Showing posts with label glbt community. Show all posts
Showing posts with label glbt community. Show all posts

Monday, September 12, 2011

James Craig Anderson Was Killed Because He's Black Not Because He Was Gay

TransGriot Note: A guest post from Renee of Womanist Musings.



Hopefully by now you have heard about how James Anderson died but for those who haven't,  seven White youths in Mississippi decided to beat him while yelling racial slurs, and then drive a truck over his body. There is no doubt in my mind that this is a racial hate crime. I found his murder incredibly triggering and that is why I didn't write about it before. I have however been following this story very closely.  As a Black mother with Black sons, what happened to Anderson represents my worst nightmare.

This weekend as I was going through my reader, I noticed that several gay blogs have finally gotten around to writing about this story. Please note that Black blogs have been writing about Anderson's death since it happened, and I doubt that without their constant attention, that this story would have made the national news.  At any rate, reading these gay blogs I learned that Anderson was Black and gay. A light bulb clicked on, and I realized why his death had suddenly been deemed worthy of coverage - his sexuality.

When Anderson was just another Black man, who was a random victim of White supremacy, none of the GLBT blogs had a damn thing to say about it.  I suppose it was considered not to be a gay issue. Now that it has been revealed that Anderson was a gay man, being beaten and then driven over by a truck is suddenly deemed horrifying.  To that I say fuck you - fuck you ten thousand times over. They weren't screaming gay slurs at Anderson, they were screaming racial slurs at him and believing  that you can appropriate his death to advance the cause of gay rights is repulsive.

The moment that it was revealed how and why Anderson died, it should have been an issue for every single social justice blogger, because his life was worth something.  It should never have been about what group he did or did not fit into, because looking at any individual is never enough to know exactly what oppressions they have to negotiate on a daily basis.  Social justice is supposed to be about intersections, because most people will negotiate multiple site of oppression throughout their lifetimes, but for the GLBT blogs that decided to ignore what happened to Anderson, until it was revealed that he was gay, apparently that is not a truism.

As I read the commentary about how horrified these writers were about how he died, and the racial slurs aimed at him while he was being beaten, the bile rose in my throat. Only caring when it was revealed that Anderson was a part of the LGBT community is a reflection of White privilege. This coupled with the fact that Blacks are continually framed as uniquely homophobic and the fact that Black LGBT members are constantly erased made me absolutely sick.

I don't believe that these White GLBT bloggers represent the entirety of the BLGT community, but they most certainly represent a faction that is determined to place their oppression over and above the oppression that others face.  This kind of appropriation is something that we have seen repeatedly, because it serves a political purpose. It manifests in things like Gay is the new Black, or the outright appropriation of the civil rights movement and civil rights sheroes and heroes. Caring about racism, only when you can redirect it or make false analogies is racist.  I say again for emphasis, it's racist.

Since the first Black person set foot in the new world, we have been the victims of White supremacy. From slavery, to Jim Crow, to the present day, Blacks are still under assault.  It does not always manifest in brutal murders, but it is an everyday occurrence, which effects life chances, health care, education, the media etc,. There isn't a single social institution that is not effected by racism, because White supremacy is insitutionalized.

Ignoring any kind of ism because it does not directly effect your life, only encourages the idea that under certain circumstances, oppression is not only natural, but good.  Deciding that just because you would never yell racial epithets or run over a Black man with a truck, does not erase the fact that your daily actions directly support the institutionalization of racism, or that you benefit from such oppression on a daily basis. Silence in the face oppression is participating in the marginalization of another human being. 

The moment it was revealed how Anderson died people should have been horrified and waiting until his death could be used political is absolutely disgusting.  I found myself wondering how these people sleep at night?  This is not ally behaviour and I would have much preferred them to completely ignore Anderson's death, than to twist it for their own ends.  In instances like this, silence and erasure is a good thing.

I know that some of these blogs have justified their failure to talk about Anderson's death by wrapping their commentary around the fact that James Bradfield, Anderson's partner is unable to file a wrongful death suit.  To me this just stands as more proof that they viewed his death as irrelevant, until it could serve their purposes.  I cannot begin to properly express my rage at all of this.  I will however say, the very next time I hear that Blacks are uniquely homophobic, Anderson's name will cross my lips because he is the perfect example of the various ways in which some members of the White LGBT community fail the very same people they claim to want as allies and the way in which some members of the White GLBT community fails to realize that they are not representative of their communities. There are Black GLBT members, and if you had not spent so much time framing gay rights as a White issue, you would have realized that oppression, no matter how it manifests is a terrible thing. Finally, Anderson died because he had the nerve to take up space as a Black man, and any speculation beyond that or an attempt to insert yourself in his death, only cheapens your fight for justice. Homophobia will never trump racism, but they are each in their own way a terrible blight on humanity.  

Tuesday, July 26, 2011

Since When Did Criticism Of Gay People Become 'Anti-Gay Hate'?

One thing that exasperates me sometimes with elements of the GL community is their hypocrisy.   They have no problem telling others that they should 'evolve' on issues of importance to them, loudly castigate people for expressions of homophobia and bigotry aimed at them, and even use satirical graphics to emphasize their points.  .

But when you turn the tables on them and point out the GL community deficiencies in being good allies, their own historically documented shady behavior, or their problems with the biphobia, transphobia and bigotry in their ranks then all of a sudden they get huffy about it and you get castigated as a 'hater' or peddling in 'anti-gay hate'?

Excuse me?    Is this another term I'll have to add to the Gay, Inc Dictionary? .   
   
One thing is certain, y'all have been watching the conservafools and trying to ape those projection tactics. It ain't cute.

What got my attention and triggered this post was this NG 2.0 blog post that accuses ENDAblog of being anti-gay.

If you're accusing ENDAblog of being anti-gay because Kat has been highly critical of the 'all marriage all the time' slant of gay activism lately,  you're tripping.   

But Kat's a big girl and she can more than defend herself.   She doesn't need my help doing so. 

You really want to see examples of anti-gay hate, how about surfing over to any conservative dominated website, Unfocused on the Family, or read the ramblings of Bryan Fischer, Maggie Gallagher, the Tea Klux Klan, the Texas Republican Party platform or Marcus and Michele Bachmann?

There's a difference between thoughtful criticism of policy stances and straight up hateful rhetoric, and some of y'all in the GL community need to learn the difference between the two..




Monday, July 11, 2011

Katy Perry, We Need To Talk

How I loathe these pop tarts like Ke$ha and Katy Perry who claim to be hip and cool trans allies but are so full of fail

Once again Katy Perry has opened her mouth and put her pump in it when it comes to trans people.  

From the latest edition of Rolling Stone:

“I wasn’t pissed,” she says. “I mean, I can’t be a full tranny every day of the week. That’s an exaggerated part of my personality. It’s me hamming it up. The exterior me is a little bit more smiley than the interior me. So, that picture, it just shows that I’m a normal, everyday woman who has really big dreams. It gives encouragement to any girls out there that they, too, can be a larger-than-life cartoon.”

You already pissed off the transmen last year with the following tweet and a pic mocking their bodies and GLAAD had to call you on your BS.. 



Katy Perry is a prime example of people inside of this rainbow community (she's bi)  who claim they are allies but are clueless and downright phobic about the lives of the other sectors of the community.  

And no, just because you are or claim to be a member of the TBLG doesn't mean you get a pass on that crap.  If I'm calling cis people out and my own African descended peeps on this blog for their screw ups, you're gonna get it, too

Her 'full tranny ever day of the week' comment is not only an insulting slur, it ignorantly trivializes our lives.  Your wallowing in vanilla scented privileged behind wouldn't last five minutes dealing with the world that transwomen have to navigate, much less last five seconds navigating the world that transwomen of color struggle with every day.

It also shows you not only need to get your Trans 101 on with the quickness, but engage in an intensive remedial education class on trans issues with your fellow pop tarts.


Monday, June 27, 2011

Um GL Community, You Violated The Dallas Principles In New York Again

While appletinis are being raised in celebration of gay marriage being achieved in New York, need to point out the inconvenient fact that GENDA hit the New York Senate at the same time the marriage bill did.

And no, discussing the fact the New York trans community got screwed is not 'whining' as so people have derisively mischaracterized it.

I guess it was 'whining' when you GL peeps were pissed about the Prop 8 outcome in Cali then?   

Okay, now that we understand each other, back to the post

According to New York activists I've had conversations with, their whip counts indicated that GENDA had enough votes to pass.  So why was it stuck in committee while the marriage bill got a full court press from Gov. Cuomo, former POTUS Bill Clinton, New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg, ESPA and even Lady Gaga for starters?.

Guess Lady Gaga's trans little monsters civil rights aren't as important to her since GENDA died without her uttering one word in support for it.    So Lady Gaga fans, don't even part your lips to tell me ever again in life how she supports GLBT rights.  She forgot about the 'T' along with elements of the GL community.  

Neither does it appear at this point ESPA and other GL groups lived up to the Dallas Principles either.

A little reminder of what the Dallas Principles are:

The following eight guiding principles underlie our call to action. In order to achieve full civil rights now, we avow

1.Full civil rights for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender individuals must be enacted now.  Delay and excuses are no longer acceptable.
2.We will not leave any part of our community behind.
3.Separate is never equal.
4.Religious beliefs are not a basis upon which to affirm or deny civil rights.
5.The establishment and guardianship of full civil rights is a non-partisan issue.
6.Individual involvement and grassroots action are paramount to success and must be encouraged.
7.Success is measured by the civil rights we all achieve, not by words, access or money raised.
8.Those who seek our support are expected to commit to these principles.

So yeah, looks like when it comes to GENDA, you're in violation of Dallas Principles 1, 2, 3, 7 and 8. 


1. Full civil rights for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender individuals must be enacted now. 
Looks like that didn't happen for trans people last week, nor did it happen in 2002 when the trans community got cut out of SONDA by ESPA, Matt Foreman and friends. 

Delay and excuses are no longer acceptable.


So no, don't want to hear any excuses or 'whining' spin about me simply asking what's up with GENDA failing to pass when it hit the NY senate at the same time as the marriage bill and only one passes.

2.We will not leave any part of our community behind.

Boy did we ever get left behind on this one.    


3.Separate is never equal.

Unless it's trans people looking for basic civil rights the GL community has had in NY since 2002 and the GL peeps have the opportunity to get marriage rights 


7.Success is measured by the civil rights we all achieve, not by words, access or money raised.

Then we failed since the New York trans community was left behind last week. 

8.Those who seek our support are expected to commit to these principles.


So I ask again.  When will the GL community, when it comes to achieving 'equality' and civil rights coverage for their trans brothers and sisters, commit to living up to the same standards enshrined in the Dallas Principles that it loudly insists everyone else live up to in dealing with it?

.