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April 10, 2026
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"The US routinely searches for new legal scapegoats to deposit its fears and anxieties around gender/sexual deviance. In the past, this has included the Witch Trials, sodomy laws, hyper-criminalization of suspected gay pedophilia in the late 20th century, and most recently dozens of state and local anti-trans bills across the country. While the face/identity of the alleged perpetrators have changed, the supposed purity of the "victims" has remained quite stagnant. These days the narrative is that freaky transgender people (or as they say "crossdressers") will come into your bathrooms and abuse innocent little girls. This type of legal/carceral culture relies on two things: The construction of morally abhorrent perpetrators/scapegoats AND the production of pure, innocent victims. In this case, as in so many cases in the past, these victims are archetypical (white) (cis) innocent little girls. We totally need to challenge the white Christian supremacist, right-wing rhethoric around trans bodies, absolutely, But we also need to seriously overhaul the idea that there is a perfect victim anywhere."
"Since the position of the transphobe is that trans people donât really exist, as trans people, and the position of trans people is obviously that they do exist, immediately we can see that no compromise is possible. Things either exist or they donât, thereâs no middle ground. So in any debate on this issue, itâs gonna be winner takes all. The trans person then is in the impossible situation of having to prove their own existence to someone whoâs every response is gonna be, âHow do you know?â Itâs perhaps unsurprising that many though not all people would decide that faced with an opponent whose entire position is the total denial of your humanity as the kind of human being that you are, the only winning move in such a game would be not to play."
"If youâre interested in supporting trans liberation, then figure out who is organizing against the street sweeps of homeless people living in Berkeley and join them. Thatâs a trans issue. Housing, access to health care, prison abolition, defending the West Berkeley Shellmound. Those are all trans issues, not only because they impact trans people, but also because trans people are there fighting back. Working toward another world is our only way out. Attempting to reform a system, like the prison industrial complex, will not eliminate its violent foundations. Reforms, as insurgents remind us, actually make the system bigger, make the system much deadlier, make the system more racist, more classist and ableist. You canât reform a system that is built on slavery, on Indigenous genocide, on transphobia, and through all forms of degradation â we have to abolish it. So, we also canât lose sight of the radical transformation that we want and need, our collective life depends on it."
"Itâs never just one thing. Itâs always a constellation of systems that are rubbing up against each other. Itâs racial capitalism. Itâs the ongoing impact of settler colonialism and imperialism. Itâs also the institutions of policing, imprisonment and deportation. These are all different forms of domination situated together that produce this atmosphere of violence. So, in responding to these murders, we need to be thinking about all of those things, all the time. That is hard and doesnât make for a very good mainstream news story: They want a single bad person, not a whole deadly system. But most forms of anti-trans violence are specifically brutal. Theyâre also very corporal. Trans people are positioned in relation to a normative culture that is both fascinated and repelled by us. Itâs not usually, âI hate you, get away.â Itâs more often, âI hate you. Come really close so I can terrorize you.â We see this in the ways trans people are produced as props in the latest culture war. These anti-trans bills are rooted in an obsession with the idea of trans peopleâs bodies. The politicians authoring these bills are saying, âLet me study you, produce you as a singular object outside of yourself, so that I cannot just terrorize you, but produce your life as terror.â This is, as I explore in my book, the other side of assimilation. But, I mean, compared to 20 years ago, people have a broader understanding and lexicon of trans, non-binary and gender-nonconforming people. So, there is that. And we are seeing more media visibility, but the violence is still increasing."
"Weâre currently in this time of LGBT formal equality. The troubled language of âfull citizenshipâ is used to make it seem like transgender communities are no longer living through contiguous harm. Yet, at this same time, along with the waves of anti-trans legislation, we still see these vicious attacks. Paying attention to this violence forces that narrative of progress back. We are in a very different space than the one that the dominant culture wants us to believe weâre in. We have to remember that these beautiful people were stolen from their lives much too early, and that is a loss for us all. We must also be clear that Black, brown and Indigenous trans women continue to be hyper-impacted by these and other forms of violence. But this is not to say that people remain singularly abject; these same communities are organizing to end the deadly world and create one where we might survive. So, anti-trans violence is always racialized within the idiom of gender. And thatâs important to remember."
"Nathan Robinson: I donât know how they go through their livesâand when I say they, I mean from J.K. Rowling to Ben Shapiro to Jordan Peterson to Helen Joyce to Debra Soh to Abigail Shrier. They must go through their lives trying to avoid having serious conversations with trans people. Thatâs the only way you could come up with this idea that there is a denial of biology. Itâs so strange. Of all the people who deny human biology, trans people are not in that group. Nobody has a better understanding of what causes the body to be the way it is and the effects of hormones on the body. Nobody thinks about that more. Thereâs not a single biological fact that is being in any way denied by trans people. Julia Serano: Yeah. I would love to be at a point whereâand obviously, weâve taken this kind of backlash turnâwe realize that trans people provide a lot of insight for everyday people about gender. People will debate the differences between the sexes, and itâs like, trans people have written about our experiences with, say, hormonal transitioning. And the answer is that yeah, there are very real differences. Experiences may vary. But again, humans are these overlapping bell curves. We, as trans people, have experience being members of both the male and female persuasions, and that relates to both physical and social aspects of gender. Having moved through the world as male and as female, we have very interesting experiences. And we have moved through the world as non-binary and have been read different ways and have experienced very real double standards. A lot of these anti-trans people purport to be feminists. Iâm not going to say they arenât feminists, but their feminism seems a bit off to me. We can talk at great length about how sexist double standards are very real thingsâif you would stop fighting us. There are a lot of feminists who appreciate trans peopleâs insights and perspectives into these issues. But this particular group of people, some of whom consider themselves to be feminists, just really donât want to have that conversation. They only want to have one conversation, and itâs one where trans people donât get to speak and where it ends with us being shown the door."
"Today, America and the conservative movement are enduring an era of division and danger akin to the late 1970s. Now, as then, our political class has been discredited by wholesale dishonesty and corruption. Look at America under the ruling and cultural elite today: Inflation is ravaging family budgets, drug overdose deaths continue to escalate, and children suffer the toxic normalization of transgenderism with drag queens and pornography invading their school libraries."
"While the American public may have a broader understanding of the experiences of people who are transgender, non-binary and gender-nonconforming, violence against these communities â in the form of killings and prejudiced American policy â has continued to rise. This year is on track to be the deadliest on record in America, with 29 trans and gender-nonconforming people killed. At this time in 2020, which was a record-breaking year for such killings, 13 had been reported, according to the Human Rights Campaign. Though recently proposed legislation, like the LGBTQ Essential Data Act, aims to combat that violence by better tracking those deaths, more than 100 anti-trans bills have meanwhile been proposed this year â the most in U.S. history â by conservative lawmakers. Thirteen of those bills have passed. âWe donât want more data. We want less deaths,â said Eric Stanley, an associate professor in gender and womenâs studies at UC Berkeley. âTrans people are positioned in relation to a normative culture that is both fascinated and repelled by us. Itâs not usually, âI hate you, get away.â Itâs more often, âI hate you. Come really close so I can terrorize you.ââ âThe culture war has landed on trans communities, and that violence is specifically brutal and very corporal,â added Stanley."
"Reverse policies that allow transgender individuals to serve in the military. Gender dysphoria is incompatible with the demands of military service, and the use of public monies for transgender surgeries or to facilitate abortion for servicemembers should be ended."
"I will not stay silent when I spot racism," Jones, 49, said during her speech, delivered at the city's Omega Center. "I will not stay silent when I spot homophobia or transphobia. I will not stay silent when I spot xenophobia. I will not stay silent when I spot religious intolerance. I will not stay silent when I spot any injustice.""
"The American Civil Liberties Union said Thursday that it will challenge the administrationâs rules in court. âThese gratuitous proposals are cruel and unconstitutional attacks on the rights of transgender youth and their families,â Chase Strangio, co-director of the ACLUâs LGBTQ and HIV Rights Project, said in a statement. Kennedy said Thursday that the administration is confident itâs approach will pass court challenges. âIf people sue us, theyâre welcome to,â he said. The HHS announcement came just after the House passed a bill that could imprison health care providers for providing trans care for minors. The bill, sponsored by Republican Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene of Georgia, could imprison doctors who provide care such as surgeries or puberty blockers for up to 10 years. Itâs unclear whether the GOP-led Senate will take up the measure, though it is unlikely it would get enough Democratic support to pass out of that chamber."
"HHS leaders on Thursday cited their own review of evidence and reports from other countries, many of which have faced sharp criticism for drawing sweeping conclusions with little or poor evidence. Health officials said they expect to emphasize psychosocial assessment and support for transgender youth, including âcompassionate, developmentally appropriate counseling.â But they acknowledged that there are a limited number of mental health care providers available. Gender identity care, which is sometimes called gender-affirming care, is a multidisciplinary approach to help a person transition from their assigned gender â the one a clinician assigned them at birth, based mostly on anatomic characteristics â to the gender by which they identify. It can include mental health care or age-appropriate medical care such as hormone treatments, puberty blockers, gynecologic and urologic care and reproductive treatments. Major mainstream medical associations â including the American Medical Association, the American Psychiatric Association, the Endocrine Society, the American Psychological Association, the American Academy of Pediatrics and the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry â have supported such care and agree that itâs the gold standard of clinically appropriate care that can provide lifesaving treatment for children and adults. Professional medical organizations do not recommend surgery for children as a part of care, and research shows that itâs rare among transgender or gender-diverse teens."
"âPatients, their families, and their physicians â not politicians or government officials â should be the ones to make decisions together about what care is best for them. The governmentâs actions today make that task harder, if not impossible, for families of gender-diverse and transgender youth.â Itâs the latest in a string of actions by President Donald Trumpâs administration that target transgender people, including eliminating mention of trans people on federal websites, halting data collection on health issues, removing trans people from the military and suing states that allow trans athletes to play on high school sports teams. Also Thursdsay, US Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Marty Makary said the agency is sending warning letters to 12 makers and sellers of breast binders who marketed or sold the devices for treatment of gender dysphoria in children. National Institutes of Health Director Dr. Jay Bhattacharya also said the research agency will end support for research into gender transition, saying, âit was junk science to begin with.â"
"Trump administration health officials announced Thursday that the federal government will block transgender care to children by targeting hospitals and doctors that provide it. New proposed rules would prohibit hospitals from participating in Medicare and Medicaid if they provide care such as puberty blockers and surgeries for transgender minors, and would prevent federal coverage of such treatments. âThese procedures fail to meet professionally recognized standards of care,â US Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. said, calling many types of transgender care âmalpractice.â âMedical professionals or entities providing sex-rejecting procedures to children are out of compliance with these standards of health care.â Medical groups denounced the announcements, saying they intrude on physician-patient relationships and jeopardize care for everyone. âAllowing the government to determine which patient groups deserve care sets a dangerous precedent, and children and families will bear the consequences,â said Dr. Susan Kressly, president of the American Academy of Pediatrics."
"And the attacks on queer people just keep coming. In May 2023, the Human Rights Campaign listed anti-queer bills introduced and passed in this year alone: ⢠Over 520 anti-LGBTQ+ bills have been introduced in state legislatures, a record; ⢠Over 220 bills specifically target transgender and non-binary people, also a record; and ⢠A record 74 anti-LGBTQ laws have been enacted so far this year, including: ⢠Laws banning gender affirming care for transgender youth: 16 ⢠Laws requiring or allowing misgendering of transgender students: 7 ⢠Laws targeting drag performances: 2 ⢠Laws creating a license to discriminate: 3 ⢠Laws censoring school curricula, including books: 13 Weâre not paranoid. They really do want us to disappear."
"It may be difficult to imagine this if you yourself arenât living with gender dysphoria (a constant disorienting and debilitating alienation from oneâs own body). What studies show is that proper health care reduces suicidal thoughts and attempts, along with other kinds of psychological distress. Furthermore, people who begin to receive such care in adolescence are less likely to be depressed, suicidal, or involved in harmful drug use later in life. As Dr. Deanna Adkins, director of the Duke Child and Adolescent Gender Care Clinic at Duke University Hospital, notes, young people who receive the gender-affirming care they need âare happier, less depressed, and less anxious. Their schoolwork often improves, their safety often improves.â And she says, âSaving their lives is a big deal.â Denial of life-saving care may start with young people. But the real future right-wing agenda is to deny such health care to everyone who needs it, whatever their ages. In April 2023, The New York Times reported that Florida and six other states had already banned Medicaid coverage for gender-affirming care. Missouri has simply banned most such care outright, no matter whoâs paying for it."
"Medical care: Laws allowing or even requiring misgendering in classrooms are, however, only the beginning. Next up? Denying trans kids, and ultimately trans adults, medical care. As of June 1st of this year, according to the national LGBT rights organization Human Rights Campaign, 20 states already ban gender-affirmative medical care for trans youth up to age 18. Another seven states now have such bans under consideration. What is âgender affirmativeâ medical care? According to the World Health Organization, it âcan include any single or combination of a number of social, psychological, behavioral, or medical (including hormonal treatment or surgery) interventions designed to support and affirm an individualâs gender identity.â In other words, itâs the kind of attention needed by people whose gender identity does not align in some way with the sex they were assigned at birth. What does it mean to deprive a trans person of such care? It can, in fact, prove to be a death sentence."
"Misgendering: As of 2023, seven states have laws allowing (or requiring) public school teachers to refuse to use the preferred pronouns of students if they donât match their official sex. This behavior is called âmisgenderingâ and itâs more than a violation of common courtesy. Itâs a denial of another personâs being, their actual existence, and can have a lethal effect. Such repudiation of trans and nonbinary young people significantly increases their chances of committing suicide. It also increases the chances that their non-queer peers will come to view them with the kind of disrespect and even contempt that could also prove lethal and certainly increases their chances of becoming targets of violence. In 2022, for example, CBS News reported that âthe number of trans people who were murdered in the U.S. nearly doubled between 2017 and 2021.â Itâs no accident that this increase correlates with an increase in high-profile political and legal attacks on trans people. Sadly, but not surprisingly, race hatred has also played a role in many of these deaths. While Blacks represent about 13 percent of trans and nonbinary people, they accounted for almost three-quarters of those murder victims."
"Transphobia, too, emanates from a prejudice that a personâs stated identity is more trustworthy if it reflects their ânaturalâ role in human reproduction."
"All around the world people are saying that we want to struggle to continue as global communities, to create a world free of xenophonbia and racism, a world from which poverty has been expunged, and the availability of food is not subject to the demands of capitalist profit. I would say a world where a corporation like Monsanto would be deemed criminal. Where homophobia and transphobia can truly be called historical relics along with the punishment of incarceration and institutions of confinement for disabled people; and where everyone learns how to respect the environment and all of the creatures, human and non-human alike, with whom we cohabit our worlds."