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[Image: Grungy black background. On the right side of the image there’s a dingy toilet at the end of a long hallway. On the left side there’s white text: “i really want to have a building where every bathroom says ‘transgender only’ except for one single, impossible to find, tiny little one person bathroom that’s somewhere down a long corridor and nobody remembers how to get there.”]
Credit to my friend Saffo Papantonopoulou for her brilliant text for this meme! ♥ For more about this topic: Click here.
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[Image: Grungy black background. On the right side of the image there’s a dingy toilet at the end of a long hallway. On the left side there’s white text: “i really want to have a building where every bathroom says ‘transgender only’ except for one single, impossible to find, tiny little one person bathroom that’s somewhere down a long corridor and nobody remembers how to get there.”]

Credit to my friend Saffo Papantonopoulou for her brilliant text for this meme! ♥

For more about this topic: Click here.

    • #transgender
    • #bathroom
    • #toilet
    • #transphobia
    • #cissexism
  • 2 weeks ago
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Vegan Sexual: Looking through fyeahbiphobia and their posts today, I feel pretty...

vegansexy:

Looking through fyeahbiphobia and their posts today, I feel pretty confident that it’s run by a radfem (noticing transmisogyny, cissexism abound). Not only is that blog not safe for bisexual people, it is not safe for trans folks. Quelle surprise! Also with the focus on bisexual women and “all their failings”, it’s likely you’ll run into a fair bit of misogyny as well.

So take that into consideration if you want to peek through that blog. I myself am adopting a personal policy of writing commentary on the posts there when I think it’s relevant, but I will not reblog or interact in any way. 

Oh bumblr.

Hah, I knew it!

I actually wrote about this briefly in my book, I feel the need to share (since it might shed light on the current situation):

[TW: general discussion of biphobia and transphobia + direct quotes containing biphobia and transphobia]

Despite the severe oppression that each group suffers, it has also been a custom—especially in queer communities—to accuse trans and bi people of seeking straight privilege. Bisexuals have been accused of wanting to lead heteronormative lives while enjoying the side benefits of queer sex or communities. Trans people have been accused of actually being gay men and lesbians who change their genders in order to become straight and avoid homophobic oppression. In addition, transgender men in particular have been accused of seeking male privilege, changing their gender as a cowardly act of internalized misogyny. Trans women have been accused of seeking the “side benefits” of femininity while maintaining their “male privilege.” Note that all of these points of view necessitate actively cisgendering and monosexualizing trans and bi people: assuming that all people in both groups are actually monosexual (gay or lesbian), and that the genders we’ve been assigned at birth determine who and what we are.

For example, in “Bisexual politics: A superior form of feminism?”, Australian writer Sheila Jeffreys presents a biphobic manifesto meant to incriminate the entire bisexual movement as antifeminist and male-identified. Among her many other accusations, she describes bisexuality as “a way not to identify as lesbian or gay.” This is because the “loss of privilege involved in identifying as lesbian [is] significant and likely to encourage women to […] avoid such a definition.” Likewise and unsurprisingly, she didn’t spare trans people either. Her article “Transgender Activism: A Lesbian Feminist Perspective” is a transphobic manifesto meant to incriminate the entire transgender movement as (you guessed it) antifeminist and male-identified. In the article, she describes trans men as women who are hopelessly oppressed by internalized misogyny and lesbophobia. She describes trans women (whom she calls “male-to-constructed-female”) as invaders seeking to exploit feminist movements for their own selfish needs, as a result of internalized male supremacy. Note that in both cases Jeffreys cisgenders and monosexualizes trans and bi people, presuming that we’re all “really” gay or lesbian.

    • #bisexual
    • #bisexuality
    • #biphobia
    • #fyeahbiphobia
    • #radscum
    • #transphobia
    • #transmisogyny
  • 2 months ago > idatandgaudior
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If you want to be a good ally, you need to start taking cissexism and transphobia seriously right now. That means getting our goddamn pronouns right and not expecting a cookie for it. That means learning our names. That means not asking invasive questions or telling us how well we “pass.” (Passing generally means “looking cis.” Not all of us want to look like you, thank you very much.) That means deleting the words “tranny” and “shemale” from your vocabulary. That means understanding the immense privilege you have in your legally recognized, socially approved, medically assigned gender.

Asher Bauer, Not Your Mom’s Trans 101

Read the whole thing, it is awesome and important.

Source: tranarchism.com

    • #transphobia
    • #cissexism
    • #trans
    • #transgender
    • #genderqueer
    • #cisgender
  • 9 months ago
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arborealmanager: OKAYdifference between pansexuality and...

insomniacslumber:

bidyke:

“The bisexual community itself has always defined it as “same and other,” or more than one, not “both.” “

I’m sorry to say, but this is an outright lie. Definitions of bisexuality as “both” and as attraction to “men and women” abound in both past and present, activist and academic bisexual writing. Yes, there have always been people in bi movements which defined bisexuality as “same + different” or as “more than one”, but saying that this is the only way bisexuality has ever been defined by these movements is misleading and has nothing to do with the realities and histories of bisexual movements themselves.

Trying to paint a false image of these realities and histories is not only unfair (in that it is false and misleading), but is also not working in that it’s not fooling anyone, and it makes bisexuals look like wishful thinkers as best and liars at worst.

As bisexual people and activists, we need to be accountable about cissexist and binary language in our communities rather than pretend like it doesn’t exist. Just as we insist that binary definitions have never been the only agreed ones about bisexuality, so we must acknowledge that non-binary definitions have been and still remain contested. Cissexism remains a significant problem within many bisexual communities, and we need to learn how to be accountable and work on that without glossing over the problems on that one hand, and without scapegoating bisexuality and the entire bisexual movement on the other.

I’m sorry, but bidyke, I really do not like how your response seems to imply that being attracted to both men and women but not non-binary people is somehow cissexist. It’s really not. Many bisexuals are only attracted to just men and women - there’s nothing cissexist or binarist about that, just like there’s nothing cissexist and binarist about lesbians being only attracted to women.

Defining bisexual as “being attracted to both men and women” is not binarist or cissexist in any way. It simply states that you’re only attracted to binary genders - not that there are only two genders in existence.

I would like to invite you to read my post here.

There is nothing wrong with only being attracted to binary genders, and it’s biphobic to accuse that orientation of being cissexist.

TL;DR: “Men and women” is not binarist language if you’re stating who you’re attracted to.

Okay, so since you asked:

First of all, I don’t think that being attracted only to cis men and women is overtly transphobic and evil. I don’t think that such people intend to hurt anyone or to practice cis privilege on anyone’s back. However and notwithstanding, I do find that this tendency resonates with cissexist social standards.

People often like to think about attraction as a non-political, inborn, pure, uncontrollable quality which is somehow a given, but in most cases this is not so. More often than not, our attractions are shaped by social standards of beauty and attractiveness - of what/who is “allowed” to be considered attractive, and what/who is not. These standards of beauty are of course deeply political as they are shaped by dominant social beliefs and structures: to name just a few, white people are considered more attractive than people of color, thin people more than fat people, nondisabled people more than disabled people - and transgender/genderqueer people more than cisgender people. In Read My Lips, Ricki Wilchins argues that the reason why transgender people are considered unattractive is that their/our bodies are unintelligible in terms of sexual attraction, to a culture which constructs its sexuality upon cisgender bodies. In order to be considered attractive, one must possess a body that “matches” their gender identity. This means that cisgender bodies are structurally privileged in terms of sexuality and sexual attraction - and we know what structural privileging of cisgender identity is called (that’s rights, cissexism).

Lisa Millbank of A Radical TransFeminist writes very elloquently about how people need to challenge themselves in terms of sexual attraction to include people of marginalized groups, whom society teaches us to find unattractive: Significant Othering: Attraction Down The Privilege Gradient.

Second of all - I feel that you’re shifting the terms of the discussion from the practical level (which I was referring to) to the symbolic level (which I didn’t). So just to clarify - when I said that the mainstream bisexual movement is imbued with cissexist language, this is what I meant: Cissexism and transphobia in bisexual communities.

Source: bellypebbles

    • #cissexism
    • #bisexuality
    • #bisexual
    • #binarism
    • #transphobia
    • #transgender
    • #genderqueer
  • 1 year ago > bellypebbles
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Cissexism and transphobia in bisexual communities (click for original post in my blog)

Note: If you came here seeking reassurance that bisexuality is binarist and/or that all bisexuals are transphobic, you will not find it here. Please see this first.

* Thank you to Robyn Ochs, who helped me think of many of these things.

Why this post?

(Why criticize?)

Within the mainstream bisexual movement, the links between bisexuality and transgenderism have always been thought of as close. Challenging of binaries, and the close relationship often existing between bisexual and transgender communities and politics, have been spoken and applauded by the mainstream bisexual movement (especially in the US) since its very beginnings. However and notwithstanding, in this post, I would like to raise a few thoughts about why the efforts of the mainstream bisexual movement to be trans-inclusive have been lacking. I’d like to call out specific problems within bisexual movements so that we, as a community, might be able to put work and energy into addressing these issues, and to be accountable for our communities’ cissexism* and transphobia.

This post came about because recently I’ve been noticing a disturbing tendency within mainstream bisexual discourses, to pretend as if the bisexual community has “always” defined bisexuality as (non binary) attraction to “same and other” genders, rather than as (binary) attraction to “both men and women”. This tendency is both inaccurate and dangerous, as it paints a false image of bisexual realities and histories in which the mainstream bisexual movement has used (and routinely uses) binary definitions and language widely.

In fact, definitions of bisexuality as attraction to “both genders” or to “men and women” abound in both past and present, activist and academic bisexual writing. While there have always been people in bi movements who defined bisexuality as attraction to “same + different” genders or as attraction to “more than one” gender, claiming that this is the only way bisexuality has ever been defined by “the movement” is misleading and has nothing to do with the realities and histories of bisexual movements themselves.

This argument is dangerous not only because it makes bisexual activists look like wishful thinkers at best and fabricators at worst, but also because it “relieves” the mainstream bisexual movement from responsibility and accountability about our own communities’ cissexism and transphobia. However, despite ardent denials, cissexism and transphobia both remain significant problems within many bisexual communities. As bisexual people and activists, we need to learn how to be accountable and work towards dismantling these forms of oppression in our communities, without glossing over these problems in attempts to avert biphobic accusations.

Cissexism and transphobia in bisexual communities

First off, and before I start, I have to mention that if asked on any occasion, I would say that the bisexual movement, as a whole, is light years ahead of most other activist communities (not just gay and lesbian) as far as it concerns transgender and genderqueer inclusion. I’m also aware of the huge amounts of bisexual writing about the intersections between bi and trans. I think the bisexual movement deserves every bit of respect when it comes to acknowledging these things, and this should not be dismissed in light of the critique I put forth below.

However and notwithstanding, despite awareness and declarations which encourage trans/genderqueer inclusion, the mainstream bi movement has long been suffering from several problems around transphobia and cissexism, which remain largely unaddressed. Note that when I talk about “the” mainstream bi movement, I am referring mostly to mainstream movements within the US, UK or Europe - and within those, I’m referring only to hegemonic discourse**. While it’s worth remembering that a lot of different bi communities exist all over world, and that not all of them behave in similar ways, it should still be acknowledged that there’s a huge body of bisexual work which nonetheless comprises a dominant discourse for these communities: Books, zines, articles, essays, papers, blogs, mailing lists, facebook groups, and many more. The fact that I do not live in US (or the UK, or Europe) only serves to emphasize this: I am more likely to be exposed to hegemonic discourse, because it is hegemonic.

And the hegemonic discourse about bisexuality, that I see from my own vantage point, is one talking about “both genders” or “both sexes”, treating bisexual and transgender people as if we’re two discreet populations, a movement generally lead by cisgender people (making it, de facto, a cis movement), engaging in tokenism, and many more things - even as they talk about trans inclusion and patting themselves on the back. Clare Hemmings talks about this in her book Bisexual Spaces when she says that in general, bisexual communities in the US and the UK have a tendency to speak of themselves as if they’re “already inclusive” without actually concerning themselves with the dirty details and of actually working to include marginalized groups (not just trans/genderqueer people, but also people of color, working class people, disabled people, and many more).

From a personal perspective, I can cite two (kinds of) incidents that disturbed, and continue to disturb me. The first is pretty typical for me: Reading any kind of book or anthology about bisexuality, ever (except Clare Hemmings’ book) - and I’ve read a whole lot - I often need to curb my irritation and frustration with the amount of “both genders” that I need to read just to get through a single text. It’s stopped me several times from reading bisexual anthologies fully in one batch - I needed whole months of breaking it down. Even while reading a single piece, I often have to stop, take a deep breath and make a conscious effort to move forward. Often it is not the only problem, but most of the time, it’s definitely one of the most disturbing one. This frustrates me all the more because as a genderqueer bisexual person, it seems as though I can never really get it right - or rather, can’t ever be gotten right. In bisexual texts I’m erased as a transgender person, and in transgender texts, I am erased as a bisexual person. I’ve seen very few texts that successfully incorporate the two - it’s usually either one or the other.

The second thing which works very strongly in my head is my experiences from BiCon 2010. After years of reading all the self-congratulatory ‘inclusive’ texts of the US and UK bi movements, I was shocked with how little trans/genderqueer inclusion was actually taking place. I mean things like language, people saying “LGB” instead of “LGBT” or saying “both genders”, discussion topics which never seemed to incorporate viewpoints or issues related to transgender people, I mean the teeny-tiny amount of workshops and spaces explicitly targeting trans/genderqueer people or issues (As I recall, there were only 1-2 workshops specifically targeting trans people. The other two trans-only spaces, during the lunch breaks, were a last-minute effort organized by my girlfriend). One evening I sat down with quite a few other trans and genderqueer people (most of whom were local) and we had a long conversation about transphobia at the convention and in the bi community in general. People were definitely feeling marginalized. And yet, throughout the convention, many cis people were still praising the bi community for being so trans-inclusive.

For me this is even more disturbing by comparison to the Israeli bi community: We grew out of the transgender community, and our politics are intimately related to transgender politics. The community here is led by trans and genderqueer people, and the rest are mostly allies. Transphobia is routinely called out and is not tolerated, our language and our politics incorporate multiple gender identities and trans issues. People who join the community without knowing these things are subsequently educated about them. This is our local ‘hegemonic discourse’ - there’s no such thing as “both genders”.

These are all issues that are generally unspoken in American/western bi communities. Moreover, in my experience online, when they are mentioned, they are generally silenced or met with pretty heavy criticism. For example, in a recent incident on one facebook group, some people actually argued that acknowledging that some bi people were attracted to more than just two genders might make others “feel uncomfortable”.

I could go on for much longer on this (and I do intend to, in my book). However, I think that even these few and rather associative examples are enough in order to point out a significant problem within mainstream bisexual communities. Despite speaking itself as if it’s trans/genderqueer inclusive, the bisexual movement in fact shares much of the cissexism and transphobia of mainstream society and of lesbian/gay communities. As a movement which largely proclaims allegiance to the transgender movement and to trans/genderqueer people, it is our responsibility to take up these points of criticism and to turn them into productive work towards eliminating transphobia and cissexism in our communities.

Afterword concerning attraction

Some people have suggested to me that there’s nothing wrong with defining individuals’ bisexuality as attraction to “men and women”, since some people actually are attracted only to cisgender men and cisgender women. So to briefly reply to this:

I don’t think that being attracted only to cis men and women is overtly/deliberately transphobic and evil. I don’t think that such people intend to hurt anyone or to practice cis privilege on anyone’s back. However and notwithstanding, I do find that this tendency resonates with cissexist social standards.

People often like to think about attraction as a non-political, inborn, pure, uncontrollable quality which is somehow a given, but in most cases this is not so. More often than not, our attractions are shaped by social standards of beauty and attractiveness - of who/what is “allowed” to be considered attractive, and who/what is not. These standards of beauty are of course deeply political as they are shaped by dominant social beliefs and structures: to name just a few, white people are considered more attractive than people of color, thin people more than fat people, nondisabled people more than disabled people - and transgender/genderqueer people more than cisgender people. In Read My Lips, Ricki Wilchins argues that the reason why transgender people are considered unattractive is that their/our bodies are unintelligible in terms of sexual attraction, to a culture which constructs its sexuality upon cisgender bodies. In order to be considered attractive, one must possess a body that “matches” their gender identity. This means that cisgender bodies are structurally privileged in terms of sexuality and sexual attraction - and we know what structural privileging of cisgender identity is called (that’s rights, cissexism).

Lisa Millbank of A Radical TransFeminist wrote very elloquently about how people need to challenge themselves in terms of sexual attraction to include people of marginalized groups, whom society teaches us to find unattractive: Significant Othering: Attraction Down The Privilege Gradient. I advise anyone to whom it may concern, to read this and reflect upon the contents.

* Cissexism is the social system according to which everyone is, or should be, cisgender (i.e. nontransgender), including the social system of privilege for those who are cisgender, and punishment for those who are not.
** Discourse
means everything spoken, written, or otherwise communicated about a certain topic. Hegemonic discourse means a discourse created by those in power and which dominates social understandings about a given topic.

Source: radicalbi.wordpress.com

    • #bisexual
    • #bisexuality
    • #cissexism
    • #transphobia
    • #transgender
    • #genderqueer
  • 1 year ago
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arborealmanager: OKAYdifference between pansexuality and...

bialogue-group:

arborealmanager:

OKAY

CLICK HERE for some thoughts on the difference between pansexuality and bisexuality

bisexuality is defined as people who ♥ people of same gender as themselves + ♥ people of different genders/gender presentations from themselves when someone is physically attracted to both males and females. heteroromantic relationships and homoromantic relationships are no difference to them, they love the person for who they are. using the term in the least offensive way possible, yes, they have no problem dingling their dangle with any fangle that jangles. HOWEVER, that does not necessarily mean that bisexuals are more sexually active/have lower morals about sex than you or i. they’re just fine with both sides of the spectrum. people in general

pansexuality is a more spiritual way of looking at things. they view the person ONLY for their personality and who they are. their significant other’s fangle doesn’t make a dang dongle difference to them. which means that one who is pansexual may have romantic and/or sexual relations with one who is male, female, transexual, genderqueer, genderfluid, etcetera etcetera. their relationships are based solely on gender-blind based chemistry.

Okay? Okay.

Pardon My Sarcasm…:

Addendum - bisexuals can have romantic and/or sexual relations with one who is male, female, transsexual, genderqueer, genderfluid, etc etc. Not just “physically attracted to both males and females.”

The bisexual community itself has always defined it as “same and other,” or more than one, not “both.” Everyone People who are not actually bisexual themselves has their own have made up their own wildly fanciful definition or interpretations, (many of them not very flattering). However, since the beginning of modern LGBTQ+ movement the bisexual community itself has consistently used a more formal definition as follows. :

Bisexuals are people with the (some include “inborn” or “innate”) capacity to form enduring physical, romantic, (some include “spiritual”) and/or emotional attractions to:

(1) those of the same gender as themselves
(2) those of a different genders/gender presentations from themselves.

There may be an individual attraction for one gender or gender presentation which can also be fluid and changeable over time.

Bisexuality is not synonymous with being polyamorous (some include “or promiscuous”). Individual bisexual people may be celibate, asexual, monogamous or non-monogamous just as individual straight, lesbian or gay people can be.

It is certainly unfortunate that for reasons that are not at all clear bisexual people are not listened to when the describe themselves. After all, in this day and age no one would say that gay men are predators and pedophiles; or that lesbians are just women who are to ugly to catch a husband; or that transfolk are just men in dresses. Instead most people listen with respect to how they self identify. Hopefully the day is coming soon when the bisexual community is treated with the same respect.

please avoid posting or reblogging fake and misleading informations, it’s not useful or funny and it hurst people feelings ~~thnx

“The bisexual community itself has always defined it as “same and other,” or more than one, not “both.” “

I’m sorry to say, but this is an outright lie. Definitions of bisexuality as “both” and as attraction to “men and women” abound in both past and present, activist and academic bisexual writing. Yes, there have always been people in bi movements which defined bisexuality as “same + different” or as “more than one”, but saying that this is the only way bisexuality has ever been defined by these movements is misleading and has nothing to do with the realities and histories of bisexual movements themselves.

Trying to paint a false image of these realities and histories is not only unfair (in that it is false and misleading), but is also not working in that it’s not fooling anyone, and it makes bisexuals look like wishful thinkers as best and liars at worst.

As bisexual people and activists, we need to be accountable about cissexist and binary language in our communities rather than pretend like it doesn’t exist. Just as we insist that binary definitions have never been the only agreed ones about bisexuality, so we must acknowledge that non-binary definitions have been and still remain contested. Cissexism remains a significant problem within many bisexual communities, and we need to learn how to be accountable and work on that without glossing over the problems on that one hand, and without scapegoating bisexuality and the entire bisexual movement on the other.

Source: bellypebbles

    • #bisexuality
    • #bisexual
    • #bisexual politics
    • #cissexism
    • #transphobia
    • #binarism
  • 1 year ago > bellypebbles
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Snippet #6: Binormativity and bi assimilationism

As an offshoot of the need to “redeem” bisexuality and bisexual people through good behaviour*, some people might feel as if all bisexual people need to fit into certain standards of normativity, so as to avoid making other bisexuals “look bad” politically. This includes being either “not bisexual enough” or “too bisexual”**, but also includes such things as radical or “unpalatable” opinions, criticizing assimilationist ideology, speaking too much about specifically bisexual issues (rather than assimilationist gay ones such as marriage, military, adoption, etc.), addressing transgender issues, etc. (For example, some people might feel that the definition of bisexuality should remain gender binary for purposes of palatability for the general population, claiming that “maybe after” more people understand binary bisexuality, “we can start” explaining to them about non-binary genders). Many people might feel as if people with such opinions might damage the bisexual movement, much in the same way in which assimilationist gays often feel that bisexuals might damage their movement by tarring their normative image. In this way, the normativity, which is the condition for entrance into the GGGG movement, is inherited into bisexual movements whose goal is assimilation with the assimilationist gay movement. I call these phenomena “binormativity” and “bi assimilationism” respectively.

* “Redeeming bisexuality through good behaviour” is something I explain in the previous paragraph inside the book. I mean the need for many bisexuals to “prove” that they belong in the LGBT movement by actively contributing to it (and, correspondingly, feeling as though bisexuals who are not LGBT activists do not deserve inclusion in the movement).
** “Too bisexual” and “not bisexual enough” are terms that I define previously as expressions of internalized biphobia directed by bisexuals towards other bisexuals. “Too bisexual” means someone who fits the bisexual stereotypes (cheating, being “promiscuous” i.e. sexually independent, having unsafe sex, etc.). “Not bisexual enough” means someone who doesn’t fit the acceptable “standard” of “true bisexuality” (not having had sex/relationship/emotions with people of at least two genders, etc).

Source: radicalbi.wordpress.com

    • #bi assimilationism
    • #binormativity
    • #bisexuality
    • #bisexual
    • #bisexual movement
    • #bisexual politics
    • #biphobia
    • #internalized biphobia
    • #gggg
    • #gggg movement
    • #transphobia
    • #lgbt
  • 1 year ago
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decolonize your mind: Types of cis bigots I am quite tired of (a bit of a rant, this)

kiriamaya:

[warning for cissexism]

The Fundiegelical: “You may think you’re ‘happy’ by wearing the clothing of the opposite sex, but you’re living in sin and you’re going straight to hell! Jesus loves you.”

The “Enlightened” Liberal: “But gender doesn’t even matter, because deep down,…

Source: kiriamaya

    • #transphobia
    • #cissexism
    • #transgender
  • 1 year ago > kiriamaya
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bisexual-community:

[Sydney NSW AU]: Transgender Anti-Violence Project - Whether it’s verbal abuse, physical attacks or discrimination, transphobia is unacceptable and it’s against the law.

You’ve got to be kidding me. Police? Officials? Friendly to trans people? Is this on a different planet? o.O Do they really expect people to believe this? O.o
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bisexual-community:

[Sydney NSW AU]: Transgender Anti-Violence Project - Whether it’s verbal abuse, physical attacks or discrimination, transphobia is unacceptable and it’s against the law.

You’ve got to be kidding me. Police? Officials? Friendly to trans people? Is this on a different planet? o.O Do they really expect people to believe this? O.o

(via bialogue-group)

Source: bisexual-community

    • #transgender
    • #transphobia
    • #genderqueer
  • 1 year ago > bisexual-community
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Transgenders - you’re not worth our breath
o.O
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Transgenders - you’re not worth our breath

o.O

(via bisexual-community)

Source: her-luckyduck

    • #GLBT
    • #GSA
    • #LGBT
    • #LGBTQ
    • #LGBTQ+
    • #allies
    • #ally
    • #bisexuals
    • #equality
    • #gay
    • #lesbians
    • #love
    • #transphobia
  • 1 year ago > her-luckyduck
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