You used it because was a mainstream headline, otherwise you could have pointed to dozens of incidents involving trans men and staying entirely within the purview of the discussion. Do you know who the first trans person killed in a hate crime in the US was this year? Somehow, I doubt it.I used that example because it was very recently in the news, and because my point isn't limited to trans men alone-- coming out increases risk. Obviously.
If you think the status of LGBTQ celebrities is ir-relevant, you have a fundamentally whacked perspective on the issue whether you're misdirecting from trans men or not.If the only relevant thing to you is that trans people in the public eye are at less risk than average joe-public trans people, then you're either failing to recognise or failing to acknowledge the increased risk that coming out brings onto somebody.
Is it an irrelevant deflection, or are you simply unaware the Folsom Street Fair is a public BDSM festival, and a major LGBTQ event, because leather subculture started in the gay community? It literally started because the SF municipal government weaponized the AIDS epidemic to crack down on Folsom Street's gay nightlife.Secondly, my argument doesn't rely on the community being a monolith, or homogeneous. Individual people can like or dislike what they want. I'm queer and I would be singularly uninterested in stuff like that BDSM public celebration thing. This is also an irrelevant deflection.
And this isn't about personal preference. This is about gatekeeping, lingering phobias, and peer pressure within the LGBTQ communities -- and perpetuating negative stereotypes.
And therein lies the rub. Activism does not have a one-size-fits-all methodology, nor should it. Public policy and social goals must be identified, the response to activism monitored, and direct action tailored to best fit the achievement of those public policy and social goals. And, as policy and social goals are met and counter-action evolves, so too does the movement and its forms of direct action in order to continue meeting further policy and social goals in the most effective manner.My argument rests solely on the principle that its not incumbent on a victim of prejudice or violence to adapt their behaviour in order to avoid the threat...Police violence is not the only form of discrimination and prejudice, believe it or not...
Different threat profiles from different potential perpetrators, and different goals for different groups with unique and individual needs, need different responses, end of story. And indeed, those change, and they have.
I literally just did, but I find it rather important to single out T here as meth, weed, oxy, fentanyl, or coke aren't sine qua non for FtM hormone therapy.Okay, you can take that argument, but it needs to be applied consistently as a general anti-prohibition argument, not as an "arbitrary exception for this drug here" argument.
And again, we have a little political problem on our hands, given scheduling in the US isn't actually done by the relative harm of each product, but as a factor of who makes them and who takes them. This isn't an "if the system worked as intended you'd be right" issue, because to be frank "the system" in the US is working as intended. We're talking about a system in which weed and peyote are still schedule I, while cocaine and all those high-octane designer synthetic opioids tearing the country a new asshole are for some incredible reason schedule II. If you want no better example of this look no further than past enforcement and sentencing disparities between crack and powder cocaine.That's disingenuous...Thus prohibition.
It is by merit of its mere existence impossible to talk about drug scheduling in the US without discussion of systemic bigotry. This is the framework in which T is scheduled, and would you agree despite our differing arguments about the necessary cause of its scheduling, the sufficient cause is toxic masculinity?
No, that's the opposite of my point, there. Read the SIlveira op-ed piece I linked.You think the majority of people that identify as trans are all mega-celebrities?