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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lol


A transgender woman has been awarded £1,000 compensation after her 'deep voice' caused her bank to think she was a fraudster.

The customer, who wanted to be treated as a woman, also got upset when Santander changed her title to Mx, when she chose to be known as Ms.

Problems started for her when she called the bank about a transaction and despite clearing all the security checks she was told to go to a branch with ID to get her account unlocked.

She was told this was because the person she was speaking to on the phone thought she was a man because of her deep voice.

The woman, then complained to the Financial Ombudsman, after more transactions were blocked and she was made to go into a branch with ID to prove who she was.

The frequent blocking of her account meant that at times she was left without cash for food and essentials and had to borrow money from friends.

The Ombudsman ruled against Santander and said the bank should have shown more understanding and ordered it to pay her £1,000 in compensation.

The ruling said: 'I would have expected Santander to have started to think about a solution - not least because the issue is particularly sensitive for Ms P as she's transgender.

'I don't think Santander recognised there was a problem early enough, and more importantly I don't think its responses were always appropriate or sensitive.

'A branch member, for example, no doubt trying to help, changed Ms P's title on her profile to 'Mx' from 'Ms' without even asking Ms P. Ms P is a woman, and proud to be so.

'She had made it very clear to Santander that she wants and expects to be treated like any other woman, as is her right.

'Our investigator suggested that Santander add a note to Ms P's profile saying that her voice doesn't match her profile.

'I think that is a sensible suggestion as people - transgender or otherwise - do sometimes have voices that don't match their gender, age, or region amongst other things.'

In a separate case Confused was ordered to pay £200 to a Doctor who when entering their details on the price comparison site was forced to input a gender.

When the firm wrote to try to explain the issue they used the wrong pronoun which the Ombudsman said was a 'careless' error.

A third case saw Liverpool Victoria being ordered to pay £350 to a customer after a new computer system meant they had to have a title, so they called the person Ms.

The Ombudsman said the customer had 'very personal' reasons for not wanted to have a title in front of their name.

A spokesperson for Mermaids, the UK transgender children's charity said: 'Transgender people have been an integral - though often hidden - part of our shared society for generations.

'Still, too many corporations overlook the existence of trans lives and find themselves accused of discrimination.

'These cases are another reminder to companies of all sizes, that their business is stronger and their customer support more inclusive if they invest in policies and staff training around lgbtq+ awareness.

'For a trans person to be misgendered by a trusted company is hurtful, disrespectful, potentially discriminatory and unnecessary.'


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S didn’t explain to LV= why they don’t use a title, but they did explain their reasons to me when I spoke to them. I’ve told LV= that I’m not going to share S’s reasons for not using a title – they’re very personal – but I’m satisfied S has found this whole experience distressing. LV= has accepted that the experience has been distressing for S, which I’m pleased to see, and understood why I didn’t think it was appropriate to share S’s reasons.

I’ve discussed this complaint in detail with both parties. I’ve also sent both parties a paper published by the Government Equalities Office in November 2015 about good practice when it comes to providing goods and services to people who are transgender. The paper doesn’t just talk about transgender customers – it talks about people who are non-binary too. More importantly, it also talks about titles and gender. The paper, for example, says that making a customer choose a title – or a gender – that they don’t identify with doesn’t help businesses to get to know their customers.



Dr L has said they’re unhappy they can’t use Confused as intended. They say it requires them to specify a gender from binary options – either Dr (male) or Dr (female). They’d like Confused to admit that by refusing to return any results on its site (unless a binary gender is specified), it’s discriminating on the basis of gender.
 
If you've not been murdered or attacked by this serial killer tranny, this story is pretty funny


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Rona Love seen on surveillance video.DCPI

A two-time murderer who’d been released on lifetime parole is back behind bars — after she was arrested on Friday for allegedly shooting a man in the neck during an argument at a Manhattan subway station earlier this month, police said.

Before being released just last year, Rona Love, 59, had spent 25 years in prison for two murders she committed in the 1990s.

She is now charged with attempted murder in an Oct. 18 shooting inside the 1/2/3 station at 14th Street and Seventh Avenue in Greenwich Village, NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea said on Twitter.

The victim in that attack, a 24-year-old man, managed to walk himself to the nearby Lenox Health Center and has survived.

Police said that Love will also be charged in a recent gunpoint robbery at a souvenir shop in Ridgewood, Queens.

Love — a transgender woman who uses the name “Rona Sugar Love” — had been released from jail in April 2019.


A couple of months later, Love told the New York City Trans Oral History Project that, while behind bars, she was repeatedly sexually and physically abused by other inmates and corrections officers and tried several times to commit suicide.

She and her twin sister also experienced “physical, emotional, sexual, mental abuses” while they were children in Puerto Rico, she said.

Since leaving prison, Love was also arrested July 15 in Bushwick, Brooklyn, on charges of assault in the third degree, after allegedly drunkenly hitting a woman on the head with a broom during a domestic dispute, police said.

She was released without bail two days later and a temporary order of protection was issued, public records show.

Her next court appearance, in that case, is set for Dec. 11.


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What was it like when you were first released?

It was hell. First, I was released to a woman’s shelter in the Bronx where I was abused by a staff member. I reported it and was out of there in 24 hours. Next, I went to a transitional house for women home from prison. Everyone from the staff to the residents was formerly incarcerated. I’m all for people having jobs and improving themselves. However, when everyone in an agency is formerly incarcerated, then the jail house mentality and code takes over. There is no trust and no confidentiality. These agencies need to have a mixed staff. I decided to move in with another transgender woman friend, which worked out fine for a month before we began to have issues. So, I left and started living on the trains and roof tops while looking for my own housing and applying for benefits
 
If you've not been murdered or attacked by this serial killer tranny, this story is pretty funny


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Rona Love seen on surveillance video.DCPI

A two-time murderer who’d been released on lifetime parole is back behind bars — after she was arrested on Friday for allegedly shooting a man in the neck during an argument at a Manhattan subway station earlier this month, police said.

Before being released just last year, Rona Love, 59, had spent 25 years in prison for two murders she committed in the 1990s.

She is now charged with attempted murder in an Oct. 18 shooting inside the 1/2/3 station at 14th Street and Seventh Avenue in Greenwich Village, NYPD Commissioner Dermot Shea said on Twitter.

The victim in that attack, a 24-year-old man, managed to walk himself to the nearby Lenox Health Center and has survived.

Police said that Love will also be charged in a recent gunpoint robbery at a souvenir shop in Ridgewood, Queens.

Love — a transgender woman who uses the name “Rona Sugar Love” — had been released from jail in April 2019.


A couple of months later, Love told the New York City Trans Oral History Project that, while behind bars, she was repeatedly sexually and physically abused by other inmates and corrections officers and tried several times to commit suicide.

She and her twin sister also experienced “physical, emotional, sexual, mental abuses” while they were children in Puerto Rico, she said.

Since leaving prison, Love was also arrested July 15 in Bushwick, Brooklyn, on charges of assault in the third degree, after allegedly drunkenly hitting a woman on the head with a broom during a domestic dispute, police said.

She was released without bail two days later and a temporary order of protection was issued, public records show.

Her next court appearance, in that case, is set for Dec. 11.


View attachment 1698467

What was it like when you were first released?

It was hell. First, I was released to a woman’s shelter in the Bronx where I was abused by a staff member. I reported it and was out of there in 24 hours. Next, I went to a transitional house for women home from prison. Everyone from the staff to the residents was formerly incarcerated. I’m all for people having jobs and improving themselves. However, when everyone in an agency is formerly incarcerated, then the jail house mentality and code takes over. There is no trust and no confidentiality. These agencies need to have a mixed staff. I decided to move in with another transgender woman friend, which worked out fine for a month before we began to have issues. So, I left and started living on the trains and roof tops while looking for my own housing and applying for benefits
I wonder if it has an internalized rape fetish or is just historonic
 
I wonder if it has an internalized rape fetish or is just historonic

Good question.

TBH a lot of serial killers were raped and abused as kids, so I'd say there's a decent chance that he DID get butt-raped every day age 7 or whatever. I find it pretty unlikely that he got raped in prison by a bunch of prison officers though.


He doesn't seem to be much of a rapist himself, more just extremely violent, which is slightly unusual for someone who was raped a lot.

Pretty much all trannies lie, as do criminals, so who really knows?
 

Dalton Harrison, 40, is a transgender man who spent a year behind bars in women’s prisons in the UK. Since getting out, the former inmate has advocated for trans rights in prisons and called for better education for prisoners. Dalton writes for PinkNews on his experience in prison and making changes to the system

I had spent my whole life fighting other people’s ideas of me.


I was so scared of losing my family and friends; so I felt like I had nothing else to lose once they knew I was in trouble with the police. This gave me the courage to transition officially. But after waiting four years for the system to find me guilty of my crime, all I ended up doing was arguing with the criminal justice system about who I was.

When I was sentenced, I found prison was even worse.

“So you are what? Transgender?” A group of women circled me. I looked past their heads to the CCTV cameras, and further away still to an office – its door shut.


“So are you a man changing into a woman?”

I had come out as transgender to my family but had been charged in my dead name. My legal team had told me that attending court in a three-piece suit was not appropriate. They took me in a side room as I passed men with tracksuits getting called to go in.

“I don’t think your look is bad. But you are a woman. The jury likes to put things in a box they don’t understand lesbian or transgender. They are scared of what they don’t understand. Off the record. I am just helping you.”


‘I questioned whether it would be better if I died.’​

“I am a transgender man.” The women stared blankly back at me, just like the eyes of the nurse on my arrival in the female prison.


“What do you want me to do about it?” the nurse had said. “Go see a doctor.”

All my fears had formed lungs and beating chests as I listened to staff respond to me. “What do you want to be a butch girl for? There’s plenty in here.”

The gym staff began barking out orders as we were counted and penned in. “Ladies get changed, get a shower. No excuses.”

I got pushed along to a small room. Like school rooms. Years of hiding. That moment. Led to that night. I lay there numb, questioning whether it would be better if I died.

Some prisoners shouted at me as I moved between officers’ observation boxes. You never felt more alone but watched at the same time.


“You think you’re a man. You ain’t nothing but a boy,” they screamed.

Hardship and adversity was meant for people who hadn’t committed crimes. Yet each day I told myself I wasn’t my worst mistake.

I was transferred from one female prison in Leeds to one in Durham.

“Transgender? Trying to get special treatment?” A prisoner spat.

‘Who would want to upset a prison full of women by locking up the only shower block?’​

The transgender agreement is a voluntary agreement inside prisons that deals with the way trans prisoners are dealt with. This includes living space, shower access and searching policy. The policy doesn’t change much for trans men and seems more for trans women.

They agreed they would lock me into the shower block for privacy. The reality was I rarely had a shower, as who would want to upset a wing full of women for locking up the only shower block? As for not sharing a cell, I could have got a single one through the mental-health team.

I was the only transgender prisoner who had not been accused of sexual assault.


At the transgender meetings held, we discussed officers using dead names daily. Being called “miss” and “gentleman, or whatever you are today”. Not having access to haircuts to ease dysphoria. Having appointments cancelled.

I realised I was the only trans prisoner who had not been accused of sexual assault. I noticed a lot of the women liked to go out with trans men or women, but if they wanted a new relationship they accused them of being inappropriate. Which would be a way of getting them off the wing or worse.

‘Being the change I wanted to see in how prisons treats trans inmates.’​

I wanted to be the change the system lacked. I wanted to show the officers I was not their joke or a troublemaker who went against the prison system that ran by two genders.

I started by becoming the first trans listener for Samaritans. Usually, prison security would exclude most trans prisoners due to mental health problems. Durham Samaritans made me feel like a human being who could make a difference.

Durham Samaritans made me feel like a human being.


The inside-out prison exchange programme with Dr Kate O’Brien and Dr Hannah King from Durham University introduced us to Pips, who was working for Stonewall Scotland. I realised I wanted to be an activist and tell people what it’s like to be trans inside prisons.

I felt it was needed after one prison officer opened up about lack of diversity training. He said he didn’t know how to react to anyone LGBT+, and talking helped him understand.

I left prison to Ripon House hostel, where I met Becky who inspired me. Along with Pam’s constant enthusiasm pushed me to apply for university. I am now in my first year and starting testosterone.

No crime is right but nearly all prisoners get out. Maybe it’s time to make mass incarceration about purpose and re-education and begin re-investing – rather than just writing people off.



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All of the men allowed into women's prison were accused of sexual assault, and caused massive drama? You don't fucking say. It's almost as if allowing men into women's prisons is the most stupid idea ever.

Transwomen are men, transmen are women, non-binary people need a slap in the face.
 
I realised I was the only trans prisoner who had not been accused of sexual assault.
Lol she seems to be missing the point. How many so-called transwomen in there were there because- as the men they are- they had raped women?

100%? Or as low as 99%, maybe even 95%.
 
I wonder if there would be a huge outcry if a TIF was placed into a men's prison.

"But you said he's a man, so that means it's the men's prison for him."
"But you don't understand, he's a trans man!"
"But you said trans men are men. So what's the problem?"
"But, but, because he's trans he'll be in danger!"
"There is nothing biologically different from trans men and men, isn't that what you guys always say?"
"Yes but..."
"Just because he was born a woman doesn't make him weaker or lesser than other men, right?"
"Well yes, but wait just a minute! He'd feel and be safer with women!"
"But he's a man. Women wouldn't feel safe having a man around right? And again, trans men are men."
"But it's different!"
"How?"
"Because he's trans!""
"And what makes him different from men then? Sex is a social construct. It's all about how you feel, and he feels like he's a man, so therefore, he should be treated as such. To do otherwise would be transphobic correct?"
"Well yeah but, but you understand, he wasn't born a man, he's still technically female. And females aren't safe in men's spaces! Men would rape him for that!"
"Ah, is that so? Well by that logic trans women are men since they aren't born women and are technically still male. And you just admitted that women aren't safe around men, so.....put the trannies in their correct sex prisons!"
"YEAH! Wait, what!?!"

I know it's mean, and I don't want to cause harm to anyone, but I would seriously love to see the reaction the progressives would have if a FtM was put into a men's prisons, because then they'd have a conundrum. If they have to admit that TIFs can't be put into men's prisons because they're female, then it can easily be flipped on why TIMs can't be put into women's prisons because they're male. Unfortunately, even the most insane TIFs still aren't retarded enough to demand to be put in a men's prison, so I doubt this is going to come up. But I hope it does, or at least some people start asking questions on why trans women can be put into female prisons, but trans men aren't put into men's prisons.
 
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