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July 31st, 2008 by Autumn Sandeen

From horrible reality:

Angie ZapataDenver Post: Transgender victim referred to as “it”:

Allen Ray Andrade never referred to his alleged victim as a she or he. Just “it.”

That alone speaks to the brutality of the crime committed against 21-year-old Angie Zapata, said a group that has been speaking for Zapata’s family.

“You get the sense that maybe he wasn’t seeing Angie as a person,” said Crystal Middlestadt, director of Training and Education for the Colorado Anti-Violence Program. “Then you get an idea of the violence behind this act.”

~~
From GLAAD’s Media Reference Guide:

DEFAMATORY TERMINOLOGY

Defamatory: “she-male,” “he-she,” “it,” “trannie,” “tranny,” “gender-bender”

These words only serve to dehumanize transgender people and should not be used.

To horrible press coverage:

UK’s Metro: Duped lover kills transsexual with fire extinguisher:

A furious dupe has been accused of murder with a fire extinguisher after discovering a woman who gave him oral sex was born a man.

Allen Ray Andrade allegedly battered Justin Zapata to death in a fury after discovering the truth.

He had believed the partner he picked up online was a woman known as Angie Zapata.

~~
From GLAAD’s Media Reference Guide:

DEFAMATORY TERMINOLOGY

Defamatory: “deceptive,” “fooling,” “pretending,” “posing,” or “masquerading”

Gender identity is an integral part of a person’s identity. Please do not characterize transgender people as “deceptive,” as “fooling” other people, or as “pretending” to be, “posing” or “masquerading” as a man or a woman. Such descriptions are extremely insulting.

With regards to Angie Zapata’s killing, there’s just not much to add to the GLAAD Media Guide’s indirect commentary on the alleged killer’s dehumanization of Angie Zapata, and the Metro’s insulting coverage.

~~~~~
Related:
* Arrest In Killing Of Angie Zapata
* Murder in Colorado

Posted in Transgender Day of Remembrance, deception, hate crimes and hate violence, in the media, law and order, trans panic, transgender | No Comments »

We Just Got A Fracas

July 30th, 2008 by Stephanie Stevens

I wasn’t there to see it, but … Cyd Zeigler of Outsports comes out for “Smiling Joe” and his putative goons, and down hard on “crazy lady” Catherine Cusic … whatever, not that I’m surprised by this, I’m sure this must simply be something these sports gays get from WWE or such …

An altercation at the Human Rights Campaign’s Bay Area Gala Dinner Saturday, July 26, has left one woman alleging abuse and threatening legal action and an organization scratching its proverbial head. And at the heart of the controversy are two very different sides of what happened that night.

Catherine Cusic, a vice-president of the Harvey Milk LGBT Democratic Club, claims she was bruised by security guards who assaulted her with allegedly excessive force soon after she rose from her seat during a presentation by HRC President Joe Solmonese at the event that evening. Her story was quickly distributed and picked up by various bloggers over the weekend and was repeated here on this Web site.

However, attendees of the dinner are speaking out and say that Cusic’s account is a distorted perspective of what happened, and that by the time security guards touched her, they had exhausted their non-physical options.

Cusic claims she was walking silently toward the middle of the room with leaflets under her arm when she was approached from behind by three security guards. She says she was quiet and did not utter a single word or distribute a single flyer until the guards approached her.

“There was absolutely nothing quiet about what she did,” event Co-chair Tom Floyd said. “She began by screaming ’Liar!’ and was not quiet. She did not distribute flyers, she threw them at people. She then walked briskly with purpose toward the stage.” Floyd said it was only when it looked as though she might try to approach and climb onto the stage that security stepped in front of her.

Cusic said a guard jerked her arm back violently and knocked the leaflets out of her possession, at which time they went flying into the air. She said her right arm was then raised over her and her wrist was crushed down, and only then did she yell.

When asked why security guards would grab her and forcefully remove her for silently walking through the crowd of seated tables, she said she had no explanation.

“[Her story] is a complete fabrication,” Floyd said. “I read her statements, I was completely shocked. It was like she was at a completely different event. She was treated with complete dignity and respect.”

Floyd said he has attended other HRC events at which there were protestors, including a national dinner in Washington, D.C. He said their treatment at each one is the same: They are asked to leave and they either leave or are escorted out, but he has never seen security at an HRC dinner use anywhere near the force that Cusic describes.

Floyd added that he’s talked to at least seven different people who were at the dinner, and none of them corroborates any aspect of her story. All told, every person who was at the dinner who spoke has contradicted Cusic’s version, including at what point she yelled and threw flyers. Diego Sanchez, a transgender member of HRC’s business council and a speaker at the event whom Cusic said she wanted to “respect” during the dinner, told The Bilerico Project that Cusic’s recollection was not accurate:

“When Joe [Solmonese] was speaking, she started yelling something and tossed stacks of paper to the center of a few tables,” Sanchez said. “That’s when I turned around, and she was alone. Only then did Security approach her that I saw, as she kept moving toward the stage.”

Cusic said everyone remembers what they want to remember from an incident, and she acknowledged that she herself may have some of the facts wrong.

“People see what is consistent with their world view,” she said. “I wouldn’t be surprised if I saw a tape and there were minor differences [with what I remember]. Maybe I was closer to the stage, maybe I said something more offensive than I remember.” However, she maintains that she did not speak or distribute any flyers until she was grabbed by security.

She said the point of the incident isn’t whether she was disruptive but how she was, in her words, brutalized by security; something she said she hasn’t experienced in many years of protesting and leafleting.

“What we’re seeing is a new kind of security system being put in by large organizations, and HRC is one of them,” Cusic said. “Even if I’d been disruptive, there is no reason for the violence that happened to me.”

She laid part of the blame at the feet of the Bush Administration for creating an anti-terrorism atmosphere in American society that has created a crack-down mentality amongst security guards. “This is what I’m told by people who are experts in the new security program.” Cusic said. “They are trained that any breach of security is to be treated as a terrorist attack.”

While video cameras were rolling, they were from the back of the room and may not have caught any of the altercation between Cusic and the event’s hired security. No one may ever know what really happened in those moments at the HRC dinner, but for the time being, Cusic has a very divergent perspective from every other attendee who has shared their perspective.

Posted in ENDA, HRC, LGBT, civil rights, employment - housing - public accomodation, gay panic, in the media, law and legislation, law and order, politics, prejudice: racism-sexism-homophobia-transphobia-etc, transactivism, transgender, transgender civil rights | No Comments »

This And That: This Week In Bathrooms And Locker Rooms

July 30th, 2008 by Autumn Sandeen

With civil rights and protections for gender identity and expression seeming to frequently hinge on the predator arguments of the religious right community (with a number of second wave feminists apparently in agreement with many of the arguments), it seems civil rights activists need to pay attention to what’s happening in the news regarding bathrooms and locker rooms.

- Transgender-law challengers submit 8,600 signatures

Moments before Tuesday’s 5 p.m. deadline, the group challenging Gainesville’s anti-discrimination ordinance turned in its final batch of petitions, totaling about 3,000 more signatures than required in order to get a citywide vote on the issue.

According to Alachua County Supervisor of Elections Pam Carpenter, more than 8,600 signatures were turned in, well above the 5,581 signatures required to place the “repealing” charter amendment on a city election ballot, likely in spring 2009.

From a related article:

According to Cain Davis, president of Citizens for Good Public Policy, fears are centered around the fact that under the law a biological man who has an “inner sense” of being a woman could legally use the women’s restroom.

“Tell the woman who gets raped, tell the family who gets their spouse killed, that it’s no big deal,” Davis said.

Per usual, no examples of when this has happened has been provided — as there are no examples of this ever having happened.

- From WingNutDaily: Judge rules voters can decide ‘coed showers’ plan; ‘Like all American citizens, Maryland voters have right to have voices count’:

A judge has ruled that voters in Montgomery County, Md., will be allowed to determine the future of a “discrimination” ban that family advocates say simply opens up all public facilities, including restrooms and locker rooms, to individuals of either sex, depending upon their “gender identity.”

“Like all American citizens, Maryland voters have the right to have their voices count,” said Amy Smith, a litigation attorney for the Alliance Defense Fund, which is arguing the case.
“Justice was served … as more than enough valid signatures were collected for the petitions, and the plaintiffs clearly failed to file their suit before the statute of limitations expired,” she said.

Maryland County’s The Gazette adds:

‘‘We’re disappointed, but the court concluded that we were right but were too late in filing,” said Jonathan S. Shurberg, an attorney for Equality Maryland. ‘‘If I didn’t think we had a strong chance to win, I wouldn’t recommend to my client that we appeal.”

Shurberg plans to request a review by the Court of Appeals, the state’s highest court. If the review is denied, he will ask for an expedited review by the Special Appeals court before the Aug. 18 deadline for ballot changes.

[Below the fold: Pre-Op Transsexual fighting to use women's locker room; Thai Schools trans restrooms]

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Blogosphere, always the bathroom, employment - housing - public accomodation, religious right organizations, transgender | No Comments »

Is The Manchester Hyatt Boycott Fizzling Or Having An Impact?

July 29th, 2008 by Autumn Sandeen

Well, there is a boycott against the Manchester Grand Hyatt in full swing now. The reason why is because significant minority shareholder Doug ManchesterCalifornians Against Hate (the Manchester of the Manchester Grand Hyatt) donated $125,000 to a group backing Proposition 8, the November ballot measure that would roll back the California Supreme Court’s ruling in favor of marriage equality.

OneNewsNow reported Monday that California homosexuals’ boycott fizzles, while conversely over at the San Diego Union-Tribune, they reported in Will gays’ boycott turn the tables?; Groups target Manchester with conservatives’ tactic.

A question has been asked by the U-T — does actual financial damage to the Manchester Grand Hyatt need to occur for this boycott to have significant impact? Such as, will campaign fundraising damage to pro-Proposition 8 forces — those seeking to redefine marriage in California as being between one man and one woman — occur because of a boycott against this hotel?

Hyatt spokeswoman Lori Alexander told the Associated Press that the Manchester Grand Hyatt was sold out for San Diego Pride weekend. OneNewsNow echoed the Hyatt’s comments, adding in their reporting in their reporting that the boycott of the Manchester Grand Hyatt is fizzling because according the boycott has actually convinced people who support Proposition 8 to stay at the hotel (that, according to a statement by Bryan Brown of the National Organization for Marriage-California). However, the Associated Press/Gay & Lesbian Times reported that the Manchester Grand Hyatt wasn’t actually sold out during San Diego Pride weekend:

…a look at the hotel’s Web site and a call to the hotel on Saturday revealed that there were plenty of rooms available in every category during the busy Pride weekend in San Diego.

And again, according to the San Diego Union-Tribune:

Some analysts contend that the tactic [of boycott] — even if it doesn’t reduce business at the hotels — could prove effective by persuading other potential donors to Proposition 8 to stay out of the battle.

“They will probably succeed in getting business owners that are hesitant to avoid giving,” said Tony Quinn, co-editor of the Target Book, which analyzes California politics. “It’s a tough tactic, but it may be a wise tactic.”

So even if the boycott isn’t a financial success, it may have an financial impact on those in support of Proposition 8 campaign. And according to the San Francisco Chronicle a lot of money is going to flood campaigns both for and against Proposition 8, much of that coming from out-of-California sources. If this boycott indirectly cuts into the campaign funds for Proposition 8, that may impact the proposition’s outcome this November.

Vow To Vote No On Prop 8I know I spent half-a-day Sunday working at a Vow To Vote No On The Marriage Ban phone bank this past weekend, have another shift scheduled for this coming weekend, and have a small, reoccurring donation going each month to Equality For All’s campaign against Proposition 8.

Oh. Off subject a bit…

I politically identify as transgender — marriage equality may not seem like a natural issue for me or my particular LGBT subcommunity. However, because my broader LGBT community has a stake in the outcome Proposition 8, I have a stake in the outcome of this Proposition 8. So, I’m investing my personal time and personal resources to preserve our recent marriage equality gain here in my home state.

Next time you hear that trans people only care about trans issues, please remember my relatively small contributions towards marriage equality, as well as the much larger contributions of attorney Shannon Minter, who is a female-to-male transgender person. As Martin Luther King Jr. said:

Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere.

Many of us trans folks really “get” the concept that All [people] are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality. For some of us trans folk, stating that we believe there is an LGBT community translates into spending a some of our time and resources on community issues that aren’t seen as primarily impacting transgender people.

H/t: Fred Karger/Californians Against Hate

~~~~~
Further reading:
* California Secretary Of State: Proposition 008 - Limit On Marriage. Constitutional Amendment; Committees formed to support or oppose the ballot measure (Check here to follow the donation money trails for those who support and oppose Prop. 8)
* Los Angeles Times: GOP suffering from a lack of (ballot) initiative

~~~~~
Related:
* AFA President Don Wildmon: Culture War Lost If Prop 8 Doesn’t Pass
* PROP 8 ballot wording rewritten: to ELIMINATE RIGHT of Same-Sex Couples to Marry.

Posted in 2008 Election, LGB civil rights, LGBT, gender neutral marriage, law and legislation, transactivism, transgender, transgender civil rights | No Comments »

The March Against The Penguins

July 28th, 2008 by Stephanie Stevens

Can’t help it … but the headline on Tommi Avicolli Mecca’s article in Beyond Chron today about the Human Rights Campaign’s fundraiser in San Francisco brought to mind an image of a big room full of Roys and Silos

~~~

Related …

Enda United: We will not be divided

Lesbian activist ousted from HRC dinner

Posted in Blogosphere, ENDA, HRC, LGBT, arts - film - music, civil rights, discrimination, employment - housing - public accomodation, in the media, law and legislation, transactivism, transgender, transgender civil rights | No Comments »

Cuil?

July 28th, 2008 by Stephanie Stevens

It’s a bit early to say whether Cuil will be cool or not, but the new search engine did debut today.

Here’s (a screen shot of page 1) what “transgender” turned up …

It’s a bit interesting to me to see some of what you get when you mouse over in the Explore by Category box.

And, by the way, (Ab)Normal Heights first showed up on page 6

… great logo we have there. ;-)

Posted in (Ab)Normal Heights, HRC, in the media, transgender | 1 Comment »

Sunday Funnies (Blogging)

July 27th, 2008 by Stephanie Stevens

Posted in Blogosphere, Sunday Funnies, in the media | No Comments »

Trans Bats Banned In California (And Paul Whiffs)

July 26th, 2008 by Stephanie Stevens

A bit of word play here, but Autumn’s earlier post brought back memories of this story

An avid athlete and a transgender person, Tedra Thomsen wants to play
coed softball — as a woman.

But the softball league she plays on won’t allow that.

“This snubs me basically,” said Thomsen, who explained while the sex
she was born with is anatomically male, the gender she identifies
herself with is female.

Next week the league’s recreation district will consider a policy on
transsexual athletes — a first for the Chico Area Recreation and
Park District — because of Thomsen’s concerns.

and

their knowledge but said the board needed to put a policy in placenow to answer Thomsen’s coed softball application request.

Also Thursday the board unanimously approved a policy addressing the
participation of transgender and transsexual athletes in recreational
sports programs. The policy — which originated when Chico resident
and softball player Tedra Thomsen, a transgender person who expressed
a desire to play on a coed softball team as a woman — states that
transsexual athletes can play in a male or female sport after sex
reassignment surgery, hormone therapy and legal recognition of their
reassigned sex. Medical documentation is also required.

Transgender athletes who don’t meet those requirements are eligible
for participation in female or male recreational sports according to
their birth sex, the policy states.

Thomsen, friends and advocates and attorneys for gender rights — some
who had traveled from San Francisco to attend the meeting — urged the
CARD board to reconsider the policy because it would mean Thomsen
cannot play as a female until undergoing sex reassignment surgery and
hormone therapy. Several said surgery was a drastic procedure and
that Olympic standards were not appropriate for a recreation league.

“I think this is not a time for hard and fast rules that might
protect someone legally, but fairness,” said one speaker in favor of
Thomsen.

CARD legal representative Jennifer Wendell, an attorney with the
Carter Law Office, said the policy — based on standards put in place
by the International Olympic Committee — is the recreation district’s
attempt at balancing CARD’s need for safety and competitive standards
with accommodating Thomsen. She said the policy will not keep anyone
from dressing, acting or being addressed and treated as the gender
they identify with.

CARD attorney Jeff Carter said CARD’s legal team would be willing to
meet with those knowledgeable about transgender issues to further
their knowledge but said the board needed to put a policy in place
now to answer Thomsen’s coed softball application request.

and that left me wondering if there have been any updates to this story?

I haven’t heard of any … ??

(By the way, if we didn’t “archive” these news stories, they may as well never have happened in many cases.)

Back to Autumn’s post, which also brought to mind this story, speaking of (”tricky”) Libertarians …

Activists belonging to the libertarian wing of the Republican Party continue to mourn the loss of Kent Snyder, a 49-year-old gay political operative credited with propelling the presidential campaign of U.S. Rep. Ron Paul (R-Texas) into a national, grassroots movement that raised more than $35 million.

Snyder, who served as Paul’s campaign chair, died of pneumonia on June 26 after being hospitalized for about two months and after running up medical bills exceeding $400,000, according to friends and family members, who said he did not have health insurance.

When asked at the Capitol in Washington on Wednesday about concerns raised by critics that his presidential campaign did not provide employee health insurance, Paul said only that he doesn’t believe any political campaigns offer health insurance.

“I don’t know of any campaign that has health insurance for temporary and other employees,” he said. “I’ve never had it and I’ve been in this business for 30 years. I don’t know any campaign that does.”

Spokespersons for the presidential campaigns of Barack Obama and John McCain said both campaigns provide full health insurance coverage to their paid staff. A spokesperson for the Hillary Clinton presidential campaign said Clinton also provided health insurance coverage to campaign staffers before she ended her campaign in early June.

I don’t expect, though, I’ll be seeing “full health insurance coverage” coming forth, for me or you, from any of these folks any time soon … Paul, McCain or Obama … three whiffs and we’re out.

Some not quite out of date mood music for this Saturday night …

Posted in (Ab)Normal Heights, 2008 Election, Blogosphere, arts - film - music, employment - housing - public accomodation, health, healthcare, in the media, politics, sports, transgender | No Comments »

A Better Show In Town This Week

July 26th, 2008 by Stephanie Stevens

Well, one show has moved out of town (actually it was closer to Black Mountain and about 18 miles or so up the valley from downtown Asheville). No loss. Just another “circus” whose methods are also certainly questionable. You can read “the reviews” from Pam Spaulding and Wayne Besen.

This Friday-Saturday-Sunday is the 30th annual Bele Chere Festival. A much better show, believe me … hope you can visit here sometime.

~~~

Just a couple of local links …

Equality Asheville

Phoenix

BlogAsheville

OUTLOUD

Posted in Alan Chambers, Blogosphere, Exodus International, NARTH, Randy Thomas, Wayne Besen, arts - film - music, events, ex-gay, in the media, transgender | 1 Comment »

Trans Fats Banned In California

July 26th, 2008 by Autumn Sandeen

The Los Angeles Times is reporting that Governor Schwarzenegger signs law banning trans fats in restaurants:

California became the first state to require restaurants to cook without artery-clogging trans fats, such as those in many oils and margarines, under restrictions signed into law Friday by the health-conscious governor.

Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger, a physical-fitness advocate and crusader against obesity, sided with legislators who said the measure would help get the fat out of Californians who are too dependent on fast food.

Trans fats can preserve flavor and add to the shelf life of foods but have been linked to heart disease, stroke and diabetes.

The new law, AB 97 by Assemblyman Tony Mendoza (D-Artesia), requires restaurants to use oils, margarines and shortening with less than half a gram of trans fat per serving by Jan. 1, 2010, and applies the standard to deep-fried bakery goods by Jan. 1, 2011.

If one violates the law, one could face fines of $25 to $1,000 — much like the law in New York City (which fully took effect this month), where one could face a fine up to $2000 for serving trans fats in restaurants.

Eliminating trans fats is all the trend; many restaurant chains have already taken action to, or have committed to, either fully or partly eliminating trans fats from their menus. Some of these restaurants include Wendy’s, El Pollo Loco, Mimis Cafe, KFC, Burger King, IHOP, Applebee’s, Starbucks, Subway, Taco Bell, Denny’s, Panera Bread, Red Lobster, the Olive Garden, McDonald’s and Spago Beverly Hills.

My brother, who lives abroad in Sweden, has mentioned how many describe government there as “mother government” because of the trend to legislate out what are perceived as personal freedoms, and legislate in a lot of government social programs. With that in mind, is this California legislating of trans fats in prepared, restaurant foods an example of government operating as a watchful parent of California’s adult population, or is this government taking an interest in eliminating a hidden food danger that raises health care costs for broader society? — much as how smoking raises the public health care costs of broader society.

It’s always a bit tricky when one takes the Libertarian view of always asking the question of “Should __(fill in the blank)__ be a function of government?” A lot of us want government involved with health issues and healthcare — the questions are instead ones of “How much do we want government involved in health issues?”, and “How much government involvement in health issues is too much involvement?”

And, when it comes to trans fats, I don’t have a good answer where the line is.

Posted in health, health & fitness, healthcare, law and legislation | 1 Comment »

HRC’s San Francisco Fundraiser Is Tonight

July 26th, 2008 by Stephanie Stevens

Here’s a CBS5 news report on the planned boycott of the event by supporters of transgender rights …

“Hiring one transgender person, or giving half-hearted apologies, doesn’t cut it. They need to be accountable. They need to do the right thing.” — Robert Haaland

Posted in Barney Frank, ENDA, HRC, LGBT, civil rights, discrimination, employment - housing - public accomodation, gay, in the media, politics, prejudice: racism-sexism-homophobia-transphobia-etc, transactivism, transgender, transgender civil rights | No Comments »

A Small Change At The BBC

July 25th, 2008 by Stephanie Stevens

Yesterday, my colleague at Transgender News, Meryl, posted a story (”Prostitute had £14,000 on body”) from the BBC News website to the group …

A transsexual prostitute was stopped at Belfast City Airport with
£14,000 hidden around his body last week, Belfast Magistrates Court
has heard.

Malaysian national Nor Azmi Bin Mohammad, 31, is understood to have
been charging clients 350 euros an hour for his services while working
in NI.

A forfeiture order for the seized cash was granted because he did not
have legal immigration status.

Today, that “same” story on its website reads like this …

A transsexual prostitute was stopped at Belfast City Airport with £14,000 hidden around her body last week, Belfast Magistrates Court has heard.

Malaysian national Nor Azmi Bin Mohammad, 31, is understood to have been charging clients 350 euros an hour for her services while working in NI.

A forfeiture order for the seized cash was granted because she did not have legal immigration status.

Props to Helen who wrote the BBC (and who let me know about the change) to say “small detail, but even an alleged prostitute deserves the basic human dignity and respect of being correctly gendered.”

Can’t say I disagree with that … and, evidently, nor could the BBC.

Now, who’s going to get in touch with the Belfast Telegraph?

Posted in in the media, transgender | 1 Comment »

Yah, You Betcha …

July 23rd, 2008 by Stephanie Stevens

… that I’m disappointed again that the “deception” “discovery” defense has credibility with anyone. Levi Gunderson? Did he punt this case? “Yah, you betcha.

Levi’s got way less (nevermind “fewer”) balls than Marge … not that, speaking personally, I think there’s anything wrong with that … but just don’t not have them in the judicial sense.

Do we have any math majors here? Can 85% of 8 3/4 years really only be not much more than seven years for this … ?

The alleged murderer in the 2005 slaying of a gay man pleaded guilty Tuesday to attempted manslaughter in agreement with prosecutors.

Ruben Solorio Valenzuela faces a prison sentence of 8-3/4 years if the agreement is accepted by Yuma County Superior Court Judge Andrew Gould.

Although Gould was not able to attend Tuesday, the plea agreement was presided over by Superior Court Judge Mark Wayne Reeves.

Reeves also said the suspect will be required to serve 85 percent of his sentence before being eligible for release.

Prosecutor Levi Gunderson acknowledged that Solorio Valenzuela did not plan the alleged murder but acted suddenly, in the heat of passion resulting from the rage and humiliation he felt when he discovered Corrales was actually a man.

Corrales, a 23-year-old gay man, was a cosmetologist who also performed as a female impersonator known as Dalila, impersonating celebrity singers.

Corrales was dressed as a woman the night he and Solorio Valenzuela met. After several attempts to fondle Corrales, Solorio Valenzuela realized his mistake and then allegedly stabbed Corrales.

Corrales’ body was discovered on May 6, 2005, floating 500 feet west of Paradise Cove, just west of Joe Henry Park, with multiple stab wounds. He died from what authorities called “violent trauma.”

Yuma County sheriff’s deputies arrested Valenzuela on May 23, 2007, at Express Lube, 1900 S. 4th Ave., where he had been working. An anonymous written tip led to his arrest.

Subsequent investigation disclosed Solorio Valenzuela had confessed to family members soon after the murder. The day of the killing, he fled to Guadalajara, Mexico, for three months, according to court records.

Maribel Corrales, the victim’s mother, briefly addressed the court Tuesday while trying to hold back sobs. Speaking through an interpreter, she said, “He didn’t kill a person but a whole family. I don’t agree (with the plea). It is not fair.”

Solorio Valenzuela had been booked into Yuma County Jail on one count of second-degree murder, but a grand jury later indicted him on a charges of manslaughter and abandoning a body.

In exchange for the plea, the state suspends the original count. Solorio Valenzuela could be ordered to pay restitution of $150,000 as well as an additional 80 percent of that amount at his sentencing, Gunderson said.

Like Marge, I’m not amused.

This stinks.

My heart goes out to Maribel Corrales, who got it right …

“[This] is not fair.”

Posted in deception, gay, gay panic, hate crimes and hate violence, in the media, prejudice: racism-sexism-homophobia-transphobia-etc, trans panic, transgender | No Comments »

To Me, It’s Become Too Much About Joe

July 23rd, 2008 by Autumn Sandeen

I wish Joe Solmonese would just go away.

Mr. Solmonese has morphed into a true lightning rod of a public figure due to last year's ENDA debacle. Wherever he goes now, he's a reminder that the HRC flip-flopped horribly on basic civil rights legislation for all of their stated gender variant constituencies — constituencies which include transgender people.

But he's not going away — He's staying very visible. In fact, the San Diego Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, And Transgender Community Center sent out an email indicating he's coming here to my hometown of San Diego on Thursday evening to talk about marriage equality — but oddly, when I checked online on Wednesday afternoon, the event wasn't listed on The Center's community calendar.

Joe Solmonese Visits San DiegoDue to his public statements on ENDA over the past year, I'm one who believes that if there ever is an HRC operative that has zero credibility on equality issues, it's Joe Solmonese.

Frankly, with the possible exception of David Smith, I believe pretty much any other HRC operative could come to San Diego from the Washington DC office to talk about marriage equality and speak with some credibility. But Joe…Joe…to me, he really is a special case because he was the mouthpiece of the HRC's flip-flopping on only supporting a fully inclusive ENDA.

With perhaps some true irony, on Monday I received an email from the San Diego Democratic Club (SDDC) with a subject line of A Transgender Inclusive Democratic Platform - Make It Happen! A Transgender Inclusive Democratic PlatformThe email announced a meeting that will discuss the adding of a plank to the Democratic Party Platform in support of transgender civil rights. This event is scheduled for the same day as Joe Solmonese's talk on ENDA.

I talked to people at both the SDDC and The Center, and apparently neither was aware of the other's event. Fortunately, the meetings are scheduled at different times during the day Thursday, so at least I don't have to choose whether basic civil rights for transgender people or marriage equality is the more important issue to me — frankly, both issues are extremely important to me.

But I did learn something about myself when I was thought I was going to have to choose between which of these events I was going to attend. And, what that was: I found I may have mixed feelings about the HRC and their mixed record with their gender variant constituencies, but I have no mixed feelings at all about Joe Solmonese. I would have attended the SDDC meeting not because I felt it was the more important of the two meetings, but it's because I really, really dislike like Joe Solmonese on a very, very personal level.

There. I said it. I'm not proud of myself for saying it; I'm not happy to realize how much I don't like Joe and how much that impacts my objectivity regarding the HRC. But it is what it is.

It isn't up to me, but if it were — well, I honestly wish Joe Solmonese would just go away. As a public voice of the LGBT activist community, he’s just become too much of a controversial, lightning rod of a public figure within the LGBT community to be a truly effective voice for LGBT people within and without the LGBT community. Plus, after all of his ENDA flip-flopping last year, I don’t believe a word that passes through his lips — he has absolutely zero credibility with me.

I'm not proud of saying that either.

Posted in 2008 Election, LGBT, gender neutral marriage, transgender, transgender civil rights | No Comments »

Q Of The Day: In Uniformed Employment, Should Government Enforce Societal Gender Norms?

July 23rd, 2008 by Autumn Sandeen

Male Postal Worker Uniform Mock-up With Male Unbifurcated Garment A lot of people think I’m crazy. This is important to me - I just want to be comfortable. I just want the option.
Letter carrier Dean Peterson

The Boston Globe is reporting, in an article entitled Mailman seeks comfort in kilt, about one letter carrier’s effort to make a kilt option available for male letter carriers:

As some 10,000 letter carriers gather in Boston this week for the 66th biennial convention of the National Association of Letter Carriers, Peterson is on a one-man mission to persuade his colleagues to approve a change in their strictly regulated uniforms. He has proposed a resolution to allow mailmen to wear kilts, which he calls a Male Unbifurcated Garment, or MUG.

Over the past few weeks, he says he has spent the $1,800 he received as part of the federal government’s stimulus package to send about 1,000 letters and photographs of a mockup of the new uniform to postal union branches in every state, as well as Guam and Puerto Rico.

“MUGs are worn all over the world, and have been for thousands of years because they are comfortable,” he wrote to fellow mailmen. “Unbifurcated Garments are far more comfortable and suitable to male anatomy than trousers or shorts, because they don’t confine the legs or cramp the male genitals the way that trousers or shorts do.”

So when creating uniforms for it’s uniformed jobs and uniformed services, is it a function of government to only allow women to wear unbifurcated garments? And even beyond allowing men to wear MUGs, should biological males be allowed wear government uniforms designed for females, and vice-a-versa, should biological females be allowed to wear government uniforms designed for males?

When thinking through your answer, remember that the military services are uniformed services too.

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