Quote from: dalebert on November 18, 2012, 01:29:50 PM
Absolutely! We just talked about some of those hypocritical bigots on the show while discussing the Trans Day of Remembrance. Hypocritical bigots are even worse than the regular ones because they should know better. They've experienced bigotry themselves and still don't learn.
The irony here is that the cisgendered LGB folks most likely to agree with you about separating the T are the transphobic ones and the ones who want to keep it there are the trans-friendly ones.
Do you feel that separating it would help more of those LGB folks to stop being transphobic or would it enable them? Do you feel keeping it as it is would mean fostering alliances and a faster path to understanding and equality or is it better to be isolationist? Does that figure into your opinion at all? If not, shouldn't it?
The reasoning for me wanting it to be separate (and I'm a trans* persyn by the way), is because of the fact that the majority of focus is on the LGB. Mainly gay marriage. I don't care about gay marriage right now (not saying I don't want it to happen, it should, but that's not my priority right now).
And there are TONS of cisgender LGB folks that speak over trans* folks. I've had a cisgender ex-girlfriend try to tell me she's not trans*phobic because she dated me. People can date trans* folks and still be trans*phobic. There are cisgender folks (and a lot happen to be LGB) that will EXPECT cookies and "pats on the back" for being friends with a trans* persyn and being "nice" to trans* folks and all that. And then when they DON'T get cookies and "pats on the back" they get furious and say rude things like "but I'm a GOOD trans* ally!" etc etc. I see it over and over and over again.
There are trans* womyn (mainly TWOC [trans* womyn of colour]) being murdered and the majority of cisgender LGB folks don't care about that. "Oh let's worry more about gay marriage and stuff like that instead". This is why I have a hard time being friends with cisgender folks. I don't get along with straight cisgender folks, and I have an even harder time getting along with LGB cisgender folks because they expect more because "we're all apart of the same community".
Just because we're all apart of the LGBT thing, doesn't mean our experiences are the same. White gay men are going to have different experiences from gay men of colour. White lesbians are going to have different experiences than lesbian womyn of colour. White trans* folks (this includes me because I'm white) are going to have different experiences than trans* people of colour will. And DFAB (designated female at birth) trans* folks are going to have different experiences than DMAB (designated male at birth) trans* folks will.
White gay men are going to have it the easiest. It's true. That may be hard for folks to hear, but it is true. And white folks in general (regardless of LGB or T status) are going to have it better in general.
Look at the majority of trans* womyn being killed. Most of them are TWOC (trans* womyn of colour).
I hear more about trans* folks being murdered, than I do white gay men right now.
QuoteI like cookies and I don't mind a little pat on the back now and then.
I'm sorry, but I'm not here to give you cookies. Nor a pat on the back. Regardless of how good an "ally" you may be. I'm not trying to be rude here, and if I'm coming across as such, I'm sorry. But that isn't going to change how I feel. And I have a hard time with gay cisgender men too. And I'll explain why: I've been turned down by so many gay cisgender men because of the fact that I don't have a penis. And there are cisgender men that'll date a pre-op trans* womon just because she hasn't had the surgery yet and still has a penis.
There are tons of cisgender folks out there, especially cisgender LGB folks, that only care about getting that pat on the back or cookies. You may say you're not one of them, but I'm not going to easily trust a persyn just because they say something. I don't trust easily.