Culture Tranny News Megathread - Hot tranny newds

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...school-attack-caught-camera-says-bullied.html

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A transgender girl accused of assaulting two students at a Texas high school alleges that she was being bullied and was merely fighting back

Shocking video shows a student identified by police as Travez Perry violently punching, kicking and stomping on a girl in the hallway of Tomball High School.

The female student was transported to the hospital along with a male student, whom Perry allegedly kicked in the face and knocked unconscious.

According to the police report, Perry - who goes by 'Millie' - told officers that the victim has been bullying her and had posted a photo of her on social media with a negative comment.

One Tomball High School parent whose daughter knows Perry said that the 18-year-old had been the target of a death threat.

'From what my daughter has said that the girl that was the bully had posted a picture of Millie saying people like this should die,' the mother, who asked not to be identified by name, told DailyMail.com.

When Perry appeared in court on assault charges, her attorney told a judge that the teen has been undergoing a difficult transition from male to female and that: 'There's more to this story than meets the eye.'

Perry is currently out on bond, according to authorities.

The video of the altercation sparked a widespread debate on social media as some claim Perry was justified in standing up to her alleged bullies and others condemn her use of violence.

The mother who spoke with DailyMail.com has been one of Millie's most ardent defenders on Facebook.

'I do not condone violence at all. But situations like this show that people now a days, not just kids, think they can post what they want. Or say what they want without thinking of who they are hurting,' she said.

'Nobody knows what Millie has gone through, and this could have just been a final straw for her. That is all speculation of course because I don't personally know her or her family, but as a parent and someone who is part of the LGBTQ community this girl needs help and support, not grown men online talking about her private parts and shaming and mocking her.'

One Facebook commenter summed up the views of many, writing: 'This was brutal, and severe! I was bullied for years and never attacked anyone!'

Multiple commenters rejected the gender transition defense and classified the attack as a male senselessly beating a female.

One woman wrote on Facebook: 'This person will get off because they're transitioning. This is an animal. She kicked, and stomped, and beat...not okay. Bullying is not acceptable, but kicking someone in the head. Punishment doesn't fit the crime.'


FB https://www.facebook.com/travez.perry http://archive.is/mnEmm

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I'm really surprised at this--isn't firing teachers really hard at a public school, because of the unions? My high school, in one of the liberal-est parts of the country, had a number of teachers that were known for saying offensive shit (including the one teacher who was so equal opportunity racist, he was bigoted toward French Canadians), and yet the only teacher that actually got fired for anything was the one who petted a girl's hair.

I dont think Christianity says anything about pronouns. That said, where was this dudes union rep? Apparently unions dont fight to keep the good ones.
The teacher's union in Virginia is incredibly weak. Virginia is a right to work state, so teachers are not required to pay into their union. In addition, the state has laws prohibiting collective bargaining. As a result, the unionss there are mostly worthless at protecting individual employees, and it is much more like at will employment.

This is crossed with public school administration being extremely left leaning. I speak from experience, if you state something like "trump isnt the worst president ever" or "the left has been just as vile as the right this year" you would think you just said "Seig Heil" in the middle of a crowded lecture hall. This teacher likely had little to no representation, and has o recourse either, his contract likely stipulates that he can be terminated at any time for any reason that is seen to violate "school board policy".

Per their policy: "West Point Public Schools does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, ancestry, political affiliation, sex, gender, gender identity, age, marital status, genetic information, disability as defined by law. "

So they probably up and told him "you are violating district policy, GTFO", leaving him no legal recourse.

On another note, students staged a walk out protest of the teachers firing: https://www.vagazette.com/va-vg-tr-wp-wphs-teacher-fired-pronoun-case-20181206-story.html
 
I think that it's kind of weird as to how easily trannies are traumatized and hardly anyone is doing anything to help them.

They can't live in their hugbox forever and I think they need an psychiatrist instead of seeing some who'll play along with their delusions.
 
That said, where was this dudes union rep? Apparently unions dont fight to keep the good ones.
Per their policy: "West Point Public Schools does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, ancestry, political affiliation, sex, gender, gender identity, age, marital status, genetic information, disability as defined by law. "

@DNA_JACKED gave a great (and state- & school district-appropriate) response. With many liberal and LGBTetc-friendly regions successfully lobbying school districts and localities to add gender identity as a protected status, this isn't too surprising. As unfortunate as it is to see this teach fired for his attempt at what he thought was a reasonable compromise, he would appear to at best have an uphill battle challenging his dismissal.

However you're not off base that much.

A former coworker's wife was a teacher and went through a period where frequent doctor visits were necessary. When she was advised she could get reprimanded for missing too much work - even though she had a valid medical reason - another coworker asked, "Where's the union?" and got an eye-roll and a "Don't even get me started," response.

On the flip side, a hidden camera news item some years ago uncovered autoworkers taking advantage of a malfunctioning turn-style that allowed them to leave the plant without swiping out. The undercover camera caught workers swiping in and immediately leaving through the faulty turn-style to go home, go off to smoke or drink at city parks, etc. when they were supposed to be working. Later that day, the workers returned to work at quitting time to clock out as if they worked the entire day. When the union appealed their discipline, the news station that aired the exposé asked for comment. One would expect the union officials to say something such as, "We can't comment on a pending investigation," right? Wrong - the union person stated on camera that the union felt the workers did nothing wrong. :story:
 
The West Point School Board voted unanimously to terminate Vlaming. Superintendent Laura Abel said she agreed with the decision.
i am now convinced that americans really don't have a line that can be crossed. there is never going to be a point where we all say 'enough is enough' and actually do something about any of this. the powers that be are fine with this as long as they can keep their political power and keep making money, nobody with the power to stop this has any incentive to do so. and any common person who stands up against it will just be labeled a crazy or an extremist. if one random guy says 'screw your optics i'm going in,' some innocent people die and nothing changes. so why bother standing up if no one else will? things will just get more and more absurd while we all do nothing.
 
the powers that be are fine with this as long as they can keep their political power and keep making money, nobody with the power to stop this has any incentive to do so.

Aye, there’s the rub. Once it stops being profitable— or rather when it becomes more profitable to sue doctors and launch class actions against big pharma— that is when the sands will shift. Someone needs to whisper in the ABA’s ear about the money soon to be made in them thar surgically-created frontholes.
 
Aye, there’s the rub. Once it stops being profitable— or rather when it becomes more profitable to sue doctors and launch class actions against big pharma— that is when the sands will shift. Someone needs to whisper in the ABA’s ear about the money soon to be made in them thar surgically-created frontholes.
And then we'll hear about how fucking awful everyone is for letting it happen and it was all just more evidence that the patriarchy blah blah blah. Politicians will proudly announce they were for it, but only before they were against it.
 
How does using a transgender person's preferred pronouns fuck up someone's education? If a teacher is constantly misgendering a student then it's going to cause issues for said student. Teachers aren't there to cause students problems and have a say on someone's identity. If I work in retail I can't call a problem customer a cunt because it's against the store policy, misgendering was against the schools policy.
Technically speaking, you're correct in that this wasn't the best way to criticize this policy.

The right way would be for the school board itself to adopt a policy forbidding playing along with people's requested pronouns unless they can show a diagnosis from a competent shrink for gender dysphoria, and that transitioning is the best treatment.

However, I really doubt that option was on the table. Going public was probably the least shitty option available.

Transitioning in high school is disruptive. It should only be entertained as an option on the basis of a doctor's recommendation. Requiring teachers to play along with this stupid bullshit is a tacit endorsement of it.
 
I think that it's kind of weird as to how easily trannies are traumatized and hardly anyone is doing anything to help them.

They can't live in their hugbox forever and I think they need an psychiatrist instead of seeing some who'll play along with their delusions.

Exactly. Nobody needs to be taught resiliency more than trans people. But all their "allies" seem to want to coddle and cultivate victimhood-wallowing in them instead.
 
https://www.thirdsector.co.uk/blf-r...rens-charity-mermaids/finance/article/1521374
But parts of the sector have criticised the Sunday Times article that reported on the issue, with one charity founder calling it 'hateful spin'.

- This story has been amended, please see final paragraph

The Big Lottery Fund has said it is reviewing its decision to award £500,000 to the charity Mermaids, which works with transgender children, after an article in yesterday’s Sunday Times criticised the move.

But sector leaders have criticised the Sunday Times piece, calling it "cheap" and "hateful spin".

Mermaids supports young people who are experiencing gender dysphoria, a condition in which the person feels they have been born into a body with the wrong gender, and is campaigning for children to have support in schools and the healthcare system.


The article said the charity, which has been awarded a £500,000 grant by the BLF to develop a nationwide network of 45 groups across the country over the next five years, had been accused of bullying doctors, promoting falsehoods and using "emotional blackmail" to pressure parents to support life-changing medical interventions for their children.

The BLF was quoted in the Sunday Times story as saying that if concerns were raised it would look into them, but adding: "However, we do not see any reason not to fund this."

But in a statement made to Third Sector today, a BLF spokeswoman said: "We have received a range of correspondence in relation to a proposed grant to Mermaids, expressing both concern and support regarding this organisation.

"We’re grateful to those who have taken the time to write to us and, in light of the nature and volume of the communication we have received, we have decided to undertake a review of this grant."

Among those expressing support for Mermaids was Simon Blake, chief executive of the community interest company Mental Health First Aid England, and a trustee of the LGBT rights charity Stonewall.

He said on Twitter that the story was a "cheap pop" against the charity and harked back to old stories attacking gay and lesbian charities.

Nathalie McDermott, who founded On the Road Media, a charity that aims to improve media coverage of groups that are under-represented or misrepresented, also tweeted her support.

She said the piece was "hateful spin, designed to confuse. Don’t buy it."

Mermaids did not respond to Third Sector’s request for comment on Monday morning.

This story has been amended. It previously said Mermaids was "campaigning to allow those under 16 to be able to undergo gender reassignment surgery", which it does not.
Plz gib Mermaids money so that they can continue advertising puberty blockers ;_;
 
"Born into a body with the wrong gender" is a phrase that makes no sense at all to me. A body cannot have a gender, a person does. A body has an explicit sex (except for intersex people) with primary and secondary characteristics, which a person may find distressing enough to change via transitioning.

Anyway, don't give Mermaids any money. Shady organization that is the trans equivalent of PETA.
 
https://www.gaystarnews.com/article/trans-porn-actor-trans-men-sexual
Trans porn actor on smashing stereotypes: Trans men are 'just as sexual'

Olly Jackson
came out as transgender at the age of 16.

He grew up in a small English town called Framlingham in Suffolk and said most of his family and friends were supportive of his gender identity.

His parents took a little longer to come around to it though.

‘My parents both helped look after me after my top surgery,’ Jackson told Gay Star News. ‘And I’ve taken that as a sign that they accept me being transgender now.’

Now 22 years old, he identifies as pansexual and lives in Bangor, Wales, studying a bachelor of zoology.

But growing up and watching pornography as a teenager, Jackson never felt represented.

‘I never saw anybody like me,’ he said. ‘I think that kind of gives a message that transgender men don’t belong in porn, which is ridiculous.

‘Just like in other media like TV and films, I think it’s important to show diversity and represent as many people as we can, because porn represents our fantasies – and transgender men exist in people’s fantasies,’ he said.

‘A huge reason I do porn is political’
So he decided to do something about it.

He started posting provocative photos and videos of himself on Tumblr in 2015. Jackson said: ‘It started off as a way to gain confidence in my body, from strangers who would compliment me.’

But over time, he realized he could work with gay porn studios, so he started doing porn professionally in the middle of this year.

He said: ‘I wanted to show the world that transgender men belong in gay porn just as much as cisgender gay men.’

Jackson flew to Spain earlier this year to appear in studio gay porn. He also films amateur content with other porn actors with sites like JustForFans. The young porn actor also models for underwear brand Debriefed Underwear.

When asked what he wants to achieve by making porn, he joked: ‘Fame, money, attention.’

He then added: ‘Joking aside, a huge reason I do porn is political.

‘Transgender men are all too often desexualised and infantilised, and that’s something that really bothers me. We’re just as sexual as the rest of the population!

‘I think that’s why we’re really underrepresented in porn, and I want to challenge people’s views about that,’ he said.

The Sex Business
A couple of months ago, the trans porn actor received an email from a producer on the Channel 5 show The Sex Business. It’s a documentary series exploring how people buy, sell and market sex.

Jackson said: ‘I was a little hesitant at first, given the usually bad media portrayal of porn models, but after seeing their first season, I was eager to take part.’

The episode featuring his story aired on Tuesday (11 December).

He said in the episode: ‘Yeah, I’ve got a vagina. But it’s mine and I’m a guy. Therefore it’s a guy’s vagina.

‘Trans guys – whether you’re pre-testosterone, whether you’ve had top surgery or bottom surgery – you are sexy,’ he said.

Jackson wants to break down stereotypes by having open conversations about trans men and sex.

For this reason, he said he’s pansexual, but he does prefer men because he ‘likes dick, a lot.’ This is why gay porn was ‘an obvious choice’ for him.

Jackson also revealed in the documentary episode: ‘With sex, I like to use both holes. I always say three holes is better than two, which is why it’s great to be a trans guy – you’ve got more options!’

Future porn career
The young trans porn actor said everyone in his life knows about his pornography career, except extended family like cousins and grandparents. He only told his parents a couple of weeks ago and they did not approve at all.

‘They’re very conservative people and I didn’t expect a huge amount of support from them,’ he said. ‘The response from my friends has more than made up for their lack of support though.’

As for his future, he hopes to have both a career in porn and a masters in zoology – eventually a full-time career in both.

‘Doing porn makes me happy,’ he revealed. ‘It makes me feel good about myself.

‘I do porn for every trans guy who’s been told he’s not sexy because he’s trans. For every trans guy who’s almost pulled someone on Grindr and then told the guy he’s trans and they’ve been like “No, stay away!”’

He then added: ‘Don’t be put off by the fact that somebody is trans because nobody is the same. No one trans person looks the same or has the same body parts.

‘Everybody is different,’ the trans porn actor said.
>Admits to watching pornography as a teenager (and being influenced by it?)
>Posted provocative selfies to gain confidence
>Identifies as "pansexual" for political reasons but prefers penis (so she's a straight woman or a straight-leaning bisexual at best)
>Expects gay men to date her and other trans men

Whew lad
 
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For every trans guy who’s almost pulled someone on Grindr and then told the guy he’s trans and they’ve been like “No, stay away!”’

It's like sexual orientation is linked to biological sex, not jendah identity.

Don’t be put off by the fact that somebody is trans because nobody is the same

Doesn't matter. Trans means claiming to be the opposite sex. This is off putting for lots of people.

No one trans person looks the same or has the same body parts.

Insane ramblings of a mentally ill woman. A dick is a dick, an inverted dick is just that. Just like a vag is a vag. The same goes for a flesh sock sewn onto a womans crotch.

Troons love saying this shit: Blah blah blah don't assume what someone has down there. Blah blah there are mtfs with "vags" and ftms with "dicks".

There are just 2 options: intact (affected by the side effects of hrt) or multilated genitals. Most people find both options disgusting.
 
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UK Troon BTFO's UK TERF (I think) courtesy of the UK's courts. Or so it claims.

Twitter Thread
Archive

View attachment 618440

That's the troon that's suing Linehan:
You're welcome to him.

We already got the funny shit he was involved in and he ain't producing any more of it.

The slap fight is intensifying!

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-45777689

Also attacked someone with a golf club before he trooned out: http://archive.is/1W5bb
 
I have no idea why this has come up now, but all of a sudden this troon has gotten rediscovered.

ANDRAYA YEARWOOD KNOWS SHE HAS THE RIGHT TO COMPETE - Bleacher Report
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ANDRAYA YEARWOOD KNOWS SHE HAS THE RIGHT TO COMPETE
She is one of the fastest teens in Connecticut. So why do people not want her to run? Because this 17-year-old Black transgender girl represents what they are afraid of: no longer being the norm.MIRIN FADERDECEMBER 17, 2018
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There are people who do not want Andraya Yearwood to run. They are bothered by the sight of her. Angered by the thought of her.

The black scrunchie on her wrist, the ponytail down her back. The steely stare she offers as coaches, parents and fans hurl insults toward her at track meets, not caring that she's an earshot away.

The vitriol intrudes before races. Afterward. In her Instagram comments. They say she has a “biological advantage.” They say allowing her to run isn't fair. They do not recognize her as a girl. They insist she is a boy—a boy who shouldn't compete in the girls division.

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When Andraya is on the track, about to burst out of the blocks, she doesn't hear this noise. Doesn't feel it. She travels somewhere else.

"I don't have to think," she says.

So she zooms. Pumps her arms harder, moves her legs more quickly.

The 100-meter dash is where she shines most. The last two seasons, she finished second in the state open in the 100, with a time of 12.29 in 2018. In 2017, her freshman year, she won a Class M title in the 100 and finished second in the 100 at the New England High School Outdoor Track and Field Championships. "Unheard of" for a first-year, according to her coach, Brian Calhoun.

Now in her third year competing for Cromwell High School, in Cromwell, Connecticut, she feels unfazed. Confident. Probably more than she ever has. "Because they don't want me to run, I have to run harder," she says. "I want to go to nationals in order to prove them wrong, to be like, You guys don't want me to run? But look, I qualified for nationals."

Andraya is a 17-year-old transgender girl. A Black transgender girl in a small town that is 90 percent Caucasian. A Black transgender girl in a world that is intent on policing and erasing girls like her.

She is perplexed by the lengths to which some people have gone to drill into her their underlying message: You're free to be yourself, just not here. Over there. Not with us. Over there.



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When Andraya is on the track, about to burst out of the blocks, she doesn't hear this noise. Doesn't feel it. She travels somewhere else.(Jesse Dittmar for B/R)

The noise has been loud since her freshman year, when an adult man, whom she had never met, posted a video about her on YouTube. He spoke furiously into the camera, calling for her competitors to boycott. He titled his video: "How to Stop Andraya Yearwood from Beating Girls for Three More Years!"

It hasn't worked.

The sky is dark. Black-purple. On this Friday night in late November, the Connecticut snow is deep enough to sink a boot. Fresh sole imprints lead up to the bright red door of the home Andraya shares with her mother, Ngozi Nnaji.

Inside, Andraya is upstairs, tinkering with the white Christmas lights that hang above her bed. She's wearing a bright yellow cold-shoulder crop top with black jeans ripped at her knees. Her nails are painted white with silver glitter on her ring fingers—she wants rhinestones next time. Her smile is warm but cautious. She replies "yes" instead of "yeah," when answering questions. She tucks her braids behind her ears, nervously, every few minutes. She has a habit of doing this when talking to reporters: eager to say the right thing, afraid to say the wrong thing. Open and guarded all at once.

Back in June, she and her family appeared on Good Morning America in front of a national audience to speak about a petition that circulated to prevent transgender girls like Andraya from running in the girls division in Connecticut. Her voice was strong, firm. She encouraged other transgender girls to follow their hearts, to do what they want to do in life. What viewers couldn't see was the pressure Andraya felt when speaking out and when being singled out. It seized her. Squeezed her too tight.


Tonight, she is noticeably relaxed. As she looks out her window, she fantasizes about living somewhere far from here, about competing in college out of state. Maybe sunny California! Maybe even Mexico! Her voice brims with excitement. She loves airports and traveling. She's in the process of learning 13 languages, including Portuguese, Italian, Albanian and American Sign Language. She's taking AP Spanish. She is restless; the monotony of Cromwell, where she has lived since first grade, gets to her.

"In the school hallways, I just feel like a zombie," she says.

Cromwell is a small town with one high school, one middle school, one intermediate school and one elementary school. There is a diner; a mall 20 minutes away (Andraya loves the mall); low-hanging streetlights coated in snow; a Dunkin' Donuts every half-mile; and white, blue and cream New England brick houses, some of which have mailboxes out front for the Hartford Courant.



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"Because they don't want me to run, I have to run harder," Andraya says.(Jesse Dittmar for B/R)
"She lives in a bubble," Ngozi says.

Andraya feels protected and safe—happy, even, in her bubble. She is genuinely supported, buoyed by love as much as she is burdened by hate. Andraya's father, Rahsaan, and Ngozi, who are divorced, have always accepted and loved their daughter. Andraya's three brothers and one sister and best friends and coaches and classmates have too.

They see her as her: a determined teen (she longed to do backflips, so she taught herself how within weeks and now flips across pavement) who is also stubborn (Ngozi used to have to sprinkle hot sauce, a favorite, onto Andraya's green peas because she refused to eat them), graceful (she is polite to her staunchest critics) and, above all else, highly motivated.


Ngozi and Rahsaan worry about what could happen when Andraya leaves Connecticut for college, if that's what she chooses. The bubble—the many layers of protection they labored to build around her—could burst.

They won't be able to control who she talks to, as they do now. They won't be able to prevent physical harm, as they may think they can now.

Andraya is grateful that she feels comfortable, accepted and safe at school. So when the noise online roars too loudly, she can turn her Instagram to private. She can power off her phone. That gives her some feeling of control. Of distance.

But the threat is still close. Always close.

Before her race at the Connecticut Interscholastic Athletic Conference (CIAC) 2018 State Open, Andraya walks over to retrieve her number near the starting line, where athletes gather before their heats. Only competitors and event staff are allowed there. Andraya comes upon two women. Parents from other schools, she presumes. They have their backs to her, so they do not know she is trailing closely behind.

"He shouldn't be running!" one of the women says.

"I know!" the other says. "Why is he running on the girls’ team? HE IS A BOY!"

And then the two women turn around. They look at Andraya. She looks at them. It is as if months pass between blinks.

"Why are you on the team?!" one of the women shouts at Andraya. "Why are you here?!"



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Andraya feels protected and safe in her hometown of Cromwell, Connecticut. "She lives in a bubble," her mother, Ngozi Nnaji, says.(Jesse Dittmar for B/R)
Andraya feels something inside of her pounding. Fear. That's what it is. A fear no longer dormant inside her. Shock, too. She is shocked that these women—these grown women—are brash enough to say these things to her, a teenage girl. Not over Instagram. Not over Twitter. To her face.


What's to stop them from doing more? she thinks. In a matter of seconds, her brain begins the mental gymnastics of computing every potential scenario.

Their words could turn into actions.

"It was very scary, being in a position where someone could harm me at any given moment," Andraya recalls. "Whenever they wanted to."

The women don't harm her, physically, but the moment causes Andraya to contemplate giving up running. "Do I want to keep doing this? Is it worth it? I don't want to put myself in danger," she says to herself.

She finishes second. When she crosses the finish line, staff is there, like always, ready to escort her if needed. (The CIAC implemented a special protocol for Andraya.) Nobody knows about the encounter; nobody knows what Andraya heard before her race.

"It was very scary, being in a position where someone could harm me at any given moment. ... I felt so numb." — Andraya Yearwood

Some parents yell profanity at Andraya in the stands. A number of kids fire back.

"The kids began yelling back at them, 'This is our meet, not yours. What's wrong with her competing?'" says Karissa Niehoff, former CIAC executive director and current executive director of the National Federation of State High School Associations. "They supported Andraya."

Niehoff describes Andraya as typically handling herself with "consummate grace and class." But the confrontation with the two women is a visceral reminder that Andraya experiences threats and challenges that those she competes with and against do not have to face.

"I felt so numb," Andraya says. "I just didn't feel like I should be the person doing this. … It was all too much."


As she thinks through what's happening, she imagines another transgender girl going through a similar confrontation. Or one much worse. She doesn't want that to happen. She wants to help other girls, like her friend Terry Miller, another transgender girl in the area, who competes at a high school less than 30 miles away.

So Andraya makes a decision: keep running, keep sharing her story publicly.

As a child, she didn't know what the word “transgender” meant. Neither did her family. They just knew what Andraya liked to wear, and they allowed her to wear whatever she wanted. As a first-grader, she had a pink, glittery Disney backpack that featured princesses Cinderella, Belle and Sleeping Beauty. She loved trying on her mom's heels and wearing pink and purple fuzzy boots with little puffy pompoms on the front.

She started wearing wigs in seventh grade and skirts in eighth. Around that time, she told her parents she was gay. But later her therapist told her about transgender people, and that's when she realized who she was. She just never had the language to describe it until then.

"All along Andraya has been Andraya. It's one of the things people need to understand," says Coach Calhoun, who was also her eighth-grade language arts teacher. "This is not a phase. This is not a fad. This is not 'trying something.'



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"All along Andraya has been Andraya," says Andraya's coach Brian Calhoun.(Jesse Dittmar for B/R)
"This is a person's right to live their life as they truly believe they are."

Her parents embraced her, too. "There was nothing to it," Rahsaan says. "Your child is your child."


Ngozi felt the same way, but she was also concerned about Andraya's safety and mental health. "My greatest fear is not that she's transgender, but because of the lack of acceptance, that she becomes an addict, becomes suicidal, becomes victim to so many other things," Ngozi says. "I just won't allow that to happen."

There were other concerns too, given that violence disproportionately affects transgender people of color—particularly women of color. The killing of transgender people is a national epidemic, according to the Human Rights Campaign. Of the at least 26 transgender people who were shot or killed by violent means in 2018, 21 of them—81 percent—were women of color. About 300 miles away, in Baltimore, a Black transgender woman named Tydi Dansbury was fatally shot, left to lay unconscious on the side of a street. Not to forget some of the other Black transgender women whose lives were cut short: Celine Walker. Tonya Harvey. Amia Tyrae Berryman. Antash'a English. Keanna Mattel...

"As a Black male with Black kids, you're always worried about a time where a physical altercation could come up, regardless of who the instigator is," Rahsaan says.

Andraya's peers have been understanding. When she first told her close friends she was transgender in middle school, they were essentially like, OK, cool. You're transgender. Can we go to the mall now? Most of Andraya's schoolmates accepted that she was using the girls’ bathroom. Several teachers, however, did not. They complained to school administrators. The "solution" was to have Andraya use the bathroom in the nurse's office. She was still not allowed to use the girls' bathroom or girls' locker room.


"I thought, If they let me wear what I want to wear and dress like a female, that's enough. But it's not," she says. "It isn't."

When Andraya started high school, she and her family knew that she might run into opposition once she began competing. "We knew there might be some controversy," Ngozi says. The strategy at first was to not necessarily be proactive. Let things happen. Let Andraya go about her business.



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Andraya (left) and her mother, Ngozi Nnaji (right), at their home.(Jesse Dittmar for B/R)
But as cameras showed up to meets and as articles began to be written, the family changed course. "We were like, 'If there's going to be a story, let it be a story that we tell,'" Ngozi says.

Andraya began giving interviews to local newspapers, asserting her right to compete. She shrugged off her critics as making a big deal out of her doing what she simply loves to do. She resisted being defined by their perceptions. Kept running as they kept trying to limit her. Those 12 seconds that she flies down the track for the 100 are only a fraction of who she is and who she wants to be. Her favorite event is actually the high jump. She loves the feeling she gets while flying into the unknown, letting the wind wrap around her as she sails through the air. For a brief moment, while airborne, she travels somewhere else. A place where she can just be herself.

In June, the petition began circulating. It called for athletes to run in the division based on the sex they were assigned at birth, unless the athlete had undergone hormone replacement therapy (HRT).


"It blew my mind," says Andraya. "People really started a petition to not get me to run."

Bianca Stanescu, a parent in the nearby town of Glastonbury, started the petition. "I'm fighting for the principle of it," she says. Her daughter, Selina Soule, is a junior at Glastonbury High. Soule finished sixth in the 100-meter at the 2018 State Open. Stanescu contends that allowing a transgender girl to run in the girls division is an "injustice." That doing so is to give "special treatment." People like Andraya, she says, have a "biological advantage."

"We were like, 'If there's going to be a story, let it be a story that we tell.'" — Ngozi Nnaji, Andraya's mother

There are a host of genetic factors that can give an athlete an advantage, such as fast and slow twitch fibers, height. Environmental and economic factors are at play, too, such as access to training facilities.

"A level playing field is a fallacy," says Dr. Myron Genel, Yale professor emeritus of pediatric endocrinology. He is a member of the International Olympic Committee's Medical Commission on issues regarding gender identity in athletics.

"There's so many other factors that may provide a competitive advantage," Genel says. "It's very hard to single out sex as the only one."

There is no proof that cisgender men are inherently more capable than cisgender women. According to an NCAA handbook called "Creating Positive & Inclusive Athletic Environments for Transgender Athletes," the fear that "transgender women will be able to dominate women’s sports without effort due to the inherent advantages men have over women" is "a new iteration of the old stereotypes that kept women & girls out of sports prior to Title IX."


Nationally, there are no uniform federal guidelines that dictate in which gender division transgender athletes must compete. Different states have different policies at the high school level. CIAC policy follows state statute; students are allowed to compete with the gender with which they identify. (HRT requirements are not included in CIAC policy.) However, Texas has a policy that only allows students to compete in the division of the sex on their birth certificates. Some states do not have policies at all.

"We're still not necessarily, across the country, doing a great job of providing equality," says Glenn Lungarini, CIAC's executive director.

At the NCAA level, transgender women may compete with cisgender women only after undergoing HRT for a year. (Ngozi declined to discuss whether Andraya has undergone HRT: "Her medical treatment doesn't define whether she's transgender or not," Ngozi says.)



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(Jesse Dittmar for B/R)
Regardless, it is still difficult to quantitatively define what "fairness" in this context truly means. For example, fairness could be seen as following the rules. Stanescu told local affiliate WTNH News 8 in June that Andraya is “following the rules” and “doing nothing wrong,” since she is competing in accordance with CIAC policy. Then again, Stanescu wants to change the rules because she thinks they are unfair. She wants to prohibit transgender girls from competing against cisgender girls unless the former have completed HRT. Stanescu told WTNH that transgender girls who have not undergone HRT should be allowed to run against cisgender girls but have their times measured against cisgender boys. Of course, HRT has been shown to have effects beyond hormone levels, according to a study in the Journal of Sporting Cultures and Identities. Researchers found that HRT resulted in physical changes to transgender women, which led to “a loss of speed, strength and endurance—all key components of athleticism.”


Hence, the question then becomes: Who ultimately gets to experience “fairness”? And is that even the right question to be asking?

"There is a difference between what is right and what is fair, and people have to decide which side of the fence they want to be on," says Robin McHaelen, executive director of True Colors, a Hartford-based nonprofit that provides services to LGBTQ youth.

"If she can't play, we are denying her all of the other benefits of participating in team sports, the things that have nothing to do with winning and losing," McHaelen says. "It has to do with developing teamwork, relationships, feeling like you belong, developing discipline."

"There is a difference between what is right and what is fair, and people have to decide which side of the fence they want to be on." — Robin McHaelen, executive director of True Colors

But like many of Andraya's critics, Stanescu focuses on winning and opportunity instead. She argues that cisgender girls will no longer win races if they compete against transgender girls and that transgender girls are taking away scholarships from cisgender girls.

That train of thought falls in line with some of Andraya's staunchest critics: Title IX advocates, who fought to give cisgender girls opportunity in sport. However, there is no evidence that transgender girls take away scholarships from cisgender girls. Andraya hasn't received an offer yet.

Stanescu insists her petition is misunderstood as a personal attack on Andraya and Miller, on transgender girls in general: "It's about the rule," she says. "It's not about them."

But it is about them. Stanescu's petition directly targets girls whose identities represent something some people are afraid of: no longer being the default, the norm.

The truth is, Andraya doesn't dominate. Not yet anyway. She has had success, but her 400 is still a work-in-progress. Her 100-meter times—including a 12.17 personal record—are just outside of major university marks. Coach Calhoun believes the mark is within reach. "It gives her something to compete for, something to strive for," he says.


To improve her times, she'll have to dig in. She's relatively new to weightlifting. She recently learned how to squat. How to summon all of her strength. How to crouch lower and spring back up, over and over.



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Andraya is relatively new to weightlifting. She hopes that training will improve her times.(Jesse Dittmar for B/R)
She's always had the drive. She's always been a fighter. A survivor.

Andraya was born extremely premature at 24 weeks. There were so many tubes connected to her tiny body, which weighed one pound, 12 ounces. She had to stay in the hospital for six months. When she was released, she went home on oxygen and a feeding tube.

"Every day, you didn't know if she was going to survive," Rahsaan says. "The doctor said if she survives this, she will do great things because this will be the toughest fight of her life."

But the fight she is in now—a fight to be who she is—is in some ways just beginning.

Andraya takes a seat at the front of Askwith Hall at Harvard University. She's been invited to speak on a November panel called "The Intersection of Gender Identity, Race and Student Support."

She sits next to her mother onstage. She feels a little nervous but less than she has in the past. Once, she spoke at Wesleyan and was so nervous taking the stage in front of 100 students that she forgot to introduce herself.

This time, at Harvard, she feels more confident. Excited. Being at a university causes her mind to drift toward the future. She is receiving some recruiting interest from Harvard's track coaches, in addition to those at UConn, Springfield College and West Point. "They want me," she says. "They want me on their track team."


But the world outside of track? Far less accepting. Just the month before, in October, President Trump said his administration was considering narrowly defining gender as a biological, unchanging condition determined by the sex assigned at birth. This move is part of a larger concerted effort to rescind Obama-era policies that recognized and protected transgender people under federal civil rights law.

Andraya's first thought was Why? Why are people so intent on erasing people like her?

"Just because the government erases the word ‘transgender,’ that doesn't mean that we don't exist," she says. "That doesn't mean that I'm not still transgender."

She brings a similar tone to Harvard. The panel's moderator, Gretchen Brion-Meisels of the university's Prevention Science and Practice Program, asks Andraya why she chooses to speak out.



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Andraya is receiving some recruiting interest from "They want me," she says.(Jesse Dittmar for B/R)
"I'm here today to advocate for transgender individuals," Andraya says, "and to allow them to be able to live in their truth without having to hide or be afraid."

Ngozi still worries about how her daughter will be perceived in college, how she will be perceived when she enters spaces far less accepting than Cromwell. Rahsaan worries about the immediate future, how Andraya will be treated while in Morocco and Spain this summer.

Andraya thinks about all of this, too, but in this moment, at Harvard, she is focused purely on the moderator's next question: How does it feel to be an activist? How does it feel to have a voice?

Something inside of Andraya stops cold.

Me? She thinks to herself. She had never thought of herself as an activist before.


Brion-Meisels offers a definition of an activist as someone who advocates on behalf of others.

Yes.

Me, she thinks to herself, smiling. Me.



Mirin Fader is a Writer-At-Large for B/R Mag. She's written for the Orange County Register, espnW.com, SI.com and Slam. Her work has been honored by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association. Follow her on Twitter: @MirinFader.



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Quote of the year:

There is no proof that cisgender men are inherently more capable than cisgender women. According to an NCAA handbook called "Creating Positive & Inclusive Athletic Environments for Transgender Athletes," the fear that "transgender women will be able to dominate women’s sports without effort due to the inherent advantages men have over women" is "a new iteration of the old stereotypes that kept women & girls out of sports prior to Title IX."

In that case, why have sex segregated sports? Possibly there's some Tumblr-level way of defining "capable" going on here?

http://mysportsresults.com/Records/archivedocs/CT-Records-Outdoor-Boys-State.pdf

http://mysportsresults.com/Records/archivedocs/CT-Records-Outdoor-girls-State.pdf
 
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