Friday, January 20, 2012

Shut Up Fool Awards- Red Tails Opening Weekend Edition

The Lucasfilm produced movie about the Tuskegee Airmen entitled Red Tails starts today at your local multiplex. 

The TransGriot is definitely going to do her part and go see it since I want to send the message for Hollywood to make more action flicks and movies featuring my people and American heroes like the Tuskegee Airmen.

BTW if you do go, so that this movie gets the proper box office credit, make sure when they sell you the ticket it specifically says it's for Red Tails so it doesn't get pencil whipped out of any hard earned box office dollars we pluck down for this movie.

Now that I've done my part to remind y'all that a good movie is in the local cinema we need to support, time to move on to my usual Friday business here at TransGriot of shedding light on the fool, fools or group of fools that deserve to be called out for their ignorance, arrogance and stupidity,

As usual we had a bumper crop of candidates for our award.  Group ones for Fox Noise and the GOP, Rick Perry (adios from the presidential race mofo), Ron Paul, Rep. Tim Scott (R-SC), Rep Eric Cantor (R-VA). Speaker John Boehner (R-OH), Gretchen Carlson, Rick Santorum, Ruth Jacobs, Derek McCoy, James Dobson, RuPaul, Pat Buchanan, Patrick Wooden and Mitt Romney

Honorable mention goes to Republifool Kansas House Speaker Mike O'Neal, who was double dipping on the anti-Obama racism.  Just last month he sent out a racist e-mail referring to the FLOTUS as Mrs YoMama and comparing her to the Grinch.  Then he followed it up with another e-mail citing Psalm 109:8 that wishes for a leader's death that wingers have been aiming at the POTUS since 2009.

"At last -- I can honestly voice a Biblical prayer for our president! Look it up -- it is word for word! Let us all bow our heads and pray. Brothers and Sisters, can I get an AMEN? AMEN!!!!!!"

Our winner this week is Newton Leroy Gingrich.  

He's been quite busy doubling down on the GOP Southern Strategy 2.0 racism that has propelled him to a position in which he's on the verge of possibly knocking off Willard in South Carolina.  

Whether it's repeating his call during a GOP debate held on Martin Luther King, Jr Day for kids to be employed as janitors, and Black people needing to demand jobs instead of food stamps, acknowledging the thanks of a South Carolina event goer for putting Juan Williams 'in his place', dissing his second ex-wife and blaming the media for his divorce, Newt more than earned this week's award.






Newton Leroy Gingrich, shut the HELL up fool.

 

Why Black Gay And Trans Americans Need More Than Marriage Equality Report

TransGriot Note: I had the pleasure of meeting Aisha Moodie-Mills during the 2011 Out On The Hill conference . We had some interesting conversations during the Monday opening panel discussion at the Capitol Visitors Center and at a subsequent forum the Center For American Progress hosted at their headquarters.  

She just penned a report posted on the Center For American Progress website entitled Jumping Beyond The Broom - Why Black Gay and Transgender Americans Need More Than Marriage Equality

You can download the full report here  

Here's the intro and summary to it.



Liberty and justice for all is not yet a reality in America. Despite the election of our nation’s first African American president, black Americans continue to trail behind their white counterparts in education, employment, and overall health and wellbeing. And while some states and the federal government continue to expand protections for lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender people, more than half of all states still deny them basic civil rights. Such systemic inequities render people of color who are also gay and transgender among the most vulnerable in our society.

Black gay and transgender Americans in particular experience stark social, economic, and health disparities compared to the general population and their straight black and white gay counterparts. According to the data we currently have, families headed by black same-sex couples are more likely to raise their children in poverty, black lesbians are more likely to suffer from chronic diseases, and black gay and transgender youth are more likely to end up homeless and living on the streets.

These issues, along with the others laid out in this report, can and should be addressed through a policy agenda that seeks to understand and tackle the structural barriers—discriminatory systems, conditions, and institutions around socioeconomic status, race, sex, sexual orientation, and gender identity—that perpetuate negative economic, health, and other life outcomes among this population. The strength of our society depends on the resilience, health, and wellbeing of all Americans, especially marginalized groups such as black gay and transgender people. They too deserve to be counted and to have their needs met, so we must work to bridge these gaps.

Doing so will require fresh thinking about the root causes of these problems as well as the political will needed to employ new strategies to address them. As this report highlights, the quality of life of many black gay and transgender people remained relatively unchanged over the last decade despite the significant gains the gay and transgender movement achieved. This suggests that some of the gay headline policy priorities that garnered the most research, analysis, and advocacy—such as marriage equality—underserve this population when taken alone even though they are important for overall progress. This also applies to broad racial justice priorities that overlook gay and transgender people within their constituencies.

In short, black gay and transgender people fall through the cracks when lumped under either a gay or black umbrella. Such categorical thinking ignores the fact that black gay and transgender people are at once both gay and transgender and black. As a result they experience complex vulnerabilities that stem from the combination of racial bias and discrimination due to their sexual orientation and/ or gender identity. So advocacy agendas that prioritize the eradication of one bias over the other do not fully respond to the needs of the population—nor will they eliminate the inequities discussed in this report.

Going forward, it is necessary to find policy solutions that will empower black gay and transgender people rather than fragment them. And we need to move beyond the dichotomy of race versus sexual orientation or race versus gender identity to do so. Scholars such as Kimberle Crenshaw, Cathy J. Cohen, and C. Nicole Mason offer frameworks for applying this intersectional lens to policy analysis and advocacy in order to understand how race, class, gender, sexual orientation, and gender identity influence public policy choices at the national, state, and local levels, as well as individual outcomes. Our analysis is drawn in part from their theories.
At the most basic level, we believe that this fine-tuned approach will best capture how public policy shapes the day-to-day experiences of the black gay and transgender population. We also believe it will encourage both gay and transgender and racial justice advocates and policymakers to understand how their approaches engage constituents who are members of other groups as well. By doing so, we can highlight new opportunities to address their needs.

This report by the Fighting Injustice to Reach Equality, or FIRE, initiative at the Center for American Progress offers the foundation on which to build this approach. We aim to establish a common understanding and knowledge bank of the data and policy research on black gay and transgender people since no consolidated inventory of literature or data on the population’s issues currently exists. Through our review, we developed a high-level summary of what we know about the black gay and transgender population in terms of economic security, educational attainment, and health and wellness.

We define these issues and frame policy measures that will enhance quality of life for black gay and transgender people. Our recommendations for dealing with the issues include policies that can be enacted by Congress, as well as changes to administration policy. These include gay and transgender specific measures along with others with a broader focus that would best tackle the issues we’ve identified.

Recommendations for addressing economic insecurity

  • Adopt inclusive family policies and safety net programs.
  • Pass housing antidiscrimination laws.
  • Take a comprehensive federal approach to gay and transgender youth homelessness.
  • Make consumer financial protection a priority.
  • Pass employee nondiscrimination laws.
  • Support gay and transgender entrepreneurs.
  • Legally recognize same-sex relationships.

Recommendations for addressing low educational attainment

  • Adopt school safety policies.
  • Enforce existing federal civil rights laws.
  • Review school discipline policies.

Recommendations for addressing health and wellness disparities

  • Implement the Affordable Care Act.
  • Work toward health equity.
  • Examine domestic violence among same-sex couples.
Our key finding, though, is that there is a dearth of data available to fully understand the disparities faced by this population. This limits our ability to develop a credible, data-driven agenda that will help policymakers, advocates, and researchers craft effective solutions for eliminating them.

The need for high-quality data to inform policy decisions and help design effective programs that will address the needs of black gay and transgender people cannot be underscored enough. High-quality data is an indispensable part of any policy or advocacy work because it allows us to paint a more precise picture of society as a whole and focus on hard-to-reach populations—such as black gay and transgender people—who are most at risk of slipping through the cracks.

Unfortunately, few federal and state surveys ask respondents their sexual orientation and gender identity, which severely limits our ability to analyze and understand the needs of gay and transgender Americans regardless of their race or ethnicity. In order to fully understand and be responsive to the needs of this population, every opportunity to expand data collection at all levels of government should be pursued.

Nonetheless, existing research and literature reveal that exposure to antigay and/ or antitransgender policies and institutionalized racial discrimination derails black gay and transgender Americans’ financial stability, creates barriers to accessing quality health care, and erodes safeguards for black gay and transgender families. We teased out areas that we found or hypothesized to disproportionately affect the black gay and transgender population and each of these warrants additional research, analysis, and/or advocacy to begin to address these issues.

The research and advocacy roadmap outlined below presents an opportunity to insert black gay and transgender perspectives into the policy dialogue, and inform the policy and regulatory work currently underway in these areas. These are components for a long-term approach to tackling disparities among this population.

Data collection advocacy

  • Collect comprehensive data on gay and transgender populations across all federal agencies and health measures.

Areas for additional research

  • Ensuring inclusive family policies and safety net programs
  • Addressing unfair punishment of black gay and transgender youth in schools
  • Reducing barriers to quality health care for black lesbians
  • Protecting black lesbian and bisexual women from violence
  • Protecting gay and transgender prisoners of color
  • Identifying structural barriers that perpetuate high rates of HIV/AIDS in the black community
  • Instituting antibullying policies and safe spaces in schools serving predominantly black populations
  • Analyzing the impact of conservative political and cultural climates on black gay families in the South
  • Supporting black transgender and gender nonconforming populations
  • Reducing housing discrimination and homelessness among black gay and transgender populations
This report is just a starting point in identifying policy areas beyond the gay and transgender headline issues that would go a long way toward addressing the disparities black gay and transgender populations face. In the meantime it is important that the issues discussed in this report be actively inserted into mainstream conversations and policy debates on both gay and transgender equality and racial justice.

Aisha C. Moodie-Mills is the Advisor for LGBT Policy and Racial Justice at the Center for American Progress. Her work with the Fighting Injustice to Reach Equality, or FIRE, initiative explores the intersections of race, economics, sexual orientation, and gender identity.


An Opposition Big Lie Exposed In Baltimore County, MD

The Baltimore County Council is considering a trans human rights law that once again, the opponents are trying to use the odious bathroom meme to kill  

Bill 3-12 was introduced to a packed chamber and if passed would protect transpeople in the workplace, house and all together people, public accommodations

Back on December 6 the Howard County MD Council passed on a 4-1 vote trans human rights legislation that prohibits discrimination based on gender identity and expression in the areas of employment, housing, public accommodations, financing, and health and social services. 

They were the third jurisdiction in the state of Maryland to do so after Baltimore City and Montgomery County.

Supporters of the proposed legislation along with the haters showed up in Towson, the county seat. The Forces of Intolerance were represented by Dr. Ruth Jacobs, the head of the Maryland Citizens Bigots For A Responsible Government and Derek McCoy of the Association of (Bigoted) Maryland Families to pimp their usual transphobic lies and fearmongering

Transphobia alert:
JACOBS: It opens up the bathrooms to men who may be just cross-dressers, who may be a pedophile who uses the law to nefarious advantage. It’s a very dangerous bill. In this law, you’re afraid to complain because [you think] Oh my goodness — maybe I’ll be considered a bigot. But, of course it could be somebody who’s trying to rape me.
This takes away from a woman being a woman. Somebody else is just like you. These people are confused about their gender.

The bill is a direct attack on women’s privacy.

MCCOY: When you look at this bill, the terrible thing about it is you’re talking about allowing someone who self-identifies (as a man or a woman) — meaning I can get up any given day of the week, especially if I have inclinations that are not right, like being a pedophile or a sexual deviant — and putting in harm’s way children who are using public facilities. They can be taken, they can be molested. We need to be on our guard and understand what’s at stake.

***
What's at stake Derek, Ruth and all you other assorted haters are trans human rights with public accommodations coverage.  The Chrissy Polis case demonstrably exposed the need for them.along with the Injustice at Every Turn Report.

And speaking of exposed, one of the lies the opponents told was busted

The transphobes alleged that since the Montgomery County, MD trans rights law was passed in 2007 there have been four rapes committed by crossdressed men lying in wait for their victims in ladies restrooms.

Montgomery County Chief of Police J. Thomas Manger sent a letter to Baltimore County Councilmember Tom Quirk, the sponsor of the proposed legislation stating that since the November 13, 2007 passage of the law there have been ZERO sexual assaults of the kind they allege.  

Next hearing is scheduled for February 14 with a vote scheduled on February 21.  Let's hope trans residents of Baltimore County get to feel the love next month from the County Council and get the human rights coverage they desperately need. 
  .