Darkmatter Poetry: Alok Vaid Menon & Janani Balasubramanian - Non-binary trans performance "artists"

c0b74faca0cd096d806014e0aa9ec306.png

3669b5a2e81d3edfa6a2c232c76a103c.png


Alok tries to justify his autism, and fails.
 
They're really just taking the piss at this point, seeing how utterly bullshit their claims can possibly be and still have morons signing off on them.

He's been touring around India recently, and earlier this month he was in Tibilisi, Georgia. I'm surprised he doesn't try to cry harassment more often.
 
That's not even a tranny, that's a frat boy in drag for a giggle.
It would be funny if that's what it turned out to be. I mean, just look at him:

04dfd7ce5747f7190ebb3c8f0e30363d.png


https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/wjq99z/why-cant-my-famous-gender-nonconforming-friends-get-laid

"Jacob and Alok don't need more claps or raised hands, more YASSSS's or SLAY's. What they need is to be found deeply, undeniably fuckable. Yet for all their brilliance, fuckability is exactly what some gender nonconforming femmes, even social media celebrities, don't ever seem to have."
 

Acock was interviewed by the BBC

"When I started to transition I would attend a trans support group where it was safe to talk about our experiences, figure out pronouns and stuff. When I would come wearing stereotypically "male" clothes, people would be confused, they'd talk to me as if I was a man. When I wore a dress, they treated me like a woman, "Okay, you're one of us."

Some people at the group would say, "If you want to be taken seriously as a trans person then you need to remove your body hair and start a medical transition."

These comments were upsetting because I've already experienced so much unsolicited advice in my life. It hurt that even within this community that was supposed to be supportive, there was still this policing of gender and beauty norms - that somehow it's impossible to be feminine and hairy at the same time.

I still get that same kind of "concern trolling" in comments on my social media. People genuinely think they are helping, but I wish they would think, "Why don't I ask that person what they need from me?"
"
 

Acock was interviewed by the BBC

"When I started to transition I would attend a trans support group where it was safe to talk about our experiences, figure out pronouns and stuff. When I would come wearing stereotypically "male" clothes, people would be confused, they'd talk to me as if I was a man. When I wore a dress, they treated me like a woman, "Okay, you're one of us."

Some people at the group would say, "If you want to be taken seriously as a trans person then you need to remove your body hair and start a medical transition."

These comments were upsetting because I've already experienced so much unsolicited advice in my life. It hurt that even within this community that was supposed to be supportive, there was still this policing of gender and beauty norms - that somehow it's impossible to be feminine and hairy at the same time.

I still get that same kind of "concern trolling" in comments on my social media. People genuinely think they are helping, but I wish they would think, "Why don't I ask that person what they need from me?"
"
Spoken like a true transtrender.
 
  • Horrifying
Reactions: Procrastinhater
Back