Quote from: Valeriedances on June 25, 2011, 03:27:18 AM
If that is true then this can partly be a gay issue and we should just admit it. And if it is, drop the T and advocate for broader gay rights openly.
I still don't think it's a gay issue. It's about stepping out of line and not living "appropriately" for what others think you should be, based on your perceived gender.
For gay men, that's sleeping with other guys, "an abomination".
For someone who has transitioned, or is trying to transition, that's supposedly going against how God created a man or women to be.
Quote from: Valeriedances on June 25, 2011, 03:27:18 AM
Looking at it from the other side, why do gay organizations advocate for trans people? Is it out of the kindness of their heart, or is there an agenda that totally negates straight peoples identity because many gay people enjoy expressing themselves in a gender variant way? If there is no agenda, why dont gay organization take up the cause for other groups?
I remember some of the first times I went out with my wife, when she did something to show she was part of an LGBT organization. I remember thinking "OMG, people are going to think I'm gay." In other words, they are going to think my identity is different than it is. After all, some people, sadly, do mistake women for men, and that's going to be a lot more common when the woman is transitioning or post-transition, no matter how much work someone goes through to avoid that. And, thus, their affectionate partner must obviously be gay in some people's eyes. Showing support of the gay community is something gay people would do, so that would likely influence an observer's "guess" about her gender, maybe even swaying someone who might otherwise have considered her female.
I've since learned that some of this was my own homophobia. I've also learned that my wife clearly had a stronger, more developed sense of who she is than I had at the time (she's not ignorant as to how identifying publicly would change people's perceptions of her). I respect her a lot for that.
As for why the LGB community is willing to support T, they definitely haven't always been willing to do so - at least not some of their leaders (witness the first drafts of ENDA in the US). But that doesn't mean history is completely lost. A lot of it may have been who was on the front lines fighting the cops at Stonewall and why they were there together. A lot of it was that "homosexual" applied just as much to the trans person as to gay person, when laws were enforced - they were the same category according to the law. While we've grown as a society, an "T" doesn't equal "L or G" today, it used to, and the prejudiced groups still treat them the same. The people being arrested during that time period for being "homosexuals" were often people wearing the wrong gender's clothing. So the connection goes back at least that far, even if we know sexual orientation has nothing to do with gender.
That said, I don't think there is anything wrong with having T-only groups to focus on the issues that are unique to T people. There are plenty of L groups, after all - clearly L's felt that LGBT groups weren't 100% representative of their needs on their own.