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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 think the best way to deal with it is to say something like "sorry, I'm not attracted to you" or "you're not my type". If you want to be extra mean, call them unattractive or ugly. If I like men who look like men and they don't match that preference, what can they do about that?
Bears only!

Trannies still raging about Rowling and normal people disagreeing with them, so they're leaving the UK.
Somali has so much sun this time of the year...
 
I don't think slash fanfiction is really about having a thing for gay men. That's more yaoi/BL, which is a bit much. From the first fanzines, the lack of interesting female characters made fanfiction writers turn to gay stories (Kirk/Spock). Even lesbian stories are still not as common because of this. If you want to write smut or romance, you either have to pick your fandom carefully or go gay.
I found a good explainer, the second paragraph of this post:

If I didn't know any better, I'd think "sex-positive" was a synonym for "gag-inducing". I've never seen a single piece of "sex-positive" media that was arousing in any way.

Much of the jouissance of sex in Western culture comes from the fact that it's taboo, forbidden, a secret little moment between two people that channels an inexplicable primal drive. When you try to "normalize" sex, study it, celebrate it, bring it out into the sunlight - that's the antithesis of what makes fucking fun. The destructive, romantic energy of sex is lost, and in its place is... the physical act of mashing pissers. It's about as arousing as watching your SO take a shit.

SJWs are insufferable navel-gazers. They lack the spark of life, the lapses of the self that make it worth living.
More reasons:
- homosexual relationships not subject to the master key theory *
- few good lowbrow high production value stories with female protagonists **
- male characters look like adult women, female characters look like children or sex toys or both **
- no camaraderie between men and women makes the eventual obligatory heterosexual romance feel like an arranged marriage
- "jealousy" toward a hypothetical female partner of the male character the female writer has the hots for

* Women are subjected to a lot of cultural messaging shaming women for being sexually proactive and putting out***. But if the woman imagines herself to be a yaoi boi bottom, her partner doesn't "score" at her expense.
** I don't mean it as "awww, poor women can't find a show to watch", it's because these women aren't sjw-picky that they end up watching what's popular, relating to male characters, and wanting to fuck other male characters.
*** Yes, this is in direct opposition to sex positivity. Different women are influenced by different messages. I myself am in slut-shaming central and can't see sex positivity as anything else than an ascended 4chan op to make dumb chicks voluntarily degrade themselves.
 
Why are drag queens obsessed with telling stories to fucking children? Why, oh god why do you have to put children through this yammering nonsense?

If the libraries are paying them, that might be your answer. For any queen who isn't at least Ru Paul's Drag Race-level famous, it's extremely difficult to make a living doing drag. There are more no-name queens out there than there are audiences who want to watch no-name queens.

There's a lot of drama in the drag scene right now due to black queens' sour grapes about not making a living. They're angry with white queens and any queen who's been on RPDR, and they claim that expecting them to be entertaining and not look like dog shit is "oppression".
 
If the libraries are paying them, that might be your answer. For any queen who isn't at least Ru Paul's Drag Race-level famous, it's extremely difficult to make a living doing drag. There are more no-name queens out there than there are audiences who want to watch no-name queens.

There's a lot of drama in the drag scene right now due to black queens' sour grapes about not making a living. They're angry with white queens and any queen who's been on RPDR, and they claim that expecting them to be entertaining and not look like dog shit is "oppression".
It used to be just a niche hobby, kinka like stand up comedy but more gay. You might make few bugs but generally the bigger reward was fun of performing. Issue is that few made it big and actually got famous enough to get more, alot more. Those drag queens are the first that many people have run into and now newcomers think that is aim, the big flashy tv queen. They also don't realize that this is just a fad. Soon queer will go out of fashion again and practically no one will be able to make money out of drag. You might be able to do a comedy show with drag elements but just drag will not do.
 


Who decides your gender?

A growing number of kids say it is up to them – and are rejecting the traditional markers of “male” or “female” in favor of identifying as “genderqueer”, which refers to people who don’t fall squarely within the gender binary. Stars like Indya Moore have come out as non-binary and use they/them pronouns, and non-binary characters are increasingly featured in breakout TV shows, such as Asia Kate Dillon’s role in Billions.


Yet non-binary kids say they are widely misunderstood, and they face prejudice. Donald Trump, for instance, recently decreed that protections against healthcare discrimination were to be applied based exclusively on biology rather than one’s inner sense of gender.

Today the Guardian is launching Genderqueer generation, a series of stories centered on, and often told by, the children and young adults who are rejecting traditional gender identities. We began by asking four of them to describe how they realized they were non-binary.

Ari, 18, Connecticut: ‘The first time someone used my pronouns I almost cried’

I don’t know really how I came to identify as non-binary as much as I came to identify as not a girl first. Until I was seven, I loved dresses and glitter and sparkles and everything. And then something changed. I don’t know what it was. I was like, I hate girly things. I hate the color pink. And I think that was me becoming what I like to call a conscious human being.


Then I thought, what if I am a boy? And I was just like, no, that’s gross! Which is not very kind to boys. But no, that’s not me.

I didn’t know at all what I was experiencing or doing until I had the internet to give me the words to describe it. I remember I was on vacation sharing a bed with my mom because we didn’t have enough rooms, and I was on my phone in the dark while she was passed out and snoring, just watching videos about what it meant to be non-binary and what it meant to be asexual or aromantic. And I was like, huh?

I don’t know how I would have found this information otherwise. There just isn’t a convenient, socially acceptable way to pass this information along unless you can be anonymous or protected by that screen. I did research and I bought a book called The ABC’s of LGBT+ by Ash Hardell. It’s so bizarre these days to do research with a physical book in your hand. But I did it and I thought, this makes more sense.

When I came out to my parents, I couldn’t provide an adequate explanation, so I got my book and showed it to them. The book gave us the right words to have a conversation about these kinds of topics, and from there my parents have been going above and beyond to try and be accepting of me.

At school it was more of a gradual thing than a quick change. But one day in Gay-Straight Alliance, in freshman year of high school, I was sitting next to my friend who had recently started experimenting with they/them pronouns. I thought, you know what? I’m just gonna do this thing and see if it feels better.

I walked up to the whiteboard and I wrote, “Ari is now using they/them pronouns.” I sat back down and that was it. Nobody even talked about it. Just the president said, “Here’s an announcement,” and pointed to the board. And everyone was
like, OK.

The first time someone – not a great friend, just an acquaintance – used my pronouns, I almost cried. It was so casual, and in such casual conversation, and I thought, holy shit, that feels so much better.

Jaiden, 17, California: ‘I try my best, but I understand some people may see me as female’

In middle school I was self-discovering and I switched labels a lot. After talking to some therapists I came to the conclusion that “non-binary” is a good label for me right now. I’m waiting until I’m 18 to see a gender-specific therapist to see if maybe binary female-to-male transition would be a better fit.


I never really came out because it’s not a big deal to my parents. My mom grew up around the LGBT community, so she doesn’t really mind. In my mother’s language, Tagalog, they actually don’t have gendered pronouns at all. So a lot of Filipinos, they understand for the most part. People are respecting of it.

At school I go by they/them. My teachers call me Jai. I haven’t ever explicitly said I’m non-binary, except to a few teachers I’m really comfortable with. But for the most part, I put they/them on my emails.

Especially if you’re AFAB – assigned female at birth – a lot of people have the idea that you’re just a tomboy. I really don’t like being called a tomboy because that implies I’m a girl.

There’s no “look” to being non-binary, but you also have to put in a little bit of effort. You can’t just go on with day-to-day life as you were doing as a cis person and say you’re non-binary because it gives off the wrong impression. And regardless of whether or not that’s right or wrong, it’s kind of just how society is. That’s something that people who don’t like the idea of non-binary can use against you.

For me, I like the color purple, I like some things that are traditionally feminine, but I also like my hair short, I don’t like being grouped with girls, I didn’t like being in the locker room for PE. Even though my parents let me buy boy clothes, it was harder to convince them to get me a chest binder. So I try my best – but I understand people may see me as female.

River, 18, Portugal: ‘I haven’t come out to my family’

I discovered the whole LGBTQ community online around 2017 when I started using social media more often. I was coming to terms with myself and my sexuality. I stumbled upon a lot of terms and one of them was “non-binary”. At the time, I didn’t really understand it. And I thought, OK, if I feel like it one day, maybe I’ll look it up again. After two years, I was like, OK, this feeling that I don’t identify as either a man or a woman is more intense.


The internet had a big role in me discovering myself. Online, I felt understood. I felt helped. I feel like the internet tells us stuff that we can’t learn in real life. People never hesitated to explain stuff to me even if I asked the dumbest questions. I know some people have some classes [about gender and sexuality], but where I live, we only have class about safe ways to have sex, basically. We don’t talk about sexuality.

I haven’t come out to my family. My family’s supportive, but I’m scared to tell them about it [in case] in a couple of years I don’t feel like calling myself non-binary any more and I have to do the whole thing again. With some of my friends, I was just like, Do you know what non-binary is? If they know, I’ll tell them I’m non-binary, and they’re like, oh, cool. If they don’t know, I’ll explain it and tell them I like to be called River instead of whatever you called me before.

I’ve never had the experience of coming out to someone who didn’t agree with me. There are some people in my class that don’t know about me being non-binary, and I’m pretty sure if I told them they would start insulting me.

A lot of the hate that comes to the non-binary community is from people trying to regulate how you identify. They’re like, oh, you can’t identify like this because you were born like that. Well, it’s my body. It’s my identity. It’s how I feel. It’s not how you feel.


Ellie, 13, Oregon: ‘Nobody has told me I’m too young to know I’m non-binary’

My family is extremely queer. I’ve grown up with so many gay aunts and I’ve been to so many weddings and I’ve been really fortunate to be in a situation where it was always OK to be me. I’ve known for a while now that I wasn’t quite in the gender binary. I wasn’t sure what the word was for a long time until I started getting into the internet and seeing people saying, like, “I am non-binary” or “I’m gender-fluid”. So I investigated and realized that using they/them pronouns works the best for me.


Because I was 11 when I came out, most of my friends didn’t know the word. They weren’t online, they were a lot more immature then, and I think that really affected how they viewed it. But my closest friends, of course, were just like, oh, yeah, OK.

Nobody has told me I’m too young to know I’m non-binary, but I watch a lot of YouTube videos of younger people coming out and people comment, oh, you’re too young to know. And I do my best not to turn the hate back on them. It does make me feel kind of invalidated, even if it’s not directed at me.

One of the things that has made me feel really supported online is fandoms. I discovered that other people were like me through fandoms. I found Harry Potter fan fiction and some of the people who write it had “they/them” in their bio online. It was the closest thing to representation I had.

Eventually I ended up watching shows like RuPaul’s Drag Race and that really showed me that I had a bigger community out there that supported everyone. And that made me feel really happy.

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I was like, I hate girly things. I hate the color pink. And I think that was me becoming what I like to call a conscious human being.


Then I thought, what if I am a boy? And I was just like, no, that’s gross! Which is not very kind to boys. But no, that’s not me

I already discussed this in detail previously, but yes, this is how things are. Troons are men who embrace femininity because they are AGP or because they think life will be easier if they are a girl. They crave positive attention and see it being given to the girls around them. Non-binaries are women who dislike what they perceive to be the restrictions of being female, but they also hate men.

It's people like this that are the reason TERFs will win. No one is telling these kids, "hey, there is a benefit to conforming to social norms. And there is a cost to openly rebelling against them. If you choose to reject the basic ideas of gender and style that we have in our society, a lot of people will accept you. But the one or two that don't will kill you. You complain about violence against transgender people? Then don't openly identify as transgender for your own safety."

And then when they say "hey don't blame the victim", we need to turn around and say, "We do. Everyone blames the victim. The victim always had something they could have done, some way they could have acted, dressed, or behaved, that would have helped them avoid being targeted. Because crime is about opportunity, and if you take steps to deny criminals any opportunity to target you, they won't. We just don't blame victims because women refuse to take any responsibility for their actions."
 
I think that sums up this article and their mindset quite well.
Jesus, this is stupid. How can any adult look at this and not realize it's a carbon copy of "It'S nOt A pHaSe MoM" with razor cut hair, eyeliner, skinny jeans, and slit wrists.

this is an awful lot of words to say "I'm special, bow to me."
 
Objectively speaking non-binary/Enbie is one of the best ways to go, as it immediately guarantees you a high-ranking slot in the progressive stack, requires relatively low effort to perform/live out, doesn't carry the gate-keeping stigma of trans-racial/trans-able, and unlike trooning out it can be easily reversed.

If you plan on building an Oppression Points Portfolio, I highly recommend investing in non-binary today!
 
A lot of the hate that comes to the non-binary community is from people trying to regulate how you identify. They’re like, oh, you can’t identify like this because you were born like that. Well, it’s my body. It’s my identity. It’s how I feel. It’s not how you feel.
On the plus side, gents, we should be really happy that we were around to witness the death of science.
 
And he said, “What comes out of a person is what defiles him. For from within, out of the heart of man, come evil thoughts, sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, coveting, wickedness, deceit, sensuality, envy, slander, pride, foolishness. All these evil things come from within, and they defile a person.”

Mark 7:20-23

Read your Bible, folks.
 
Objectively speaking non-binary/Enbie is one of the best ways to go, as it immediately guarantees you a high-ranking slot in the progressive stack, requires relatively low effort to perform/live out, doesn't carry the gate-keeping stigma of trans-racial/trans-able, and unlike trooning out it can be easily reversed.

If you plan on building an Oppression Points Portfolio, I highly recommend investing in non-binary today!
Enbie is the new “pretending to be gay to get near women”
It’s a perfect pickup line. “Oh I’m enbie/asexual, but if I meet a woman who’d change my mind.....”
 
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