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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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If we end up getting LiveLeak footage of this guy getting shanked by knackers I swear to fucking God it will make. my. year.
It is the only thing that could possibly redeem this wretched year. The problem is then it'll go from 'sick predatory fuck taken out like a rabid dog for the good of society" to "brave and stunning trans woman murdered in cold blood while just trying to pee!"
 
Most of the guys I observe with this confusion are posting their ignorance on the internet, so I’m not sure where they live, their age, or other demographic data. We had like, a day of sex ed in 7th grade where I lived, and it was very clinical. Idk what the boys were taught, but for us it was all periods and contraception. I doubt quite seriously if the boys got talked to about things that girls find pleasurable. Biology didn't cover anything except reproduction, and idk what they taught in Anatomy & Physiology, because only retards who were too dumb to be routed into Chemistry and Physics ended up taking that for one of their science credits.

I have also observed males who think that periods are like pee and that girls are just too lazy to hold it in. Lol.

I wonder if this complete lack of knowledge is why MtF are able to make themselves believe they can have a real vagina.

Do they legitimately believe it's just a biological fleshlight and nothing else?

I did see some claim that the puss and hairballs that come out occasionally are their real periods.

I'm glad I took the time to learn basics of human sexual anatomy, it helpa avoid a lot of stupid issues and dumb questions, also horrifies you when you realize how few people know anything about it beyond dick goes in hole = fun with possibility of 18+ years of unforseen consequences.
 
I wonder if this complete lack of knowledge is why MtF are able to make themselves believe they can have a real vagina.

Do they legitimately believe it's just a biological fleshlight and nothing else?

I did see some claim that the puss and hairballs that come out occasionally are their real periods.

I'm glad I took the time to learn basics of human sexual anatomy, it helpa avoid a lot of stupid issues and dumb questions, also horrifies you when you realize how few people know anything about it beyond dick goes in hole = fun with possibility of 18+ years of unforseen consequences.

Ignorance mixed with fetish and delusion. These aren't usually the types of men who have a lot of first hand experience with vaginas. Their knowledge comes from porn and what other men in their crab-bucket tell them, which is that vaginas are just fuck holes and no doctor will ever know their frankenditches aren't the real thing. Anyone trying to suggest otherwise is deemed an awful transphobe TERF who just want to harm the community. Even if they know before hand that a vagina is more than a fuckhole the constant repetition of "facts" by everyone they associate with will beat that out of them real soon (men who had the flip telling them how fulfilling their sex lives are, they have 90 billion orgasms just looking in the mirror, they get their periods, they have a 100% genuine cervix, soon they'll even have a uterus and can have babies to suck on their sexy woman-boobs!)

So entering with ignorance into a community with an incentive to keep them ignorant and that makes the truth hate speech. Choco rations going up doubleplus good etc etc.
 
It is the only thing that could possibly redeem this wretched year. The problem is then it'll go from 'sick predatory fuck taken out like a rabid dog for the good of society" to "brave and stunning trans woman murdered in cold blood while just trying to pee!"
It might deter others of his type from trooning out though. Some library in Dublin tried to hold a drag queen story hour. They got a bomb threat, and there haven't been many drag queen story hours since.
 


“Hey baby, did you miss my phone call?”
Seeing as how I didn’t know the guy following me down the street from Adam, no, I hadn’t gotten his call. It wasn’t wanted, either. He called out to me again, and I wasn’t sure if he was drunk or hitting on me or both.
So I did what all women do when they’re being followed by strangers and catcalled. I started mitigating risk. Was it more dangerous to smile, which could lead him to think I’m interested? Or was it more dangerous to tell him to fuck off?
I opted to cross the street sans crosswalk. He followed me. I touched my hand briefly to my hip, which I hope indicated to him that I had something on me. He didn’t need to know it was only a knife. Whether he saw it or simply lost interest in me, he stopped following and I walked on. Even though this kind of thing happens all the time, I still thought about it during the rest of my walk home and over the next hour I played over in my head what I would’ve said or done if the situation had escalated.

In one of those hypothetical scenarios, I yelled at the man, “I’m not even a girl!” and I imagined him yelling homophobic slurs back at me. And why not? If my own mother could say I’m an abomination, and if evangelicals can show up to a Pride parade to scream in my face that I’m deviant, why wouldn’t a stranger who’d just harassed me do the same?
That was something I didn’t expect about being openly nonbinary: Every reason that someone, like the catcalling man I just encountered, might be turned off by learning my identity ― from homophobic rage to confusion about my gender to just plain not being as attracted to me because I’m not a woman ― feels bad.
Nonbinary is an umbrella term for people who don’t identify with the gender binary or the gender they were assigned at birth. It includes people who are agender, or genderless, people who are genderfluid, people who identify with both genders, people who are genderqueer and so much more. There are as many unique labels as there are people who fall outside the binary. I probably fall into that agender category, although I still look pretty feminine most of the time. Luckily, nonbinary people aren’t required to be androgynous — makeup, hair and clothes are just products and choices, often based on financial means. They don’t constitute gender.


Still, in a room full of women I often feel othered, out of place. I don’t identify with feminine qualities, traits or characteristics. While it’s often hard to place exactly what I do identify with — we live in a culture that erases LGBTQ people and robs us of even basic language to help us define ourselves — simply put, I don’t feel like a girl. I don’t feel like a boy, either. I’m neither.
Because we’re just rediscovering the right words to describe nonbinary genders little things hurt, and we’re often dehumanized in such simple, succinct ways. Death by a thousand cuts, if you will. Just a few days after that man harassed me on the street, a former client sent me a DM on Instagram, opening with a “hey lady!” My pronouns ― they/them ― are in my bio and have been for weeks on multiple platforms. They’re even in my email signature. A few days prior, a close friend who knows I identify as nonbinary gave me a “hey, girl!” and our conversations about sexism centered heavily around women and girls’ struggles.
That’s another thing I didn’t expect about being nonbinary: Sometimes even queer allies — even your friends — get it wrong. And as someone who hates conflict, I ask myself if I’ve done enough to inform and educate the people I know about who I am. I wonder if my posts about being nonbinary have been enough. If having my pronouns visible on my social media accounts, which all of my friends can see, has been enough. If I have brought up being nonbinary in conversations enough.


But where do you draw the line between the personal responsibility of the queer person and the responsibility of others to do their part in pushing back against the overwhelming influence and effects of compulsive heterosexuality, of thinking of the gender binary as default? And who gets to say with any degree of certainty where someone’s responsibility begins and another person’s ends?
I knew I was nonbinary in childhood, although it took more than two decades to understand and define what it means for me, and I’m still not done learning. I remember being in the car with my grandmother when I was a kindergartner and declaring I wish I’d been born a boy. I got in trouble for saying it. It probably had more to do with the fact that I couldn’t play how I wanted and I was already feeling held back, but cisgender people (or those who identify with the gender they were assigned at birth) generally don’t wish they are another gender.
Shortly after moving to Nashville in 2017, I became deathly afraid I was a boy. What would it mean to transition, to tell my family they had a son? I cried while looking at dresses hanging in my closet I didn’t want to wear anymore. I still don’t wear dresses much, but I also know I’m not a boy.
Then, after encountering new and more places to talk about, learn about and engage with nonbinary people ― even if it was just via Twitter discussions or when Public Universal Friend went viral ― and after doing a lot of thinking and feeling, I was able to publicly declare myself nonbinary in 2019. Still, that doesn’t mean that I don’t have to continually inform people of who I am and how I fit into the world. Most queer people have to come out many times to many different people. It’s not a one-and-done kind of thing.


It’s also important to remember that a person can be nonbinary and not heterosexual, too. Gender is different than sexual orientation; you can be trans and straight or trans and gay. Gender is how you perceive your gender identity, and it doesn’t have much to do with who you are attracted to. I’m bisexual, so I’m queer in both aspects, but that isn’t always true for everyone, so it’s best to just ask people what pronouns they use and not make assumptions about their sexual orientation.
Thankfully, things continue to evolve and nonbinary people are enjoying increased representation in the media, even if it’s still marginal. One of my favorite animated shows, Steven Universe, features multiple genderfluid and nonbinary characters. I’m an avid fan of autonomous sensory meridian response videos (ASMR) and love creators who use gender neutral pronouns. Pronouns in Twitter bios are more common than ever (and many cis people are listing theirs there as well) and we’ve even passed gender-neutral legislation here in Nashville. The advances are nice because you can’t be what you can’t see, but we still have a long way to go and I still often feel out of place.
Being nonbinary feels a bit like being a piece of a train jigsaw puzzle when everyone else around you is putting together a kitten puzzle ― you don’t always feel like you fit. But it wasn’t always this way. Native American and other indigenous cultures have long recognized multiple genders and the spectrum of possibilities. Though I am white and not a part of those communities, I can still learn from them and point to them as further evidence that the gender binary is counterfeit and a colonial invention.


The social construct of gender has different effects on everyone and it depends on your family whether you’re AFAB (assigned female at birth) or AMAB (assigned male at birth). It also depends on how much, or how far, you deviate from the binary. Some people identify with their genders more or less strongly. Some of us are still questioning, trying to figure out what it all means and why we feel like foreigners in our own bodies.
For me, an AFAB nonbinary person, the consequences are simple: I get the worst of both worlds. I get to enjoy all the sexism, misogyny and catcalling cis women do. I’m terrified to walk alone at night. I can’t afford birth control. Men hop in my DMs with unsolicited pics and my male friends have all tried to sleep with me at some point — a couple of them succeeded, and it was mostly never very good. And it’s not that I’m special, or look like a supermodel. That’s just what being a woman is like.
I also get to enjoy being targeted with homophobia and transphobia because some non-queer people hate the LGBTQ community; they hate gays and queers and they especially hate folks like me that don’t fit neatly into their notions of how gender works or what it looks like. They’ve called me “it” and “a sin.”
Even within the queer community things can be ugly for those of us who exist outside the lines of specific, often surprisingly rigid subgroups of identity like Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender. As disappointing as it may be to admit it, sometimes the people who should understand what being different is like the best do the worst job at being supportive.


And then there’s the battle I constantly have with myself and my daily struggle with the mirror. It’s everything from feeling that women’s jeans fit too tightly but hating to not show off what curves I do have in baggier options to knowing a top knot feels too feminine but a realizing a short cut makes my face look as round as a dinner plate. It’s things that many people take for granted and might not be able to understand how important they are to having a healthy sense of yourself. And when dating is added to the mix, it gets even harder and I constantly worry that being nonbinary is the reason I get ghosted.
In short, being nonbinary can really suck. Or, perhaps more precisely, being nonbinary in a binary world can really suck.
But there are things we can do. I’m starting by writing about my experience. I also explore my gender identity with my therapist, and we talk about how childhood experiences and growing up in a conservative family have influenced me. I educate myself, reading things like the “Am I a Lesbian? Masterdoc” which covers compulsive heterosexuality and exploring cultures that honor the multiple genders. I journal almost every day, which allows me to vent and explore what bothers me in a safe space. I have found it’s so important to get the negativity out of my body and mind. And last, I’m working on building better relationships. I want to talk with my friends about what hurts, and why, and set boundaries. I want to have them on this journey with me.


Because that’s what being nonbinary is — a journey. I didn’t wake up one day and have all the answers, especially not in a culture that insists on seeing things as black or white, blue or pink. I may change my mind or change how I see myself as I continue to learn more about myself, and I believe that growth will serve me as I continue to figure out who I truly am. Ultimately, I’ve realized it’s not about finding other people who are putting together exactly the same puzzle as me ― or that if I don’t, that I have to pack up my toys and go home. I’m determined to keep carefully assembling my own puzzle over time and invite others to have a look at it and share in what I’ve discovered if they like ― and if I like ― in hopes of creating new and better ways of seeing and being seen by the world around us.
Abby Lee Hood is a Nashville-based freelance writer covering politics, violence, justice and games. They live with their three-legged cat and albino hedgehog and enjoy riding motorcycles and roller skating. They also write poetry and fiction.
 
Let me translate:

I'm a plain woman who won't turn any heads but I can cope by saying I'm not trying to be a woman anyway. And also, in a world where LGB is plain old vanilla now, I've got be super extra to get those sweet queer intersectionality points. Also, I'm mentally ill with daddy issues and I'm about 50lbs and 3 cats away from my ultimate destiny.
 
More pics

personal site:
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twatter:
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Patreon(where you're paying to see which pitches to rags like this work, and which ones don't; she has 74 patrons):
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In case you still weren't sure it was a woman...
Her ASMR youtube:

An ASMR vid where she roleplays interviewing you about your debut novel, something she desperately wishes would happen to her:
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"I'm not a woman, but I exclusively wear dresses when I skate!"
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God yeah, your life sounds awful, almost as awful as folks working two jobs to keep food on the table, oh, how do you survive in this cruel, awful, world that only acknowledges the existence of men and women, don't they know you're the one who's REALLY important?

Wish these jackasses would put their money where their mouth is with their "mental illness isn't shameful" and suck it up to get rightfully diagnosed with NPD already.
 
There are only 2 genders you dumb cunt. You're not intersex (which lets be real, its a disorder, its not a gender) and you still have to pick one of two. We evolved to have 2 genders. That simple. There aren't any more. Nobody grasps the 'concept' of multiple genders because humans made that shit up. You basically have to be retarded and pretend biological gender doesn't actually exist to even come close to thinking in this fashion. Which is not most people.

You're not special. You are not unique. You're a dumb fucktard. And your lack of gender is a screaming warning sign to anyone remotely normal that you are fucked in the head. You are a fucking moron and nobody wants to associate with idiots. Jesus, is it a wonder nobody wants to fucking buy the Huffington Post from Verizon when their entire staff is comprised of mentally handicapped fucking idiots?
 
For me, an AFAB nonbinary person, the consequences are simple: I get the worst of both worlds. I get to enjoy all the sexism, misogyny and catcalling cis women do. I’m terrified to walk alone at night. I can’t afford birth control. Men hop in my DMs with unsolicited pics and my male friends have all tried to sleep with me at some point — a couple of them succeeded, and it was mostly never very good. And it’s not that I’m special, or look like a supermodel. That’s just what being a woman is like.
I also get to enjoy being targeted with homophobia and transphobia because some non-queer people hate the LGBTQ community; they hate gays and queers and they especially hate folks like me that don’t fit neatly into their notions of how gender works or what it looks like. They’ve called me “it” and “a sin.”
Even within the queer community things can be ugly for those of us who exist outside the lines of specific, often surprisingly rigid subgroups of identity like Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender. As disappointing as it may be to admit it, sometimes the people who should understand what being different is like the best do the worst job at being supportive.

As if it's not mostly self-inflicted and exactly what she wanted, like the BPD attention whore she is. Every non-binary female I know well enough is a diagnosed borderliner AND a straight woman, and I'm quite comfortable assuming the same of every female enby out there, since they're some of the most cookie-cutter group of people there is.
 
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