The 14th of February was a very revealing experience to live through this year, and that was not because of a great night enjoying pink champagne and salmon sashimi with my partner. It was the UK mainstream media that made it significant.
The attitude of the gutter press when reporting the death of Reeva Steenkamp lifted the lid on an industry still intent on plumbing further depths in spite of the Leveson Inquiry. Led downwards as usual by Rupert Murdoch’s papers’ increasingly desperate attempts to attract readers after a good section of the population has clearly decided never again to by the Sun, the ‘sexy’ images of the murdered woman adorned the front page in place of the usual wankfodder.
Yet that same mainstream media also failed to report at all on the worldwide demonstrations of women against rape and violence against women which constituted the Billionrise movement. This movement, which had originated largely in the 3rd World from the catalyst of the appalling gang-rape and murder of a young student in Delhi, represented millions of women campaigning against the violence and rape which ruins the lives of a billion women worldwide, including transwomen, young girls, married women, lesbians, rich women and poor women of all races. The fact that a third of the female population of this planet is suffering from male-perpetrated violence is a huge issue. It is an issue that makes the other issues of the day pale into insignificance.
Yet it was ignored by the mainstream media (with the notable exceptions of the Guardian, New Statesman and Independent) In particular the BBC failed to report it, preferring to lead with the report of Reeva Steenkamp’s murder.
So my question is this: which is worse, the treatment of Reeva by an increasingly pathetic and desperate Rupert Murdoch or the deliberate censorship of this issue by the BBC, an organization which should be more impartial and carry stories which go beyond the cosy rightwing misogynistic media consensus of the Mail and Murdoch?
The Steenkamp murder and the Billon Women Rise media event and non-event illustrates how deeply complicit mainstream media is in the oppression of women. One, high-profile example of male violence against women dominates the headlines on a day when millions of women worldwide were demonstrating against violence against women. Yet the media failed to draw any link whatsoever between the two, indeed it is likely that the latter was deliberately ignored as a matter of policy.
This represents a deliberate erasure of women and women’s issues. When the Murdoch news-for-wankers treatment of Reeva Steenkamp is factored in, the episode reveals a concerted policy of oppression of women; not simply a misogynistic culture within the media, not simply institutionalised misogyny, but a deliberate ideology of oppression. The mainstream, rightwing media is, of course, known as an oppressive machine, which exists to impose rightwing political dogma and suppress anything opposed to that, but the lengths to which they are prepared to go to reinforce women’s suppression is quite breathtaking in this case, and certainly very revealing.
As a trans woman I am used to experience a media-imposed culture which legitimized hate-crime and delegitimizes my identity, this episode demonstrates the lengths this media machine is prepared to go to oppress all women. This is an area where trans people can have common cause with those women campaigning against media misogyny…
Monday, 18 February 2013
Monday, 4 February 2013
Translation of article about Fernanda Milan in Danish newspaper Politiken
BY FLEMMING CHRISTIANSEN
"Transgender human rights activist Fernanda
Milán from Guatemala was due to be deported from Denmark after refusal of
asylum.
But now Refugee Board has changed his mind.
It is the first time a transgender person seeking asylum has obtained
protection in this country. Fernanda Milán has even been recognized as
'genuine' refugee under the UN Refugee Convention.
Fundamental importance
The Asylum Counselor in the organization LGBT
Denmark (National Association for gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender
people) Søren Laursen is no doubt that the decision is of great fundamental
importance.
"Now it has been established that
people who are persecuted in their home country because of their sexuality or
gender identity, need the same protection as other groups," says Søren
Laursen.
Fernanda Milán herself was almost disbelief
when she got the message. "Finally justice, I thought."
Since she was little, she felt that her
body was wrong, so even at the age of 14 she began taking female hormones. She
has experienced persecution and violence in her homeland, where police have
threatened her – but also because she went public and openly fought for
transgender people's rights.
In Guatemala, trans people have few opportunities
but to earn a living out of prostitution. Fernanda left the country and ended
up in a brothel in Jutland in 2009, and after a police raid she came in contact
with the organization's Nest International – but even in Denmark, life has not
been easy.
Fernanda Milán has talked about humiliation
and abuse committed by other asylum seekers in asylum center Sandholm.
Rare refugee status
Shortly after the rejection of asylum in
September LGBT Denmark wrote to the Refugee Board arguiing that Denmark protects
sexual minority asylum-seekers far worse than many other countries.
People who are persecuted in their home
country because of their sexuality or gender identity, can have an equal need
of protection as other groups
Søren Laursen, Asylum Counselor in the
organization LGBT Denmark said "Already in Denmark, in certain cases there have been gay, lesbian and
transgender people who called protection. But refugee status under the UN
Convention, which gives more rights, had never been granted.
The answer came in a letter, in which the
Board found that "LGBT people will in their view be recognized as
belonging to a particular social group and thus covered by the Refugee
Convention." Since the new message is Fernanda’s refugee status has become
a reality.
She has here been strongly supported by
grassroots organization T-Refugee, and according to spokesperson Stine Larsen
also that transgender future easier could get asylum - because now the Refugee
Convention in the back.
The long and torturous case demonstrates in
Stine Larsen's view, however, that "it can be completely random who gets
asylum '.
"But we are pleased that it pays to
fight alongside people like Fernanda. Many strings were pulled, and it is a
testament to the fact that Denmark, after all, is a democracy. "
Lawyer Gunnar Homann, who has led the
proceedings before the Refugee Board, is in no doubt about the importance of
the Decision. "It will probably also lead to homosexuals being able to
claim the status of UN refugees," he said.
The decision of Fernanda Milan's case came
in November, but the support group has not publicized it until now because
Fernanda did not feel well at the time. She tells Politiken that she has been
exhausted after all this struggle.
"But now I have to make me a future
and find jobs. And I will continue to work for justice for transgender people
and others whose human rights are not recognized. ""
Translated from Danish by Natacha Kennedy
Fernanda Milan: Activism Works!
“The most common way people give up their
power is by thinking they don’t have any.” Said
Alice Walker, that has always been something activists bear in mind when they
work for change.
On the 14th of August last year,
a Swedish friend of mine posted a newspaper article about a Guatemalan trans
woman who had been through a terrible ordeal trying to seek asylum in Denmark
from persecution in her home country.
After I read it, I felt so angry that the Danish Asylum Board had
decided to send this woman, Fernanda Milan, back to Guatemala, on the 17th
of September, barely 5 weeks later, so I decided to translate
the article into English and it was picked up by the LGBT Press around the
world, even being retranslated into Spanish.
Various forms of activism both online,
offline, through personal contacts using the new technology of social
networking, the old technology of email, and positively antediluvian technology
of the telephone, took place during that time. There were demonstrations in Copenhagen, in
Madrid and here in London. The demonstration we held outside the Danish Embassy
in Knightsbridge was effective. Denmark doesn’t get many demonstrations outside
its embassies; indeed the last one anyone can remember was Muslims
demonstrating against cartoons in a Danish newspaper in 2006. Our
demonstration made it into EkstraBladet, the largest circulation tabloid in
Denmark.
At the eleventh hour a message was received
that the Danish Asylum Review Board had decided to grant Fernanda a stay of
execution. Her case was reexamined and new representations were made.
Information was collected from studies by the UN, the Organisation of American
States and Oasis, the LGBT rights organization for which Fernanda had worked in
Guatemala. They all confirmed how trans people in Guatemala are systematically
murdered, and that Fernanda herself had had death threats from the police.
A few weeks later the Danish Asylum Board
announced that it would now recognise as valid reasons for seeking asylum, persecution
on the grounds of gender identity and sexual orientation. A couple of weeks
after that on the 27th November, they granted Fernanda Milan
permanent leave to remain in Denmark, protected under the UN refugee
convention.
The support organization, hastily put
together in Denmark, called T-Refugee Project, to support her was, of course
very happy with this result but they were still angry. In answer to why they
are only announcing her victory today Stine Larsen of the T-Refugee Project
said;
"We are
very relieved that our struggle, together with Fernanda, ended in her being
granted asylum. But it has been a soul-destroying asylum process with an
initial refusal which was then reversed just three days before her scheduled
deportation on 17 September 2012. Fernanda has needed time and space to recover
from this ordeal. That's why we are only publicising the good news now."
Fernanda added; "I am very grateful to
all the people who have helped me to fight, because in the end I could not have
done it on my own."
Activism works, solidarity works. Trans
people are now able to obtain asylum in Denmark, but the story does not end
there. The reason Fernanda had problems was that she arrived and claimed asylum
in one of the three countries that had opted out of the EU agreement to
recognize persecution on the grounds of gender identity as a valid reason to
claim asylum. The two other countries to
opt out of this agreement are the Republic of Ireland and the United Kingdom.
So far the UK government seems to have made no clear declaration either way on
the issue of trans refugees. It is time they clarified their position.
If Fernanda Milan had been deported to
Guatemala on the 17th September, it is highly likely she would have
been one of the 265 names we read out at the Transgender Day of Remembrance ceremony
on Nov 20th. There are no
transgender people in Guatemala over the age of 35, they are all murdered by
then, either by vigilantes, the police or because, excluded from education or
work, they have to resort to sex work, which puts them in vulnerable positions.
In the 6 weeks leading up to the 17th September there were four
recorded murders of trans people in Guatemala, in a population only around one
and a half times the size of London. With the Guatemalan police looking for
her, there is little doubt that by now she would have been a charred or
dismembered corpse in a remote roadside ditch. Instead she is alive. She is
only alive because of activism by trans people and their supporters.
It looks like the
activism is not going to end there; the last word on this from Fernanda;
”I have been a transgender person all my life. And I have been fighting
against prejudice as long as I remember. I had to flee from Guatemala because I
was fighting for human rights. Now I have the chance to live my life as a woman
and an activist. Now I want to keep on the fight for a better world, where
everybody can be educated, work, create families and live a dignifying life
regardless of their gender identity,”
Press Release from T-Refugee Project, Denmark
Press
Release by the T-Refugee Project, Copenhagen, Denmark, Embargoed until;
First
transgender
person granted asylum in Denmark
In the
Autumn of last year Transgender woman Fernanda Milán from Guatemala was refused
asylum. But after protests from an asylum Initiative; the T-Refugee Project, and a number of individual campaigners, her
case was reexamined by the asylum board and she was granted indefinite leave to
remain in Denmark as an official refugee on the 26 November 2012, recognised
under the UN Refugee Convention.
The T-Refugee Project is delighted that
Fernanda Milán has
now been granted asylum, but is angry that she was forced to go through lengthy
and gruelling proceedings. Fernanda Milán was granted asylum on 26 November 2012, but did not want
to publicise the news until now.
Stine
Larsen, of the T-Refugee Project
says:
"We
are very relieved that our struggle, together with Fernanda, ended in her being
granted asylum. But it has been a soul-destroying asylum process with an
initial refusal which was then reversed just three days before her scheduled
deportation on 17 September 2012. Fernanda has needed time and space to recover
from this ordeal. That's why we are only publicising the good news now. "
Fernanda
Milán
added
"I
am very grateful to all the people who have helped me to fight, because in the
end I could not have done it on my own."
Even
before Fernanda was granted asylum, there were signs that the campaign by
asylum activists was going to succeed. Following a request from campaigner Søren Laursen the Refugee Board
sent a letter stating that the Board will from now on consider persecution on
the grounds of gender identity and sexuality relevant factors in any asylum
case.
Søren Laursen believes that this case casts doubt on earlier refusals
of asylum to trans people:
"Looking at the big picture, I am very pleased that there
was so much focus on this case. As transgender asylum seekers are a highly
overlooked group. There have only been a few trans cases before the Refugee
Board the last twenty years, and they were all rejected. From what we know of
them, I think there is reason to question those decisions. It is therefore very
satisfying that there is now a case that has received a thorough examination
and which has been successful. "
Fernanda at the forefront of the struggle.
With the
success of Fernanda's asylum case, it has been determined that new policies in
this area can permanently benefit transgender and LGB asylum seekers.
Stine
Larsen says:
"Fernanda
has been fighting from the front. She has been fighting for her own survival,
but she has also fought for transgender asylum seekers who will come after her.
We hope Fernanda's case means it will be easier for future transgender asylum
seekers. "
"Fernanda
was granted asylum according to the UN convention on refugees, because the
decision in this case emphasised that she was individually and specifically
persecuted on the basis of her gender identity.
"Fernanda
Milán's
own case afforded us a grim insight into Danish asylum policies. And she knows
that asylum seekers can not necessarily count on fair treatment.
"UNHCR
Refugee Convention status for other refugees is not necessarily guaranteed in
the future, because I have been granted asylum. The Refugee Board's new policy
was a step in the right direction, but I think it is important that activists
hold them to it in future asylum cases, " says Fernanda Milán.
A victory for Danish activism
As well
as being a victory for Fernanda's case and for transgender refugees, the
positive outcome is also a victory for activism in Denmark.
Stine
Larsen says:
"I
do not think the Refugee Board would have granted Fernanda asylum if neither Søren Laursen, eminent
researchers and other groups and individuals hadn't argued for asylum for
transgender and gay, lesbian and bisexual people who risk persecution in their
countries of origin. I think the change in the board's decision in Fernanda's
case was due to the hard work of many different activists have put into the
campaign for Fernanda. "
An international victory
The
Refugee Board's policy change is also a victory for cooperation between
activists across national borders. And it is a victory for international human
rights bodies and groups like ILGA Europe and the UNHCR.
The
T-Refugee Project believes that the other European countries that are lagging
behind UN recommendations on asylum for gender and sexual minorities, ie. The
UK and Ireland, should follow Denmark and change course, and extend their
asylum criteria to include gender identity and sexual orientation.
"Now
we hope that the door Fernanda has opened in Denmark will mean that the UK and
Ireland also realise that persecution on the grounds of gender identity and
sexuality are valid grounds for seeking asylum. We will keep closely watching
what happens in the two countries in the future, "said Stine Larsen.
Natacha
Kennedy, a campaigner for trans rights in the UK said "Fernanda's case
shows clearly that activism works. Trans activists in the UK are particularly
pleased with this result. Many trans people and trans allies supported Fernanda
with action in the UK. Now the UK government needs to clarify its position on
trans refugees."
Fernanda's future
Life is
difficult for asylum seekers in Denmark. And transgender asylum seekers are
some of the most marginalised. Fernanda once said that encountering Denmark was
the worst 'blind date' ever. Now she has been granted asylum and is going to
live her life in Denmark.
The T-Refugee Project is a group campaigning
for Denmark to comply with Refugee Convention recommendations on gender and
sexuality.
FOR more information
T-Refugee
Project: t.refugee @ gmail.com / www.tlounge.dk / trefugee
Facebook:
T-Refugee Project / Save Fernanda Milan
The
Refugee Board's response to Søren Laursen:
http://panbloggen.wordpress.com/2012/10/26/lgbt-flygtninge-nyt-statusvalg/
Demonstration
in Copenhagen: 'Asylum for Fernanda Milán' manifestation
Demonstration
in Madrid:
https://www.facebook.com/events/179424342182357/
UNHCR:
Refugee protection: A Guide to International Refugee Law p 43
UNHCR:
About the concerns of LGBT asylum seekers in the beneficiary states:
http://www.unhcr.org/505b27336.html
ILGA:
http://www.ilga-europe.org/home/guide/country_by_country/denmark/fernanda_milan
The UN
Human Rights Committee: About LGBT conditions in countries of origin:
http://www.ecoi.net/file_upload/1930_1340012793_ccpr-c-gtm-co-3-en.pdf
PRESS
PHOTOS
Press
photos can be purchased from the T-Refugee
Project photographer.
The T-Refugee PROJECT AND FERNANDA -THE BACKGROUND
Fernanda
Milán
fled Guatemala after including being attacked and threatened by the police. She
has for many years lived as a transgender person and worked for transgender
rights in Guatemala.
In
protest against the initial rejection of Fernanda's asylum application by the
Refugee Board, activists formed a support group called the T-Refugee Project. In September Stine Larsen, one of the activists
in the T-Refugee Project said that
the Fernanda Milan asylum case was full of errors:
"Fernanda
Milan's case does not take sufficient account of the fact that her work for
transgender rights means that she is in imminent danger of being individually
persecuted in Guatemala."
According
to information from the T-Refugee Project
there have previously been three transgender asylum-seekers in Denmark. They
were all refused asylum, like many
homosexuals.
FACTS:
REFUGEES THE COMMISSION CONSIDERS THAT GENDER IDENTITY MAY BE A CRITERION FOR
ASYLUM
UNHCR
(the UN refugee commission) recommends member states, and thus Denmark take
into account that gender identity can be a cause of persecution and thus
criteria for asylum. Until September 2012, Denmark did not adopt these
recommendations but the positive outcome of Fernanda's asylum case demonstrated
that gender identity and sexuality can now be recognised as an aspect of the
legal acknowledgement of this social group.
FACTS:
ABOUT TRANSGENDER PEOPLE
Being
transgender means to have a gender identity that does not match the body you
were born with. For example, Fernanda Milán identifies as a woman, but was born with a male body.
Being transgender is not a sexual orientation like hetero- or homosexuality.
Transgender people's sexual identity be both eg hetero- or homosexual.
Thursday, 17 January 2013
An open (hearted) letter to Suzanne Moore
Dear Suzanne,
Like Paris Lees, I am a long-term admirer of you and your writing. Your articles have always been a breath of fresh air and often helped me understand that it is the world that is mad not me. So everything Paris wrote in her open letter to you, goes for me too.
Getting to the point, I would like to ask you to reconsider you tweet about suing Pinknews. Not only is there nothing you could possibly sue them for but you might help silence one of the few places where the murders of trans people around the world get reported in this country.
I have to declare an interest here; I am one of the team that organises the London International Transgender Day of Remembrance. I have volunteered to do it, despite heavy work committmemnts pulling me in other directions, because it is the only way we can bring people's attention to the obscene numbers of trans people being murdered around the world, and especially in Latin America. The Transgender Day of Remembrance this year saw such an increase in numbers that, for the first time we had to stop lighting real candles and use battery-powered ones because the smoke pollution they were causing in the room.
We also worked hard to find Spanish and Portuguese speakers who are trans, so that we can get right the pronuncuation of the names of the dead people. Finding trans people who can speak Portuguese proved difficult even in cosmopolitan London, but we found two who soldiered bravely through the 124 names until they were both overcome with emotion. I know it doesn't seem a difficult thing to do; read out a list of names, but I was one of the readers two years ago when there were "only"180 names altogether (there were 265 worldwide this time), I managed to get through without crying but wept almost uncontrolably afterwards. Believe it or not it was one of the hardest things I have ever done. Every name could have been me or my friends.
The reason why we keep this tradition going, and it has been going since 1998, is to keep alive the memories of our sisters and brothers who have been killed for being just like us. The world needs to know about this, we are a small and relatively powerless minority, even more so in global terms, so all we can uselfully do is bring it to people's attention, which is what TDoR is about.
So I want to ask, please, please do not make this about you. It is not about you, and no-one could ever read into the Pink News article that the death of Cecilia Marahouse is going to have any connection, however tentative, with you. However the fact that she has been murdered needs to be got out there. As far as we are concerned, any publicity about this issue is good publicity, but now is the time to allow the real story to be heard, that is the only way we will ever be able to bring pressure on governments in Latin America to change their ways. Work is under way already but it is difficult.
I recently met Mariela Castro who has worked hard for trans rights in Cuba, she is trying to spread understanding of trans issues throughout Latin America; she has recently started to make some tentative inroads with the Guatemalan government for example. But these governments will not listen to her without international pressure, and with the World Cup next year and Olympics two years after that, there are fears of an even greater bloodbath than that which trans people currently experience in Brazil.
We feel angry about the murders and at the same time powerless to stop them, but we are using whatever tiny influence and leverage we can find to stop out brothers and sisters form dying. Last year a young transwoman was tortured to death by a mob of 400 people in La Paz, Bolivia; plenty of others were killed in religious-style stonings across Latin America.
So please make this about them, not you. This is not about getting one back on you, this is about charred bodies in remote ditches, it is about drive-by shootings, it is about bodies of teenagers with multiple stab wounds or bullet holes, it is about religious-style stonings.
A constructive response on your part would also restore your reputation conmsiderably, especially amongst trans people and our supporters.
Yours sincerely,
Natacha Kennedy
Like Paris Lees, I am a long-term admirer of you and your writing. Your articles have always been a breath of fresh air and often helped me understand that it is the world that is mad not me. So everything Paris wrote in her open letter to you, goes for me too.
Getting to the point, I would like to ask you to reconsider you tweet about suing Pinknews. Not only is there nothing you could possibly sue them for but you might help silence one of the few places where the murders of trans people around the world get reported in this country.
I have to declare an interest here; I am one of the team that organises the London International Transgender Day of Remembrance. I have volunteered to do it, despite heavy work committmemnts pulling me in other directions, because it is the only way we can bring people's attention to the obscene numbers of trans people being murdered around the world, and especially in Latin America. The Transgender Day of Remembrance this year saw such an increase in numbers that, for the first time we had to stop lighting real candles and use battery-powered ones because the smoke pollution they were causing in the room.
We also worked hard to find Spanish and Portuguese speakers who are trans, so that we can get right the pronuncuation of the names of the dead people. Finding trans people who can speak Portuguese proved difficult even in cosmopolitan London, but we found two who soldiered bravely through the 124 names until they were both overcome with emotion. I know it doesn't seem a difficult thing to do; read out a list of names, but I was one of the readers two years ago when there were "only"180 names altogether (there were 265 worldwide this time), I managed to get through without crying but wept almost uncontrolably afterwards. Believe it or not it was one of the hardest things I have ever done. Every name could have been me or my friends.
The reason why we keep this tradition going, and it has been going since 1998, is to keep alive the memories of our sisters and brothers who have been killed for being just like us. The world needs to know about this, we are a small and relatively powerless minority, even more so in global terms, so all we can uselfully do is bring it to people's attention, which is what TDoR is about.
So I want to ask, please, please do not make this about you. It is not about you, and no-one could ever read into the Pink News article that the death of Cecilia Marahouse is going to have any connection, however tentative, with you. However the fact that she has been murdered needs to be got out there. As far as we are concerned, any publicity about this issue is good publicity, but now is the time to allow the real story to be heard, that is the only way we will ever be able to bring pressure on governments in Latin America to change their ways. Work is under way already but it is difficult.
I recently met Mariela Castro who has worked hard for trans rights in Cuba, she is trying to spread understanding of trans issues throughout Latin America; she has recently started to make some tentative inroads with the Guatemalan government for example. But these governments will not listen to her without international pressure, and with the World Cup next year and Olympics two years after that, there are fears of an even greater bloodbath than that which trans people currently experience in Brazil.
We feel angry about the murders and at the same time powerless to stop them, but we are using whatever tiny influence and leverage we can find to stop out brothers and sisters form dying. Last year a young transwoman was tortured to death by a mob of 400 people in La Paz, Bolivia; plenty of others were killed in religious-style stonings across Latin America.
So please make this about them, not you. This is not about getting one back on you, this is about charred bodies in remote ditches, it is about drive-by shootings, it is about bodies of teenagers with multiple stab wounds or bullet holes, it is about religious-style stonings.
A constructive response on your part would also restore your reputation conmsiderably, especially amongst trans people and our supporters.
Yours sincerely,
Natacha Kennedy
Wednesday, 16 January 2013
Thicker Skins
I am one of the lucky ones; I can afford to live in a relatively safe area of London, so I spend a considerable part of my - no doubt by Toby Young's standards - paltry salary on a huge mortgage and two hours a day getting to and from work. This is because the area of London where I work, although having a plentiful supply of relatively cheap and comfortable accommodation, is dangerous for me. How do I know? I work there.
Numerous times I have been thankful that there are plenty of other people waiting on my platform at the station, as someone has acosted me and started haranguing me; I have been called everything from a "fucking tranny" to a "fucking dyke". At one time when I was waiting for a bus on the main road a mob of people started shouting things at me of a similar nature, and making threats. I was fortunate that a black cab went past after a few moments and I jumped in in order to get away. I don't know what would have happened if I had not done so.
This does not mean I have not received transphobic harrassment in West Hampstead where I live, Cornered once on a station platform with only one exit a large, threatening man tried to attack me, and once again I was only saved by the arrival of a train full of people. I have been folowed by people in the street, on one occasion a man tried to creep up behind me at the top of my street, for what purpose I do not know, can imagine. screaming at him in a loud voice and waking up many of my neighbours, to whom I later appologised profusely was the only way he was frightened off. I was threatened while waiting for a bus outside a tube station in East London in broad daylight once and harrassment and intimidation of a verbal kind is a weekly occurence so much now that I almost do not notice it. The only thing I have noticed is how the "I'm a Laydee" wits have generally disappeared since the BBC stopped repeats of Little Britain.
I am also in the position of having to do part of my job in a cisgender male appearance, because that element, supervising students on placement, is not covered by any anti-discrimination legislation, including the "all-encompassing" Equality Act.
Clearly I have not been doing things right. The wisdom of Toby Young, who must know everything about being trans, after all he's a journalist for the Sun) clearly dictates that I should grow a "thicker skin". I must admit to being perplexed at this advice. I must be doing something wrong and I can't see how a thicker skin is going to help me overcome the harrassment I recieve at the hands of those who have been driven to hate me by the media's cumulitive negative stereotyping of trans people.
OK so Young argues that you cannot "prove' that the media causes transphobic hate crime, but this is legalistic disingenuousness. You can't prove that school uniform improves discipline of attainment in school, but Toby Youn's "free" school has one.
So perhaps Toby Young could advise me on these points. I wuld love to be able to live colser to work and not become a victim of hate-crime. How thick will my skin need to be to protect me from a knife, a gun or a hate-fuelled mob.
Numerous times I have been thankful that there are plenty of other people waiting on my platform at the station, as someone has acosted me and started haranguing me; I have been called everything from a "fucking tranny" to a "fucking dyke". At one time when I was waiting for a bus on the main road a mob of people started shouting things at me of a similar nature, and making threats. I was fortunate that a black cab went past after a few moments and I jumped in in order to get away. I don't know what would have happened if I had not done so.
This does not mean I have not received transphobic harrassment in West Hampstead where I live, Cornered once on a station platform with only one exit a large, threatening man tried to attack me, and once again I was only saved by the arrival of a train full of people. I have been folowed by people in the street, on one occasion a man tried to creep up behind me at the top of my street, for what purpose I do not know, can imagine. screaming at him in a loud voice and waking up many of my neighbours, to whom I later appologised profusely was the only way he was frightened off. I was threatened while waiting for a bus outside a tube station in East London in broad daylight once and harrassment and intimidation of a verbal kind is a weekly occurence so much now that I almost do not notice it. The only thing I have noticed is how the "I'm a Laydee" wits have generally disappeared since the BBC stopped repeats of Little Britain.
I am also in the position of having to do part of my job in a cisgender male appearance, because that element, supervising students on placement, is not covered by any anti-discrimination legislation, including the "all-encompassing" Equality Act.
Clearly I have not been doing things right. The wisdom of Toby Young, who must know everything about being trans, after all he's a journalist for the Sun) clearly dictates that I should grow a "thicker skin". I must admit to being perplexed at this advice. I must be doing something wrong and I can't see how a thicker skin is going to help me overcome the harrassment I recieve at the hands of those who have been driven to hate me by the media's cumulitive negative stereotyping of trans people.
OK so Young argues that you cannot "prove' that the media causes transphobic hate crime, but this is legalistic disingenuousness. You can't prove that school uniform improves discipline of attainment in school, but Toby Youn's "free" school has one.
So perhaps Toby Young could advise me on these points. I wuld love to be able to live colser to work and not become a victim of hate-crime. How thick will my skin need to be to protect me from a knife, a gun or a hate-fuelled mob.
Putting Words into our Mouths
As the dust from the Burchill transphobic
article starts to settle it is time to step back a bit and look a little more
closely at some of the untruths that have been said for trans people by others.
In this case, in addition to Burchill, the almost as unedifying ‘intellect’ of
Toby Young; the bone-headed tribal Tory reactionary journalist who stepped in to
champion her cause...
There are the obvious and sickening insults
from Burchill; deliberately provocative and reminiscent of some bad racist
propaganda I got hold of at an Anti-Nazi League demo ages ago. But her diatribe
of mindless working-class Tory bigotry (is there any other kind of
working-class Tory bigotry?) also concealed an interesting, and rather nasty
twist, which probably went unnoticed but which may turn out to be more
significant than the more obvious stuff.
This was her deliberate
misrepresentation or deliberate “misunderstanding” of the word “cisgender”. The
way she presented us as using it as a kind of anti cisgender insult “syph, cyst,
cistern.” Suggests that this represents one of the ways TERFs like her are
going to try and misrepresent us. The fact that she suggested that “cis” is a
term only used to describe women, is, of course not true, yet I have had a
number of cisgender women friends contact me in recent days saying they don’t
want to be called “cis” thinking that it is some kind of anti-feminist insult,
which of course it is not.
A blatant attempt to deny us an important element
of our vocabulary represents epistemological violence against trans people and
aims to misrepresent what we say in an attempt to drum up transphobic hatred
through promoting misunderstanding. It is an attempt to deny us the words with
which to talk about out lives and our experiences. This is something we must
watch out for. It is sometimes difficult to understand but people who have
considered themselves “normal” and “unmarked” actually do find it uncomfortable
to find someone else attaching a label to them. I’m not sure how many
heterosexual people like the term “straight” for example. Unfortunately TERFs
running round deliberately trying to make out that we are using it as a
misogynistic insult is something only too true to type for these individuals;
in the end since they have so little ammunition with which to attack us, they
will use what they can…
Of course Burchill’s attempt to do this is
probably unlikely to have much effect since it was associated with so much
obvious bile, but Toby Young’s piece in support of her, and, for that matter
from some other journalists, is more subtle. As such more dangerous, and not
just for us but for other minorities that it is still not socially unacceptable
to have a go at, Romany travellers, Chavs, genuine feminists, red-headed
people, disabled people etc…
His argument is the “offence” argument, an old
chestnut that needs to be exposed for what it is. The stock in trade, standard
issue argument for right-wing journalists trying to silence others critiques of
their own bad practice and unacceptable (and usually bigoted) views. The
argument is that they should have the right to cause “offence”. Let us be very
clear about this. Toby Young is using a what is in my view a thoroughly
dishonest argument. He is telling everyone that we are against Burchill’s
article because it caused us to be “offended”. This is a serious and disingenuous
misrepresentation; I am “offended” almost every time I look at a news site, I
am certainly offended every time I look at any newspaper that Young writes for,
but I am of the opinion that the Burchill article should not have been
published for entirely different reasons, and I believe Toby Young knows this
but still chooses to misrepresent our views.
I am protesting against this article, and others
like it by Richard Littlejohn for example, not because I am “offended”, but because they legitimize transphobic hatred. They make
it OK for those people in the street who shout at you, to call me ‘mate’,
‘fucking tranny’, ‘I’m a Laydee’ or any other clever witticisms. It makes it OK
for groups of young men to threaten me in the street, it makes it OK for men in
cars to stalk me to my door at night because they want to have sex with a “TV”,
like they have seen on porn sites. It makes it legit for men to try and chat me
up when I’m walking home from the Tube at midnight; a scary experience because
you don’t know what they want. And it makes it OK for schools to say; no, we
don’t want your kind visiting our premises and “confusing” our kids.
Toby Young’s deliberate disingenuousness is
easier to pick out but no less dangerous. If journalists can justify incitement
to hate crime by simply describing it as the right to “offend” then almost
anything becomes possible, including groups of people being “mandated out of
existence.”
So, in addition to calling Burchill on her
bigotry we need to call both her and Young on deliberate and dishonest
misrepresentation. It is a classic
right-wing bigot’s tactic in the absence of any genuine argument. We need to
make sure it is a tactic that fails.
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