We are citizens of the world and all members of the body politic. I am a non-binary bisexual transsexual woman. That is about as far out there as it is possible to go. Yet I live in a city that explicitly prohibits discrimination in employment, housing, and opportunity because of gender identity and sexual orientation: In a state that with simple letters from my therapist and primary care physician allowed me to change my name and gender marker on all relevant state documents including my birth certificate: In a country that, with those same affidavits, allowed me to change my social insurance, my passport and all federal documentation related to my job: With a chief executive who last night affirmed my rights as a member of society and a citizen of the United States.
This didn't happen by accident. It is my reality because of the people who put themselves on the line so that justice and equality would become not only the law but the accepted norms. I live an authentic life because of the sacrifice of others. I have an absolute obligation to them and to those who come after to complete and extend this work!
In the United States we celebrated Dr. King's birthday on Monday. This is a man who knew that he would be killed, and who responded with love, not only for African Americans, but for all Americans. I wept at the service I attended. Martin King did not compromise with human dignity, and neither will I. Alone we can affect our neighborhood, but united we can change the world.
Change comes when everyone demands it. Everyone in every village, town, and city. There are authors on these forums whose lives are at risk because of their gender identity, or sexual orientation, yet they speak out here. I am safe and secure in a job, in a city, in a country where I am given not only human rights but civil rights. But here in the USA there are large swaths where there isn't safety, and there isn't liberty for people such as me. Eventually things will change, but eventually I will be dead too. It takes action; It takes speaking out; It takes voting and getting others to the polls.
Survival for trans folk is grass roots, it is growing, and it takes us all.
Julie