#LGBTQI+ life
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Rainbow trout. Happy pride!
#pride#lgbtq#lgbt#pride month#lgbtqi#lgbtq+#queer#artists of tumblr#art#artists on tumblr#rainbow trout#trout#fish#ghcstcd#my son has anxiety#you can see it in his eye#I wanted to keep their markings...#marine life#marine animal#animals#animal#aquatic animals#aquatic life#nature
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Sometimes I think about 11yo me wearing bra and panties for the first time and how i just felt it made so much sense and made me feel like a freak but just at peace with myself. Fast forward a year to when sometimes I would wear while going to school with all the mixed feelings. If only i could understand then that me being myself would also lead to so much more pain and bullying and shame for even trying to exist and how it would effect the rest of my life in a mostly bad way. It still to this day majes me so sad how the only thing ive wished for my entire life have been to be just like any other girl. Yet it always been so very clear ill never be.
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I'm so glad your friends are both okay. That's so horrible.
Thanks, anon. It was about a decade ago (although the incidents happened in different years), so time's marched on. They're both doing well now.
#it was actually at the same festival#i volunteered there for a year and worked there for another two#and the assaults happened in that time#it's actually part of why i left the festival#it was a bunch of artists basically descending on a regional aus town every year to create art and learn and develop#and the nature of it was that the festival wanted diverse artists to attend#particularly lgbtqi+ artists#and then did nothing to protect them once they were there#i had huge issues with it especially as at the time i was working in marketing / publicity#and felt we were marketing to audiences we would be putting in danger#it didn't help that everyone who worked at the festival was extremely young#like god#i was about 21 or 22 i think at the time and i think the festival director was only 25#and i was not very good at advocating for my own opinions although tbh i also don't think i had the vocabulary for it that i do now either#but y'know#it's given me a deeply rooted passion for artist safety#which sounds extremely uncool lol but i've worked in and out of the field ever since#a large part of my current job at the theatre company is in safe and equitable workplaces#actually right now even i'm working on a safety strategy for working with deaf actors and artists#as we're developing a new show which has a lot of them#so i've been doing a lot of training and interviewing deaf people and advocates to develop it#work's even paying for me to learn auslan which has been amazing#and like the fact that my job even exists now i think is a sign of how far we've come over the last decade#but still#probably revealing too much about my real life here right now haha
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Thank you Hayley Kiyoko, Girl I'm Red, Studio Killers, Steven Universe by the Crewniverse, Undertale by Toby Fox, and Life Is Strange By Dontnod for helping me learn that I am gay.
Also thank you Undertale by Toby Fox, Double Trouble from She-Ra, Lake from Infinity Train, and Steven Universe by The Crewniverse (and Rebecca Sugar) for helping me learn and accept that I am non-binary
And thank you, Saiki K, Todd Chavez and that girl from Sex Education for helping me learn I'm Asexual, Amen 🙌🏽
Also shout-out to my nonbinary English teacher in 9th grade for realizing I was nonbinary before I did but not pushing me! 🙌🏽
Which also, THANK YOU Ellen Wittlinger for writing Parrotfish. I needed that on my Journey to realizing I was trans in 9th grade. Rest in Peace.
Thank you to the authors of Girl Mans Up and Simon vs The Homosapiens agenda, the first queer books I ever read and owned (Becky Albertalli & M-E Girard)
Almost all of the lesbian Tik Tokers I followed in 2019-2021 who then came out as Trans Men 🫡
Thank you to (almost) all the queer YouTubers I watched either while not knowing I was also queer, or just as I figured out I was queer. #respect Joey Graceffa, English Simmer, MacDoes it, Kat Blaque, The Queer Kiwi, Jammi Dodge, Rowan Ellis, Philosophy Tube, Anna Akana, Strange Æons, Ty Turner, A good chunk of Ladylike as well as Eugene Lee Yang, Sam Collins, The multiple Lukes/Lucases, AND ESPECIALLY THOMAS FUCKING SANDERS, Jaiden Animations ( we Stan an ace queen ) GinjaNinja and Szin...I think. I'm pretty sure Szin is queer but idk if I made up GinjaNinja being queer but ykw honorary bc I had a crush on her anyways-
And so many more bruh. (Idk if any of these guys are problematic today)
AND FUCK KALVIN GARRAH ALL THE WAY TO HELL, BITCH. FUCK YOU, FUCK THE DAMAGE YOU COSTED ME ON MY JOURNEY, AND FUCK BLAIR WHITE TOO.
#queer#queer community#lgbtq#lgbtqi+#lgbt+#This was originally much much shorter. It eas just supposed to be “Thank you Life is Strange”#and then I was just gonna do “Thank you Hayley Kiyoko”#and then it snowballed#i dont know#why#i did this#but#its a blog now#its lowkey cringe but what are you gonna do#Has Kalvin Garrah changed#Has he oromises for the irreparable damage hes done#i hate that man#if he has 0 haters I'm fucking dead#He made me HATE MYSELF#And i said so much vile shit thinking he was right
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Congressman Mark Pocan (D-WI) has laid out a path forward for LGBTQ+ equality, which prioritizes defeating Donald Trump in November and pushing the right’s more extreme elements out of the mainstream Republican party. Americans can be convinced to support LGBTQ+ rights, but Trumpism — or, in Pocan’s words, “that hate, base-only mentality” — must be divorced from the Republican party.
Because, outside the most right-wing parts of the GOP base, there isn’t much support for lawmakers spending so much time attacking LGBTQ+ rights.
I truly believe it was the last spaghetti thrown against the wall,” the congressman told LGBTQ Nation when asked about Donald Trump’s use of transphobia at his rallies — including one last year where Trump attacked “transgender insanity” before making fun of how his supporters are so energized by attacks on transgender people when they “didn’t know what the hell” transgender people were while he was in office.
“They were looking for something to scare people because that’s where they do this best,” Pocan said. “I really believe much of this issue is a driver for a segment of their base, and not a general election driver because most people — what they’re most concerned about — are kind of economic core issues to their family … I think it’s going to be hard to make this one of those transcending issues.”
They didn't know what the hell transgender people were when he was in office. Now, they use it to raise money and scare people!
“I truly believe it was the last spaghetti thrown against the wall,” the congressman told LGBTQ Nation when asked about Donald Trump’s use of transphobia at his rallies — including one last year where Trump attacked “transgender insanity” before making fun of how his supporters are so energized by attacks on transgender people when they “didn’t know what the hell” transgender people were while he was in office.
“They were looking for something to scare people because that’s what they do best, then raise political funding!”
“They were looking for something to scare people because that’s where they do this best,” Pocan said. “I really believe much of this issue is a driver for a segment of their base, and not a general election driver because most people — what they’re most concerned about — are kind of economic core issues to their family … I think it’s going to be hard to make this one of those transcending issues.”
This is in contrast to the House, where Pocan says that “LGBTQ+ discrimination is pretty rampant” right now. He brought up how House Republicans attached anti-LGBTQ+ riders to major appropriations bills throughout 2023 in defiance of congressional norms.
It’s coming back to full-blown discrimination against the broader LGBTQ+ community,
“I think it’s really broader now than just the very significant anti-trans attacks we’ve seen nationwide, but it’s coming back to full-blown discrimination against the broader LGBTQ+ community,” Pocan said. “We do have to try to gain public support and show that public support to the rest of Congress to try to make some of these attacks less common.”
Pocan chairs the Congressional Equality Caucus (CEC), which was formed in 2008 to advance LGBTQ+ rights, putting him at the center of discussions of LGBTQ+ issues in the House and giving him unique insight into how LGBTQ+ equality will fare in the House this year.
The GOP is obsessed with taking Rights away from Members Of The LGBTQI+ Community. A report that outlines how Republicans have tried to use the levers of power afforded to them in the chamber to take away rights from LGBTQ+ people.
Pocan and the CEC’s focus is on the 2024 election season. The CEC just released “Obsessed: House Republicans’ relentless attacks against the LGBTQI+ community in 2023,” a report that outlines how Republicans have tried to use the levers of power afforded to them in the chamber to take away rights from LGBTQ+ people.
The report identified 50 anti-LGBTQ+ votes held on the House floor last year, 95 anti-LGBTQ+ amendments added to bills that the House will vote on, 40 committee hearings at which people made anti-LGBTQ+ comments (often as the main focus of the hearing), and 55 anti-LGBTQ+ bills introduced. House Republicans voted to pass several anti-LGBTQ+ bills and also voted for anti-LGBTQ+ extremist Speaker Mike Johnson (R-LA) to lead the House.
This report continues in-depth at LGBTQNATION and can be found by clicking this line.
#black lives matter#aclu#black lgbt#gay#lgbtqi#lgbt#black history#gay men#gayboy#gay love#gayguy#gayman#gay couple#gay art#gayhot#gay memes#gaytwink#gay marriage#gay life#gay tv#gay asian#gay bear#gay community#gay cub#gay dad and son#gay encouragement#gay edit#gay exposure#gay fantasy#gay music
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Changing the grindr notification sound cuz I can't have my all knowimg sister realize what i am and wtf I'm doing like
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Speak Now (Taylor's Version)!
Hey!
So some of you will know this, others may not, but Taylor Swift recently re-recorded her 2010 album titled Speak Now, and it was released roughly 40 hours ago at the time of posting. When ‘Speak Now (Taylor’s Version)’ was announced back in the first week of May this year, I wrote a thing about how I feel about the original album. If you haven’t read that, you may want to to get caught up on how and why I feel things so deeply for this record in particular.
Since way back in February 2021, when Taylor first announced that she was re-recording a bunch of her old albums, starting with Fearless, I have been waiting for this moment. I won’t get into the whole sordid story about why she’s doing it, or how much I wish Scoote* B*aun would get hit by a car, but it’s a whole thing. What I will say is that in the long run, I am honestly happy that this happened because the re-recordings are flawless. Seriously, I’m just wonderstruck (lmao 😉). I haven’t listened to this record as much as I wanted to before writing this - I’ve listened a few times, but mostly I’ve just been thinking about it. I was b i g excited for this to come out, but I can’t lie, there was some anxiety too - this record is so important to me so it had to be flawless; and I think Taylor nailed it. Anyway, I have waited for this for a long time, and now that it’s finally here I have Some Thoughts.
I went back and forth in my head about how to do this, and I decided the best way would be to nail down exactly which songs I was most nervous or excited about, and then do a broader breakdown of the rest of the album, so here we go: starting with…
Mine
‘She is the best thing that’s ever been mine.’
Taylor always opens her records with one of the strongest tracks on said record, and this one is no different. I adore the original, and the re-recording is incredibly faithful to it. The only differences I noticed in this track versus the original were a few unsubtle moments where the growth and refinement of Taylor’s vocal range in the past thirteen years really shine through. It’s the same song, but new again.
Sparks Fly
‘The way you move is like a full-on rain storm, and I’m a house of cards,’
This song has always been one of my all-time favourites from any artist ever, and this new version is just as intense and moving as the original was back when I first heard it somewhere around 2012. This re-recording gives me chills. I am literally trying not to cry right now as I sit here writing this and relistening to it. Every line in this song is flawless. And oh my god, the strings. During the track, I find it difficult with my audio processing problems to tell if it’s a guitar, a violin, another string instrument, or all of the above, but whatever it is it makes this song so much more powerful.
Speak Now
“She floats down the aisle like a pageant queen,”
‘Speak Now (Taylor’s Version)’ is the first track here where Taylor’s strengthened and refined voice is apparent in almost every lyric. While it’s maybe not one of the biggest or strongest stand-out tracks on the record, but it has a very special place in my heart from when the original record made its indelible mark on me. Not a lot is different here, besides the sound of Taylor’s voice, and I think that’s okay.
Mean
“You, with your switching sides and your wildfire lies and your humiliation.”
Mean is so much fun, it always has been. The up-tempo of it contrasted against the subject matter has always worked really well for me. The opening is so peppy while she talks about how hard critics had been treating her, and how badly she used to take it when it happened. But I love how the song goes from ‘upset’ to ‘f**k you’ by the end. This re-recording feels really good, too, because the line “some day I’ll be big enough so you can’t hit me,” feels like both a prophecy from 2010, and a vindication in 2023 that she was right all along.
Better Than Revenge
“He was a moth to the flame, she was holding the matches.”
This is the one I was most anxious about going into this new version. For one, I really love the original song, despite its one glaringly large problem, but I was also nervous about whether or not she would change the lyric, and if so, to what? The first time I heard the new lyric, I was reading the prologue in the booklet that came with the CD hard copy of the album, and even though I wasn’t super paying attention I noticed it. I skipped back a few seconds to hear it again, and looked up the lyrics in the booklet so I could sing along and get it into my brain. I really like the new lyric a lot, and I expect I am going to think about it a lot in the future, too.
Haunted
“Something keeps me holding onto nothing.”
Haunted has always been a big favourite of mine to just scream-sing along to when I need to release some sadness energy, even the acoustic version is great. This version is… something else. It’s always been something of a rock song, but I feel like Taylor really leaned into that here, and the result is flawless. I sent Castles Crumbling to my sister (not a swiftie) during my first listen to the record, and she liked it so much that she listened to the rest of the album - during her listen, she sent me back this text:
This new version is incredible, and I’m so happy to have it in my life. And I’m stoked that ‘Haunted (Taylor’s Version)’ may have made a Swiftie out of my sister. 😁
Ours
“The stakes are high, the water's rough, but this love is ours,”
I love the way Taylor kept the little southern drawl from the original track here. This is the one track on this record that really makes my heart flutter. There’s very little in this track that feels different from the original, but I think that was a really inspired choice because it was honestly practically flawless the first time around. This song also has a really special place in my heart because the original video was the source of one of my favourite reaction gifs to use on social media or in texts (see below!).
Wrapping up… 🎁
The rest of the re-recorded tracks here are gorgeous, and you really can hear the different inflections and tones in Taylor’s voice as she sings these classics from her early career in the studio again. Altogether, I love this release of Speak Now and I really feel like if someone were to ask me which version they should listen to, my answer would be overwhelmingly this one; it truly is the definitive version of the record. It was honestly tough to nail this list down to just seven favourites out of the 22 tracks, even with excluding the From The Vault tracks which I will get to in a second. I’m so happy to have this space to gush about this record, and I really hope you enjoyed reading about my feelings!
From The Vault 🔓
As I said above, I excluded the From The Vault tracks from my list because I simply don’t have a ton to say about them yet. I have only listened to them a handful of times, so expect a follow-up post in a few weeks, once I’ve had more time to sit with them and form Some Opinions. What I will say right now, though, is that the immediate stand-outs for me were Electric Touch, I Can See You, and Castles Crumbling. I’m excited to listen to them a bunch more times. I also wanted to mention the Surprise Announcement video at the end of the album on Apple Music, too. Many hardcore swifties will probably have seen a version of it before elsewhere, but I had not - I have been avoiding any streams from The Eras Tour in hopes that I’ll someday get to see a complete version on Netflix or something - and y’all, this video almost broke me. I so wish I could have been there in person to feel the energy of the crowd!
The End 🔚
Well that’s it from me for this week, friends. Thanks so much for hanging out and indulging me while I am once again back on my Taylor Swift bullshit. If you want to see more writing from me, as I mentioned above you can go back and read about why Speak Now is so special to me, check out other things I've written on Substack, and as always you can check out my Letterboxd movie reviews. I recently reviewed Single White Female (1992) and Poseidon (2006)! Also! Please remember that if you have comments, questions, suggestions, or just want to say hi, please hit me up in the comments or at any of the socials in the links below.
Stay safe out there y’all and have a great week. You’re the best thing that’s ever been mine! Ka kite anō au i a koe. 💚
Rebecca
| Twitter | Mastodon | Bluesky | Cohost | Substack | itch.io | Letterboxd | Instagram | Carrd | Email |
#taylor swift#speak now#taylors version#taylorswift#taylorswift13#music#swifties#swifties 4 life#queer writers#trans writers#non binary writers#writers of tumblr#writers of aotearoa#writers of new zealand#substack#aotearoa#aotearoawriters#new zealand#lgbtqi+#swiftie#tay#non-fiction#feelings#emotions#love#taylor swift owns my ass#letterboxd
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I love this face! I'm so lucky I get to spend the rest of my life looking at it ❤️❤️❤️
I was taking a selfie for @its-brit-bruh and she caught me doing so and called me cute and it made me blushy smile
#im gonna marry this girl#love of my life#my girlfriend is so pretty#trans is beautiful#trans women are beautiful#trans women are valid#trans women are women#trans positivity#trans ally#lesbians#love#wlw#lgbt#lgbtq#lgbtqi#lgbtqia#lgbtiq#lgbtqia+#lgbt pride#lgbt rights#lgbtq community#lgbtqi community#lgbtqiia+#lgbtqplus#lgbtqiaplus#pride
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sulla Strada ByMe CapDaSha Photographer Milano Italy Street
#streetphography#style#fashion#editorials#fashionphotography#fashionmagazines#potraiture#gender transgender lgbtqi life
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I think the dream i had last night made me realize i don't like men. what a world y'all
#shout out to dreams that change the course of my life for the rest of time#dreams#so uhmm#do i tag this as lesbian yet orrr do i wait until i officially diagnose myself#lqbtq#lgbtq+#lgbtqia#lgbtqi community
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“At the same time, families across the country face excruciating decisions to relocate to a different state to protect their children from dangerous and hateful anti-LGBTQI+ laws, which target transgender children, threaten families, and criminalize doctors and nurses. These bills and laws attack our most basic values and freedoms as Americans: the right to be yourself, the right to make your own medical decisions, and the right to raise your own children. Some things should never be put at risk: your life, your safety, and your dignity.”
That’s an excerpt from President Biden’s Proclamation on Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, Queer and Intersex Pride Month, 2024.
In my lifetime, we’ve gone from the White House press secretary laughing uproariously at AIDS patients and making sneering accusations of members of the press corps only asking about AIDS because they were gay to POTUS supporting the rights of trans people, trans kids, in a proclamation of national recognition of Pride.
No, more plainly, we’ve come to this point in the last fifteen years.
The depth, breadth and speed of this progress is astounding, especially as it has coexisted with absolute regression and a constant state of attack of LGBTQIA rights from Republicans.
Do not take this for granted.
#lgbtq#lgbtqia#pride month#trans rights#protect trans kids#protect trans lives#joe biden#biden administration#pride 2024
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😭
Just a few more months and I can marry Muffy as a woman. The significance of this to all the gay and unknowingly sapphic/gay girls that wanted to give Muffy that happy romance she craved but just had to watch her be single and date fuck bois after fuck bois
This is from the official JP account and Muffy(or Molly) is so precious here 🥺💕💕
#aaaaaaaa#holding back tears#fuck fuck fuck fuck#sapphic thoughts#lgbtqi+#i'm not okay#sos awl#story of seasons a wonderful life#harvest moon awl#farming games#vide games#representation matters
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Gender apartheid: oppression of women should be made a crime against humanity – feminist academic explains why
Published July 15th, 2014, written by Penelope Andrews
"Crimes against humanity are occurring with impunity around the globe; from Myanmar to Sudan, Ukraine and elsewhere. And yet, unlike international treaties for the crimes of genocide, torture, apartheid and forced disappearances, there isn’t a treaty specific to crimes against humanity.
That lack is now being remedied.
The International Law Commission, a UN expert body, has submitted draft articles for a treaty to the UN’s Sixth Committee. This is the main forum for considering legal questions in the UN General Assembly. The intention is to give countries more legal tools to hold accountable those who commit crimes against humanity. It is expected that the treaty process will conclude in October 2024.
The new treaty may include special protection for women.
We believe good journalism is good for democracy and necessary for it.
A group of women activists is lobbying the committee to consider including in the treaty a new definition aimed at protecting women against all forms of oppression. They are advocating for a definition of this discrimination as “gender apartheid”. The idea is that it would track the definition of racial apartheid by replacing the word “race” with “gender”.
Apartheid (Afrikaans for “apartness”) policies were codified in South Africa between 1948 and 1954. The ideology divided South Africans on the basis of race in all spheres of life.
The lobbyists argue that the international community responded comprehensively to racial apartheid after the Apartheid Convention made it a crime in 1973. This forced the South African apartheid state to be held accountable for the crime. It also imposed an obligation on UN member states to eradicate the institutionalised systematic oppression and domination of black South Africans.
Read more: Ordinary white South Africans and apartheid – bound to a racist system they helped prop up
As an academic who has researched and written extensively on racial and gender equality, I fully support broadening the definition of the crime of apartheid to include gender. I believe this is necessary given the persistence and ubiquity of structural discrimination and violence against women in the world.
I first made a case for this in my 2012 book From Cape Town to Kabul: Rethinking Strategies for Pursuing Women’s Human Rights. I argued that when one reads the Apartheid Convention closely, and substitutes “gender” for “race”, the situation of Afghan women, in particular, is identical to the plight of black South Africans under apartheid.
I argued that thinking about constructing a genuine alternative to the realities of women’s lives in Afghanistan was to consider the way the international community confronted the eradication of apartheid in South Africa. It would enable a structured global approach responsive to the institutionalised systems of domination and oppression of women, girls and the LGBTQI+ community.
Codifying “gender apartheid” could go much further than protecting Afghan women and girls.
Great progress has been made in the pursuit of gender equality and in stemming gender-based violence. I believe that codifying gender apartheid under international law is an essential component of that continued progress.
It could offer significant relief to many victims and survivors who otherwise would not be entitled to adequate recourse from the international community and from states. It could also lead to a more effective and concerted international response to gender-based oppression.
Fighting gender apartheid
The crime of gender apartheid stands out as unique and pernicious in intent and consequence. It is what legal scholar Patricia Williams has referred to as “spirit murder”. That is a system of dehumanisation, erasure, oppression, domination and persecution.
Read more: Students on the frontline: South Africa and the US share a history of protest against white supremacy
The Taliban’s ever deepening and institutionalised oppression of Afghan women and girls is the most vivid illustration of the case.
Multiple UN experts, member states and Afghan women’s rights defenders have warned of the deteriorating situation of women and girls in Afghanistan. The concerns became more pronounced after the UN Deputy Secretary-General Amina J. Mohammed on 12 January 2023 warned the international community that in Afghanistan,
unprecedented, systemic attacks on women’s and girls’ rights and the flouting of international obligations are creating gender-based apartheid.
A sign in Johannesburg in 1948 saying 'non-European' people are not allowed to use a lift reserved for Europeans (whites).
Apartheid signage in Johannesburg in March 1948. AFP via Getty Images
In September 2023, UN Women executive director Sima Bahous called on member states to support an intergovernmental process to codify gender apartheid under international law. She said that
the tools the international community has at its disposal were not created to respond to mass, state-sponsored gender oppression. This systematic and planned assault on women’s rights is foundational to the Taliban’s vision of state and society and it must be named, defined, and proscribed in our global norms, so that we can respond appropriately.
Why the argument holds water
One question that needs answering is whether apartheid can be separated from its association with South Africa. Can we think of apartheid as a crime against humanity that can be removed from its racial context?
The evidence from Afghanistan, for example, suggests the answer is a resounding “yes”.
There is a precedent for this. The crime of genocide originated as a term to describe the crimes in Nazi-occupied Europe in the second world war. It was then applied to genocides that occurred elsewhere in the world, like Rwanda, Cambodia and Sudan. In the same way apartheid ought not to be confined to its racial origins.
Read more: South Africa’s genocide case against Israel is the country's proudest foreign policy moment in three decades
International opponents of racial apartheid played a significant role in bolstering South African anti-apartheid activists. In the same way the backing of the global community is crucial to advancing gender justice and women’s human rights. It is particularly necessary to support frontline defenders of women’s human rights who challenge gender apartheid at great risk to themselves.
As the government of Malta noted in its 2023 written comments on the Draft Crimes Against Humanity Convention:
[t]he codification of the crime of gender apartheid will enable victims and survivors – present and future – to hold perpetrators to account for the totality of crimes committed by systematized oppression which the crime of gender persecution alone cannot and does not capture.
This view ought to be widely endorsed by the international community."
#i like the using of gender apartheid and hope it can become more standard#gender apartheid#feminism#feminist news#radical feminism#radical feminist safe#radical feminists do touch#global feminism
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HAPPY PRIDE MONTH
As every year this is a good date to remember the daily struggle for the rights of the LBGT+ community. It is also a time to learn about the people who made it possible for us to identify ourselves as who we are today without fear of reprisals or being punished by the law. This month I got involved in the history of Argentina and its different movements for the fight for rights through the 20th century. Here I come to share some important figures, some more known than others, but obviously there are a lot that I have left out of this publication.
Sara Facio (1932-2024) & Maria Elena Walsh (1930-2011)
A couple of intellectual artists that would need a separate publication to go deeper into the subject. Sara is one of the greatest Latin American photographers who with her camera contributed to the creation of the most outstanding photographic heritage of the country. Maria Elena is a writer, singer and composer whose children's songs resonate to this day because they are much more profound than they seem and are still relevant today.
Salvadora Medina Onrubia (1894-1972)
She was a writer, militant anarchist, single mother and the first woman to run a newspaper in the country. She was the first Argentinean woman to dare to write about double sinners, lesbians and adulteresses. One of her most valued plays was Las descentradas, premiered in 1929. There, Salvadora honors her own contradictions, narrating women who question monogamous structures, marriage and the traditional family.
Malva Solis (1920-2015)
She was a transvestite writer who lived for 95 years when the life expectancy of this community in the country was under 40 years old. In 1951 founded the first trans organization on record, Maricas Unidas Argentinas. She has the oldest series of trans photographs in the country, dating from 1940 to 1980, when simply having those photographs at home was cause for being arrested. There is a documentary based on the photographs and conversations with her at her home called "Con Nombre de flor".
Jorge Horacio Ballve Piñero (1920-?)
Piñero was a young man from a well-to-do family of the Buenos Aires society at the beginning of the century. Together with his best friend Adolfo and Blanca, he organized gatherings in his apartment in Recoleta, and was a pioneer of male erotic photography. They mixed the privileged social class with workers, dishwashers, gas station workers, sailors and cadets from the Military College. These three characters were involved in a police case involving cadets from the military college, known as the Cadet Scandal. In the police archives remain captive the photographic collection, intended for pleasure and personal aesthetic enjoyment that tragically proved key to incriminate some friends who just wanted to have fun.
Ruth Mary Kelly (1925-1994)
She was a bisexual woman, who worked as a "Wohoo Worker". Founder of Grupo Safo in 1972, the first Argentine lesbian organization, and of the Frente de Liberación Homosexual (Homosexual Liberation Front). In 1972 she wrote Memorial de los Infiernos about her experiences as a "Wohoo" worker and bisexual, persecuted by the psychiatric-prison system.
Manuel Puig (1932-1990)
He was an Argentine writer and LGBT+ activist, author of the novels Boquitas pintadas, El beso de la mujer araña (Considered one of the most recognized LGBT works in Latin America and one of the best works in Spanish of the 20th century) etc. He also fought against authoritarianism and machismo, and was one of the founders of the Homosexual Liberation Front in 1971, one of the first associations for the defense of LGBTQI+ rights.
Mariela Muñoz (1943-2017)
She was the first transsexual woman to be recognized by the state and given a female ID card on May 2, 1997. At the age of 16 she became independent, and it was then that she began caring for children, teenagers and single mothers. She cared for children who had been abandoned by their mothers, whom she loved and cared for. She raised, during her lifetime, 23 children and 30 grandchildren. In a dispute over the guardianship of 3 children in 1993, Argentina was confronted for the first time with the debate as to whether a transsexual person "could be a mother"
Carlos Jauregui (1957-1996) & Raul Soria
Carlos was a History professor and the founder of the Civil Association Gays for Civil Rights, organizer of the first Pride march in Buenos Aires and an essential figure for Argentine activism. In 1984, he broke with the schemes by appearing in the magazine Siete Días embracing the activist Raul Soria, a homosexual person assumed his sexuality in a public way for the first time. He believed that media visibility is fundamental for LGTB people. Leaving aside the fear and silence that other generations suffered for years. In 1985, Raul would present himself as the first gay candidate for congressman in the country.
Roberto Jauregui (1960-1994)
Brother of Carlos, was a journalist, actor and the first activist for the rights of people with HIV in the country. In 1989 he exposed the inequality in access to treatment at that time due to the price of medication. He played a central role in marches, actions, talks and interviews to demand human rights for people living with the virus. A well-known phrase of his is "Showing one's face is not easy in a society that discriminates, censures and separates".
Cris Miró (1965-1999)
Cris was the first visible trans people that appeared in the media and broke with the "transvestite" paradigm. A dental student, she got involved in the artistic underworld and later studied classical dance, musical comedy and acting. Her career was meteoric: the popularity of revue theater catapulted her to the small screen where she became a sought-after figure in the most popular programs. On June 23rd, a series about his life inspired by his biography was released, available on Prime Video.
Alejandro Vannelli (1948-) y Ernesto Larresse (1950-)
They were the first couple in the province of Buenos Aires to get legally married on July 30, 2010 after the Equal Marriage Law was passed. They met in 1976 because of a triple A bomb in the theater where Larresse was performing with Nacha Guevara, then he joined the cast of Vannelli. At the beginning they did not like each other because of Vanelli's appearance as a wealthy young man and Larresse was the opposite, but opposites attracted and they were a couple for 34 years.
Norma Castillo (1943-) y Ramona "Cachita" Arévalo (1943-2018)
They were the of South America's first gay marriage on April 9, 2010. Norma and Ramona were married to two Colombians, who were cousins to each other. During the dictatorship they both went into exile in Colombia and there they fell in love and lived their romance clandestinely, until Cachita separated and Norma was widowed by her husband. They lived their love freely and even opened an LGBT discotheque in Colombia. In 1998 they returned to Argentina and began to work in sexual diversity organizations.
Feliciano Centurión 1962-1996)
He was a visual artist, a Paraguayan painter professionally trained in Argentina. He grew up in a home dominated by women, where he learned to sew and crochet. Inspired by queer aesthetics and folk art, he used to incorporate household textiles and references to the natural world. She handled kitsch art and languages not considered high art with a great deal of knowledge and sensitivity.
Humberto Tortonese (1964-) , Alejandro Urdapilleta (1954-2013) & Batato Barea (1961-1991)
Batato was an actor and "literary transvestite clown" as he called himself, one of the most important personalities of the underground theater movement of the post-dictatorship years. Together with Alejandro Urdapilleta and Humberto Tortonese, revolutionized the underground scene of the 80's - in places like the Parakultural. They disguised themselves, wore make-up and improvised delirious and strident scenes for the decade.
Sandra Mihanovich & Celeste Carballo
Sandra and Celeste are two singers who were visibly lesbians during the 80s and early 90s. Together they released the albums "Somos mucho mas que dos" and "Mujer contra mujer" which became a symbol of belonging for the whole LGBTQ arc in our country. They managed to be part of the rock scene, an area historically dominated by men. Sandra among all her songs is "Soy lo que soy" released in 1984 composed by Henry Jerman.
#Argentina LBGT#Lgbt Latin America#ARG Queer#lgbt#lgbt love#gay pride#bisexual pride#lesbian pride#pride month#the sims 4#sims 4 pride#sims 4 edit#sims 4 render#ts4 lgbt#lgbt history#queer history#victorian lgbt#PrideFlagLegacy#pride flag legacy challenge#ts4 historical#sims 4 historical#Cris Miro#Sandra Mihanovich#Celeste Carballo#Maria Elena Walsh#Sara Facio#Ballve Piñero#Carlos Jauregui#Roberto Jauregui#Feliciano Centurión
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Stand with Queer Refugees in Africa: Peter's Story
Survival Funds for LGBTIQ'S Refugees
My name is Pablo , and I am an LGBTIQ leader and representative here in an emcampment, where we have faced a great deal of homophobia in this environment, including from fellow refugees.
Unfortunately, UNHCR staff, including medical attendants, are homophobic to us and don’t provide services to us. This has been reported several times to the people responsible but help has been in vain. Thus, seeking support from fellow LGBTIQ organizations and individual well-wishers to attain medication from private hospitals in the camp has been difficult.
Additionally, food provided to us, as distributed at present by the UNHCR, is not enough to sustain us for a month which is in a ratio of 1:2 beans and Rice.
Thus, we are seeking support to overcome scarcity and hunger.
We will be very glad to receive any positive feedback in terms of financial help, advice and advocacy support!
Many thanks.
life at the refugee camp is extremely hard for the LGBTQI community since from 2019 when I fled to 2024 due to rampant HOMOPHOBIA within the camp. This was witnessed through daily attacks by homophobic fellow refugees and the co-host community.
LGBTQI refugees live under great fear whereby we're being targeted by the homophobes; this has resulted in severe injuries where these homophobes ambush when armed with machetes. Over time, property has been also lost and even lives where we lost three of our mates in kakuma before I left there. This was witnessed in the recent attack when two LGBTQI refugees were set on fire where they suffered third degree burns, which resulted in one losing his life while the other is on life support in hospital update.
In addition, sexual harassment has also been witnessed here in refugee camp to the LGBTQI community. Lesbians on several occasions have been raped not once but twice. Beyond any reasonable doubt, this has made the most hostile land for LGBTQI community.
Furthermore, the LGBTQI community lives under great suffering due to the fact we are willing to work to earn a living but fail to get employment opportunities due to our sexual orientation. This has made life so much harder for us minority group, being marginalized amidst these arid areas of camps. We have faced various attacks from homophobes and also illness related to poor standards of living.
Even so, despite all the misery, we try to find some time to kill the stress when celebrating official LGBTIQ days and festivals. Below is when we celebrated the Pride Day and also had some couples officially get married while maintaining a low profile.
Please help and support us to overcome our starvations, get good medications and shelters because as we are now we daily face the same obstacles while sleeping out side😭.
Yours only our hopes.
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It is hilarious the amount of leftists that I have seeing defending Maduro without a second thought, not realizing:
Maduro doesn't care about the working class, and people had been sent to prison for making unions thanks to his policies.
There is no protection to LGBTQI+ people, to not say persecution, considering how not so long ago the police raided a private gay club and charged people for things like "indecency."
Abortion is only legal when the mother's life is at risk, while access to contraceptives as well as condoms has been lacking due to exorbitant prices.
Indigenous people had been subjected to abuse, forced labour, and their rights being diminished.
Routinely using police brutality against its citizens.
Under his rule there has been deforestation of the Amazon, for profit.
The lack of freedom of expression had gotten way worse just recently.
Like this guy does all the things these people say to hate, but oh if he does? Apparently its all fine and dandy.
Make it make sense man.
(A few links in English because sources in Spanish routinely gets ignored.)
#venezuela#venezuela libre#free venezuela#oh but later this is all a us coup#because somehow people don't think we can get tired of this shit
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