Tyler Oakley: “The LGBTQ Community is Incredibly Diverse”
Tyler Oakley: “The LGBTQ Community is Incredibly Diverse”
QUEEN’S EYE VIEW of New Orleans: Cafe Du Monde
How you can honor Intersex Awareness Day and fight back against the Trump Administration
To all intersex allies: we need your help now more than ever.
Intersex Awareness Day (IAD) is October 26, a day on which intersex people and allies from around the world come together to celebrate and uplift the intersex community. IAD has its roots in radical action against institutional forces that sought to normalize our bodies by forcing us into narrowly defined categories of “male” or “female.” To celebrate being intersex is a triumph over these institutional pressures. This year, it comes just a week after the news broke that the Trump administration aims to enact a federal definition of sex, basing it on sex assigned at birth.
Much of the press around this memo describes it as an act of violence against the transgender community: an attempt to write trans people out of existence by erasing the complexity of sex and gender. However, many of these criticisms have failed to include the fact that the effects of this memo are themselves are even further reaching. Defining sex so narrowly doesn’t just erase trans people—it erases nonbinary, gender non-conforming, and especially intersex people, who are often left out of the conversation around LGBTQ rights. As intersex people, our lives exist outside of binary gender.
InterACT Advocates for Intersex Youth defines intersex as an umbrella term that refers to people who have one or more of a range of variations in sex characteristics that fall outside of traditional conceptions of male or female bodies. What the memo’s initiative asks—that we identify as male or female according to our birth genitalia—is literally impossible.
Intersex identities are often misunderstood and underrepresented. Let’s debunk 10 myths about intersex people: t.co/VYwWWaIssP pic.twitter.com/cmhGE4RFRz
— GLAAD (@glaad) April 3, 2018
We cannot allow this hateful initiative to move forward. This is the moment that our communities need to come together, but to do that we must acknowledge all of the communities that are affected by this memo. As an intersex nonbinary trans person, I feel outraged, scared, empowered, strong, and a calling to show up and show out not only for myself but my ancestors, my communities, and the future youth.
Intersex and trans history has been intertwined for centuries. Even though these identities are distinct, there are some experiences that do overlap. Both of our communities are deeply affected by binary and heteronormative values that seek to regulate our bodies and conform them to performative mainstream expectations. Where trans folks are systematically barred from accessing affirming healthcare, intersex people are frequently subjected to gendered procedures often kept from our trans siblings. We cannot keep teaching our youth fundamentally wrong things based in biological essentialism.
Intersex people exist, illustrating that the sex dichotomy that our society tries so hard to keep alive is wrong. I am a living embodiment that this idea is factually untrue: I am intersex, I was born with ambiguous genitalia, and my body does not fit into the two sex categories. So where does this leave me and so many people like me?
Right now, Malta is still the only country that has legislation banning intersex surgery on infants and children before the age they can consent to surgeries if they choose to pursue them. Intersex individuals in the USA and many other countries around the world are still fighting for their right to bodily autonomy. Without solidarity and action from our allies in the LGBTQ community and in medical institutions, especially doctors and surgeons, intersex lives and bodies will continue to be erased.
Legislation that seeks to codify a rigid definition of sex can and will harm countless numbers of people. Will this now lead to the further medicalization and pathologizing of my body and future generation’s intersex kids? Does this lead to pushing forward the eugenics movement to eradicate future intersex babies by in-utero genetic testing? We cannot allow this to happen. Discriminatory actions like the ones undertaken by the Trump administration places intersex people at risk in ways that are immediately tangible.
The desire to force-fit people into societally conditioned boxes has led to sterilizing children and enacting medically unnecessary surgeries on them. Now the Trump administration wants to make this the official preference of the state, writes @xoxy_alicia t.co/KbOV7M1MEM
— NYT Opinion (@nytopinion) October 23, 2018
I urge you, if you are in New York City, to come out to protest against nonconsensual intersex surgeries and in support of intersex human rights on Saturday, October 27th at the corner of York Ave and E 61st St. from 2pm-4pm. Follow intersex advocacy groups on social media, and if you can, please donate to intersex-led organizations like Intersex Justice Project and InterACT: Advocates for Intersex Youth. You can also find more information at 4intersex.org to learn about some of the actions you can take to show up for intersex human rights.
Additional reading:
Jonathan Leggette is a GLAAD Campus Ambassador and senior at The Evergreen State College. Jonathan works as a New Student Mentor and a Peer Advisor at the Trans and Queer Center at Evergreen State. Off-campus, Jonathan serves as an interAct youth advocate and speaker, bringing intersex awareness education to schools across the country.
www.glaad.org/amp/how-to-honor-intersex-awareness-day-and-fight-back-against-trump
1,500 Parents of Trans Kids Send Letter To Trump-Pence Denouncing Attempt to Erase Trans People
Today, HRC released a letter to Donald Trump and Mike Pence denouncing their administration’s proposed regulations narrowly defining “sex” to exclude transgender people and to eliminate federal civil rights protections for LGBTQ people in the process. The letter, signed by more than 1,500 parents from all 50 states and Washington, D.C., was organized by HRC’s Parents for Transgender Equality Council, a coalition of the nation’s leading parent-advocates working for equality and fairness for transgender people.
“As the parent of a beautiful and bold transgender child, our families deserve the full and equal protection of the federal government and our nation’s civil rights laws” said Jodie Patterson, a member of HRC’s Board of Directors and HRC’s Parents for Transgender Equality Council. “Our government has an obligation to assist and protect young people, not to erase them. I’m proud to join with other parents across our nation in condemning this Administration’s proposal, and our families need all fair-minded voters to turn out between now and November 6 to make sure we elect leaders who will defend the rights of our children.”
“The Trump-Pence administration’s latest anti-LGBTQ proposal is a direct attack on the fundamental equality of transgender people, and it is constitutes an unconscionable betrayal of young people by their nation’s leadership,” said HRC National Press Secretary Sarah McBride, a transgender advocate. “This Administration has heartlessly targeted the rights and wellbeing of transgender young people since their first days in office, but Trump and Pence should know that families and friends and allies of all ages will not stand by or be silent. This November, they’ll be hearing from all of us on Election Day.”
The parents, speaking for the thousands of families of transgender children across the country, write, “As parents, all we want is for our children to be safe, healthy, and fulfilled. Our children have our unconditional love, and many have the support of a loving community of friends, peers, teachers, coaches, and other allies. Sadly, however, our children also face ostracization and discrimination in far too many places. We fear every day that our children will encounter bullies — but we never imagined that the most threatening bullies would be in the White House.”
HRC’s Welcoming Families Program released a resource this week for educators who may have questions about what this proposal means for their students.
A recent survey by HRC and the University of Connecticut of more than 12,000 LGBTQ youth found that 50 percent of transgender, non-binary or otherwise non-cisgender youth never use the restroom in school because they are prevented from using facilities that align with their gender identity. Only 18 percent report that they are always referred to with the correct pronouns at school, and only 30 percent are able to completely dress and express themselves in a way that matches their gender identity.
In 2017, when the Trump-Pence Administration rescinded lifesaving guidance promoting the protection of transgender students, HRC’s Parents for Transgender Equality council sent a letter to the administration from more than a thousand parents demanding that the Obama-era guidance be preserved. And earlier in 2018, the Parents council sent a letter to Secretary of Education Betsy Devos condemning her failure to protect transgender students and calling on her to recognize the basic human and civil rights of transgender young people in our nation’s schools.
To read the full letter, click here.
Meant to Fly
TheIrishDevil posted a photo:
Don’t you wanna get away from the same old part you gotta play
‘Cause I got what you need, so come with me and take the ride
It’ll take you to the other side
‘Cause you can do like you do
Or you can do like me
Stay in the cage, or you’ll finally take the key
Oh, damn! Suddenly you’re free to fly
It’ll take you to the other side
—
The Other Side – The Greatest Showman Soundtrack youtu.be/Wk008ADh4iY
Nike hé lộ toàn bộ BST “Be True” với chủ đề ủng hộ cộng đồng LGBT
tonghopdeal posted a photo:
via Tổng hợp full product ift.tt/2Jh9Hq5
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