Jahaira in the first video of her Trans 101 series gives her take on the recent Katie Couric interview with Laverne and Carmen and why it's NOT appropriate to ask a transperson about their genitalia.
Friday, January 10, 2014
Thursday, January 09, 2014
Bullied Trans Teen Girl Being Charged For Defending Herself
But that's exactly what has happened in this case. Gutierrez is being charged with a single count of misdemeanor battery for defending herself against three cis female attackers who had been bullying her.
Wanna guess what happened to the bullies? Nada.
What the hell was Contra Costa County DA Mark Peterson and assistant DA Dan Cabral thinking? One of the girls takes spit laden gum out of her mouth, threw it in Jewelyes' face, and Jewelyes is the one getting charged?
You've got to be kidding me.
"I don't understand quite why the District Attorney's office would prosecute someone who's already been a victim of bullying. I think it's a further victimization of somebody who's been a target of homophobia and transphobia."
So do I. DA's Peterson and Cabral need to drop the charges they leveled at Jewelyes and let the school handle it, which it already did with suspensions to all the girls involved.
Charles Ramsey, the President of the West Contra Costa School Board, says this should have been a teachable moment and not "something that should rise the level of where it has to go to the District Attorney's office for prosecution."
So do the right thing Contra Costa DA's office. Drop the charges.
TransGriot Update: Here's a petition asking the Contra Costa DA to do precisely that.
Labels:
bullying,
California,
high school,
legal/justice,
transteens
Moni's TDL Test Today
And yeah, pending this driving test, I'm going to take out my anger at the GOP at the polls for all the Republican inspired drama and so far $107 in fees, expenses and unnecessary drama I've gone through just to get a Texas drivers license
Well, after taking and passing the written test in October, I've had to reschedule the driving portion of it twice due to people flaking out on me at last minute. I have a looming January 19 deadline to complete that part of it otherwise I forfeit the $25 I've already plunked down and have to start the licensing process from scratch.
So wish me luck. My ability to vote in the 2014 election cycle depends on me passing this driving test.
No pressure.
TransGriot Update: Passed with a score of 94, so I have my Texas DL until the end of the decade. Lost points for forgetting to signal after successfully completing my parallel park, nose of car being past a stop sign pole and driving 10 mph too slowly in a 30 MPH zone.
Be afraid Texas GOP, be very afraid of the wrath of Moni. Electoral payback is coming.
Wednesday, January 08, 2014
AB 1266 Repeal Referendum Effort Clears Initial Hurdle
After hearing the news coming out of California moments ago, I'm going to repeat what I said in a post last month. Hope you Cali peeps have a game plan in place if the PFAS haters succeed in getting this on the November 4 ballot.My concern about that possibility is elevated because of the news that the haters effort to get a referendum on the ballot to repeal AB 1266 cleared the first hurdle.
The random sampling indicated that AB 1266's opponents failed to gather the 504,760 valid signatures of registered voters they needed to put their measure on the ballot, California Secretary of State Debra Bowen (D) said. However Los Angeles County was the last one in the spot-check verification process, and its 77.9% verification rate bumped up the statewide verification rate to 77.93% and 482,582 signatures.
While that was below the 81.5% one needed to shut down implementation of the law or immediately put the repeal referendum on the California ballot, it was enough to move it to the second phase. Secretary of State Bowen's office will now check every one of the 619,241 signatures received on those petitions, and that process needs to be completed by February 24.
So that now another month and a half of waiting to see if this referendum happens or it doesn't.
In the interim, Childen of Light, better be using your time wisely.
Katie Interview With Carmen Carrera
For some strange reason every time I tried to post the Carmen Carrera and Laverne Cox January 6 Katie interviews in the same post, the code would get overwritten to where it was either showing carmen or Laverne's segments twice.
So I'm just going to give the Carmen Carrera one this separate post of its own and link it to the original post. Problem solved.
Here's Carmen's interview with Katie Couric.
So I'm just going to give the Carmen Carrera one this separate post of its own and link it to the original post. Problem solved.
Here's Carmen's interview with Katie Couric.
Katie Interview with Laverne Cox
The Katie show that aired Monday featured Laverne Cox and Carmen Carrera. That was the good news.
It's getting attention in a not so positive way because Katie Couric tried to go there on the genital surgery question with both Carmen and Laverne.
Pro Tip: Trans women are beyond tired of being asked about genitalia, and frankly that is in none of your damned business territory unless you want to date or get intimate with us. Focus on what's between our ears, not what's between our legs.
Megakudos to Carmen and Laverne for gracefully deflecting and refocused those questions back toward general trans issue concerns.
For some reason when I tried to put the separate segments on the same page, the code in one would overwrite the other, so I had to put Carmen's interview in a separate post after trying four times to tweak the code so I wouldn't have to do that.
Here's Laverne's interview
It's getting attention in a not so positive way because Katie Couric tried to go there on the genital surgery question with both Carmen and Laverne.
Megakudos to Carmen and Laverne for gracefully deflecting and refocused those questions back toward general trans issue concerns.
For some reason when I tried to put the separate segments on the same page, the code in one would overwrite the other, so I had to put Carmen's interview in a separate post after trying four times to tweak the code so I wouldn't have to do that.
Here's Laverne's interview
Labels:
media,
talk shows,
transgender POC,
transwomen
When Are Transbrothers of Color Going To Get Their TV Closeups?
In the six decades since Christine Jorgensen stepped off her SAS flight in New York on February 13, 1953, when the media has deigned to turn the discussion of transsexuality towards transmasculine issues, far too often that discussion has centered on white transmen.
That has been majorly frustrating to me as a Black trans woman and also Black and Latino transmen. They don't get enough television time as is to discuss transmasculine issues, and what little there is has yet to realize they exist, ignores them altogether and the issues unique to being transmen of color.
And frankly, transwomen of color for balance purposes in our communities need to have those stories told.
Latinos are the fastest growing minority group in this country. It would nice to have Latino trans men talking about the cultural issues inside and outside the Latino community that affect their transitions.
To make you go hmm even more, how about Asian transmen? What are the issues that affect them?
It's not like it's hard to find transmen of color who are willing to chat about those issues all over the country. Carter Brown, Dr Kortney Ryan Ziegler, Tiq Milan, Kye Allums and Kylar Broadus for starters can easily and eloquently hold it down on the Black trans masculine end of things.
So yeah media peeps, how about trying harder in the 2K14 to broaden the transmasculine discussion to include transmen of color?
You'll not only broaden and bring about a long needed diversification of the transmasculine conversation, but get some fascinating and compelling stories out of it as well.
Labels:
Black transmen,
media,
trans Latino,
transgender POC
AB 1266 Random Sample Validation Deadline Today
My Left Coast transpeople and their allies have their eyes turned toward their state capital of Sacramento awaiting word on whether the transphobic haters efforts to put a repeal effort on the ballot for have successfully made it to the next round of the process or they failed.Deadline for all 58 California counties to complete the random sample validation is January 8, but hope the supporters have been using their time wisely and setting up their game plan in case this does happen.
AB 1266 went into effect on January 1, so it is NOT on hold pending the results of the signature count.
And the news so far has been bad for the Forces of Intolerance trying to kill the law. The Orwellian named Privacy For All Student (PFAS) group needed to gather 504,760 signatures to put the issue on the November 4 ballot, and the PFAS haters verification percentage has been steady at 78.24%
If that continues to be the case, it means that they will have submitted 484,487 signatures, 20,000 shy of the number needed and the attempt to put AB 1266 on the ballot for repeal will have failed.
We'll find out later this afternoon if that still is the case.
Tuesday, January 07, 2014
Moni's Speech To Houston City Council
TransGriot Note: This is the text of the three minute speech I delivered to the Houston City Council this afternoon during the public comment phase of today's City Council meeting.
Speech To Houston City Council
January 7, 2014
Happy New Year and good afternoon to you Mayor Parker, distinguished members of City Council, and my fellow Houstonians.
I am Monica Roberts, a proud native Houstonian who grew up and resides in District D. I’m standing at this podium today because I’m one of the people that Mayor Parker talked about in her inauguration speech last week and was inspired by it to do so.
As a transgender resident of this city, I’m keenly aware of the fact I'm not covered in this city’s current NDO and don't have the human rights coverage other Houstonians take for granted. I stand here before you today to humbly ask on behalf of myself and other trans Houstonians that when you take up the issue of crafting a comprehensive non-discrimination ordinance that adds sexual orientation and gender identity to protections most Houstonians take for granted, to not forget us.
The late Nelson Mandela once stated, “To deny any person their human rights is to challenge their very humanity.”
Far too often many of our fellow Houstonians are all too willing and eager to do precisely that. It took a court order to stop the Houston Police Department from using the 1904 anti-crossdressing ordinance then on the books in 1975 to harass Anne Mayes and other members of the local LGBT community with it until Phyllis Frye led the nearly four year solo charge to get it repealed in August 1980.
Izza Lopez was forced to sue River Oaks Imaging in 2005 after it discovered during a background check she was transgender. River Oaks Imaging used that reason to rescinded a job offer they had extended to her
Lopez said about what happened," My first emotion when they rescinded the job offer was shock:; I was in disbelief. I had thought that if I passed, I would be able to slip under the radar of society's judgement and disapproval. But I was wrong."
Speaking of society's judgment and disapproval, Tyjanae Moore, was minding her own business at the Houston Public Library back in November 2010 but was arrested for using the bathroom appropriate to her gender presentation. An overzealous female security guard believed gender policing was part of her duties, declared Moore to be in her not so infinite wisdom a ‘man’ and subsequently involved the HPD officer on site in this situation.
And these are just the highly publicized incidents we are aware of. There are probably countless others inside the 628 square miles we call home that go unreported because of the lack of human rights protections and the transpersons involved feel powerless to do anything in response to the injustice aimed at them.
Well today, I'm going to reclaim and own that power on their behalf..
While we have a proud Houston flavored trans history in terms of ICTLEP, (The International Conference of Transgender Law and Employment Policy) happening here from 1992-1997, the Josephine Tittsworth organized Texas Transgender Nondiscrimination Summit, people like the late Kathryn McGuire, Judge Frye, Vanessa Edwards Foster, Lou Weaver, Cristan Williams, Jenifer Rene Pool, Dee Dee Watters, myself and others rising to the challenge of leadership inside and outside our city limits, trans Houstonians and especially trans Houstonians of color feel more like third class citizens of it.
According to the 2011 "Injustice At Every Turn' National Transgender Non Discrimination Survey commissioned by the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, which is having its conference here January 29-February 2, transpeople have an unemployment rate twice the national average of 7%. It’s even more appalling for transgender people of color at 3x the national average.
We face housing discrimination, harassment on various levels from grade school to collegiate campuses to health care and we’re fed up with it.
This shouldn’t be happening in the fourth largest city in the country, and the largest in the great state of Texas. But sadly Houston is now the largest city in the US and the state that doesn’t have an NDO that protects its LGBT citizens from discrimination .
A world class city like ours protects the human rights of all its citizens. It’s past time distinguished council members, to let freedom ring in Houston for the LGBT citizens who live here. You’ll discover that as you expand rights to include us at the Houston family table, you’ll expand them for yourselves and the Houstonians you represent.
I’ll close with the words of Barbara Jordan, a great daughter of our city and paraphrase them so they are applicable to my transgender brothers and sisters.
“What transgender Houstonians want is very simple. We want a Houston that is as good as its promise.”
I and my trans brothers and sisters hope and pray that when you finally have the opportunity to exercise your legislative power to write that comprehensive non discrimination ordinance, you will expeditiously do so.
January 7, 2014
Happy New Year and good afternoon to you Mayor Parker, distinguished members of City Council, and my fellow Houstonians.
I am Monica Roberts, a proud native Houstonian who grew up and resides in District D. I’m standing at this podium today because I’m one of the people that Mayor Parker talked about in her inauguration speech last week and was inspired by it to do so.
As a transgender resident of this city, I’m keenly aware of the fact I'm not covered in this city’s current NDO and don't have the human rights coverage other Houstonians take for granted. I stand here before you today to humbly ask on behalf of myself and other trans Houstonians that when you take up the issue of crafting a comprehensive non-discrimination ordinance that adds sexual orientation and gender identity to protections most Houstonians take for granted, to not forget us.
The late Nelson Mandela once stated, “To deny any person their human rights is to challenge their very humanity.”
Far too often many of our fellow Houstonians are all too willing and eager to do precisely that. It took a court order to stop the Houston Police Department from using the 1904 anti-crossdressing ordinance then on the books in 1975 to harass Anne Mayes and other members of the local LGBT community with it until Phyllis Frye led the nearly four year solo charge to get it repealed in August 1980.
Izza Lopez was forced to sue River Oaks Imaging in 2005 after it discovered during a background check she was transgender. River Oaks Imaging used that reason to rescinded a job offer they had extended to her
Lopez said about what happened," My first emotion when they rescinded the job offer was shock:; I was in disbelief. I had thought that if I passed, I would be able to slip under the radar of society's judgement and disapproval. But I was wrong."
Speaking of society's judgment and disapproval, Tyjanae Moore, was minding her own business at the Houston Public Library back in November 2010 but was arrested for using the bathroom appropriate to her gender presentation. An overzealous female security guard believed gender policing was part of her duties, declared Moore to be in her not so infinite wisdom a ‘man’ and subsequently involved the HPD officer on site in this situation.
And these are just the highly publicized incidents we are aware of. There are probably countless others inside the 628 square miles we call home that go unreported because of the lack of human rights protections and the transpersons involved feel powerless to do anything in response to the injustice aimed at them.
Well today, I'm going to reclaim and own that power on their behalf..
While we have a proud Houston flavored trans history in terms of ICTLEP, (The International Conference of Transgender Law and Employment Policy) happening here from 1992-1997, the Josephine Tittsworth organized Texas Transgender Nondiscrimination Summit, people like the late Kathryn McGuire, Judge Frye, Vanessa Edwards Foster, Lou Weaver, Cristan Williams, Jenifer Rene Pool, Dee Dee Watters, myself and others rising to the challenge of leadership inside and outside our city limits, trans Houstonians and especially trans Houstonians of color feel more like third class citizens of it.
According to the 2011 "Injustice At Every Turn' National Transgender Non Discrimination Survey commissioned by the National Gay and Lesbian Task Force, which is having its conference here January 29-February 2, transpeople have an unemployment rate twice the national average of 7%. It’s even more appalling for transgender people of color at 3x the national average.
We face housing discrimination, harassment on various levels from grade school to collegiate campuses to health care and we’re fed up with it.
This shouldn’t be happening in the fourth largest city in the country, and the largest in the great state of Texas. But sadly Houston is now the largest city in the US and the state that doesn’t have an NDO that protects its LGBT citizens from discrimination .
A world class city like ours protects the human rights of all its citizens. It’s past time distinguished council members, to let freedom ring in Houston for the LGBT citizens who live here. You’ll discover that as you expand rights to include us at the Houston family table, you’ll expand them for yourselves and the Houstonians you represent.
I’ll close with the words of Barbara Jordan, a great daughter of our city and paraphrase them so they are applicable to my transgender brothers and sisters.
“What transgender Houstonians want is very simple. We want a Houston that is as good as its promise.”
I and my trans brothers and sisters hope and pray that when you finally have the opportunity to exercise your legislative power to write that comprehensive non discrimination ordinance, you will expeditiously do so.
Moni's Long H-Town Day
I'm excited about it because it's not only the first Houston City Council meeting I have attended since I returned home, it's the first ever one I've signed up to speak at.
The subject? Give you a wild guess what it's about
The text of the speech will pop up at 3 PM CST for your reading pleasure and those of you in the H-town area will eventually get to maybe see me deliver it on public access cable.
But it's not the only event on my schedule for today. Today will also be the last scheduled meeting for the Houston Host Committee for Creating Change 2014 at the Montrose Center,.Since I missed the last meeting because I didn't want to share my cold with 'errbody' else in the room, definitely want to be there for this one since I was a part of the team of people who were at that first Host Committee meeting back in April.
It's probably going to be a bittersweet and emotional moment when the realization hits us that it is the last scheduled one before CC14 happens at the Hilton Americas.
While it's going to be a long day for me when I return home and I didn't help it by being up until 5:30 AM working on my City Council speech, if the sweat equity I put in today leads to a comprehensive NDO and a wildly successful CC14, then it'll be worth it.
Olympic Gender Drama-Erik Schinegger
With us a month away from the start of what are sure to be the controversial Sochi Olympic Games, here's another one of my posts about Olympic and world class athletes that were embroiled in gender identity or gender related drama either during or in the runup to an Olympic Games. We're going to jump into the wayback machine and go back to the June 19, 1948 birth in Agsdorf, Austria of Erik Schinegger. Erik was raised as a girl named Erika who became a world championship downhill ski racer.
In Portillo, Chile in 1966, 18 year old Erika Schinegger won the title over France's decorated Olympic and world championship skier Marielle Goitschel.
In 1967 because of Marielle Goitschel's and Nancy Greene's of Canada's dominant World Cup season she fell to sixth in the overall standings and relinquished the downhill title to Goitschel.
Grenoble would be the first Winter Games that female competitors would have to submit to such testing, and now 19 year old Erika submitted to it along with the other Austrian skiing hopefuls as part of the formality for competing in the Olympic Games.
Doctors found only male hormones in the saliva of Schinegger, and submitted her to more rigorous scientific and psychiatric testing that led to a shocking discovery for the soon to be 20 year old who had been raised as a girl but was questioning her sexuality at the time.
Schinegger was told by IOC doctors she couldn't compete in the Games because she was chromosomally male and intersex. After digesting and accepting the news Schinegger changed his name to Erik, went on a hormone regimen, started living his life as male and underwent a corrective surgery that revealed he had an internal penis and testicles.
"The discovery was a tremendous shock for me, my parents and everyone who knew me," Schinegger was quoted as saying. "What came afterward was an indescribable torture."
Schinegger subsequently retired from international skiing, got married twice and fathered a daughter in addition to running an inn and a children's ski school in the Carinthia region of Austria.. Schinegger also penned an autobiography entitled Victory Over Myself and during a documentary that was filmed about his life handed his 1966 World Championship gold medal to Marielle Goitschel.
Labels:
international sports,
intersex,
Olympics,
skiing
Monday, January 06, 2014
UH-Downtown Gender Neutral Bathroom Proposal Up For Vote
A proposal is being considered by the UHD student government association on January 10 that would designate two bathrooms (one male, one female) in each of UHD's three buildings as gender neutral restrooms open to anyone.
UHD student body Vice President Kristopher Sharp is pushing the initiative after hearing of trans and gender variant students being either harassed or made to feel so uncomfortable they refrain from using the on campus facilities.
Ever since Sharp's election as student body vice president last April, he has been busy addressing some of the groups that have felt marginalized on campus versus the rest of the student population.
Sharp helped create a GLBT resource center on the UH-Downtown campus, amend the nondiscrimination policy to include sexual orientation and gender identity in the student handbook, and create a diversity committee in the student government focused on finding underrepresented populations, such as international, veteran and LGBT students. A similar diversity committee was also created for administration for faculty, staff and students to look at diversity issues at the university.
Sharp wrote up the proposal after hearing stories about a transfeminine student being confronted twice in the women's restroom. It also has the advantage of being a quick and cheap solution since it requires only a new sign (and possibly instructions) on the door.
The proposal also affects only six of the 60 bathrooms on the UHD campus.
University officials have been working to address the problem by building lockable single stall restrooms of which the first is scheduled to open in February according to John Hudson, director of UHD's new Center for Student Diversity, Equity and Inclusion.
"Others we hope would come on line later in the year," Hudson said in a Houston Chronicle interview. The administration's plan calls for a total of five private restrooms - one in each main building, one near the auditorium and one at the sports center, he said.
Good luck and hope that proposal gets the unanimous vote and passage it deserves..
Labels:
bathrooms,
colleges,
Houston,
Texas,
transgender issues
Statement From The CeCe Support Committee
Here's a statement from the CeCe Support Committee.
Dear CeCe McDonald supporters,
The rumors are true: CeCe is scheduled to be released from prison in January. She will wait and write a public statement about her release after she gets out of prison, because she wants to tell you all in her own words and own time. She would like to spend her first days out in privacy, with people she feels close to. Again, information about her release will be shared when CeCe feels it is the right time to do so. In the meantime, she and her support committee ask everyone to be patient.
We are excited to throw her a party, the weekend after her release. As soon as the venue and date are confirmed, we will announce! This party is a chance for everyone who has been supporting CeCe to come out and celebrate her release with her.
Many of you are eager to send contributions of money or materials, to aid in her transition home. Keep an eye on the FreeCece Mcdonald Facebook page for specific 'asks' in the future. Right now, because of the incredible support of her community here in Minneapolis and around the world, she will be safe, comfortable, and cared for when she rejoins us. Please consider sending a donation to other incarcerated people or abolition movements. (Check out the Rainbow Defense Fund http://
Thanks everyone for supporting CeCe, and for supporting her now in the way she most needs: with your patience.
~ CeCe Support Committee
Labels:
legal/justice,
Minnesota,
transgender issues
Carmen And Laverne On Katie Show Today
While the Katie show has already been cancelled after its two seasons on the air, the shows that have already been taped still have to being broadcast.
One of the shows in the can and scheduled for broadcast will involve Carmen Carrera and Laverne Cox.
These two lovely ladies will be gracing our television screens today. Katie will be discussing in Laverne's case of course her groundbreaking role in Orange Is The New Black and the realities that trans people have to face.
Carmen will talk about her transition fears, her blossoming career as a model and the fan sponsored petition to have her walk the runway as a Victoria's Secret Angel.
If you wish you find what local station in your area broadcasts the show and at what time for your market (in Houston it's broadcast at 3:00 PM CST on KTRK-TV Channel 13), you can click on this station finder link to do so.
Labels:
#girlslikeus,
media,
talk shows,
television,
transgender issues
OutSmart Article On Creating Change 2014
Christina Gorczynski, one of our Houston Host Committee Co-Chairs,wrote an article that published in the latest issue of it concerning the rapidly approaching January 29-February 2 date of Creating Change Houston style.
And yeah, as you probably guessed, a certain blogger y'all know and love was quoted in it.
And for those of you traveling to Houston wondering if I'm going to be there for CC14, um yeah. This is my birthplace and hometown (although Louisville likes to claim me as theirs, too). I've been part of the team helping put it together since April and I'm already scheduled for two panel discussions. You think I was going to miss a Creating Change in my backyard?
Here's the link to it, and looking forward to seeing everyone who is going to be part of the record breaking crowd we are expecting at the Hilton Americas Hotel in a few weeks.
Labels:
Creating Change,
Houston,
Houston GLBT community,
Texas
Sunday, January 05, 2014
UT Fans Welcome Their New Coach To Austin
As I've stated in other UT related blog posts, I'm not a Texas Longhorns fan because I've had negative run-ins with elements of their arrogant and racist fanbase while I was a student at UH during the SWC days.
In fact, it makes my day when I see their precious $140 million dollar football team of five star recruits get its collective butt kicked by teams that have less cashflow and had to work harder to get their players
But did have to comment on Charlie Strong becoming the first African-American head coach of their football program. Word is that Strong has accepted their offer and is about to sign a contract that pays him $5 million a year over the next five years to break the UT coaching color line.
In fact, it makes my day when I see their precious $140 million dollar football team of five star recruits get its collective butt kicked by teams that have less cashflow and had to work harder to get their players
But did have to comment on Charlie Strong becoming the first African-American head coach of their football program. Word is that Strong has accepted their offer and is about to sign a contract that pays him $5 million a year over the next five years to break the UT coaching color line.
Congratulations and good luck, brother, you're gonna need it.
LSUFreek put up at his blog this awesome GIF of the reaction that Strong's hiring as the Longhorn head coach has generated with elements of UT's demanding fanbase.
.
And yeah, also not happy about the problematic reporting coming out of the Dallas-Ft Worth area about it too.
If Closeted TBLG People Are Harming BTLG People's Human Rights, Out 'Em
In the wake of the outing of three more closeted Pink Republicans, the debate has been stirred up in LGBT World once again as to whether it is ethical or moral to do so and whether it harms or helps our rainbow human rights movement. Here's my take on outing. If the person in question holds a position of policy making, judicial or legislative power, and is consistently using it to negatively impact the TBLG community while being GLBT themselves, yeah, you need to be outed and called on it.
I have no sympathy for you in this case because self hating closeted people are problematic. Self hating closeted people with policy making, legislative or judicial power who consistently use it to negatively impact the human rights of a marginalized group are dangerous to not only themselves, but the marginalized group they are a part of.
But for an example of a person from the GLBT community who was in a decision making capability who repeatedly acted in ways to harm the community, you need look no further than Ken Mehlman.
He was Director of the White House Office of Political Affairs from 2001-2005, ran the 2004 GW Bush reelection campaign and was chairman of the Republican Party from 2005-2007 until he came out three years later.
Mehlman was quite aware that Karl Rove was working with other Republicans to put anti-gay referenda and anti-gay marriage amendments on the 2004 and 2006 ballots to cynically increase turnout for those election cycles, but said and did nothing about it. Worse, he stacked much paper while remaining mute.
So he came out. Big fracking deal because the damage has already been done and he's long since cashed his checks for his reprehensible work. We are going to be spending the next decade or so unraveling the damage to our human rights this self hater caused. It is time, energy and money that could have been spent focusing on other issues of important to our community.
So when it comes to people like this who only care about themselves, their personal power, prestige and bank accounts while screwing the rest of us, then yeah, out 'em.
Labels:
glbt community,
human rights,
outing,
sellouts
Using Our Pain To Make You Money
It had an entrance designed to look like a smiling blackface picture of an African American porter. As you approached The Coon Chicken Inn, you would see a large head with huge lips and a porter’s hat over the exaggerated features that portrayed African Americans as a denigrated cartoon character. Customers would enter the restaurant through the sculpture’s mouth, and the trademarks and advertising for the restaurant featured the same reprehensibly racist caricature.
Items on The Coon Chicken Inn's menu were southern fried Coon Chicken sandwiches and the Baby Coon Chicken special. African Americans were hired as waiters, waitresses, and cooks but were discouraged from frequenting the venue as customers or enjoying its dance floor.
The karmic wheel caught up with it in early July 1927 as the restaurant caught fire sometime around 6 PM. But a group of 50 people rebuilt the Coon Chicken Inn and had it back in operation within days. The Coon Chicken Inn later expanded to Portland and Seattle and the chain's three locations were in operation until the late 1950's
Leanne Snelgrove owns the Taco Cid restaurant in Columbia, SC and her vanillacentric privileged behind thought it would be a hilarious and wonderful idea to promote her restaurant with an offensive T-shirt that states 'How To Catch An Illegal Immigrant'.
It has a graphic of a box trap propped up by a stick with two tacos underneath it that employees of the eatery also wear.
It went viral after Corey Hutchins took a picture of this full of fail shirt and posted it to his Twitter account. Predictably, Snelgrove doesn't think the shirt is racist and proceeded to whitesplain it in media interviews and on the restaurant's website.
It’s
so cute when white-owned businesses, restaurants, etc., in an effort to
prove how bold, hip and modern they are, hide behind marketing
campaigns in demonstrating their resentment of people of color and other
marginalized bodies all in the name of sticking it to political
correctness. I can’t imagine just how awesome these folks must feel to
know their creativity is so dismal that they have to step on the backs
of oppressed groups just to get ahead. - See more at:
http://newblackwoman.com/2013/01/11/today-in-post-racial-america-restaurant-uses-xenophobia-to-promote-business/#sthash.ZT3Pxpk3.aFldB9ik.dpuf
We're tired of you using our pain to make you money, and hope that message came through loud and clear during that dustup. Sadly I have the feeling it didn't
Saturday, January 04, 2014
Janet Mock's 'Redefining Realness' Due In February
Despite the fact I get a chance to converse with her from time to time when both our busy schedules allow it, I'm still like many of you megaexcited that her book Redefining Realness is being released one month from now on February 4.
These are some of the early reviews about her book.
“Of the book’s many strengths, the most notable is its political bite. Mock defies the historically apolitical confines of the transgender memoir…[and] take[s] the uninitiated, non-transgender reader with her.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Undercurrents of strong emotion swirl throughout this well-written book…An enlightening, much-needed perspective on transgender identity.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“Redefining Realness is loving, searing, and true.”
—Jennifer Finney Boylan, New York Times bestselling author of She’s Not There
“Redefining Realness is a classic American autobiography. Like Richard Wright and Maya Angelou, Janet Mock brings us into a world we may not know.”
—Barbara Smith, author of The Truth That Never Hurts
“Redefining Realness is a riveting, emotional, crisply written testimony. I couldn’t put it down!”
—Laverne Cox, actress, advocate and star of Orange Is the New Black
“Redefining Realness overflows with the everyday magic of survival and resiliency.”
—Susan Stryker, author of Transgender History
I'm looking forward to reading it, and hope you will pick it up when it hits your fave local bookstore. If you have local independent bookstores, support Janet and them by purchasing it from them or hit your fave online retailer or chain bookstore to do so as well.
Let's do our part to push this book toward the New York Times Best Seller List.
Also looking forward to seeing her in H-town when her book tour finally makes it to my part of the country
These are some of the early reviews about her book.
“Of the book’s many strengths, the most notable is its political bite. Mock defies the historically apolitical confines of the transgender memoir…[and] take[s] the uninitiated, non-transgender reader with her.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Undercurrents of strong emotion swirl throughout this well-written book…An enlightening, much-needed perspective on transgender identity.”
—Kirkus Reviews
“Redefining Realness is loving, searing, and true.”
—Jennifer Finney Boylan, New York Times bestselling author of She’s Not There
“Redefining Realness is a classic American autobiography. Like Richard Wright and Maya Angelou, Janet Mock brings us into a world we may not know.”
—Barbara Smith, author of The Truth That Never Hurts
“Redefining Realness is a riveting, emotional, crisply written testimony. I couldn’t put it down!”
—Laverne Cox, actress, advocate and star of Orange Is the New Black
“Redefining Realness overflows with the everyday magic of survival and resiliency.”
—Susan Stryker, author of Transgender History
I'm looking forward to reading it, and hope you will pick it up when it hits your fave local bookstore. If you have local independent bookstores, support Janet and them by purchasing it from them or hit your fave online retailer or chain bookstore to do so as well.
Let's do our part to push this book toward the New York Times Best Seller List.
Also looking forward to seeing her in H-town when her book tour finally makes it to my part of the country
Labels:
#girlslikeus,
African American transwoman,
books
Homegoing Services For Minister Bobbie Jean Baker January 11
For those of you who may not have heard the tragic news, our West Coast sister Minister Bobbie Jean Baker was killed in a hit and run accident January 1 after attending a New Year's Eve watch service.
Here's the information about the homegoing service for those of you on the Left Coast who want to pay your last respects to our sister who was very active in the trans* faith community.
It will be officiated by Bishop Yvette Flunder and take place next Saturday, January 11 at First Congregational Oakland UCC starting at 1 PM PST.
Address of the church is 2501 Harrison St, Oakland, CA.
For those of you in the Bay Area whose lives she touched, I hope you will consider attending and being there in body for those of us who would like to be there but can only do so in spirit.
Let's fill that sanctuary up as a tribute to her and in honor of her years spent in service to our community
If there are any updates to the story, I will pass them along as soon as I get them.
Here's the information about the homegoing service for those of you on the Left Coast who want to pay your last respects to our sister who was very active in the trans* faith community.
It will be officiated by Bishop Yvette Flunder and take place next Saturday, January 11 at First Congregational Oakland UCC starting at 1 PM PST.Address of the church is 2501 Harrison St, Oakland, CA.
For those of you in the Bay Area whose lives she touched, I hope you will consider attending and being there in body for those of us who would like to be there but can only do so in spirit.
Let's fill that sanctuary up as a tribute to her and in honor of her years spent in service to our community
If there are any updates to the story, I will pass them along as soon as I get them.
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