatever anybody else does is deviant to some degree. To want to have sex with somebody of the same gender violates heteronormative expectations of gender behavior as much as it does heteronormative expectations of sexual behavior. Simply put: Real men don’t suck cock. Nor do they use the word “fabulous” when describing a pair of women’s shoes. Nor do they keep a picture of their husband pinned to the wall of their office cubicle. All of the above violates conventional or stereotypical expectations of proper masculine gender, and as Lambda Legal’s preliminary analysis of ENDA makes clear, none would be protected under the rubric of sexual orientation alone. It’s OK to be gay, in other words, just so long as you don’t act like a fag.

Without solid theoretical ground to stand on, Aravosis resorts to flights of rhetorical fancy in lieu of an argument against gender protections. He characterizes the more than 300 GLBT organizations nationwide now on record as supporting a gender-inclusive ENDA, which collectively speak on behalf of hundreds of thousands if not millions of people, as plotting something of a palace coup. They attempt, he claims, to force the gay movement — along with the country that is poised to embrace them — to crawl unwillingly into bed with a big bunch of tranny whatevers. Aravosis positions himself as a man giving voice to an oppressed silent majority, a majority too cowed by their fear of appearing “politically incorrect” to express their true feelings, in order to proclaim “that over the past decade the trans revolution was imposed on the gay community from outside, or at least above.”

This coming from an ex-Republican, former congressional aide, Georgetown-educated, inside-the-Beltway lawyer who studied under Secretary of State Madeleine Albright, and who has spent the past decade working his political connections in order to hold corporate America’s feet to the fire on gay rights? Puh. Leeze. John Aravosis is in the nosebleed section of the social hierarchy; if he gets any higher up the food chain he should be issued an oxygen mask. Where, pray tell, is this “above” whereof he speaks, peopled with radical transgender revolutionaries? Somewhere in the vicinity of the Jewish international bankers, or the Trilateral Commission?

Aravosis wants to know how the T came to be added to GLB. Here’s how: It started happening in the mid-1990s, in response to the queer movement of the early 1990s, and in response to a decade of radical AIDS activism. Fighting to end the epidemic required, from a public health point of view, getting past the squabbles of homosexual identity politics left over from the 1960s, ’70s and ’80s. The Reaganite right wanted to label AIDS “gay-related immune deficiency,” even though viruses are no respecters of identity. AIDS was not a gay disease, but convincing others of that fact required a transformation of sexual politics. It fostered political alliances between lots of different kinds of people who all shared the common goal of ending the epidemic — and sometimes precious little else.

What does Aravosis, as a gay man, have in common with a little girl whose mother gave her HIV in utero, or a heterosexual African man who contracted HIV from a female prostitute, or a junkie living on the streets of Bangkok, Thailand? Presumably, a common interest in ending AIDS. And what might he have in common with transgender people? Some sense that a person’s suitability for employment had something to do with their ability to do the job?

Transgender people have their own history of civil rights activism in the United States, one that is in fact older, though smaller and less consequential, than the gay civil rights movement. In 1895, a group of self-described “androgynes” in New York organized a “little club” called the Cercle Hermaphroditos, based on their self-perceived need “to unite for defense against the world’s bitter persecution.” Half a century later, at the same time some gay and lesbian people were forming the Mattachine Society and the Daughters of Bilitis, transgender people were forming the Society for Equality in Dress. When gay and lesbian people were fighting for social justice in the militant heyday of the 1960s, transgender people were conducting sit-in protests at Dewey’s lunch counter in Philadelphia, fighting in the streets with cops from hell outside Compton’s Cafeteria in San Francisco’s Tenderloin, and mixing it up at Stonewall along with lots of other folks.

There was a vibrant history of transgender activism and movement building through the 1970s, when it suddenly became fashionable on the left to think of transgender people as antigay and antifeminist. Gay people were seen as freeing themselves from the straitjacket of psychopathology, while transgender people were clamoring to get into the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of the American Psychiatric Association; feminists were seen as freeing themselves from the oppressiveness of patriarchal gender, while transgender people were perpetuating worn-out stereotypes of men and women. It’s a familiar refrain, even now. Transgender arguments for access to appropriate healthcare, or observations that no one is ever free from being gendered, fell on deaf ears.

Until the early 1990s, that is, when a new generation of queer kids, the post-baby boomers whose political sensibilities had been forged in the context of the AIDS crisis, started coming into adulthood. They were receptive to transgender issues in a new way — and that more-inclusive understanding has been steadily building for nearly two decades.

Aravosis and those who agree with him think that the “trans revolution” has come from outside, or from above, the rank-and-file gay movement. No — it comes from below, and from within. The outrage that many people in the queer, trans, LGBT or whatever-you-want-to-call-it community feel over how a gender-inclusive ENDA has been torpedoed from within is directed at so-called leaders who are out of touch with social reality. It has to do with a generation of effort directed toward building an inclusive movement being pissed away by the clueless and the phobic. That’s why every single GLBT organization of any size at the national and state levels — with the sole exception of the spineless Human Rights Campaign — has unequivocally come out in support of gender protections within ENDA, and has opposed the effort to pass legislation protecting only sexual orientation.

What happens in Congress in the weeks ahead on this historic issue is anybody’s guess. I urge all of you who support the vision of an inclusive ENDA to contact your representatives in government and let your views be known.

Why the T in LGBT is here to stay

Posted in bisexual, civil rights, employment - housing - public accomodation, gay, gender, in the media, law and legislation, planetary astronomy, transactivism, transgender, transgender civil rights | 2 Comments »

5 Things You Need To Know Today

October 7th, 2007 by Stephanie Stevens

For Sunday, a non-ENDA inclusive edition where we catch up with some of the other recent news …

#1 - AfterElton did a feature on the “TV Landscape Changing for Transgender Characters” …

The portrayal of transgender characters on television these days seems to be sort of a glass-is-either-half-empty-or-half-full situation. For years television has presented a steady stream of “transsexual” prostitutes, murder victims, and other assorted minor characters that usually appeared for one episode and were portrayed as little more than a collection of stereotypes to advance the plot or get a cheap laugh.

A recent example of that aired this past summer on HBO’s hit show Entourage. In the episode “Sorry, Harvey” a secondary storyline centered on Johnny Drama (Kevin Dillon) trying to get the sad sack mayor of Beverly Hills (played by Groundhog Day’s Stephen Tobolowsky) hooked up with a beautiful woman in order to curry his favor. At a bar to which he takes the mayor, Drama thinks he has succeeded with a woman named Anika — at least until he learns that she is actually transgender.

The mayor turns out not to mind, but the show portrays this as due more to his being so pathetic rather than a message of acceptance. This impression is further underscored by the main characters’ clearly being repulsed at the idea of a transgender person, and by the episode’s big “reveal” when Anika’s male genitalia are shown during a panty-less Britney Spear’s-type incident.

On the “half-full” side of the equation there is ABC’s Ugly Betty. Last season the hit dramedy included Alexis Meade, a transgender character portrayed as self-accepting, not desperate for the approval of a man, and who wasn’t a prostitute. Audiences loved the character.

Already the most diverse network when it comes to LGBT representation, ABC deepened their diversity with two new transgender characters introduced this fall, one each on Dirty Sexy Money and Big Shots. Neither are regulars at this point, and while the Dirty Sexy Money show continues to build on the progress of Ugly Betty, thus far Big Shots is a throwback to more stereotypical portrayals of transgender women. (There are no transgender men – female to male – characters currently on network TV.)

Despite setbacks like the recent episode of Entourage, Mara Keisling, Executive Director for the National Center for Transgender Equality, believes things are improving when it comes to transgender representations on television. “I’m really, really optimistic. Things are changing so much so fast. Oprah has had so many sensitive shows. Montel has done some good shows. Larry King does show after show, and that’s just really educating the public.”

As to what is driving that change, Keisling stated, “It’s just natural that as there are more and more trans people visible in public, that’s going to be reflected in popular culture.”

The rest of that feature can be read here.

Monica Roberts at TransGriot had some thoughts about the role of Dontrelle in Entourage

It figures that we transsistahs once again get stuck being painted by the hooker brush while white transwomen are seen running a magazine or being the love interest of a US senator.

As the late Esther Rolle said in her Good Times role as Florida Evans, “Damn, Damn, Damn!”

Memo to Hollywood: Is it so hard for you to create an African-American transgender character that fits the reality of the 90% of us who don’t partake of sex work to make our living? Is it that difficult for you to craft an African-American transgender character that isn’t the punchline of a joke or doesn’t end up dead in the first five minutes of the show?

And, by the way, Oprah Winfrey has an upcoming show this week (Friday, 10/12) entitled, “Trangender Families” …

Meet transgender individuals who had the courage to say “this is who I am.” What happens in a family when Dad becomes a woman? Oprah talks with the new American family.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in 5 Things You Need to Know Today, Alice Dreger, J. Michael Bailey, always the bathroom, bisexual, books, gay, gender, in the media, intersex, law and legislation, lesbian, science, television, transgender, transgender civil rights | Comments Off

The J. Michael Bailey Controversy Over Transsexuality

August 27th, 2007 by Autumn Sandeen

J. Michael BaileyJ. Michael Bailey wrote the book The Man Who Would Be Queen: The Science of Gender-Bending and Transsexualism, which was published in 2003. Dr. Bailey and the transgender community have both been dealing with the shockwaves ever since publication.

Reviving the controversy in the past few weeks, Alice D. Dreger, Ph.D., wrote a paper for the Archives of Sexual Behavior entitled The Controversy Surrounding The Man Who Would Be Queen: A Case History of the Politics of Science, Identity, and Sex in the Internet Age, with the New York Times reporting on the controversies surrounding Bailey’s book and on Dreger’s paper in their article Criticism of a Gender Theory, and a Scientist Under Siege.

The general spin in the blogosphere since the New York Times article has been published echoes the sentiments expressed in the Times article:

To many of Dr. Bailey’s peers, his story is a morality play about the corrosive effects of political correctness on academic freedom. Some scientists say that it has become increasingly treacherous to discuss politically sensitive issues.

What makes Bailey’s perspectives on transsexuality a particularly sensitive issue for transpeople is found in his theories of why transsexuals exist: Either a male-to-female (M2F) transsexual has autogynephilia (is sexually aroused by the idea of being female), or “he” is a male homosexual who needs to be a woman to be comfortable being sexually attracted men. {Bailey’s book completely ignores the existence of female-to-male (F2M) transsexuals}. That’s it — if you’re a M2F transsexual, Bailey says it’s solely because of your sex drive, and you’re either one type or the other.

And, given that perspective of what one of two conditions must exist for one to identify as a male-to-female transsexual, it should come as no surprise that he consistently refers to transwomen like me as “transsexual men.” Bailey has essentially relegated transsexuality to the functional status of a paraphilia, stigmatizes transsexuals and the accepted treatments for transsexuals, and exposes transpeople, like me again, who want civil rights furthered for transpeople to further societal resistance.

Adding to Bailey’s impact on transgender civil rights activism, Gary Barlow (in a 2005 Chicago Free Press article) said of the Bailey book:

…Bailey alleged that transgenders are “especially motivated” to shoplift and that prostitution is “the single most common occupation” among transgenders.

Sandra L. Samons, Ph.D., L.M.S.W., said this of Bailey in response to the recent New York Times article:

Not only did I find his premise and many of this comments and conclusions to be questionable or outright erroneous and offensive to transgender people, but also to therapist colleagues, in that he essentially stated that any therapists who did not agree with him had been duped by transgender people, who are generally manipulative in their efforts to accomplish their ends and naive therapists (meaning anyone who did not concur with his premises) had been taken in by them.

…I think it should not be overlooked that by making the kinds of assertions he made, negating and invalidating the opinions of any colleague who disagreed with him, he too engaged in this kind of approach, and did so before others reciprocated in kind. On that basis, I found many of his comments and assertions to have gone beyond offensive to being unprofessional.

Samons, like many others, recognizes that some of Bailey’s critics have stepped out of bounds in their impassioned reaction to what he wrote, but at the same time believes he should have been able to anticipate the firestorm he would bring down upon himself by making the assertions he made — one has to wonder if at least on a certain level, that was exactly what Bailey hoped to accomplish with his book.

Frankly, I’m concerned that Bailey’s “rehabilitation” in the mainstream press will have the secondary effect of his transsexuality theories being accepted as gospel — not because the theories are tested, but because a number of transactivists were passionate to the point of overzealousness in attacking his theories. Bailey — the author and researcher — should have his theories on transsexuality evaluated based upon whether Bailey’s psychological construct for transsexuals holds up when compared to a statistical samplings of actual transgender people. My guess, given recent studies on the brain structures of transpeople and recent genetic studies on mice that indicate gender is based on more than one’s natal genitalia, is that Bailey’s dichotomic model of transsexuality won’t hold true for all transsexuals. I know it doesn’t hold true for me.

Next month, the World Professional Association For Transgender Health (WPATH) holds their Biennial Symposium. It’ll be interesting to see if any statements about the Dreger paper and/or the New York Times article comes out of that event.

~~
Joanne Herman, columnist for The Advocate, contributed significantly to this article.

~~~~~
Further information regarding J. Michael Bailey:

* KQED (Public Radio): Transgender Theories
* Northwestern Chronicle/J. Michael Bailey: Academic McCarthyism
* Aaron S. Greenberg, JD and J. Michael Bailey, PhD: Parental Selection of Children’s Sexual Orientation
* New York Times: Gay, Straight, Or Lying: Bisexuality Revisited
* Washington Blade: Report on bisexuality study angers gay activists
* The Advocate: Kinder, gentler homophobia

Posted in Alice Dreger, Blogosphere, J. Michael Bailey, LGBT, bisexual, science, transactivism, transgender | 2 Comments »

Friday Recommended Reading

August 24th, 2007 by Autumn Sandeen

Bob, The View From (Ab)Normal Heights Bookworm Feministing: Friday guest blogger: Julia Serano
Excerpt:

Much of the transgender community’s initial outrage over Bailey’s book centered on the fact that it was presented to the public as a work of science…

Gay & Lesbian Advocates & Defenders (GLAD): Dignity, Respect, and Equal Treatment (O’Donnabhain Trial Concludes)
Excerpt:

“I hope that this case sends a clear message that transgender people deserve dignity, respect, and equal treatment not just for our medical care, but in all aspects of our lives - just as every human being deserves dignity, respect and equal treatment.

“I also hope that this case addresses some of the misunderstanding, bias, and prejudice transgender people face in our lives every day. Because what’s really at the heart of this case - and my story - is a basic misunderstanding about the critical importance of being able to express my gender identity. It’s something everyone should be able to do.”
–Rhiannon O’Donnabhain

KTAR.com [AZ,USA]: Anderson’s Invites Transgender Band To Play
Excerpt:

Psychic TV Promo PhotoKTAR uncovered an interesting twist in the case of the Scottsdale bar owner who’s banned transgenders.

Anderson’s Fifth Estate has invited Psychic TV to play on Monday. Tom Anderson said he’s made special bathroom arrangements for transgenders on that night only.

“Yeah, isn’t that a contradiction in to my style,” said Anderson.

SFist: A Bi-Transgender Fight
Excerpt:

Chasing Amy Social Club founder Amy LarsonYou know you’ve made it in San Francisco as a marginalized group when you start getting in fights with other marginalized groups — so a local bisexual advocacy/social group is under fire for their policies excluding certain transgender persons.

Transgendered - My Journey To Womanhood: Telling My Sister I’m Transgendered
Excerpt:

…So I decided to take the easy way out and email her, we do not live close to each other so I thought this might be the best way. I sent Her a email but gave her plenty of warning not to read past the first paragraph if she couldn’t handle the truth of who her brother was. I told her in brief the truth about my being transgendered. I didn’t go into great detail but she got the point. I was so scared and for two days I cried and wished I could take the email back, I thought the worst. I should say that she doesn’t have access to a computer everyday, so two days was not really that bad to wait for a response, but it felt like a life time to me. I got home from work Monday to find a email from her. I sat there for what felt like hours afraid to push the read email button. Then before I even had the courage to open it I received a phone call from her. The first thing she said was ” I Love You ” or at least that was the first thing I remember her saying, as I was kind of shocked to hear her voice…

Los Angeles Times: The Gospel and hate crimes
Excerpt:

…There might be rational reasons to question the wisdom of this [federal hate crime] legislation. But the argument that it endangers the 1st Amendment rights of these pastors is certainly not one of them.

Northwest Florida Daily News: China Bans TV Show on Cosmetic Surgery
Excerpt:

The Chinese government banned television shows about cosmetic surgery and sex changes Friday, less than two weeks after shutting down a talent show that regulators deemed coarse.

A headline on the Web site of the State Administration of Radio, Film and Television said would no longer allow “shows about cosmetic surgery, (or) sex changes that involve public participation.”

Moldova.org: Monkeys harass Kenyan women
Excerpt:

A trouble-making gang of monkeys is frustrating Kenyan villagers by destroying crops and harassing women.

Posted in Blogosphere, Blogroll, bisexual, law and legislation, politics, recommended reading, religious right organizations, television, transgender | 1 Comment »

Friday Recommended Reading

June 15th, 2007 by Autumn Sandeen

Bob, The View From (Ab)Normal Heights BookwormDallas Voice: Where Do They Stand?
Excerpt: Democratic candidates across the board support the Employment Non-Discrimination Act, but Clinton told The Washington Blade she is not sure it should include protection for transgenders.

Monstrous Regiment: “inclusion fascists”
Excerpt: Transfascism (n) (related to BiFascism; both being subsets of QueerFascism)(def) hysterical whining tantrums accompanied by maniacal shouts of ‘Oppressors’ or ‘Hitler” while calling for the banning/shunning/hitting/hating of any gay man or lesbian (LG) who does NOT embrace forced “inclusivity” of everything BTQ. (Source)

The Feminist Pulse: Girlistic’s Blog: Transfeminism - Joelle Ruby Ryan (Interview)
Excerpt: I think the most important founding paper in transfeminist discourse is Sandy Stone’s “The Empire Strikes Back: A Posttranssexual Manifesto,” first published in 1991. Written in response to Janice Raymond’s anti-transgender “radical” feminist diatribe The Transsexual Empire, Sandy Stone lays out a brilliant interrogation of Raymond’s faulty ideas as also exposes the conservative logics behind early, traditional transsexual treatment clinics and how we must work to liberate transpeople from these gate-keepers and allow for greater flexibility of sex, gender and sexuality diversity and expression.

Box Turtle Bulletin: The Death Rattle of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell
Excerpt: This past Sunday, Colin Powell, former Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, had some comments about the military’s anti-gay “Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell” policy put in place during his term of service.

Gay City News: Transgender Health Fair Draws 150
Excerpt: More than 150 people turned out Monday evening, June 6, for a first of its kind transgender health fair at the LGBT Community Center on West 13th Street. The event was initiated by the Transgender Health Initiative of New York, a joint project of the Transgender Legal Defense and Education Fund (TLDEF), the New York Association for Gender Rights Advocacy (NYAGRA), and the Center’s Gender Identity Project.

PlanetOut: Baptists’ gender point man tries soft sell
Bob Stith, who advocates a softer approach on LGBTs in the church, is named Southern Baptists’ national strategist for gender issues.

San Francisco Chronicle: The TSA Hates Your Vibrator
How to safely fly with your sex toys

Jamaicans.com: Reggae stars renounce homophobia - Beenie Man, Sizzla and Capleton sign deal
Excerpt: Three of the world’s top reggae/dancehall singers have renounced homophobia and condemned violence against lesbians and gay men. … Beenie Man, Sizzla and Capleton had previously released anti-gay hate songs, including incitements to murder lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people. … They have now signed up to the Reggae Compassionate Act in a deal brokered with top reggae promoters and Stop Murder Music activists.

Shakesville: Privilege: In One Story (with Pictures!)
Mr. Carol Broussard, mayor of a Louisiana town called Delcambre, is set to sign into law a new ordinance unanimously passed by the Delcambre town council which will make it a Exposed Butts And Underwearcrime to wear trousers that show underwear, punishable by a $500 fine and up to six months in jail. When some residents complained that the ordinance was racially-motivated, targeting blacks who wear the baggy trousers “fashionable among hip hop fans,” Broussard dismissed them with the inevitable: “White people wear sagging pants, too.” … he told the AP that people who wear low-slung trousers would be “better off taking the pants off and just wearing a dress.” And something tells me Broussard isn’t directing that recommendation at teh boyz.

Posted in Blogosphere, Blogroll, LGB civil rights, LGBT, Veterans, arts - film - music, bisexual, feminism, healthcare, military, prejudice: racism-sexism-homophobia-transphobia-etc, recommended reading, separatist philosophies, transactivism, transgender, transgender civil rights | Comments Off

Tuesday Recommended Reading

April 24th, 2007 by Autumn Sandeen

Bob, The View From (Ab)Normal Heights BookwormLos Angeles Times (free subscription): Why do straights hate gays?
An 72-year-old gay activist isn’t hopeful about the future.

Box Turtle Bulliten: Know Thy Neighbors
“One of the concerns I’ve had with the state of activism today is the tendency to literally “dehumanize” opponents — by that, I mean the process by which activists reduce those who disagree with them to caricatures which make them appear to be, well, not people. . .”

Pam’s House Blend: The truth about the federal hate crimes legislation and free speech

Cynical-C Blog: The Blame Game
In case you were wondering what columnists and bloggers are saying is to blame for the Virginia Tech massacre (because obviously it has to be more than just a mentally ill killer’s fault, right?), the Cynical-C Blog is maintaining a list for us so we can keep track of anyone or anything that might be to blame for the students’ deaths.

And speaking of menal illness. . .Los Angeles Times (free subscription): State is sued over hospital staffing crisis
“In their court filings, Department of Mental Health officials concede that the staff shortages have left them in violation of both state and federal regulations and jeopardized patient safety.”

AEBrain: Pre-Natal Hormones and Post-Natal Cognition and Left or Right? — Not Politics: Brains

Feministe: “Pro-Life” Mississippi Has Highest Infant Mortality Rate in the Nation

Transgender Workplace Diversity: 600,000 Transgenders “Could” Push Diversity Envelope for Some Employers
“Bill Leonard, senior writer for HR Magazine, published by the Society for Human Resource Management, yesterday posted an article on transgender workplace diversity, entitled “Transgender Issues Could Push Diversity Envelope for Some Employers.” Yes, it could. It discusses the Stanton case, noting that Stanton’s case made national headlines and has left many employers pondering how they would handle a similar situation. . .”

Chico Enterprise-Record: [Chico Area Recreation and Park District] gives nod to disc golf course, transsexual policy legislation and free speech

San Francisco Chronicle: Beware Of Flame-Shooting Bidet Toilets
“‘The fire [from the toilet] would have been just under your buttocks,’ Japanese maker says.”

Posted in Blogroll, LGBT, bisexual, civil rights, diversity, education, employment - housing - public accomodation, faith, gay, healthcare, intersex, law and legislation, lesbian, prejudice: racism-sexism-homophobia-transphobia-etc, recommended reading, religious right organizations, science, transactivism, transgender, transgender civil rights, youth | Comments Off

CNN defends host’s use of the word “faggot”

January 27th, 2007 by Autumn Sandeen

I know I’m slow to this story, considering how I’m usually all over media portrayals of LGBT people. But this is one of those stories that’s better talked about later rather than never.

Americablog has a story up on their site entitled CNN defends host’s use of the word “faggot” - network slammed by lead gay anti-defamation group. GLAAD has a press release up on the story too.

It seems Glenn Beck, who hosts an opinion show on CNN’s Headline News doesn’t think the term “faggot” is anything more than a “naughty name.” Just so I don’t mistate this, let me excerpt the exchange between Beck and a guest, as reported by GLAAD:

Glenn BeckBECK: But anyway, Dave, what is the -what is the controversy? One of the guys called another guy a naughty name.

GLOVER: Yes. Basically you have Isaiah Washington, who’s one of the stars of the show, who referred to one of his co-stars during a heated argument as a derogatory term for a gay man that starts with ‘F’ and rhymes with maggot. Did it a couple more times after that. And do you like how I did that?

BECK: Yes.

GLOVER: And –

BECK: Do you know that “The New York Times” wouldn’t even print, I mean, we can say the word. We’re having an adult conversation here. Wouldn’t even print the word “faggot.”

GLOVER: Right.

BECK: Wouldn’t print it. I find that amazing.

John of Americablog reported that…

So CNN is now defending its host, Glenn Beck, and his use of the word “faggot” on the air, AND his suggestion that the word isn’t very derogatory. Way to step in it even further, CNN. Faggot is the n-word to gays, and you think it’s appropriate? Does CNN permit the n-word on the air? And would they permit their hosts to suggest that it’s simply a “naughty name”? CNN has a host who is a loose cannon and who has already slurred Muslims, gays, and more. (Though, interestingly, I doubt CNN would let a host slur blacks or Jews, so apparently free speech has its limits even at CNN.) But rather than apologize, CNN defends their host who thinks the word “faggot” is appropriate for CNN, and who thinks the word “faggot” is simply a “naughty name.”

I think CNN is about to see just how the gay community feels about TV networks who think the bigoted slurs are no big deal. Why? Because now GLAAD is involved. They’re the gay community’s largest anti-defamation group. That elevates the CNN controversy to a whole new level. And the fact that CNN is defending their host’s use of the word “faggot,” and his attempt to belittle the damage the word causes, is not going to sit well with the non-FOX-news crowd that usually watches CNN.

From GLAAD’s press release:

“Beck’s obnoxious repetition of the slur — and his flip dismissal of it as simply a ‘naughty name’ – speaks volumes about his appalling ignorance of its impact,” Giuliano said. “Beck added nothing to the audience’s understanding of the issue, except perhaps to demonstrate his juvenile belief that repeating an anti-gay slur makes him an ‘adult.’”

On Tuesday, GLAAD reached out to CNN’s standards and practices department to discuss the matter. On Wednesday, a CNN spokesperson told GLAAD that Beck wasn’t using the word himself, that Beck’s show is an “opinion show” and not a news program, and that Beck was expressing an opinion about The New York Times’ decision to not use the word.

“The ugliness of Glenn Beck’s word choice and his ignorance of its impact really speak for themselves,” Giuliano said. “Other CNN personalities have discussed derogatory slurs as part of this story without debasing that discussion. CNN has a responsibility to address Beck’s crudeness and require that he adhere to basic standards of respect.”

I used the comment section to CNN Headline News to let CNN know I won’t watch either of the CNN networks as long as Glenn Beck is employed there; I let show sponsors Best Buy and Office Depot know I won’t shop at their stores until they drop sponsorship of Beck’s show.

An epithet isn’t a “naughty name.”  Sometimes folk in and out of the LGBT community need to remind people just how ugly a term “faggot” can be. For me, this is one of those times.

*****Update*****

Mara Keisling blogged on this CNN/Beck story on the NCTE’s new T-Equality Blog.

Mara adds some insight on Beck as “The Thinker,” reminding us of a May 2006 segment about the transgender teen in Indiana. The teen was barred from a high school prom for wanting to wearing an appropriate prom gown after wearing girl’s clothes in school for an entire school year — Beck called the teenager “Dame Edna” and “freak boy.”

Posted in Blogroll, GLAAD, LGBT, bisexual, gay, lesbian, politics, prejudice: racism-sexism-homophobia-transphobia-etc, transgender | 1 Comment »

My Friend Vicki In The News

January 14th, 2007 by Autumn Sandeen

Vicki EstradaI have very few very close friends in the world, but one of them is Vicki. This week, she was profiled in San Diego’s Gay & Lesbian Times in an article entitled Coming out transgender in same-sex relationships.

There’s an compannion piece in the publication — an editorial entitled Provocative vs. politically correct.

The article on transgender people in relationships is probably the best piece I’ve seen on the topic, my friend Vicki’s participation not being a factor. The piece just explored relationships from all sorts of perspectives — and it was well-written. I highly recommend the piece as interesting reading.

Posted in LGBT, bisexual, gay, lesbian, transgender | Comments Off