May 4, 2013
The Largest LGBT Donors Are Drone Manufacturers

navigatethestream:

by Hannah Kapp-Klote

In the 1960s and 1970s, queer liberation (what we now call “LGBT equality”) was seen by its advocates as an all-inclusive movement intrinsically bound to other social justice movements: there could be no justice for queer people without justice for people of color, women, workers, those in other nations, etc. Accordingly, queer activistsworked hard to build coalitions with all those determined to fight for justice. 

Nowadays, the LGBT movement does more branding than coalition building. 

Steven W. Thrasher, who has been nationally recognized for his LGBT journalism, called out national LGBT nonprofits and advocates, colloquially referred to by some as the glitter industrial complex, in aGawker article, contending that the LGBT activists and nonprofits “have been bought, paid-for and sold to the highest bidder.”

It’s true: corporate America runs the LGBT movement, or at least the part of the LGBT movement that gets press time and donors. Their sponsorship keeps the LGBT movement from addressing the issues that matter most for the LGBT community and beyond.

Thrasher highlights that many of the biggest donors to the Human Rights Campaign, the multi-million dollar nonprofit that receives the bulk of donations for LGBT issues, aredrone manufacturers. These donors profit off of the United States’ use of drones to killcivilians,including children, with little oversight or accountability. Drone manufacturers are far from the only ethically dark gray to black donors to LGBT advocacy organizations: a brief perusal of any major LGBT organization’s list of donors reveals thatcorporate black hatslike Bank of America,BP,Coke, andNikeall provide major cash to LGBT nonprofits.

And it must be acknowledged that these corporate dollars do some good:  programs that encourage the leadership development and empowerment of LGBT young people, the election of LGBT public officials, and advocacy for greater research into LGBT issues would be practically impossible in the modern economy without significant corporate donations. Yet there is something antithetical about a movement for equality and justice funded by the forces in the world most responsible for widespread economic and social inequality. 

When the LGBT community is not united with social movements that address the issues facing the most marginalized LGBT people, with racial justice proponents (proportionally more people of coloridentify as queer), with those fighting against systemic poverty, with pacifists, are we really making any progress? Or has the LGBT movement been kidnapped by power elites advocating for their own interests?  The dilemma is reminiscent of an image circling some corners of the web: a white gay male couple superimposed over the Human Rights Campaign red equality symbol that dominated Facebook during the gay marriage Supreme Court hearings.

“We’re just like you: racist, homophobic, and sexist,” reads the caption. All that’s missing is “market driven” and “war profiteers.”

Of course, claiming that the agendas of nonprofit executives and corporate leaders are the agenda for the entire LGBT movement is just as misleading claiming that gay marriage is the deciding issue of the LGBT movement. Queer activists around the country, from radical groups likeSoutherners on New Ground (SONG),andQueers for Economic Justice, are connecting the dots between queer liberation, pacifism, and economic and racial justice. Countless more groups and activists, with or without 501c3 status, are fighting to make sure that queer liberation — not LGBT equality — is tied up with justice for all oppressed groups around the world.

Progress for queer people means nothing if it comes at the expense of others also marginalized and fighting for justice. Gay advocacy paid for by companies that poison the land, treat their workers unfairly, and assist in the killing of children from other nations is worthless in the long run. If we truly want a world where LGBT people are equal, we have to recognize that such equality is contingent upon justice for all people.

Not when health care is provided to every same-sex couple, but where health care is accessible to all; not when violent homophobia is eliminated, but when violence based on hatred of any group is eliminated. It might sound Utopian, and it might not be achieved through high profile fund raising dinners. But the alternative, inequality and corporate exploitation draped in a pride flag, is neither progressive nor equal.  

 

cue to a shot of me howling with diabolical laughter. 

not because drones are funny

but because for all the equality red signs i had to stomach, for all the insufferable cis straight people who refuse to apply a critical lens to their “allyship”, for all the horribly constructed arguments supporting the HRC i’ve listened to not only this year, but in past years

congratulations! your desire and push for equality is intersectional in the worst way possible. 

now not only does the HRC screw over people (anybody who is not upper middle class, white, gay cis male), but the companies who back the HRC screw over people WITH DRONES. on top of their other shitty corporate policies because WHO HAS EVER MET A FRIENDLY ETHICAL CAPITALIST?! NOT I! 

i chuckle in your face

i chuckle long, i chuckle hard, and i chuckle loudly

(via sixtyforty)

April 22, 2013

fritzvonfuckup:

jamesdarlingxxx:

t-wood:

EROS is T-Wood’s home…if you can help, forward, reblog it would mean a lot!

Just click on the source below for the direct indiegogo.com link or search for EROS 21.

EROS is one of very few sex clubs in the world that is a welcoming space for trans men looking to cruise other men. In a day and age where most men cruise online and through phones, it’s value as a place of education & exploration, as a community center, and a sober cruising space cannot be emphasized enough. I’ve worked here for about 4 years and in that time I’ve seen some incredible art shows, drag performances, open mic nights. I’ve met people from all walks of life from around the world. Coming to EROS from a town where I was the only trans guy around (that I knew) who wanted to hook up with other men was truly transformative and affirming (and hot!) experience and I know that this is an important & special place for many people. Consider donating if you can!

As a trans guy who loves to cruise and has had to do various levels of arguing with door staff and been made to feel uncomfortable in men’s sex spaces, I cannot say enough about how amazing Eros has been. Additionally, now that I’ve been there I absolutely love recognizing the locker room/shower/sauna in t-wood productions and various cis gay porn videos.

Please consider donating to Eros and keeping the community bath house spirit afloat!

(Source: indiegogo.com)

March 29, 2013
"Trans inclusion will be a legislative priority over my dead body."

 Elizabeth Birch, Human Rights Campaign Executive Director, 1995-2004

 

figured now would be a good time to remind everybody exactly who these people are and exactly how much they value trans people

(yes, I realize Birch is no longer with the organization, but this is not because they found her ideas repellant—it’s because she retired)

March 29, 2013

afc24:

From Ali Forney Center’s Carl Siciliano: ” As millions celebrate Easter, I need to ask my fellow Christians to wake up to the terrible fact that far too many LGBT youth are being abused and rejected in Christian homes.

Many conservative Christians are increasingly preoccupied with fighting against the equal treatment of LGBT people in our society. And no one suffers more harm from this fight and the intolerant climate it creates than the LGBT children of too many of these Christians. As the director of the Ali Forney Center, the nation’s largest organization providing housing and support to homeless LGBT youths, I see the reality of this harm in the faces of the thousands of desperate and frightened teens who turn to us for help after being driven from their homes and reduced to homelessness.

The stories these youth tell us about the religion-based abuse they endure from their parents are heartbreaking and deeply disturbing.”

http://www.aliforneycenter.org/stopreligiousrejection

March 5, 2013

sparkzter:

Hey, folks! 

So, I’m running low on submissions for a research project I’m doing for my undergraduate thesis. I’m re-opening submissions and accepting them up until Friday, March 8th. I’m listing the original prompt below, so be sure to let me know if you want to participate and ask questions if you have any! 

In addition, if you are interested in participating but having trouble thinking of prompts, I can help you brainstorm. 

Finally, please signal boost this! Thank you so much for reading.

Hi all! If you could take the time to look over this request and consider participating in this study I’m conducting, I would really appreciate it!

In terms of requirements for participation, the only things I ask are that you: are 18 years of age or older, consent to me using your narrative for my thesis (I’d be more than happy to go over what this involves if you want to know), identify as queer in terms of your gender and/or sexuality, and that you are not currently a student at Bennington College. In the way of confidentiality, no one except for you and me will be able to identify you from your narrative.  Your name will not be used, and I will change any elements in your narrative that would indicate your identity (names, locations, etc).

For my undergraduate thesis, I am studying narratives about identity, specifically from queer individuals. I know that the word “queer” has many different meanings, many of them being subjective. To identify oneself as queer often requires a personal explanation, as opposed to identities that are expressed with a single culturally established word. I am interested in investigating what different people think makes them queer and how their queerness relates to the world at large and its social mores about gender and sexuality.

Here’s how you can help me. I plan to collect 5-10 narratives about what being queer means to you: this can mean a coming out story, a story that exemplifies your queerness (that means gender and/or sexuality), or any kind of narrative that is central to your identity as a queer person. The point is that I want to hear you talk about your shade of queerness and what it means to you,all relating to a specific incident in your life. Ideally, these narratives would be approximately 250-1500 words in length, by March 8th. This prompt is intentionally open-ended and vague, as I want you to tell me a story that is meaningful to you!

If you’re interested in submitting something to me, please let me know and I can let you know where to send it. Also, don’t hesitate to ask me any questions or voice any concerns you may have! Thanks so much! :D

hey pals, Jay is one of my oldest friends and he is a remarkably kind, respectful, considerate dude! so if you give him your story I promise he will do right by it! plus, you’ll get to interact with Jay, and I rate my interactions with Jay A++

(Source: sparkz-achive, via sparkz-achive)

7:12pm  |   URL: http://tmblr.co/ZAAEXwfcDlTr
  
Filed under: queer trans transgender gay lgbt 
January 18, 2013
WordPress slow to rectify copyright violation of trans woman Janet Mock's image - National Transgender and Transsexual Issues | Examiner.com

safeword:

mattachinereview:

signal boost the HELL out of this, please!  it’s negative public attention that gets the attention of websites like wordpress!

oh man, get her picture OFF there at the VERY least…

right? obviously the next step is to get wordpress to adopt a policy for their TOS that disallows hateful blogs like gallus mag and gendertrender, but this would be the VERY LEAST they could do.

(Source: girlslikeusnews)

January 3, 2013
thematerialworld:

WE OPEN TOMORROW NIGHT!  Get your tickets HERE!

I am this beautiful show’s production intern!  Please come to it!

thematerialworld:

WE OPEN TOMORROW NIGHT!  Get your tickets HERE!

I am this beautiful show’s production intern!  Please come to it!

December 31, 2012
Please Help

frankethor:

Sociology student seeking participants for a study on sexuality identity formation in the face of colonialism and white supremacy. This is an intersectional study operating from the position that race, gender, sexual orientation, etc. are not separate identities.

Interested participants must be 18 years of age or older.

They must be culturally indigenous and/or a person of color.

Participants must also self identify as Transgender, non-binary or as a gender/sexuality often erased or obscured under the white western umbrella term Transgender. Such identifications may include but are not limited to one, or a combination of the following: Bakla, Bissu, Calalai, Calabai, Fa’afafine, Genderescent/Genderessence, Gender Liminal, Hijra, Kathoey, Muxe/Muxhe, Third Gender, Two Spirit/Two-Spirit, and/or Queer. Those culturally indigenous and/or people of color who’s gender and/or sexuality identity do not neatly fit under White Western LGBT categories, are also welcome to participate.

Participants will be interviewed via video, audio, and chat software such as Skyppe and Tiny Chat, (software and method (audio, video, chat) up for discussion). Interviews will range from a period of forty-five minutes to one hour, with possible follow up interviews occurring as needed.

The researcher conducting these interviews is also a person of color who self-identifies with a gender/sexuality tradition obscured under the term Transgender. Those interested in participating should contact the researcher at: wharcong@hotmail.com for more information.

(Source: frank-e-fighting-words, via biyuti)

December 15, 2012

tranqualizer:

friendlyangryfeminist:

just because coming out is brave, doesn’t mean being in the closet is cowardly. 

queer existence, queer survival is brave. 

yeah, let’s stop fucking policing each other damn it 

coming out is not one-dimensional 

and let’s not delve into how often coming out operates in a framework of whiteness. many of us queer non-cis poc operate in very different realms when it comes to “being out” 

I’m so sick of compulsory disclosure of all kinds

also incidentally! I just read a book called Tacit Subjects by a cultural critic named Carlos Decena! and I am too sleepy at the moment to describe it to you in a way that makes sense but suffice to say he critiques this idea of compulsory disclosure and it’s rad. you guys might enjoy it—

and I have a lot of feelings about how compulsory outness affects kids?  if anyone ever wants to help talk this out with me I’d obv. really appreciate it, instead of vomiting feelings and book recommendations all over a perfectly good post

December 6, 2012
on the co-opting of our voices

biyuti:

So. This article about CSI and its continued shitty portrayals of trans women, by GLAAD ass. direct Nick Adams, OP ED How the TV Show CSI is Screwing Us Again | Advocate.com, delivers some fairly good info and whatever.

However, I’m sure you noticed that headline. What the concluding sentence:

We ask CSI to use episodes like these as a model going forward, or if they can’t do that, just stop using transgender characters in the show.  This type of visibility, transgender people don’t need.  In fact, it’s killing us.

Being a deeply curious sort, I tried to find a pic or some info about this person. I also don’t want to make too many assumptions about who they are…

But. The overall tone of the article leads me to believe, at the very least, that Nick Adams is not a trans woman. So…

Who the fuck is ‘us’ re: “it’s killing us”? I’d really like to know. Because unless you are a trans feminine person, it is unlikely that CSI’s generally disgusting and dehumanizing portrayal of trans women is killing you. Or contributing danger to your life in any meaningful way.

I guess what really clues me into just how this isn’t written by someone actually part of the community:

The timing of the current episode is particularly insulting as it occurs one week after the annual Transgender Day of Remembrance, which commemorates the (at least) 72 transgender people murdered over the past 12 months: 16 killed in the United States and the 56 killed elsewhere in the world. 

It is true as fuck that the number is higher because, in reality, the *reported* deaths number around 256. But why bother doing your actual research when you can just, idk, co-opt our oppression and stand on our bodies.

Because, I would really like to know how speaking for us (instead of us) on an issue many of us have already discussed a bajillion times (CSI is notoriously bad for this, and only now I’m seeing something from GLAAD?).

Just so we are clear: this isn’t helping. At all. Not even a little. Because co-opting the actual suffering and oppression of trans feminine people is also killing us.

So. Fuck you.

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