Wednesday, June 16, 2010

Will There Be Any Black Trans People At This Year's White House LGBT Reception?

Various leaders in the TBLG community are have begun receiving mailed invitation for a 5 PM EDT LGBT reception being held June 22 at the White House.

If you did receive it, congrats. As for the TransGriot, I have a better chance of receiving a visit from the Publishers Clearing House Prize Patrol than receiving a White House invite since I've been slimed by the NCTE derriere kissing crew as a 'violent racist' and an 'uppity n****r'.

If it did show up in my mailbox, I'd probably fall over in shock.

President Obama said in his May 28 proclamation declaring this GLBT Pride Month 'our Nation draws its strength from our diversity,”

That's a lesson often lost on the GL community, especially when it comes to events like this. I'm willing to bet that when this event kicks off, there will not be one African descended transperson in the house our ancestors built.

I predict it will be an event in which once again, African American transpeople will be denied the opportunity to meet a president our votes, sweat equity and money helped put in that office.

And I'm not happy about it.

The TransGriot is definitely interested in finding out who did get invites to this event, and just how diverse it will be.

Judging from the melanin deficient one last year, I'm not holding my breath.

First Native Houstonian In Orbit

Despite the fact that Houston kids have grown up since the 1960's with NASA's Johnson Space Center in our backyard and being immersed in space flight news, it was only yesterday that we had our first native Houstonian launched into space.

Astronaut Shannon Walker accomplished that historical footnote when she blasted off aboard a Russian Soyuz spacecraft along with NASA astronaut Doug Wheelock and cosmonaut Fyodor Yurchikhin from the Baikonur Cosmodrome yesterday afternoon.

Her launch from Baikonur was also the 100th combined launch to the space station, including Soyuz and Russian Progress vehicles as well as the space shuttle. During Walker’s mission the ISS will mark 10 years of continual habitation.

They will dock with the International Space Station on Thursday and stay on board the ISS until November.

When the Rice University grad arrives and joins Tracy Caldwell Dyson on board the ISS, it will mark the first time that two women have served together as long-duration station residents.

But it's also cool that a native Houstonian gets an opportunity to make some of that space history.

DART Committee Advances Trans Inclusive Non Discrimination Policy

The Dallas Area Rapid Transit Authority is one step closer to a trans inclusive non discrimination policy after voting 11-2 to advance it to the full DART board on June 22.

It's past time that happened, since the city of Dallas has had trans protections ensconced in its nondiscrimination ordinance since 2002.

The lack of a DART trans inclusive non discrimination policy led to the mistreatment of a 20 year employee known as Ms. T-DART to keep her identity secret.

Her DART supervisors had been exploiting that hole in the policy to treat Ms. T-DART in a discriminatory manner.

She was told by DART supervisors she couldn't have long hair, wear skirts at work, or use the women's restroom. Ms. T-DART was forced to show up for work in her uniform and use public restrooms on her bus route.

They even went as far as having DART lawyers contest her court ordered gender marker change and reverse it.

According to John Wright of the Dallas Voice's Instant Tea blog, the vote followed a 30 minute executive session to discuss the proposed policy behind closed doors.

There were concerns voiced amongst local activists about the wording of the amendment. Rather than simply adding “gender identity” to its existing nondiscrimination policy, DART attorneys have also inserted several clauses indicating that the policy applies only “to the extent [it is] consistent with state and federal law.”

Because neither sexual orientation nor gender identity is included in state or federal employment protections, the fear is that these clauses could be interpreted to mean the policy is moot.

And as we all know from past civil rights history, if you give conservafools an inch and don't write these policies so there is no wiggle room for opponents to ignore it, they will take the nullification mile.

Voting for the proposal were members John Danish (made motion), Loretta Ellerbe (seconded motion), Jerry Christian, Pamela Dunlop Gates, Raymond Noah, Robert Strauss, William Tsao, Tracey Whitaker, Faye Moses Wilkins, Claude Williams and William Velasco.

Voting against the proposal were members Scott Carlson who represent Dallas on the DART board, and Mark Enoch who represents Farmers Branch, Garland and Rowlett.

So circle June 22 on your calendars, Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex and keep those calls and e-mails coming.

And I can't stress this enough, be respectful while doing so.

PTSS-Post Traumatic Slave Syndrome

Since 1865, the United States has been suffering from an unacknowledged malady, and nope, I'm not talking about racism, even though it's unfortunately still part of the American body politic. Racism predates 1865.

What I'm talking about is PTSS. Post Traumatic Slave Syndrome.

Even though it's been almost 150 years since my peeps emancipation from chattel slavery, whether people want to admit it or not, it has had debilitating effects on former slave and former slave owner alike.

A primary example of it happened in April with our different perceptions about the Confederacy. While whites with Southern heritage mourn the 'Lost Cause' and extol the virtues of brave Confederate soldiers, myself and other African descended Americans see them as traitorous racist oppressors who sought to keep us in permanent servitude.

It has had negative effects on our national politics and race relations. African Americans are still judged by racist myths that originated during slavery. Our negative economic status today vis a vis whites is rooted in the fact that the weatlth that whites built up was at the expense of my ancestors 246 years of uncompensated labor and then spending another 100 years locking us out of various occupations thanks to Jim Crow laws.

Some of the colorism issues we have within the African American community can be traced back to America's original sin as well.

Post Traumatic Slave Syndrome: America's Legacy of Enduring Injury and Healing is a book by Portland State University professor Dr. Joy DeGruy Leary that tackles how the aftermath of slavery has negatively effected African-Americans to this day.

She argues that both overt and subtle forms of racism have damaged the collective African-American psyche—harm manifested through poor mental and physical health, family and relationship dysfunction, and self-destructive impulses.

Leary suggests that African Americans (and other people of color) can ill afford to wait for the dominant culture to realize the qualitative benefits of undoing racism. The real recovery from the ongoing trauma of slavery and racism has to start from within, she says, beginning with a true acknowledgment of the resilience of African-American culture.

Sounds like it's an intriguing book that I'm looking forward to having the opportunity to read.

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

DART Committee Meeting Tonight To Discuss Trans Inclusive Nondiscrimination Policy

For you peeps in the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex, time for y'all to be agents of your own liberation and help Ms. T-DART out at the same time.

Kelli Busey and the gang have advised me that there will be another DART committee meeting taking place tonight starting at 7 PM CDT to decide whether a proposal to amend DART's nondiscrimination policy to include gender identity will be forwarded to the full Dallas Area Rapid Transit board.

This is another chapter in an ongoing story that started with Ms. T-DART, a 20 year employee of Dallas Area Rapid Transit having her gender marker change contested and reversed in court by DART lawyers. That incident led to a proposal to amend DART's nondiscrimination policies to include trans employees.

The proposal was not forwarded to the DART board because at last month's committee meeting Committeemember Pamela Dunlop-Gates switched her YES vote to a NO one.

Ms. Dunlop-Gates cited wanting DART attorneys to clarify the “gender identity” and “genetic information” definitions as her reason for changing her vote.

Unfortunately her vote switch stopped the committee from passing the amendment of the nondiscrimination policy to the full DART Board.

I'm presuming that the meeting will be held at the same site if you wish to attend, the DART Headquarters Akard Station Board Room, at 1401 Pacific Ave in Dallas, TX.

But just to be on the safe side, here's the DART administrative office number to double check the location. 214-749-3278.

Once again transpeeps, be nice, not nasty when you call to express yourselves about how important it is that DART's trans employees be covered in the transit authority's nondiscrimination policy.

As my grandmother always said, you can catch more flies with honey than with vinegar. Now is not the time to be acting like nekulturny teabaggers.

These are the people y'all need to be calling and expressing yourselves to on the DART board who voted against passage along with Ms. Dunlop-Gates. As a warm up exercise, you may wish to call the people who supported us and say thank you to them.

DART council members who voted against passing the amendment to the DART Board:
Mr. Velasco
Mr. Strauss
Mr. Noah
Mr. Enoch
Ms. Ellerbe
Ms. Dunlop-Gates

Please contact the following Dallas city council members and ask them to pass on to the above listed Dart council members your wish that the DART nondiscrimination policy be amended to include gender identity.

David A. Neumann
Email
Phone: 214-670-0776
Fax: 214-670-5117

Delia Jasso
Email
Phone: 214-670-4052
Fax: 214-670-5117

Linda Koop
Email
Phone: 214-670-7817
Fax: 214-670-5117

If you have any questions, these are your local GLBT advocates with the answers:

Rafael McDonnell
Resource Center Dallas
Strategic Communications and Programs Manager
Email: rmcdonnell@rcdallas.org
Web Page
Phone: 214-528-0144
Fax: 214-522-4604

Patti Fink
DGLA: Dallas Gay & Lesbian Alliance
Web page
Phone: 214-528-4233
Fax: 214-521-6424

Kelli Busey
Dallas Transgender Advocates and Allies(DTAA)
DTAA Web site
Phone: 972-693-1988

Let's Put A Doctor In The House

The Maryland House of Delegates that is.

Dr. Dana Beyer is running for a state legislative body as well. The Senior Assistant to at-large Montgomery County Councilmember Duchy Trachtenberg officially kicked off her campaign for the Maryland District 18 seat that covers Montgomery County on April 27.

Dr. Beyer has made two previous runs for the Maryland House of Delegates in 2006 and stood for an appointment for a House of Delegates seat in 2007.

This is her second run for office, and let's hope she's successful.

If you live in Montgomery County or the Washington DC metro area and would like to donate to or volunteer for her campaign, you can check our her website.

She could use some $5, $10 and $25 donations from the community as well.

One of the things we are going to have to do as a community is start getting some of our own people elected to public offices such as state legislatures and major city councils.

It is from these offices that candidates for the US House and Senate get their experience and build the name recognition for future House and Senate runs.

It's a major reason why I'm going to be keeping you TransGriot readers apprised on what's happening with Dr. Beyer's campaign.

Let's get that process started by putting Dr. Dana in the Maryland House and providing her with the means and the funds to do so.

Good luck Dr. Dana!

Monday, June 14, 2010

Trans Community, Help Brittany Win!

If you haven't heard the story by now, attorney Brittany Novotny has filed to run against incumbent homobigot Oklahoma state legislator Sally Kern.

The same Sally Kern that famously stated in 2008 that homosexuality was more dangerous than terrorism.

The same faith-based bigot Sally Kern that on the Fourth of July last year, issued her “Oklahoma Citizen’s Proclamation for Morality” blaming the country’s financial problems on same-sex marriage, divorce, pornography, sex trafficking, child abuse and “many other forms of debauchery.”

So yeah, Sally's gotta go.

Brittany so far has raised $20,000 with much of that being small donations within the state of Oklahoma. But our sis could always use more.

As this Oklahoma House race continues to get attention from the national media and across the blogosphere, the bigots will start sending money to Kern. We need to step it up and give Brittany some help.

If you live in the Oklahoma City metro area, consider donating some time to her campaign if you're not in the financial position to donate some cash.

But then again, $5, $10 and $25 contributions can go a long way toward amassing the $100,000 war chest she wants to build up to take on the incumbent Kern.

Good luck Brittany! You TransGtiot readers know I will keep you updated on this potentially historic race.

GL Community, It Ain't POC Democrats That Are Your Problem, It's White Anti Civil Rights Republicans

One of the things I noticed in the aftermath of the NY Senate committee 12-11 vote that killed GENDA for another session was all the vitriol being hurled at NY state senator Ruben Diaz (D-Bronx).

While Diaz deserves it for being a longtime foe of TBLG rights coverage, what I didn't like was seeing and hearing once again, the 'conclusion jump' that ensued and recitation of the inaccurate meme that Democrats are no better than Republicans when it comes to GLBT rights issues.

Hmm, guess y'all conveniently forgot about the last eight years under the Bush misadministration, much less last week's State Department rule change that drops the SRS requirement for a passport gender marker change.

That came from a State Department run by Hillary Clinton, not Condoleezza Rice.

Lost in the GL community rush to condemn Sen. Diaz was the fact that 10 Democrats voted to pass GENDA out of committee and that the eleven Republicans voted against it.

Those eleven Republicans all happen to be white.

Why haven't you condemned those Republicans, especially Sens. Andrew Lanza (R-Staten Island) and George Maziarz (R-Niagara) who reneged on their commitment to support GENDA, only to vote against it in committee?

Maybe the answer lies in the perception that GLBT people of color have about the predominately white led GLBT rights movement.

The perception of many GLBT people of color is that white GLBT people are so desperate to regain what you see as your lost white privilege and show conservative whites you're 'just like them', you're reluctant to voice or mute your criticism for whites who oppress you.

But you have no problem expressing yourselves when that oppressor happens to be a person of color.

You also have no problem expressing yourselves and your feelings about an African American president you lukewarmly supported that you don't feel is moving fast enough on your issues.

So why no rising volume of condemnation for what is glaringly obvious to any person of color? It's white Republicans who are and have been for decades the enemy of TBLG rights.

Sunday, June 13, 2010

Upcoming Trans ID Protest In Quebec

TransGriot Note: Thanks to reader Matt McLauchlin, was made aware of a June 17 rally taking place place in Montreal protesting Quebec's restrictive rules on legal changes of name and gender.

More info about the rally from the coalition's Facebook page.


***

Thursday, June 17, 2010
3:30 PM - 6:00 PM EDT
devant le Directeur de l'État Civil
2050, rue De Bleury
Montreal, QC


Down with STERILE civil status rules!
Trans people demand their citizenship

Today in Québec, trans-identified, or trans, people do not enjoy the same civil status rights as other citizens. Trans people are subjected to long, complex, restrictive, and not universally accessible regulations. Their right to equality and physical integrity is not respected, since they must undergo compulsory sterilization in order to obtain the right to have their designation of sex legally changed in civil status documents.

Moreover, because of these situations, many trans people are forced to wait long periods of time with official identity papers (civil status documents) that do not reflect their actual identity. This can lead to endless discrimination when looking for work or housing, seeking health care, opening a bank account, etc.

Some examples of the consequences these regulations have:

• Trans people who want to change the designation of sex on their birth certificate are required to undergo “medical treatments and surgical operations involving a structural modification of sexual organs intended to change [their] sexual characteristics” – in other words, sterilization. Even though the Director of Civil Status does not explicitly require trans people to be sterile in order to change their designation of sex, these conditions necessarily involve forced sterilization of trans people.

• Trans people who want to change their name in under five years must obtain a psychiatric diagnosis of gender identity disorder and begin medical procedures to change their sexual characteristics. Trans people who do not want to undergo medical procedures must live an additional five years under the name assigned at birth.

• Trans people who are unwilling or (because of financial, health, or other issues) unable to undergo these physical modifications have a civil identity that does not concord with their real identity.

• Trans people who are not Canadian citizens are also condemned to a situation where the identity listed on their civil status documents do not reflect their real identity. Article 71 of the Québec Civil Code requires Canadian citizenship, among other conditions, for a legal change of name or sex designation. Obtaining Canadian citizenship can take years.

• Trans people who have children before changing their sex designation cannot change the gender they are assigned on their children’s birth certificate. For example, Nicole may be Nicolas’s mother, but she will still be listed as “father” on his birth certificate. This rule is a leftover from legal homophobia, reflecting the fact that until recently, children could not have two parents of the same gender. Now that same-gender parents are accepted, trans people should be able to change the term listed on their children’s birth certificates.

Current regulations harm not only transsexual persons, but many others, such as transgender, intersex, bi-gender, and genderqueer people, as well as their children. They threaten the equality of all Quebecers under the law.

The Supreme Court has objected to sterilization for non-therapeutic purposes. Law professor Marie-France Bureau says: “In both Québec and Canada, non-therapeutic sterilization of persons suffering from mental illness is not permitted. The courts have ruled that it is contrary to fundamental rights. […] We can therefore ask how it is that sterilization is, for a person unable to give informed consent, a violation of fundamental rights, while for a trans person who has full legal capacity and is able to give informed consent, it is a requirement.”

Other legal models are possible and in some cases are already being used in Canada. In the other provinces, for example, laws concerning legal change of name are very different, allowing change of name without the various requirements of Québec law.

For these reasons, the undersigned call on the Director of Civil Status, legislators, and the relevant government bodies to immediately undertake reforms to end these discriminatory policies. In particular, we call for the following:

• Access to legal change of name without excessive delay, similar to the regulations in force in all other Canadian provinces.

• Access to legal change of sex designation without compulsory medical treatments (operations or hormone therapy), based on the recommendation of a professional (a list of professionals can be drawn up in consultation with the concerned communities), following the example of Spain and the United Kingdom.

• Access to legal change of name and sex designation for non-citizens of Canada who have lived in Québec for one year.

• Access to legal change of trans people’s sex as designated on the birth certificate of children born to them before transition.

• A clear description, published on the website of the Director of Civil Status of Québec, of the procedures for legal change of name and sex designation for trans-identified people.

We are open to meeting with the Director of Civil Status as soon as possible. Today’s action aims to shed light on the discrimination suffered by trans people in connection with civil status, and is part of a wide range of demands in the fight against transphobia.

Will The Last Big 12 Team Please Turn Out The Lights?

It has begun.

Colorado became the first domino to fall in the college relocation sweepstakes Thursday by accepting an invitation to join the Pac-10 in 2012.

They were followed less than 24 hours later by Boise State leaving the WAC for the Mountain West and their now former Big 12 conference mate Nebraska accepting an invitation to join the Big Ten Conference in 2011.

Nebraska leaving the Big 12 didn't surprise me. They haven't been happy being in Texas and Oklahoma's shadows the last few years. They see themselves as an elite football school even if they've slid a bit from that status.

We'll find out in 2011 if Nebraska they have the horses to compete in the Big Ten(12).

Now the rest of the college football universe waits to see what the rest of the remaining Big 12 schools will do.

Feel sorry for Kansas. Elite basketball program, not at that status in football, and unfortunately, football and the pursuit of television cash is driving this expansion and realignment scenario just like it did in 1996.

But the collegiate football world wants to know what Texas is going to do.

Yeah, they're talking a good game about 'trying to save the Big 12', but if you believe that bull I have some waterfront property along I-10 between Breaux Bridge and Baton Rouge I'd like to sell you.

Will they stay in the Big 12 or jump to either the Pac 10 or the SEC? We'll know after Tuesday's board of regents meeting.

Don't see the Wronghorns jumping to the SEC. Too much competition, and we all know what happened the last time they tangled with an SEC squad.

Here's a hint: Roll Tide!

The Pac-10 is also sending a message with the extending of a membership invite to Colorado and not Baylor that they run thangs, not UT.

Texas A&M is considering something different. Not going to the same conference with UT.

They are also tired of being in the Longhorns shadow and being considered the 'little brothers' to the 'Teasips' as they call them in Aggieland.

They are considering a potential invite to the SEC.

In the meantime the rest of the soon to be Left Behind Big 12 schools are meeting, trying to come up with a coordinated strategy to keep what's left of the Big 12 together and hold on to their BCS conference status.

But this is reminding me more and more of the Southwest Conference breakup.

Saturday, June 12, 2010

2010 World Cup USA Watch-It's A Draw

Team USA didn't win their opening Group C match versus England, but they didn't lose it either.

They played England to a 1-1 draw in a highly hyped and anticipated match on both sides of The Pond. It was the first time England and the United States have played in a World Cup match since the 1950 'Miracle on Grass'.

It didn't get off to a great start for Team USA. Steven Gerrard blew past USA defender Ricardo Clark and beat goalkeeper Tim Howard in the 4th minute to give England an early 1-0 lead.

The US stormed back in the 40th minute when Texan Clint Dempsey blasted a shot at the goal from 25 yards out that skipped off the grass twice and incredibly through the hands of English goalkeeper Robert Green to tie the game before halftime.

Jozy Altidore nearly gave the US the lead in the 65th minute after blasting a rocket toward the upper corner that went off Green's hand and just missed entering the net.

England then turned up the offensive pressure, but Tim Howard made a series of saves that preserved the draw and the point that Team USA gained in the Group C standings.

Team USA's next match will be against Slovenia on June 18, and they close out Group C play with Algeria on June 23.

They need a win in either one of those matches to move on to the next round.

New TransGriot Template

Hey TransGriot readers! Hope you noticed the new template and look for the blog.

It was time after five years to give TransGriot a makeover.

I've had that setup since I started the blog back in 2006. I needed to get rid of the pink and get a white background to make it easier to read. I just hadn't found a template I liked until now.

I'll be tweaking and adjusting it over the next few days until I'm satisfied with the final look.

Hope y'all like the change and it makes the time you spend surfing here more enjoyable.

you can also comment on it if you wish.

2010 World Cup USA Watch-USA v. England

Team USA opens up in World Cup Group C play with its first competitive match against England since the 1950 'Miracle on Grass'. That 1-0 game was rated as the greatest upset in FIFA history.

This time Team USA and team captain Landon Donovan won't be sneaking up on England or the rest of the world. They are ranked Number 14 in the FIFA world rankings, upset then FIFA World Number 1 ranked Spain last summer enroute to the Confederations Cup final with Brazil and have 14 players on this squad who play in the English Premier League.

The Americans will try to capture some of that almost 50 year old magic with a team that is the most diverse USA team ever put together for World Cup competition.

The USA men are trying to prove to the rest of the soccer playing world that we can hang and compete with the soccer superpowers. They also want to erase the memories of a less than satisfying 2006 World Cup tournament in Germany.

They tied Italy 1-1, but lost to Ghana and the Czech Republic to compile an 0-2-1 record in Group play and not advance.

If they want to advance in the 2010 edition of the World Cup tournament, this widely anticipated match against England is a critical step toward doing so.

Friday, June 11, 2010

Louisville Civil Rights Warrior George Unseld Passes

In the eight years I lived in Louisville, one of the first civic leaders I had the pleasure of meeting not long after moving there was trailblazing Metro Council member George Unseld.

I was saddened to hear that retired educator and Councilmember Unseld died yesterday at 6:47 PM EDT after falling in his Metro Council office 20 minutes before a scheduled city council meeting.

Giant of a man is a word you can use to describe him physically and literally. The 6'7" Unseld was the older brother of NBA Hall of Famer Wes Unseld. He blazed some trails himself on the court at Seneca High School and the University of Kansas.

He later became the first first African-American coach of a predominately white high school in Kentucky when he assumed the job at his alma mater Seneca High School. he also served the Jefferson County Public Schools as an instructor and Director of Athletics.

Unseld was elected as a alderman in 1999, and served two teems before being elected as one of the charter members of the merged city's Metro Council District 6 in 2002. He was reelected to Louisville's Metro Council in 2004 and 2008.

While at Kansas, he and Gale Sayers were among 130 students arrested for protesting racial discrimination in the fraternity and sorority system at KU.

Unseld also played a leading role in tackling some large issues facing Louisville over the last decade and a half. He called for policies allowing for civilian review of police actions and a living wage for metro government employees.

In 1999 he was one of five co-sponsors to the original Fairness Ordinance passed by the board of aldermen. The Fairness Ordinance bars discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity. In 2004 he voted to affirm the ordinance when the Metro Council later re-enacted it to apply to the merged city.

He's had some health issues over the years. He's battled diabetes, a kidney infection, skin cancer, and a drug resistant infection following a knee operation.

But it didn't stop him from interacting with his constituents and progressive Louisville and working hard on behalf of his District 6 constituents.

He was preceded in death in January by his wife and high school sweetheart Jacqueline, who he married in 1994. His 43 year old son Charles Dorsey Unseld passed away in 2009.

George Unseld is a civil rights warrior and another walking slice of Louisville and Kentucky history that has now joined his wife, son and the ancestors.

George, thanks for the wonderful conversations we had at various events every time we ran into each other. You will be missed.

Sample Letter For US Passport Gender Change

New State Department regulations took effect yesterday that no longer require gender reassignment surgery as a prerequisite to have accurate gender markers on your United States passport.

The new policy was implemented because Trans Americans face extreme danger when traveling abroad in the many countries that are hostile to them. Many also experience harassment when entering and leaving the United States and several other countries.

So without further ado, here are two examples of the letter you'll need to submit for your corrected passport gender marker.


Attending Physician’s Letterhead
(Physician’s Address and Telephone Number)

I, (physician’s full name), (physician’s medical license or certificate number), (issuing State of medical license/certificate), (DEA Registration number), am the attending physician of (name of patient), with whom I have a doctor/patient relationship. (The letter must indicate that the physician is either an internist, endocrinologist, gynecologist, urologist or psychiatrist.)

(Name of patient) has had appropriate clinical treatment for gender transition to the new gender (specify new gender male or female).

Or you can use this format:

(Name of patient) is in the process of gender transition to the new gender (specify new gender male or female).
I declare under penalty of perjury under the laws of the United States that the forgoing is true and correct.

Signature of Physician

Typed Name of Physician

Date

Shut Up Fool! Awards-FIFA World Cup Is Starting Edition

Starting today, half the world's television sets will be tuned in to the start of the FIFA World Cup tournament from South Africa.

For the next month we'll be watching on ESPN in the States to see which nation emerges from the month long competition to take home FIFA World Cup Trophy.

Will it be Brazil, who has won it a record five times and will host the 2014 World Cup tournament? Will it be Italy, who has won it four times? The Germans, who are looking to take their fourth title after failing to do so on home turf in 2006?

Or will it be a Cinderella national squad that puts together a nice run that carries them to an upset victory.

The tournament starts today with the host South Africans taking on Mexico. There's another matchup with former FIFA champions in Uruguay vs France.

It's Friday, and we'll now move on to determine what fool, fools or group of fools exhibited world championship level stupidity to receive our coveted award this week.

We had the usual peeps such as Beck, Palin, and O'Reilly, Rand Paul, and Sharon Angle. British Polluters got suggested for a group award for all the 'Baghdad Bob' like spin coming out of their mouths since this tragedy started unfolding 50 days ago.



But our winner is Rep. Don Young (R-AK) who said this on the House floor in regards to the Deepwater Horizon spill.

“This is not an environmental disaster, and I will say that again and again because it is a national phenomena. Oil has seeped into this ocean for centuries, will continue to do it. During World War II there was over 10 million barrels of oil spilt from ships, and no natural catastrophe. … We will lose some birds, we will lose some fixed sealife, but overall it will recover.”

Um, didn't have one in your home state courtesy of the Exxon Valdez spill which until this one was the worst in US history?

And oh yeah, the oil seepage into the Atlantic and Gulf during World War II was caused by German U-boats SINKING tankers.

And this conservafool not only thinks global warming is a scam, but has a strange definition for 'natural phenomena'.

I guess an oil rig that blows up and kills 11 people is a 'natural phenomenon' in GOP Bizarro world.

Rep. Don Young, shut up fool!

Thursday, June 10, 2010

The First College Football Domino Falls

Ever since the Big Ten Conference announced they were looking to expand by as many as 16 teams in order to split into two divisions and set up a championship game, the talk and rumors of which school was going where and to what conference has dominated the sports pages and ESPN for weeks.

It has non-BCS schools wondering what the college football landscape would look like id such a feeding frenzy of realignment got jumped off.

That may have just started, but it's coming from an unexpected quarter.

Instead of Texas or Notre Dame getting a conference invite to the Pac 10 or the Big Ten (yet), today the University of Colorado announced they would leave the Big 12 Conference to accept an invitation to become the 11th member of the Pac-10 Conference in 2012.

This is happening amid rumors that Nebraska may be on the verge of leaving the Big 12 for the Big Ten Conference and would announce it at a press conference after its Board of Regents meeting on Friday.

If that turns out to be the case, it would be a huge shock to Missouri, which has made no secret that it wanted to leave the Big 12 for the Big Ten and pissed off their Big 12 brethren in the process.

As a UH alum, watching this impending round of conference realignment has the same deja vu feeling of watching the 1993 breakup of the SWC that started with Arkansas leaving for the SEC in 1990. Many UH alums still have extremely bitter memories about being Left Behind during the formation of the Big 12.

TCU and UH both finger Texas as the major culprit as why they were Left Behind in the first place. We believe they slimed both schools so the Longhorns could use the non-BCS status of those schools as a recruiting tool to access football recruits in the talent rich Dallas-Ft. Worth and Houston areas.

Of course, the Orangebloods deny it, but I note that they never miss an opportunity in local Houston Chronicle forums to trash the University of Houston every chance they get.

Must be because UT never got over those football buttkickings the Coogs administered on a regular basis during the 70's and 80's, including sending Darrell Royal into retirement with a shutout loss in front of a sellout crowd enroute to our first SWC football title.

TCU alums also have much Hateraid for Baylor. They feel the Horned Frogs would have gotten membership in the Big 12 if it hadn't been for the fact that Baylor leaned on an alum who was in the Governor's mansion (Ann Richards) at the time in order to secure its spot in the new conference.

So we're both sitting on the sidelines feeling for the current members of the Big 12 who are about to be tossed aside like empty beer cans as the rest of your former conference brethren leave for mo' money.

Payback is a witch, eh Baylor?

Stay tuned, the conference realignment drama is only going to get more interesting.

Surgery No Longer Requirement For US Passport Gender Marker Change

Some welcome news for those of us who either have, need or soon will be applying for or picking up United States passports.

The U.S. State Department announced yesterday a new policy that no longer requires passport applicants seeking a gender change to have undergone genital reassignment surgery.

Incorrect gender markers on passports are a major concern to tarns people traveling abroad, and can lead to harassment or worse when a passport is presented with a gender marker that doesn't match the person's gender presentation.

The policy, which goes into effect today, allows a gender marker change with a certification from an attending physician.

The doctor's certification must confirm only that the passport applicant has undergone treatment for gender transition. Limited-validity passports for applicants who are in the process of gender transition also will be available under the policy.

The Grio.com's Trans Free 15 LGBT Leaders List Fail

I'm usually paying attention when Black LGBT leaders lists are put together by media outlets geared toward people of color.

I've found these lists are heavy on the gay and lesbian side of the community, forget the bi part or add them as an afterthought, and either forget the trans part altogether or mistakenly believe that drag queens are acceptable substitutes for actual trans people.

Not surprisingly, I get to tell y'all about another African descended media outlet that fails in that regard.

The Grio.com recently put together a list of 15 LGBT Leaders of the Future.

While there are some wonderful and well deserving people on the list Talia Whyte compiled such as Keith Boykin, Pam Spaulding, Jane Velez-Mitchell, Anthony Woods, Staceyann Chin, Lee Daniels and Wanda Sykes, I'll give you one guess who she chose as what she thought was a representative of the trans community.

Nope, wasn't the TransGriot. Wasn't Miss Major, Kylar Broadus, Earline Budd or even Isis King. The person she chose was RuPaul's Drag Race Season One winner Bebe Zahara Benet.

Excuse me?

Okay, how many times do I have to say this Black GL community and African descended cis allies? This next paragraph also applies to elements of the vanilla flavored GL community and our cis allies, too as well, so pay attention.

Drag queen, unless said drag queen is living 24/7/365 (366 in a leap year) as a woman, DOES NOT equal trans.


Yes, there are and have been drag artists that not only have done high quality work in terms of entertaining the community, but stepped up offstage to fulfill leadership roles for the TBLG community.

But I'm beyond sick and tired of being sick and tired of Black peeps putting lists together advertised as LGBT community ones and being too fracking lazy to do the work to find actual trans leaders to profile on these lists.

And don't give me or the African descended trans community the weak azz excuse about you don't know or can't find any trans leaders or accuse me of sour grapes for calling y'all out on the oversight.

This isn't even about me, so don't go there. It's about the erasure of African descended transpeople.

My point is that if our own people don't or won't show us some love when you compile these leadership lists, and you write for one of our leading blogosphere sites directed at the African-American community gay and straight, how in the hell can we Black trans leaders who are doing the work expect the predominately white TBLG community to respect us as well?


Crossposted to the Bilerico Project

Wednesday, June 09, 2010

Dr. Hedy Fry's Remarks on C-389

TransGriot Note: I took some time to watch the Canadian Parliament proceedings online yesterday with Bill C-389 that now has successfully moved on to committee.

Will be keeping an eye on it along with my Canadian trans cousins. In the meantime, check out the words of Liberal MP for Vancouver Centre Dr. Hedy Fry in support of this bill.


Mr. Speaker, I rise to support the bill. The hon. member who moved the bill has worked very hard on this for a long time and is very committed to the issues of equality for all.

I support the bill for many reasons. When I first became a Member of Parliament in 1993, as a physician, I saw what discrimination based on sexual orientation cost my patients. I saw the high levels of suicide and discrimination. I saw the law discriminated against access to medical care, to dental benefits, to medical benefits in every way.

Persons who were same sex couples and had lived together for many years were unable to do the simple things that a heterosexual couple that had been together for a year could do. In other words, if a partner was dying or ill, the person did not have the right, no matter how long he or she had lived with that partner to make decisions with regard to care and with regard to funeral arrangements in the event the partner passed away.

As a physician, this did not allow me to do my job or to take care of my patients in a manner that should be beyond any kind of discrimination whatsoever, as stated in the Canada Health Act. As a result, the Liberal government brought forward these issues, and today we have equality based on sexual orientation.

However, the bill speaks to another issue where, as a physician, I saw a great deal of discrimination. This is a medical diagnosis. The concept is there are persons who we like to call transgender persons. They have problems coming to grips with their sexual identity. They then go to see a physician. There is a definite medical diagnosis that states these people need to look at their identity gender change. There are many things they need to access. They need to access psychiatric care in terms of decision making and in terms of the diagnosis. Once that is done, there are all sorts of medical options available such as the necessary medication for the change to occur, surgical interventions, et cetera.

Depending on what province these patients live in, many do not have access to that kind of medical care. The Canada Health Act states very clearly that we cannot discriminate against people if they require medically necessary care. As a diagnosis, this falls under the heading of medically necessary care and all of the pieces that come in between.

For a medical reason alone, we once again have a group of Canadians that do not have access to the care it needs when it needs it regardless of its ability to pay, or geography or pre-existing conditions, portability and all the pieces of the Canada Health Act about which we need to talk.

For medical reasons alone, even if we did not bring on the reasons that pertain to discrimination, to equality within the country, to the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, to the concept that we cannot discriminate against any Canadian because of his or her particular group identity, this fits into all of those things.

However, as a physician, I really want to speak to the fact that we are denying certain members of our society, based on their group and identities, access to good care when they need it.

I have had many patients who struggled to decide if they did have a gender identity problem or if they needed to move into the next stage, which is to have whatever medical care they need to help them to deal with this issue. They were the transgender patients. Not only did they not have access to the health care they needed, or access to the ability to deal with a lot of psychological as well as the physical trauma they underwent during that period of time, many of these people faced a totally different kind of discrimination.

They faced discrimination from the heterosexual community and, in many instances, from within their own communities sometimes because no one knew who they were. They did not have access to simple things like washrooms because they were considered neither fish nor fowl. No one had decided who they were. That kind of discrimination is psychologically devastating to a person, if we put aside the medical needs for a minute.

When people do not know who they are and do not have access to counselling to help them deal with these issues in a real way in order to find out who they are and why they are trapped, the whole concept of lack of control over anything they do affects their psychological ability to live normal lives, to walk into a community and to express themselves once they have had a diagnosis made.

For people who had money and were able to go to another country to get whatever medical care they needed to become transgendered persons, when they returned to Canada the discrimination was extraordinary. As a physician, as an MP and as a Vancouverite, I have been around the community and I have seen the pain, the discrimination, the isolation and the inability to be welcomed anywhere by anyone because of the concept of people not accepting people for who they are. This is an extraordinary thing to live with.

We need to look at the number of suicides and the different addictions people have to help them get out of the place where no one accepts them. We need to deal with this issue because it is of profound importance to a group of Canadians.

If we believe in our Charter of Rights and Freedoms and we buy into our Canada Health Act, we must take every step necessary to, first, make every Canadian equal under the law, and, second, by being equal under the law, the law and the nation makes a statement that we will not accept people being discriminated against in this country where we have chosen to set up a charter that speaks in section 15 to the issue of minority rights.

We cannot say that one minority has more rights than another. The minute we start saying that someone has more rights than another person, we immediately set up a criteria of different levels of people who are accepted in society. One thing we all know is that when people are not accepted in society, they will rise up to seek their rights.

We are talking about basic human rights and with human rights comes access to all of the things that human beings can enjoy: the ability to live in freedom and seek opportunity and potential wherever we can; to have access to justice, education, health care and all of the things that allow us as human beings to realize whatever it is that lies within us and in our potential to live meaningful lives; and to be a part of communities that accept and embrace us.

We are discussing a fundamental human rights issue. As I said, the subsets of it are access to medical care, freedom and equality under the law. Those are just chunks of things that we bring in under the subheading of the basic human right to life, to the freedom to be who we are, to choose who we wish to be, to live in a manner that co-exists with other people and to live as a lawful human being who does not harm others and can become a productive and contributing member of society.

Those are fundamental things that we all want. We can deny other people for all sorts of trumped up reasons. There are always great reasons. We can cite legal precedents and discuss the fact that we do not understand the meaning of the words and what they pertain to, but that is a red herring. The bottom line is that we actually know in medicine what this means. There is no question in medicine what this means, no question at all.

Therefore, we need to start thinking about the people who live in our country and what kind of government and Parliament we are that we would allow people to live in fear with discrimination and without access to the basic human rights that other people have. I support this bill and I will be voting for it to go to committee.