Friday, June 04, 2010

2010 French Open Williams Watch-Serena And Venus Take Doubles Title

Who said the Williams sisters couldn't play on clay or win at Stade Roland Garros?

While the frustration continues in the French Open women's singles tournament, my fave tennis playing sisters business trip to Paris wasn't a total loss.

Team Williams will be taking home their first French Open doubles title since 1999 after efficiently spanking the doubles tandem of the Czech Republic's Kveta Peschke and Katarina Srebotnik of Slovakia in straight sets 6-2, 6-3.

Venus and Serena Williams keep making tennis history as well. It's their fourth consecutive Grand Slam doubles title and 12th overall, and they are only the third doubles duo to accomplish that feat. Martina Navratilova and Pam Shriver did so in 1983-84, and Gigi Fernandez and Natasha Zvereva did it in 1992-93.

With the win they not only captured the number one world ranking in doubles, they are halfway to achieving a calendar year doubles Grand Slam.

The Williams sisters won six Grand Slam doubles titles from 1999-2003. After a five year lull, they began playing doubles regularly again as part of their preparations for the 2008 Olympic Games.

Since taking the doubles gold in Beijing, they've won six of eight majors and bad news for the rest of the women's doubles teams out there, Team Williams is planning to continue playing the doubles majors through the 2012 Summer Olympics.

FYI, the tennis venue for the London Games is 'Williams'-don.

Next stop for the Williams sisters, a hop across the channel to London for their favorite tournament, Wimbledon.

International Conference on Gender Identity and Human Rights Starts Today

Another conference is starting today in Barcelona, Spain that I would have loved to have been in attendance for.

It's the International Conference on Gender Identity and Human Rights, and activists from across the planet will be gathering there starting today until June 6. Fittingly it will take place at the University of Barcelona's School of Law.

Thanks to the hard work spearheaded by Carla Antonelli, transpeople in Spain since 2007 have laws on their nation's legal books that allow them to change their identity documentation.

It's fitting that Carla is serving as the press secretary for this historic gathering of nearly 700 transactivists from around the world.

Some have been there since June 1 as part of pre-conference event working groups putting together proposals that will be discussed and voted on during the main conference.

One of the stated goals of the conference will be to not only put together a document that will set out general principles of protection relating to human rights, but also lay out specific suggestions for governments to develop legislative solutions in relation to the rights of trans people.

The conference organizers hope that the final document will become a guiding roadmap for activists and advocacy organizations on the rights of trans people worldwide.

The ultimate goal is to achieve global impact and recognition of the dignity of all transmen and transwomen and provide the means for this to be possible.

Good luck, have fun and may all of my trans brothers and sisters in attendance accomplish those goals and much more.

Thursday, June 03, 2010

Chill With The 'Gayjacking' Of Trans Lives For Your Gay Agenda

One of the things that is infuriating to trans people is the 'gayjacking' of our lives and our stories in order to serve your agenda.

From the ultimate gayjacking of the Stonewall Rebellion to falsely characterizing relationships that transwomen are involved in as same-gender ones, it is a persistent pattern of GL peeps, the gayosphere and the Gay Media that continues to piss us off.

Hot on the heels of the misgendering and mischaracterization of the Tiwonge Chimbalanga and Steven Monjeza relationship in Malawi as a 'same-sex' one by the gay and straight media, now comes the story out of Pakistan that an attempted marriage to a transwoman was broken up by Pakistani police.

42 year old Malik Muhammad Iqbal and 19 year old transwoman Rani were arrested May 26 in Peshawar. She and the 43 other guests assert they were celebrating her birthday and Iqbal was just a friend. Police are claiming otherwise.

Pakistan is a Muslim country in which gay sex is punishable by a ten year prison sentence.

As the story unfolds, like clockwork the Advocate and some gayosphere blogs continue their ongoing patterns of misgendering Rani and other transwomen to pimp the story as a gay marriage issue.

The transphobic comments of Advocate readers don't help either.

News flash: Contrary to public opinion, there are transwomen who are not only strikingly beautiful, they have no problems attracting male companionship whether they have undergone SRS or not.

Being attracted to or in a relationship with a transwoman does not automatically make a cismale gay. Rani is and identifies as female, so this is a heterosexual marriage assuming the facts in the case bear out it wasn't a birthday party.

If you think Moni's selling woof tickets about the gender identities of transwomen repeatedly being erased and gayjacked for GL political and policy agendas, class is now in session.

In July 1999 PFC Barry Winchell, who was in a dating relationship with transwoman Calpernia Addams, was killed by fellow Ft. Campbell soldier Calvin Glover.

The trans community was royally pissed Calpernia was misgendered by gay organizations in order to push the 'gay relationship' meme and finger anti-gay hate and the DADT policy as the trigger for Winchell's murder.

This ain't just Moni's interpretation of it. The May 28, 2000 issue of the New York Times magazine said the same thing in its article entitled 'An Inconvenient Woman'

"In order to turn the murdered soldier Barry Winchell into a martyr for gay rights, activists first had to turn his girlfriend, Calpernia Addams, back into a man."

It happened last year with Jason Stenson and Kimah Nelson. They were married May 26 at the New York City Clerk's Office ten days after receiving their marriage license.

But unfortunately, the marriage license was revoked and their marriage invalidated after the news broke that Kimah is a transwoman.

And how did the Advocate and the gayosphere blogs such as Towleroad report this situation? In their usual manner of erasing the transwoman's identity in order to pimp the story as a 'gay marriage'.

Rod 2.0 beta was one of the few GLBT blogs that got the story right.

Now that the history lesson's over, class is dismissed. We now return you back to your regularly scheduled blog post.

We are getting beyond sick and tired of being sick and tired of the Advocate, the gayosphere, and gay organizations misgendering and gayjacking transpeople's identities to fit their agenda bullet points.

It reeks of white privilege when you do so, and helps feed into the perception by transpeople and people of color gay and straight that the only thing the GL movement cares about is attaining 'Almighty Whitey' status and the ability to oppress others.

2010 Philadelphia Trans Health Conference

I'm a little bummed out right now because many of my trans brothers and transisters are gathered in Philly for the annual Philadelphia Trans Health Conference taking place this weekend at the Pennsylvania Convention Center.

One of the reasons I'm bummed is that the NBJC's Kylar Broadus is one of the keynote speakers for this year's event and have been wanting to meet this brother for some time.

Oh well, hopefully there will be another opportunity to do so.

The Philly THC tends to draw a nice sized crowd of African American transpeople thanks to it being held on the east coast.

As a matter of fact I did get some late communication form one of the organizers wanting me to attend. This person had heard about my Trans 101 presentations I do from an African American perspective and my speaking skills, but couldn't get it worked out in time for me to do so live and in person in Philadlphia.

Well, have a successful conference, and hope to see y'all next year.

Canadian Action Alert: Bill C-389 Needs Your Help

TransGriot Note: Forwarded to me by Mercedes Allen. TransGriot Canadian readers, time for y'all to get busy calling, e-mailing and writing your MP's.

Call for Action

I’m very pleased to inform you that my Private Member’s Bill (C-389), which would ensure explicit human rights protections for transgender and transsexual people will be debated for a second hour in Parliament on Tuesday, June 8th, 2010 at 5:30 pm. The vote on Second Reading will be on June 9th. If passed, the bill will go to committee for consideration.

Bill C-389 would update the Canadian Human Rights Act (CHRA) to include gender identity and gender expression as prohibited grounds of discrimination, and update the Criminal Code of Canada to include gender identity and gender expression in the hate crime and sentencing provisions.

Transsexual and transgender people are often victims of discrimination, harassment, and violence because of their gender identity and gender expression. They often experience injustices such as denial of employment, housing, access to trans-sensitive health care, and face difficulties obtaining identification documents. Because there are so many barriers for transsexual and transgender Canadians, explicit rights and protections must be added to the CHRA and the Criminal Code.

Here’s what you can do to move this forward and help get this important legislation passed in Parliament:

• Call, write, or email your Member of Parliament and Party Leaders, and let him or her know that you support my bill. If you don’t know who your MP is, you can find out here:
• Call, write, or email the Minister of Justice, The Hon. Rob Nicholson, P.C., M.P.
• Call, write or email the Prime Minister, The Right Honourable Stephen Harper, P.C., M.P.

Letters to all MPs and Party Leaders can be sent postage free to:

House of Commons
Ottawa, Ontario
K1A 0A6

• Join my Facebook group
• Gather signatures for my petition

Click here to view a sample letter.

Please let us know about your contacts.

Thank you,
Bill Siksay, MP

Wednesday, June 02, 2010

So, How's That 'Year Of The Black Republican' Thingy Working Out For Y'all?

The Republicans and their Black auxiliaries made a big deal about the 32 sellouts running for Congress this year in primaries across the nation.

They crowed about the fact that it was the most Black Republicans running since Reconstruction and that it was 'their year'.

Yeah, right. So far the Houston Astros have a higher winning percentage than y'all do.

The Mississippi primary last night was the latest one in which a high profile Negro Republican went down in flames. Oreo Barbie, oops, Faux News spokesmodel and Tea Klux Klan fave Angela McGlowan was running in the GOP primary in Mississippi's 1st Congressional District currently held by Travis Childers.

She was even endorsed by Caribou Barbie.

So where did Miss Right Wing Thing finish?

Third with 15% of the vote, behind the winner, MS state senator Alan Nunnelee. He captured 50% of the vote and Henry Ross garnered 33% of it.

So where was that groundswell of non racist Tea Party support, Angela? Probably voting for Nunnelee and Ross.

Princella Smith was walloped by a 73%-27% margin in the Arkansas GOP primary, and more butt kickings are coming.

Guess all you 'freethinking' Blacks are too uppity for the GOP plantation, huh?

2010 French Open Williams Watch-Little Sis Ousted In Quarters

The Williams haters are jumping for joy now that Number one seeded Little Sis was beaten in the quarterfinals by Australia's Samantha Stosur 2-6, 7-6 (7-2), 6-8.

She had a match point in the third set that sailed an inch wide, and Stosur capitalized on it to break serve for a 7-6 lead. She then closed out the match with three service winners to hand Serena her first Grand Slam tournament loss since last year's US Open semifinal.

Serena was trying to reach her first French Open singles final since 2003 and was trying for a calendar year Grand Slam.

Oh well, Williams-don starts June 21. Serena is not only defending champion, she and Big Sis are the defending doubles champs.

Serena dusted herself off after her loss and joined Big Sis an hour later for a hard fought 2 hour three set win over American Liezel Huber and Anabel Medina Garrigues of Spain 2-6, 6-2, 6-4 to reach the French Open doubles final for the first time since 1999.

Number one seeded Team Williams will face the team of the Czech Republic's Kveta Peschke and Katarina Srebotnik of Slovakia, who upset the Number 2 seeds Maria Llagostera Vives and Maria Jose Martinez Sanchez of Spain in three sets to get to this French Open doubles finals.

With their semifinals win, the Williams sisters are now the Number one ranked doubles team in the world irregardless of the results of the doubles final.

Serena is also the first player since Kim Clijsters accomplished the feat in 2003 to hold Number one world rankings simultaneously in singles and doubles.

Should Team Williams be successful in capturing the French Open doubles title, they would be halfway to completing a doubles Grand Slam.

Dear Gay Inc., Gayosphere and MSM - Tiwonge Identifies As A Woman, So She's In A HETERO Relationship

transgender-Use the pronoun preferred by the individuals who have acquired the physical characteristics of the opposite sex or present themselves in a way that does not correspond with their sex at birth.

If that preference is not expressed, use the pronoun consistent with the way the individuals live publicly.

From The AP Stylebook


Gay Incorporated, Gayosphere and MSM. It's really a simple concept, but it's one that you consistently fail to grasp. If a person identifies as a certain gender, lives in that role, and presents themselves in a way that doesn't correspond with their birth gender, then that's what they are.

Y'all either can't, don't or willfully won't get that, and it's really pissing the trans community off.

You've demonstrated that willful ignorance in the Malawi case and once again with the the Pakistani couple.

As for you peeps in Gay Incorporated, the GL community and the gayosphere, y'all don't have any excuses since we've been part of the community for decades.

But then again, we are well aware of the fact that you will and have repeatedly 'gayjacked' a situation involving a transperson to promote your GL agenda at our expense.

How many fracking times do we have to point out what the AP Stylebook has to say about trans issues before y'all FINALLY and consistently get it right?

Tyra Video-Trantasia Show

TransGriot Note: This from from Tyra's show about the movie Trantasia. While I hate Tyra's penchant for asking the 'what was your old male name' question, which frankly is nobody's business, it was still an interesting look into the lives of the participants in the movie, which was about the first (and only) World Most Beautiful Transsexual contest that took place in Las Vegas in 2004.

Tiara Russell has an interesting (and minority opinion) about how he self identifies.






Black Transpeople Are Tired Of The Erasure, Too

I think there is a reason there is a separate growing Trans movement that exists outside of the LGBT and that's because it has to just to get anywhere. Transgender people (especially trans women) are highly under represented in LGBT orgs. This means their opinions are often not heard nor are they involved in decisions that directly affect them.

Jayna L-Pavlin May 30, 2010


I found this comment interesting in Jayna's post, because it mirrors exactly what we trans people of color have been saying for decades about the white dominated trans movement.

The frustration of African descended transpeople is growing. We are beautiful, intelligent people who demand and deserve an opportunity to use our talents to get paid fairly, control our destiny and contribute to our society.

That is why you're probably going to see in this decade more activity initiated by African descended trans people. We are not listened to by the white dominated trans movement and are not represented in the senior leadership of trans organizations.

Our issues and concerns are not reflected in or brought up neither in the policy initiatives drafted by these organizations or discussed in the general GL community discourse.

The racism within the trans community has not been acknowledged nor has sustained work been done to eradicate it.

Since we have attempted for two decades to work in partnership with the white trans community and gotten nowhere, it's time to heed the words of the late Kwame Toure.

'In order to participate in the greater society, we must first close ranks.'

Closing ranks means following the example of our parents, grandparents and great grandparents and following the principles of Black leadership to do things for ourselves.

If it calls for us to form our own independent organizations, and having our own dedicated conventions, we need to get busy doing so.

Compiling our history to counteract the whitewashing of trans people of color our of the general trans narrative of the last half century? Check.

Determining our own political destiny? Right on!

Encouraging more African descended trans people of color to come out, tell their stories, and work with our African-American cis brothers and sisters? Past time for that to happen.

If it scares white transpeople to hear that, well, you've had two decades to correct the problem. How much longer should we wait for y'all to do the right thing when it's our people and our Latina sisters who are taking the brunt of the anti-trans violence casualties, but are not even close to being represented in the leadership ranks of this community in significant numbers?

Much discussion needs to happen internally in the African American trans community about a unified program and strategy for doing so. We also need to be putting together a long term strategic vision of where we wish to see the African descended trans community ten, twenty, and fifty years from now.

One thing I'm certain all African descended trans people can say at this point is that the current situation isn't good enough.

We're not letting our own community off the hook either. The same thing needs to be forcefully said to mainstream and SGL African-American orgs.

The current status quo is not acceptable and we're beyond sick and tired of being sick and tired of the erasure on one level and the faith based Hateraid leveled at us on the other.

I am happy to see African descended transmen and transwomen of all ages stepping up, increasingly saying they're tired of the bull feces, and articulating with an increasingly loud voice that we want a meaningful role and voice in trans community affairs that goes beyond tokenism and denigration of our human rights.

Tuesday, June 01, 2010

The Mission Of Black Trans Leadership

So, what is the mission of Black Trans Leadership? I see it this way:

*It is getting our African descended cis brothers and cis sisters to recognize that their trans brothers and trans sisters have the same African heritage, history and cultural ties. Our issues as African descended trans people are the same as and intertwined with Black America's issues.

*It is getting our cis brothers and cis sisters to accept that we aren't going away and for them to do their part in combating transphobia within our community and ensure that our humanity and our human rights are respected and protected.

*It is calling out and speaking truth to power to the people inside and outside the community who align themselves with the same white fundamentalist-GOP Dixiecrat Forces of Intolerance who opposed our 50s and 60's era march toward full equality and our constitutionally guaranteed civil rights.

*It is getting African descended trans people to shake off the shame and guilt of being trans, and say it loud, we're Black, trans and proud.

*It is getting African descended trans people to work collectively to build community amongst ourselves and forge allies inside and outside the community to work as committed partners to help us achieve our goals.

*It is to use our talents and gifts to uplift our community, our people, our culture and our country

*It is to get African descended trans people to use our ballot box power strategically and become full fledged participants in our political system in order to affect change that benefits us.

*It is being able to participate in all facets of society without fear of intimidation, ridicule, and violence.

*It is praising our allies when they do something right on our community's behalf and chastising them with Kingian love when they don't.

'Worst President Ever' On GLBT Rights? I Don't Think So


"We must stand against crimes that are meant not only to break bones, but to break spirits — not only to inflict harm, but to instill fear. "No one in America should ever be afraid to walk down the street holding the hands of the person they love. No one in America should be forced to look over their shoulder because of who they are or because they live with a disability." President Obama during the Byrd-Shepherd Hate Crimes signing ceremony.


The griping has been loud and long even before Sen. Barack Obama took the oath of office in January 2009 from predominately white GLBT people that he would be 'the worst president ever' on GLBT rights.

And Black GLBT people haven't and won't forget y'all were selling those woof tickets before Obama even sat down for his first day in the Oval Office.

White GL pundits, gayosphere bloggers and people in the community two years later are still screaming that bull feces even as the evidence mounts to the contrary.

But then again, Black politicians have always been held to impossibly high standards by white people they hypocritically don't hold white politicians to.

That 'worst president on GLBT rights' assertion not only is irritating to African descended GLBT people, it's proving to be ludicrous as far as my section of the LGBT rainbow is concerned. From our vantage point, Obama has been the been president ever when it comes to highlighting the 'T' part of LGBT.

Whether it's passing and signing a hate crimes law that covers gender identity and sexual orientation, one of the legislative Holy Grails for trans people, drafting guidelines barring workplace discrimination against transgender federal employees, or appointing qualified people such as Amanda Simpson for federal positions, President Obama has stepped up for the trans community.

But since y'all been too busy screaming about an 0-34 same gender marriage push and DADT, y'all may have missed the lifting of the decades old HIV travel ban that has kept the United States from hosing international HIV/AIDS conferences, much less kept people with a non American HIV infected partner from being able to emigrate here to live with the person they love.

***

Here's the list, compiled by openly gay DNC treasurer Andrew Tobias.

1. Reversed an inexcusable US position by signing the UN Declaration on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity

2. Extended benefits to same-sex partners of federal employees

3. Endorsed the Baldwin-Lieberman bill, The Domestic Partnership Benefits and Obligations Act of 2009, to provide full partnership benefits to federal employees

4. Signed the Ryan White HIV/AIDS Treatment Extension Act

5. Lifted the HIV Entry Ban effective January 2010

6. Released the first Presidential PRIDE proclamation since 2000

7. Hosted the first LGBT Pride Month Celebration in White House history

8. Awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom to Harvey Milk and Billie Jean King

9. Appointed the first transgender DNC member (Diego Sanchez) in history

10. Issued diplomatic passports, and provided other benefits, to the partners of same-sex foreign service employees

11. Committed to ensuring that HUD’s core housing programs are open to all, regardless of sexual orientation or gender identity

12. Conceived a National Resource Center for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender Elders — the nation’s first ever — funded by a three-year HHS grant to SAGE

13. Testified in favor of ENDA, the first time any official of any administration has testified in the Senate on ENDA

14. Signed the Matthew Shepard and James Byrd, Jr. Hate Crimes Prevention Act, which expanded existing United States federal hate crime law to include crimes motivated by a victim’s actual or perceived gender, sexual orientation, gender identity, or disability — the first positive federal LGBT legislation in the nation’s history

15. Supported lower taxes for same-sex couples who receive health benefits from employers

16. Hired and appointed a record number of qualified LGBT Americans, including more than 10 Senate-confirmed appointments

17. Sworn in Ambassador to New Zealand and Samoa David Huebner

18. Changed the culture of government everywhere from – among others – HUD and HHS to the Export-Import Bank, the State Department, and the Department of Education

19. Appointed Sonia Sotomayor, instead of a conservative who would have tilted the Court even further to the right and virtually doomed our rights for a generation.

To wit (quoting McCain): “I’ve said a thousand times on this campaign trail, I’ve said as often as I can, that I want to find clones of Alito and Roberts. I worked as hard as anybody to get them confirmed. I look you in the eye and tell you I’ve said a thousand times that I wanted Alito and Roberts. I have told anybody who will listen. I flat-out tell you I will have people as close to Roberts and Alito [as possible]”

***

The more liberal progressive (and younger) Supreme Court judges we get on the Court now, the better position we'll be in when cases critical to the advacement of GLBT rights percolate up to the SCOTUS.

Do you want a 5-4 conservative majority deciding those cases? Thought not.
Continue, Andrew.

***

20. Named open transgender appointees (the first President ever to do so)

21. Banned job discrimination based on gender identity throughout the Federal government (the nation’s largest employer)

22. Emphasized LGBT inclusion in everything from the President’s historic NAACP address

(“The pain of discrimination is still felt in America. By African American women paid less for doing the same work as colleagues of a different color and a different gender. By Latinos made to feel unwelcome in their own country. By Muslim Americans viewed with suspicion simply because they kneel down to pray to their God. By our gay brothers and sisters, still taunted, still attacked, still denied their rights.”) . . . to the first paragraph of his Family Day proclamation (“Whether children are raised by two parents, a single parent, grandparents, a same-sex couple, or a guardian, families encourage us to do our best and enable us to accomplish great things”) and his Mothers Day proclamation (“Nurturing families come in many forms, and children may be raised by two parents, a single mother, two mothers, a step-mom, a grandmother, or a guardian. Mother’s Day gives us an opportunity to celebrate these extraordinary caretakers”) . . . to creating the chance for an adorable 10-year-old at the White House Easter Egg roll to tell ABC World News how cool it is to have two mommies . . . to including the chair of the National Gay and Lesbian Chamber of Commerce along with the Secretary of the Treasury and the President of Goldman Sachs in the small audience for the President’s economic address at the New York Stock Exchange . . . to welcoming four gay couples to its first State Dinner

23. Recommitted, in a televised address, to passing ENDA . . . repealing Don’t Ask/Don’t Tell . . . repealing the so-called Defense of Marriage Act

24. Spoken out against discrimination at the National Prayer Breakfast

(“We may disagree about gay marriage, but surely we can agree that it is unconscionable to target gays and lesbians for who they are — whether it’s here in the United States or, as Hillary mentioned, more extremely in odious laws that are being proposed most recently in Uganda.”)

25. Dispatched the Secretary of Defense and the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff to call on the Senate to repeal Don’t Ask / Don’t Tell, in the meantime dialing back on discharges.

26. Launched a website to gather public comment on first-ever federal LGBT housing discrimination study.

27. Appointed long-time equality champion Chai Feldblum one of the four Commissioners of the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

28. Eliminated the discriminatory Census Bureau policy that kept our relationships from being counted, encouraging couples who consider themselves married to file that way, even if their state of residence does not yet permit legal marriage

29. Produced U.S. Census Bureau PSAs featuring gay, lesbian, and transgender spokespersons

30. Instructed HHS to require any hospital receiving Medicare or Medicaid funds (virtually all hospitals) to allow LGBT visitation rights.

***

Crumbs, you say? Can you Obama detractors pull up a comparable list of positive for the TBLG community GW Bush misadministration accomplishments early in the first term of a presidential administration?

I'm betting you predominately white, Hillary-loving GLBT Obama haters can't.

And hello, bear in mind Obama still has to get past the 2010 and 2012 election cycles in addition to cleaning up the toxic waste the Bush administration left behind.

You may want full civil rights and equality now, but my peeps have been fighting that battle for over 200 years. We've had spectacular successes and dark periods of fighting tooth and nail just to avoid any slippage when conservative governments and Supreme Court majorities get ensconced with the task of rolling them back.

From where I sit an an African descended trans person, I'm always in favor of any expansion of civil rights because it benefits me as well.

To you white gay peeps, you don't care what party is is power because as beneficiaries of vanilla flavored privilege, Republican policies are aimed to benefit your ethnic group even as your civil rights are stagnated or rolled back.

As a person of color I'm painfully aware that Republican governments are detrimental not only to my civil rights, but my wallet and community as well.

So no, voting for Republicans, a disorganized third party or sitting at home on Election Day is NOT an option.

A question for you peeps to ponder. If you were in his shoes facing the same political landscape and a looming 2012 reelection campaign, would you be inclined to risk your entire presidency for a group of people that for the most part, weren't in your corner or reluctant supporters to begin with, and have a history of throwing allies and people of color under the bus?

I'm more than tired along with many African-American GLBT people of hearing that played out 'Obama isn't doing enough for GLBT rights' line. What you mean is that he isn't moving fast enough for you lukewarm supporters satisfaction to advance the cause of GLBT rights.

I also want to see as a proud African-American the first African-American president get two full terms in office, if for no other reason than to flip the Supreme Court script to liberal-progressive control. Scalia, Kennedy and Thomas aren't getting any younger, and neither is Ruth Nader Ginsburg.

So chill with the lie that he's the 'worst president ever' on GLBT rights.

Texas Transgender Nondiscrimination Summit

The second annual Texas Transgender Nondiscrimination Summit will be taking place on the Rice University campus July 20-21, 2010 in the Kyle Morrow Room of the Fondren Library. The Houston GLBT Community Center is a sponsor/partner for this summit.

Depending on how her schedule plays out, the TransGriot is about 90% certain she may make that her first local trans event she attends since moving back to the Lone Star State.

The Texas Transgender Nondiscrimination Summit will primarily be focused on the struggle to gain transgender coverage in collegiate policies. One of the goals of the TTNS is to create a statewide supportive network of like minded individuals working to make Lone Star State campuses inclusive for all.

Only a small handful of colleges and universities have made this important acknowledgement of the fact that transgender students matriculating at Texas colleges exist. The University of Texas at Austin, Rice University, South Texas College of Law, Houston Community College System, and the University of Houston System.

Josephine Tittsworth, one of the TTNS organizers points out, "The need for change is very great in order to allow people the freedom of experiencing educational advancement to its fullest extent."

"Transgender faculty, staff, and students experience systemic discrimination in such simply tasks as an expedient and respectful name change on records, housing, facility access, and fair competition among colleagues and students. There is also a serious lack of education on transgender lives and issues on college campuses."

And the need for transgender education is needed at HBCU campuses as well.

TTNS participants will learn what works and what doesn't work in changing policy on college campuses to protect transgender faculty, staff, and students. You'll get the opportunity to make connections with people already doing this important work and learn from their successes and failures.

All Texas Colleges and Universities wishing to gain transgender rights in institution policies should attend this strategy sharing summit in Houston.

I'd like to see some representation from Texas based HBCU's such as Texas Southern and Prairie View A&M as well.

If you're considering coming down from other parts of the state and do so by bus, METRORail's Red Line runs in front of the Greyhound Station and past the Rice University campus, located at 6100 Main St.

Registration is free to all participants, and the Texas Transgender Nondiscrimination Summit has a Facebook page that you can direct further questions you have to the event organizers. I'll also update this post with further contact info once I receive it.

Hope to see you at the upcoming TTNS Summit.

It's Hurricane Season

June 1 is not only the start of a new month, but for those of us living on the Atlantic and Gulf Coast it's hurricane season.

It reminds us that from now until November 30 we'll have to cast a wary eye on satellite images of clouds building up off the west African coast, the Caribbean or the western Atlantic for signs they are developing into tropical waves, tropical storms or hurricanes.

The 2010 NOAA predictions are for 14-23 named tropical storms to develop, 8-14 to become hurricanes with 74 mph winds, with 3-7 turning into major hurricanes of Category 3,4 or 5 level (winds of 114 MPH or higher).

We get refresher courses and news coverage on the differences between a Category 1, 2, 3, 4 or 5 storm. We update our family evacuation plans in case we have to leave the area. We check generators, our emergency hurricane supplies and make sure those generators and flashlights have fresh batteries in them.

Hurricane Ike whacked Houston while I was gone, but ironically still came up to Louisville to affect me anyway.

At the same time, hurricane prediction numbers, while they are a concern, also depend on where they form as well. In 1983 we had only 4 named storms that made US landfall. One of them was Hurricane Alicia, the last Major hurricane to hit the Houston-Galveston area until Ike.

So yes, hurricanes just aren't a concern for those of us in the coastal zones. After they make landfall and begin breaking up they can dump massive amounts of rain in a very short time or create conditions for large tornado outbreaks depending on the type of storm.

So here's hoping that my first hurricane season since returning to the Gulf coast, despite the initial predictions from NOAA, is a relatively quiet one.

Monday, May 31, 2010

2010 French Open Williams Watch-Little Sis In Quarters

World Number 1 ranked Serena Williams not surprisingly is the lone American woman standing in the singles competition at the 2010 French Open.

She began her second week in Paris as the French Open's Number one seed by stepping onto Court Philippe Chatrier and taking out Israel's Shahar Peer in straight sets 6-2, 6-2 to move on to the quarterfinals.

She will face Aussie Samantha Stosur, a 2009 French Open semifinalist who upset four time French Open champ Justine Henin 1-6, 6-2, 6-4 over on Court Suzanne Lenglen to end Henin's French Open win streak.

Meanwhile, the Williams express hasn't dropped a set as they roll through the 2010 Roland Garros doubles competition. They moved on to the doubles semifinal with a 6-2, 6-3 straight set demolition over the duo of Maria Kirilenko of Russia and Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland.

Team Williams faces fellow American Liezel Huber and Anabel Medina Garrigues of Spain. Garrigues along with Virginia Ruano won last year's French Open doubles title.

Here's hoping that the Williams sisters make it to their first French Open doubles final since 1999.

Memorial Day 2010

Today is Memorial Day in the States, and outside of the fact the Indy 500 took place yesterday, we take this day to remember all the service men and women who have died in service for our country. It's also considered the unofficial start to the summer season here in the States as well.

This Memorial Day sees what might be Congress finally going down the road of taking out an unjust law and repealing Don't Ask, Don't Tell.'

Contrary to what most conservafools think, TBLG peeps served with honor and distinction in our nation's military. Some of them paid the ultimate price as well.

So as you're celebrating the start of the summer holiday season, take a moment to remember all of our people who died so that we can enjoy the freedoms that we enjoy, but have the ability to petition our government for redress of grievances.

Sunday, May 30, 2010

2010 French Open Williams Watch-Big Sis Out In Singles

We have one less Williams sister playing tennis in the Roland Garros women's singles draw.

Number Two seeded Big Sis was upset by Russia's Nadia Petrova 4-6, 3-6 to put Venus' attempt to win her first French Open singles title to a screeching halt.

She's still playing tennis in Paris, but it will only be doubles with Serena until hopefully June 3.

Venus did get a little redemption by teaming with Little Sis to beat the Czech Republic's duo of Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka in straight sets 6-1, 6-2.

Team Williams moves on to the quarterfinals in their bid to win their first French Open doubles title since 1999. They will take on the duo of Maria Kirilenko of Russia and Agnieszka Radwanska of Poland.

Speaking of Little Sis, Serena's quest to win her first French Open singles title since 2002 is still alive.

She plays her fourth round match against Israel's Shahar Peer. If she gets past Peer, she gets the winner of the Justine Henin-Samantha Stosur match.

Isis Update

Isis put a comment on her Facebook page recently that she would be appearing on the Tyra Show soon. haven't seen it yet, so I either missed it or it's been rescheduled. If it's been rescheduled, definitely will be on the lookout for it to see what my sis has been up to these days. You'll have to check your local TV listings to see what time the show comes on in your area.

Isis has been doing some wonderful things since her emergence on Cycle 11 of America's Next Top Model She's become a role model and eloquent voice for many transwomen of color regardless of our ages.

I had the pleasure of interviewing her on the Womanist Musings Blogtalkradio podcast, which is on hiatus until I get resettled here and Renee finishes a major project.

But I do want to take a moment to give a shoutout to my sis. Isis is evolving before our eyes into a beautiful, confident and sexy woman, and that's a wonderful thing to witness.

Saturday, May 29, 2010

The Trans No Makeup Zone

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There's an interesting discussion going on at Womanist Musings about makeup in reaction to the No Makeup Zone Today show episode. I'm going to toss in another angle of this makeup debate, from a transwoman's point of view.

One o the things we are constantly dealing with in addition to the usual baggage women deal with in terms of the beauty standard is also our insecurities about whether were accepted as women, period.

Those concerns are elevated or depressed based on whether or not you've had GRS, race, class and how long you've been living in the feminine gender role.

And that's even before we start talking about makeup issues.

My sisters fall along the makeup continuum from being either militantly anti-makeup to embracing it.

While we know that makeup is only a tool we use to enhance our femininity and our overall feminine presentation, it takes on a heightened importance for a transwoman. The more feminine we look to the average person, the better because it draws less attention to us.

That's a major concern when it's in the back of your mind that a transwoman is killed somewhere on this planet every three to four days. .

We know how to expertly put on that other face to the point where ciswomen are asking us for makeup tips.

Personally, I'm in the 'I like wearing it' camp. I own makeup books by Emmy Award winning makeup artist Reggie Wells and Sam Fine. I'm always experimenting with new ways of perfecting and polishing my look and use a mix of budget and Fashion Fair products that I discovered through trial and error work for me.

I'm also aware of the fact that I'm considered a role model for the African descended trans community. My appearance has to be on point when I do presentations and speeches. I never know when I step into a room whether this might be a person's first encounter with a professional African-American transperson and I want that interaction to be a positive one. So looking my gender best includes putting my other face on.

So do I feel different in my bareface than I do when I'm 'in face'? Yep.

I'm fortunate that in addition to having a tall and thin body build, I have a relatively androgynous face with high cheekbones and naturally long eyelashes.

Makeup enhances what I have. But some of my transsisters aren't so lucky.

I like the way I look when it's done, I feel more confident when I walk out the door and that translates into me being more confident in my ability to blend in with other ciswomen and society.

As to being more comfortable with going without it? That's an ongoing process.

2010 French Open Williams Watch-Little Sis Survives To Fourth Round

Serena had to put on the hard hat for her Court Philippe Chatrier match against Russian teen Anastasia Pavlyuchenkova.

It didn't look that way at first as she only took 28 minutes to win the first set 6-1. But after Serena had to call the trainer out for some medical issues, Pavlyuchenkova took advantage of Serena's troubles. She flipped the script in the second set to win it by an identical 6-1 count in 34 minutes to even the match.

Serena regrouped, took a deep breath and subdued Pavlyuchenkova 6-2 in the decisive third set to punch her ticket to the fourth round and her match with Israel's Shahar Peer. The win ensured that Little Sis will keep the world No.1 ranking after Roland Garros.

“I just ran out of a little energy out there,” Williams said. “Just fighting a cold and fighting sickness. But, you know, I’m just feeling better and getting ready for doubles.”

Meanwhile, Big Sis is rested and gets to play Russia's Nadia Petrova in her fourth round match.

The good news for Serena was that she didn't have to expend any extra energy in that doubles match against Hantuchova and Wozniacki. It was won in a walkover, so the Number one ranked Williams sisters will take on the Czech Republic's duo of Andrea Hlavackova and Lucie Hradecka in their next doubles match.