Transgender Rights – Informed Comment https://www.juancole.com Thoughts on the Middle East, History and Religion Mon, 12 Jun 2023 04:45:56 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.8.10 Anti-Trans Politicians Are Following the Nazi Playbook https://www.juancole.com/2023/06/politicians-following-playbook.html Mon, 12 Jun 2023 04:02:37 +0000 https://www.juancole.com/?p=212581

Right-wingers don’t have any answers for the issues that matter, so they’re viciously attacking a vulnerable minority. 

( Otherwords ) – The 1920s were both good and bad times for the Jews of Germany.

They’d been granted the same legal rights as other Germans and were established in respected professions. They were mostly treated as worthy of dignity. But that changed as antisemites scapegoated Jews for all of Germany’s woes — from the loss of World War I to the hyperinflation that had ruined so many lives.

Nazis not only stereotyped Jews as rich, cunning, and devious, but also likened them to revolting vermin — including lice, rats, snakes, and cockroaches. They were depicted as creepy, smelly, disease-ridden, sub-human.

Attacking this vulnerable, long-persecuted, tiny minority — under 1 percent of the German population — as repulsive and dangerous was the German far right’s way to activate loathing while evading the fact that they had no solutions for Germany’s real problems.

Today, Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and other GOP leaders are following the Nazi playbook, substituting transgender youth for the Jews. They industriously promote hatred, fear, and physical revulsion of this small group — also barely 1 percent of the population — and pretend it’s out of concern for children.

It’s no coincidence that open antisemites actively harass LGBTQ events, nor that right-wing anti-LGBTQ rhetoric invokes anti-semitic tropes. In Nazi Germany, transgender people were viciously targeted alongside Jews. And although today’s GOP denies that it welcomes Jew-haters, they are comfortable working with anti-semites jointly attacking trans and LGBTQ people.

Meanwhile the GOP evades concerns that actually threaten Americans and our children — like gun violence in schools, poverty, hunger, climate change, medical debt, and the erosion of middle-class incomes.

Who are the people Republicans want to make us fear and loath?

Transgender people are simply those whose sense of themselves doesn’t conform to the gender they’re expected to assume. For many young people, the need to transition their gender presentation represents the culmination of a long and painful process.

Physicians recognize “gender dysphoria” as a medical condition, and families of such children work with doctors to determine appropriate treatment at various stages in the lives of their children. Young people and their families steering through this difficult terrain deserve support and compassion — not demonization.

But right-wing GOP politicians find it more useful to create scapegoats.


Image by Vogue0987 from Pixabay

DeSantis recently signed a set of anti-trans bills that outlaw treatment for gender dysphoria for minors, make the existence of nonconforming people unmentionable in public schools, and provide for taking trans children away from their parents if, with their physicians, they decide to follow medically recommended standards of care.

These bills are unconstitutional and bigoted, as one federal judge ruled recently when he blocked DeSantis’s ban on trans health care from being enforced. Yet at least 20 other Republican-led states are pushing anti-trans laws, in some cases effectively barring gender-appropriate care even for adults.

Many of these laws also bar transgender people from public restrooms matching their gender identity, evoking the days of racially segregated toilets. These laws play on the false, malicious claim that transgender people pose a danger to others in restrooms — a claim for which there’s not one shred of evidence.

For a transgender woman, on the contrary, it’s uncomfortable and potentially unsafe to be expected to use a men’s toilet. Trans people have reported being harassed in large numbers simply for trying to use the restroom.

But reality doesn’t matter when your purpose is not to solve an imaginary problem, but to inspire fear of a despised group.

Like the Jews of Germany in the 1920s and 1930s, trans people are a convenient target for cynical politicians with no interest in solving our real problems. We shouldn’t let them get away with it.

 
 
Mitchell Zimmerman

Mitchell Zimmerman is an attorney, longtime social activist, and author of the anti-racism thriller Mississippi Reckoning.

Via Otherwords

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Pride Month 2023: Erasing LGBTQI+ People is a Crime against Humanity https://www.juancole.com/2023/06/erasing-against-humanity.html Sun, 04 Jun 2023 04:04:26 +0000 https://www.juancole.com/?p=212411

The ability of LGBTQI+ people to express and live as who they are — without fear — is a fundamental human right

 

By Susan Dicklitch-Nelson

( Pennsylvania Capital-Star ) – Twenty-five years ago, at the Christmas table, my uncle suggested that “all gay people should be sent to a desert island, covered with fertilizer, and set aflame.”

His proposed method may have been novel, but he certainly was not the first person to suggest the extermination of LGBTQI+ people. Perhaps if he knew more “gay” people he would realize that all they wanted was to be treated as equal human beings, enjoying the same rights as their heterosexual and cisgender counterparts.

Having hidden in the shadows and proverbial closets for millennia, LGBTQI+ people have dared to come out to demand equality before the law in human rights and dignity. And now, there are calls for their erasure, again.

Extermination does not have to happen on a desert island with fertilizer and flames. Incorrectly painting members of the LGBTQI+ community as pedophiles and groomers gives permission to others to stigmatize and morally exclude members of the LGBTQI+ community from the human family.

It is not just happening in faraway places such as Uganda and Russia, where it is a crime to identify as a member of the LGBTQI+ community. It is happening closer to home in places such as Florida and Montana, with anti-transgender legislation, book bans, and the demonization of drag queens.


Image by PublicDomainPictures from Pixabay

Using the guise of “protecting the children” as a justification for persecution of the LGBTQI+ community is perverse. The current anti-LGBTQI+ rhetoric and legislation sends a chilling message to LGBTQI+ people that they do not matter, they are not equal, and that they should go back to being invisible.

But one group’s discomfort or fabrication of danger should not supress another group’s fundamental human rights.

This is why Pride Month is so important, not only for LGBTQI+ people, but for humanity overall. The outfits (yes, especially drag queens’), parades and dancing are all fine, but what’s most important is the visibility.

The ability of LGBTQI+ people of all walks of life to celebrate who they are — without fear of losing their job, experiencing dehumanization, or violence — is a basic human right. In fact, freedom of expression and speech are fundamental U.S. rights.

According to the Franklin & Marshall College Global Barometers, the unfortunate reality is that most countries do not treat their LGBTQI+ people as equal citizens.

In fact, the majority of countries are persecuting their LGBTQI+ populations. LGBTQI+ people remain some of the most targeted and vulnerable people in the world. They have been branded as social pariahs and scapegoated for the economic, political and social ills in their countries. Many countries and individuals continue to use tradition and religion to justify the dehumanization of LGBTQI+ people.

Countries must  pass hate crimes and hate speech legislation that is inclusive of LGBTQI+ people. Businesses must  do more than provide corporate sponsorship for pride events. Corporations must  put their money where their mouths are, calling out governments that deliberately repress their LGBTQI+ citizens. Governments must  sanction countries that enact severe human rights abuses on LGBTQI+ people.

And, the Yoweri Museveni’s of this world need to hear that Ugandan LGBTQI+ people matter, and must  be treated as equal members of the human family.

Thankfully, my uncle has evolved from his initial position. Unfortunately, the new culture war is resulting in the regression of safe public spaces for LGBTQI+ people.

Pride 2023 requires a recognition of not only the global LGBTQI+ community that is still suffering tremendous tragedies on a daily basis, and the vicious attacks on the transgender community.

For these reasons, I will proudly march with the LGBTQI+ community during Pride Month to reclaim my right to exist and to be who I am.

Susan Dicklitch-Nelson is professor of government at Franklin & Marshall College in Lancaster, Pa., and founder and Principal Investigator of the F&M Global Barometers.

 

 
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Pakistan’s Trans Community battles Climate Catastrophe and Exclusion https://www.juancole.com/2023/05/pakistans-community-catastrophe.html Wed, 17 May 2023 04:02:20 +0000 https://www.juancole.com/?p=211978

Despite progressive laws protecting their rights on paper, transgender people in Pakistan are overlooked in disaster responses, and shut out from government relief

<p>Trans people affected by floods in Pakistan’s Balochistan province gather to receive aid from the non-profit Al-Khidmat Foundation, in partnership with Unilever Pakistan (Photo courtesy of Al-Khidmat Foundation)</p>

Trans people affected by floods in Pakistan’s Balochistan province gather to receive aid from the non-profit Al-Khidmat Foundation, in partnership with Unilever Pakistan (Photo courtesy of Al-Khidmat Foundation)

( The Third Pole) – This winter was very hard for Bunti, a transgender woman, or Khawaja Sira as trans people are known in Pakistan. When floods hit her village in Nowshera district of north Pakistan’s Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province in August 2022, Bunti’s home was inundated and all her belongings damaged or washed away. But Bunti was unable to access the relief disbursed by the government for those affected by the floods. With her bedding and quilts lost to the floodwaters, she spent the season shivering in the biting cold of the night.

“Others living here received 160,000 Pakistani rupees [USD 564] as compensation for damage to their homes, but we trans persons did not get a single penny from the government due to technical barriers in proving our identity,” Bunti tells The Third Pole.

Bunti’s experience, mirrored across Pakistan in the wake of 2022’s devastating floods, demonstrates how Pakistan’s trans community remains uniquely vulnerable to the impacts of disasters – which are set to become more frequent and severe due to climate change.

Barriers to accessing relief

Nargis, a trans woman who lives in a dilapidated house on the banks of the Swat River in Charsadda, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, lost her cow and goat in last year’s floods. “The deluge swept away my belongings and any hope for survival, leaving me empty handed with no other option except begging to earn a living,” Nargis says.

Farzana Riaz, a trans rights activist in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and president of rights group Trans-Action, says that Bunti and Nargis’ stories “depicts the plight of hundreds or even thousands of transgender people who suffer due to climate-induced disasters and face neglect in the distribution of relief and rehabilitation services.”

Article continues after bonus IC video
Transgender in Pakistan | DW Documentary

Riaz says that due to social exclusion and challenges in finding stable work, many trans people in Pakistan live in remote localities and slums, where extreme weather events like torrential rain, heatwaves and hailstorms hit much harder due to lack of proper infrastructure. Exacerbating this vulnerability are the barriers many trans people face in accessing government support in the wake of disasters. Access to relief and compensation is dependent on provision of an official identity card, which most trans people in Pakistan do not have, explains Riaz.

“Obtaining an identity card is almost impossible for transgender people in prevailing circumstances, [as it] requires registration of the family tree by NADRA [the National Database Registration Authority],” says Muskan, a young trans woman from Khyber Pakhtunkhwa’s Kurram district, who moved to Peshawar in her teens after facing rejection from her family members. Muskan performs at wedding functions for a living, but struggles to make ends meet.

Muskan says she went home for her sister’s wedding a few years ago, with the intention of reuniting with her family, but the response was heartbreaking. “I was conveyed the message that my presence can cause insult and humiliation for the family, especially the bride in front of her in-laws, and it would be better to go back to the [trans] community [in Peshawar],” she recalls in a choked voice, wiping away tears. “I came back with a heavy heart, thinking that I should not have to face such disrespect and insult from my own blood relations. We are not acceptable to our relatives and considered a shame for them, so how can we be included in the family tree?”

Nargis stands outside her home in Charsadda, which still bears the marks of damage from the devastating floods in August-September 2022
Nargis stands outside her home in Charsadda, which still bears marks of damage from last year’s devastating floods (Image: Adel Saeed)

“Almost 90% of transgender people [in Pakistan] are abandoned by their families and live away from home with community members, and it’s not possible for them to fulfil the very basic prerequisite of NADRA regarding inclusion of their names in the family tree,” explains Farzana Riaz. “[As] relief and rehabilitation after any emergency solely depends on identification of applicants, this makes 90% of transgender people ineligible because they do not possess identity cards due to exclusion from families and omission of [their] name from official records to avoid disgrace in society,” she elaborates.

Riaz adds that the majority of trans people in Pakistan are reluctant to accept the government’s offer of marking their gender as ‘X’ on their ID cards – an option which would force them to declare themselves ‘eunuchs’, a term considered taboo. There is a fear in the community that this would attract further backlash and disrespect from relatives, she explains. 

Trans rights in Pakistan – on paper and in practice

On the surface, recent years have seen momentous wins for trans rights in Pakistan. In 2018, Pakistan’s parliament passed the Transgender Persons Act, which theoretically gives the community basic protections. The law guarantees trans persons’ right to safety, respect, property and inheritance, and criminalises harassment and discrimination against trans people. But the reality of being a trans person in Pakistan remains fraught with challenges. Rejected by their families and ostracised by much of society, many trans people in Pakistan live in fear of violence, harassment and extreme economic hardship. Many are forced to beg on the streets or engage in sex work.

Pakistan’s Sixth Population and Housing Census, conducted in 2017, estimated the number of transgender people in the country as 10,418. But independent estimates place the number in the hundreds of thousands.

A research paper seen by The Third Pole on the impacts of Covid-19 on the transgender community in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, published by Trans-Action Pakistan and non-profit organisation Blue Veins, states: “There is significant concern about underrepresentation of the number of trans population across Pakistan due to insensitive and non-inclusive data collection mechanisms. The community across Pakistan rejects the census figures and claims that in KPK [Khyber Pakhtunkhwa] alone, house around 50,000 trans community members.”    

“Transgender [people] do have concerns over their under-representation in the population census which excludes the majority of them from availing of any welfare-oriented policy for the community,” says Katrina, an activist based in Peshawar who heads REST, an organisation that offers vocational training to trans people.

Devastating floods compelled our community members to resort to door-to-door begging

Bindiya Rana, Gender Interactive Alliance

This lack of representation translates into disaster management planning and assessments of damage, in which Pakistan’s trans community is often overlooked. “A large number of trans people lost their homes in the [2022] floods, but there is no official data available on this,” says Nayab Ali, a prominent trans rights activist who works at the Islamabad-based Peace and Justice Network.

Tania Hamayun, former programme manager of the Gender and Child Cell at Pakistan’s National Disaster Management Authority (NDMA), admits that trans people are not addressed in the national disaster management guidelines developed in 2014. “The guidelines cover children, women, elders and people with special needs or disabilities as vulnerable segments of society. Unfortunately, transgender [people] did not get any mention in this list,” says Hamayun.

Quick to add that “we have never discriminated against transgender [people]”, Hamayun says the community is “neglected” because the particular vulnerabilities faced by trans people had received little recognition when the NDMA’s National Policy Guidelines on Vulnerable Groups in Disasters were drafted in 2014.

Disasters exacerbate vulnerability of trans people in Pakistan

Bindiya Rana, president of the Gender Interactive Alliance, an organisation that advocates for equality and civil rights for trans people in Pakistan, emphasises how disasters often hit trans people particularly hard, as many are already living in poverty.

“More than 250 transgender people migrated to Karachi in search of livelihoods from districts submerged by floods in Sindh Province [in last year’s floods],” Rana says. “The economic stress [placed] on transgender people due to climate disasters is much more than material losses [due to] a slump in business – devastating floods compelled our community members to resort to door-to-door begging,” she adds.

The aforementioned research paper on the impacts of Covid-19 on transgender people in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, which interviewed 271 trans people, found that 17% of those who had previously not engaged in sex work turned to it as an option to handle economic stress caused by the pandemic.

An advertisement disseminated by the Government of Pakistan in 2022 invites the trans community to register with the government in order to benefit from the country’s largest social welfare scheme.
An advertisement disseminated by the Government of Pakistan in 2022 invites the trans community to register with the government in order to benefit from the country’s largest social welfare scheme. Though billed by the government as a ‘landmark achievement’, the funds disseminated via the scheme can only be accessed by those with a NADRA-issued ID card. (Image: Blue Veins)

Movements for change

Mehnaz Bibi, a gender specialist at the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa Social Welfare Department, says that government departments are working to register trans people in order to issue them with identity cards, having realised the huge gap between official figures and the ground reality. “We have 416 trans people registered who are entitled to any initiative taken by the government,” Bibi says, referring to welfare measures like protection at shelter homes or distribution of food.

Questioned about the problems trans people face in getting identity cards due to being disowned by their families, Mehnaz says a proposal is under consideration to issue identity cards on the assurance of their ‘gurus’ – mentors in the trans community. In 2018, a former chief justice took interest in the challenges faced by the trans community and directed government officials to help them, but the community continues to struggle to obtain formal documents as the proposal to recognise gurus’ assurance is not yet formalised.

Farzana Riaz of Trans-Action welcomes the proposal. “This is a suitable solution which, if implemented, can help a lot in making transgender people eligible for the government’s welfare-oriented schemes in the wake of any calamity, and also to claim their inheritance rights, as well as travelling internationally, especially for religious pilgrimage of Hajj and Umrah,” Riaz says.

In 2022, Pakistan’s National Commission for Human Rights (NCHR) constituted a task force which brings together transgender rights organisations, government departments and UN agencies to address the barriers trans people face in accessing government support, especially the lack of official data that leads to exclusion of trans people from disaster management, Rizwanullah Shah, deputy director of the NCHR, tells The Third Pole. 

Meanwhile, according to Shaukat Ali Khan, deputy director of Pakistan’s general population census, the country’s ongoing Seventh Population Census includes a special section on transgender people in order to redress this neglect in official data.

“Pakistan is ranked among the top 10 countries most vulnerable to climate change,” says Qamar Naseem. “Considering the severity of climate-induced disasters, it is time to act much more rigorously for the safety of people, including the neglected transgender community of Pakistan.”

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DeSantis’ Florida as the Epicenter of the New Culture Wars: The Coming Battle for America’s Political Soul https://www.juancole.com/2023/05/desantis-epicenter-political.html Tue, 16 May 2023 04:15:41 +0000 https://www.juancole.com/?p=212032 Oakland, Ca. (Special to Informed Comment; Feature) – The concept of “woke” culture is an existential threat to Republican office holders and party officials. Led by Florida Governor Ron DeSantis and other Donald Trump wannabes, Republicans have embarked on a campaign to bury information, books and literature; illustrating their agenda to promote racism as acceptable, while also marginalizing LGBTQ people. Florida is ground zero the American Culture Wars. If DeSantis is successful in dictating public school academic curriculum in Florida, that will open the floodgates for other states to do the same.  Moreover, “anti-Wokeism” (i.e. anti-minority hatred) will become the template at the Federal level if DeSantis or Trump prevails in the 2024 Election. DeSantis’ embrace of Culture Wars has encroached into the legal realm. It is happening here.

DeSantis signed the Stop Woke (Wrongs to Our Kids and Employees) Act in December 2021 allegedly to take a “stand against state-sanctioned racism,” which was readily passed. That’s his legal basis for banishing Advanced Placement Black History from the curriculum last January. There already is a precedent for overturning this campaign stunt in Arizona, when the legislature there similarly tried to ban teaching of Mexican-American history. AP Black History is an elective course, which requires parental permission to enroll. It is not a mandatory requirement, though DeSantis positions this as some form of indoctrinating thought control. He said, “We believe in teaching kids facts and how to think, but we don’t believe they should have an agenda imposed on them. When you try to use Black History to shoehorn in Queer theory, you are clearly trying to use that for political purposes.”

Let’s parse that: Black History and LGBTQ are two separate concepts, though four of the 100 curriculum topics in the AP program address LGBTQ issues. DeSantis is trying to bundle grievances to manufacture more white rage. Republicans don’t want young people learning the truth about how racism forged, built and defined the US for most of its history. This has nothing to do with gay issues, but “bundling” grievances is part of the Republican manual.

What is this “wokeness” they find so threatening?  Is it the values many learned in church-synagogue-mosque teachings, or source of family spiritual-ethical teachings? The stuff about equality among the races, all men are created equal, do unto others . . . , and similarly quaint notions? Trump made all that more unpopular again, when he co-opted and escalated Ronald Reagan’s 1980 proclamation that, “This doesn’t matter anymore; and it’s OK to be greedy again.” That was Reagan’s message when he began his Presidential campaign near the gravesites of the murdered Civil Rights workers, Andrew Goodman, James Chaney and Michael Schwerner. Trump took that agenda and shot it full of steroids. DeSantis is trying to elevate the madness for his own vainglorious ambition.

            Banning AP Black History would set a dangerous precedent, according to Attorney Ben Crump. He argues that if they can suppress Black History in Florida, they can do it anywhere. “The strategy behind this Republican battle is to fight off the federal state until they have recaptured federal power themselves.” The stakes go beyond Florida, to the “anti-woke” politicians in Tennessee, Texas, Virginia and Arizona. “It is solely about DeSantis making himself more popular with the GOP base in order to win the 2024 presidential nomination.”  In a gross Orwellian twist, DeSantis argued that, “In Florida we are taking a stand against the state-sanctioned racism that is critical race theory.” So teaching about the history of racism is declared to be a form of “state-sanctioned racism.”

            In a related strike for American Fascism, and his effort to inherit Donald Trump’s political base, DeSantis has also recently made unilateral moves to overturn the popular vote and will of Florida residents, by removing Hillsborough County Prosecutor Andrew Warren, who was re-elected twice.  Further, he acted against his Black 2018 gubernatorial rival, former Tallahassee Mayor Andrew Gillum, who’s been subjected to malicious prosecution over manufactured campaign violations, in what appears to be a brazen abuse of process.

DeSantis mirrored the Tennessee Republican Legislature’s attempt to overturn the popular vote with the Tennessee 2 by firing Hillsborough County Andrew Warren, which resulted in a Federal lawsuit to reinstate him. DeSantis unlawfully removed Warren from his position last August, claiming he’d refused to enforce laws, after Warren resolved to not use his office to prosecute complaints about abortion or transgender health care; and to discourage prosecution of nonviolent misdemeanors often linked to racial disparities, such as police stopping bicyclists. DeSantis retaliated by unlawfully removing him. U.S. District Judge Robert L. Hinkle ruled in January that the governor violated both the Florida Constitution and the First Amendment in suspending Warren. But Judge Hinkle also concluded that he lacked the power to put Warren back in office, which led to the pending appeal. Warren’s jurisdiction of Hillsborough County (Tampa) is a diverse urban area, in contrast to neighboring Pinellas County (St. Petersburg), which is overwhelmingly Republican and white.

DeSantis’ malicious prosecution of Gillum, drew public objections issued by eight jurors in Gillum’s case. They called out how two jurors remained on the panel despite their violations of juror protocol and legal prejudice. Those eight people made themselves vulnerable to legal consequences, in an act of courage, calling out the illegality of Gillum’s prosecution and trial dynamics. One objector refused to consider the evidence, and the other was not disqualified despite his public statements that showed uncceptable bias.

            Gillum and his PR associate, Sharon Lettman-Hicks were prosecuted by US Attorney for Northern Florida Andrew Grogan, for allegedly diverting campaign funds for personal use, in his unsuccessful bid to unseat DeSantis in 2018. Despite the acquittal, the witch hunt of Gillum for challenging DeSantis has not abated. Prosecutors still intend to go forward with charges of criminal conspiracy and fraud. Defense Attorney David Markus characterized the trial saying, “From the opening statement, our theme was that the prosecution put a target on Andrew’s back and played gotcha’ with him during an early-morning interview where they lied to and secretly recorded him.” An ironic twist of fate is that Trump acolyte Alan Dershowitz has recommended against continuing the prosecution.

Dershowitz illuminated the weakness of the prosecution’s case saying, “The prosecution should not retry Andrew Gillum where the jury was deadlocked 10-2 in favor of acquittal.  Gillum had the courage to proceed to trial.  The prosecution took its best shot to convict him and lost.  Not only did he beat back the false statement count, but it appears that the jury — a cross section of Northern Florida — overwhelmingly rejected the rest of the government’s case. The government should not get a do-over in this situation and should accept the jury’s clear message. Gillum should be allowed to resume his life, having essentially disproved the prosecution’s case.”

When local and state level politicians double down on the anti-Black, anti-Gay, anti-Jewish, anti-Education, anti-Union agenda; then all of the “others” become the majority. Then the politicians maliciously prosecuting these grievances don’t even represent a plurality of voters, but hold sway for now because of the dramatic gerrymandering and voter suppression of the past 20 years, which makes a white, Christian heteronormative minority into a functional majority.

 

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