Rethinking the opposition to Measure 8
Nov. 19th, 2008 12:25 pmYes, the opposition to Measure 8 was a good thing, and it was great that there was there was this groundswell of public outcry about it and protests -- across the country, even; the local paper in Austin had a large bit about theirs.
But some people in the GLBT community -- including some of my friends -- have a 1-in-12 chance of getting murdered just for who they are in a gendered sense. Tomorrow is the International Day of Remembrance for the victims of anti-transgender violence. Last year in Portland, only about 40 people showed up. Maybe we could pay attention to this, too?
But some people in the GLBT community -- including some of my friends -- have a 1-in-12 chance of getting murdered just for who they are in a gendered sense. Tomorrow is the International Day of Remembrance for the victims of anti-transgender violence. Last year in Portland, only about 40 people showed up. Maybe we could pay attention to this, too?
no subject
Date: 2008-11-19 08:53 pm (UTC)I guess I still read "but" as "everything I said before this is invalid." This is reinforced by the choice of words in the title... Are you really rethinking the measure 8 opposition? Or are you wanting to expand that outcry and protests to the GLBT community?
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Date: 2008-11-19 09:07 pm (UTC)If I didn't have a friend who was directly impacted by this, I wouldn't have even known that tomorrow was the tenth annual day of remembrance for the victims. And that bothers me, especially in contrast.
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Date: 2008-11-19 09:13 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-19 10:07 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-11-20 04:25 am (UTC)Also, much of the article you link to was about how the HRC "took over" the Day of Remembrance and brought in people to speak. According to the article, those speakers don't represent transgendered people, and the HRC just whitewashed the whole event to make it presentable and acceptable. By not mentioning transgendered people specifically in your post, you basically did the same thing as the HRC.
Let's not marginalize transgendered people out of the GLBT community.
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Date: 2008-11-20 04:39 am (UTC)My intent was not to marginalize transgendered people, but to emphasize that they are part of us, where so many people see "transgender" and think of them as other, and their issues as unrelated. By speaking of them without qualifiers, I meant to emphasize that they are first and foremost "people", to avoid that dismissiveness.
In any case, I've edited the post a touch to make this clearer.
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Date: 2008-11-20 05:59 am (UTC)Oh, I noticed that wording first time I read your post. I just don't think it clarifies that you are talking about transgendered people. I don't see how your wording emphasizes the T part of GLBT anymore than saying "some people in the blonde-brunette-redheaded community" emphasizes redheads or saying that "some people in the Asian-American community" emphasizes Japanese immigrants.
Thanks for clarifying the original post a bit. If somebody wants to attend a TDOR (Transgendered Day Of Remembrance) event, I'd like to point them to this site: http://www.transgenderdor.org/ it lists where to find TDOR events in cities all over the world.
no subject
Date: 2008-11-20 07:38 pm (UTC)