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by pgcj_poster
1492 days ago
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Within living memory, people could get arrested for wearing clothes
that the cops deemed inappropriate for their sex.
Most trans women had to present as men to avoid
being fired from their jobs or publicly ridiculed.
Those who were lucky enough to transition
generally had to disappear and cut all ties to the previous life.
More and more of us have emerged from the underground in recent decades,
but there are many people out there who want us to go back.
The recent Alabama bill targeting trans youth
makes explicit the fact that it's setting out to prevent them
from ever becoming trans adults.
It's completely reasonable for us to be afraid of being forced back
into the position we were in a few decades ago. |
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I'm trying hard to correlate "We were arrested and discriminated against in the past" to "We must teach impressionable pre-pubescents about gender dysphoria behind their parents' back and ban anyone who criticizes this off the internet in the present". A majority used to take your rights away, then it self corrected and gave you your rights back, then you... impose your views back on them and influence institutions to crush their dissenting views ?
Am I just naive or is "we used to be second class citizens but now we're not" cause for reconciliation with and gratitude toward the majority, not hostility and belligerent activism ?