I liked Mike Crawfor's essay and think it's nail-on-the-head correct. For all too long we've withdrawn, withdrawn, withdrawn -- and if lesbian and gay folks have done that TG/TS people are actually prolly much more withdrawn.
And we wonder, consistently why we lose "rights issues." Because, it's easy enough to believe that families are not part of the homosexual experience -- when they are -- strong, vibrant and enviable-by-straights families. But we want to turn our political power into "reason."
TG/TS people discovered, if we discovered anything, Ocotber of last year that the same thing applies to us. We don't share the emotional impact on us of our lives and the ways we are treated legally and socially that no other people in this country have to, or would, put up with.
Rationality is not gonna win people over in great enough numbers to make the difference. On the other hand, knowing that one is hurting and harming people just like oneself, in every way, not "freaks" or "child-molesters" or "rapists," makes it that much harder to deny those people exactly what I already have.
In 1964 the murders of three young men in Philadelphia, MS and a 1963 church bombing in Birmingham, AL, probably did more to eventually make changes in the ways we actually treated one another as racial beings than any number of debates and "well-thought-out" proposals did.
Sad that it takes horrific murders to accomplish that.
Nichole