- Joined
- Aug 23, 2020
Vulnerable transs woman Earline has infiltrated the Tranch under the guise of being "rescued" from his white supremacist compound.
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I don't think the embedded image could have been a more ogre-like picture, holy fucking shit. That is PRIMO Man-Ogre photography. I can't tell if it's the weird lumpy state of Bronnie's body but those are some seriously gnarly triceps if I'm seeing this right. Holy moly. If anyone can take a good look at this sasquatchian creature and define it as a woman they'd have to have exceptionally bad eyesight or brain damage.
Good god, is that Paul or a trained gorilla in a t-shirt?
Over the course of three days in late June, about 50 volunteers visited the Tenacious Unicorn Ranch in rural Colorado to help shear its alpaca herd and be in queer community.
Image: Tenacious Unicorn Ranch
Bonnie Nelson, 34, helps sort sheared and un-sheared alpaca before starting another day of "Shear-a-Palooza" at the Tenacious Unicorn Ranch in Westcliffe, Colo., on June 24, 2021.Leah Millis / Reuters
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July 18, 2021, 6:30 AM EDT / Updated July 18, 2021, 11:31 AM EDT
By Jo Yurcaba
“Bedtime, girls! Bedtime! Bedtime!” Penellope Logue yelled as she clapped her hands behind a herd of about 100 female alpacas.
It was about 9 a.m., so it wasn’t bedtime for the alpacas, but some of them understood the command to mean “Go into the barn,” where Logue and about a dozen volunteers were trying to corral them for their annual shearing.
This year, the shearing was a come-one, come-all event. Over the course of three days in late June, about 50 volunteers visited the Tenacious Unicorn Ranch in southern Colorado to help shear the alpacas. Logue, 40, founded the ranch in 2018 as a safe place for transgender people like herself, and she now co-owns it with Bonnie Nelson, 34.
Over the last two years, the ranch has received national recognition through more than a dozen news articles and has built an online reputation in the queer community as an armed, anarchist haven that shares cute photos of alpacas on Twitter, where it has more than 14,000 followers. Most of the volunteers who traveled to the ranch for the shearing were LGBTQ people who said they found it through social media.
Image: The Tenacious Unicorn Ranch
Penny Logue removes her bulletproof vest and gear after finishing practice at the range with fellow ranchers on the Tenacious Unicorn Ranch in Westcliffe, Colo., on May 27, 2021.Leah Millis / Reuters
One alpaca at a time, the volunteers, ranch residents and a team of three Denver-based professional shearers clipped the fiber, as it’s called, off of nearly 170 alpacas. The fiber is processed at a local facility into yarn that is sold on Etsy every year to support the ranch, said Logue, who grew up on a farm in Longmont, Colorado, about 30 miles north of Denver.
During breaks from shearing, people gathered under a roughly 50-foot-wide red and yellow tent at the top of a hill near the shearing barn. Volunteers and ranch residents pulled up chairs in a circle — a “queer circle” as one resident called it, because it wasn’t perfectly round — to chat while a group of alpacas lingered next to the tent eating their hay. Some alpacas, like one female named Mocha, came up to Nelson and other volunteers for scratches.
Image: Tenacious Unicorn Ranch
Kallen Ondrejkovics, Daisy Hand, Penny Logue and Sky Nelson tie down an alpaca so it can be sheared during "Shear-A-Palooza" at the Tenacious Unicorn Ranch in Westcliffe, Colo., on June 23, 2021.Leah Millis / Reuters
The co-owners said the event captured exactly why they founded the ranch in the first place: to create a place for queer people to gather and not just survive, but thrive.
“Walking up from shearing to a round circle of hyped up queer people is f------ awesome,” Logue said. “Everybody’s cackling and laughing. Everybody’s having a great time. That’s our ranch.”
“We created joy,” said Nelson, who moved from Long Island, New York, in August 2019. “It’s a wonderful feeling.”
It’s a feeling the ranch residents have fought for. In March, they faced online threats and harassment that culminated with two armed people trespassing on their land, Logue said. For about a month, a team of four volunteer guards conducted 24-hour patrols, but things have recently settled down. Now, they’re looking forward to expanding and helping other queer people replicate what they’ve created.
‘Queer people are done being stepped on’
The feeling of joy and safety that residents and volunteers say they feel on the ranch stands in contrast to what many trans people face everywhere else. So far this year, more than 30 states have considered at least 100 bills targeting transgender people, according to the Human Rights Campaign.
Nine states — eight since the start of the year — have passed laws banning trans girls from school sports, and two have banned or restricted trans minors’ access to medical care, according to the Movement Advancement Project, a nonprofit LGBTQ think tank. Six states have passed religious exemption laws that allow medical professionals to refuse to serve LGBTQ people.
This year is also on track to become the deadliest on record for transgender Americans, with at least 30 trans and gender-nonconforming people killed in the U.S. so far, according to the Human Rights Campaign. Advocates say this estimate is likely low, because law enforcement officials often misgender trans people and use their deadnames, their birth name they no longer use, in reports of their deaths.
That violence is part of the reason Logue and Nelson are well-armed. Both co-owners wear semi-automatic pistols strapped to their legs every day.
Image: Tenacious Unicorn Ranch
Bonnie Nelson sits with eir rifle, nicknamed 'Yoko', in the living room of the ranch house at the Tenacious Unicorn Ranch in Westcliffe, Colo., on May 25, 2021.Leah Millis / Reuters
Nelson — who uses the pronouns ey, em and eir — said ey has watched the murder rate for trans people rise as the community has achieved more recognition and rights.
“You’ve got to fight back,” Nelson said. “I’m ready to kill people if they are threatening our lives.”
Logue added that she doesn’t want to kill anybody.
“That’s not why we’re here. We’re here to raise alpacas and see queer people thrive,” she said.
But she and Nelson said they will defend themselves if they have to — and they have. On March 1, after Denver’s 9News published an article about the ranch, Logue said she started receiving threatening messages, including death threats.
About 20 minutes away, in Westcliffe, Colorado, the closest town, Logue said people are largely supportive of the ranch, which has been involved in some community projects such as recycling efforts. The owner of Peregrine Coffee, a local coffee shop in the small town of less than 400, referred to Logue and Nelson as “the unicorns” and described them as good friends.
But Logue said there’s a small faction of local right-wing militia groups that haven’t liked them since they moved there. That all started to come to a head in early March after the 9News article, when they began receiving threatening messages.
They created a 24-hour guard team, and a few days later, at 3 a.m. on March 6, one of the guards found two people trespassing on the ranch’s property with rifles. Nelson said the guard alerted the trespassers to his presence, and they fled.
Image: Tenacious Unicorn Ranch
J Stanley, 29, leads an alpaca to get sheared during "Shear-A-Palooza" on June 23, 2021.Leah Millis / Reuters
The ranch posted about the incident, which residents now refer to as “the siege” on social media, and Logue said they received support from across the country. A local chapter of the Socialist Rifle Association donated enough armor for all the ranch residents, for example.
Their GoFundMe was also fully funded, raising $100,000. It allowed them to purchase security cameras to take the place of armed guards and a tractor, which they used to put up new fencing.
Ash Kreis, a documentary filmmaker from Colorado Springs, lived at the ranch for nine months and recorded many of the events leading up to, during and after the siege. The trailer for the documentary, called “Tenacious,” debuted last month.
Over the last few weeks, things have calmed down, but Logue said multiple residents developed post-traumatic stress disorder from that time.
“There are lasting effects of that kind of trauma, because it’s 24 hours a day,” said Logue, who added that she experienced PTSD from her time in the military. “It is literally taking a group of people and dropping them into what is a potential combat zone everywhere they go in their home.”
The experience has “hardened” them even more, Logue said, so that if it comes down to it, they will defend themselves if someone comes onto the property with ill intent.
“We’re done. Queer people are done being stepped on,” Logue said. “Whereas nonviolence is a wonderful end goal, that’s not what stage we’re at.”
Nelson added that many marginalized people are arming themselves now, “because they realize we’ve been in an arms race, and we are far behind.”
“The system isn’t going to help us,” Nelson said. “We have to protect us.”
‘A sense of community’
Logue and Nelson decided to send an open invitation for people to come help with shearing from June 23 to 25. They offered up camping space just outside of their dome-shaped Earthship, a type of off-the-grid, solar-powered home.
One volunteer towed their purple tiny house on a trailer from New Mexico. Another towed a small camper, while still others slept in their cars or set up camp in tents facing the Sangre de Cristo mountain range, which is visible from the Earthship’s front porch.
Image: Tenacious Unicorn Ranch
Volunteers help bring items into the Earthship as a storm approaches on June 24, 2021.Leah Millis / Reuters
Some of the volunteers were trans people who had recently left their homes permanently. Some wanted to support the ranch after the siege. Others just wanted to see the alpacas and be around other trans people.
Salina Grey, 38, said she found the ranch through social media. She came out as trans in October, and in May, she said she began medical leave from her job as a software architect after her mental health began “spiraling.” She left her home in Mississippi and plans to stay with friends across the country until she finds a place to settle. Visiting the ranch fit into her route “too perfectly to ignore.”
“It’s everything I hoped it would be,” she said of the ranch. Before visiting, she said she constantly questioned whether she was being “feminine enough,” even when she was by herself. But at the ranch, “all the performative expectations are just gone the second you get there, because everybody’s at different stages in their own transition,” she said. “So they get it, and you can just be.”
Most of the volunteers helped with shearing the alpacas. The three-person shearing team and volunteers would shear two alpacas at a time next to each other in the small barn, using a generator to power the clippers.
Image: Tenacious Unicorn Ranch
Sky Nelson, 34, tries to calm an alpaca as it waits to have its hair cut on June 23, 2021.Leah Millis / Reuters
To prevent an alpaca from being nicked by the clippers, their skin has to be as flat as possible, Nelson said, so their front and back feet are tied. Nelson and eir husband, Sky, would wrangle an alpaca from the pen on the other side of the barn and pick them up so volunteers could secure the ties to their feet.
When Tom, the shearer, began clipping an alpaca’s “saddle,” the fiber on its back, it would fall away from the alpaca into a soft blanket, which volunteers would gather in plastic bags. He’d quickly trim their necks and then their bellies and legs, passing the trimmings to volunteers.
Between alpacas, the shearing area was cleaned and two more alpacas were brought in, starting the process all over again.
Recommended
OUT COMMUNITY VOICES
An armed, anarchist haven: Alpaca farm prospers as a one of a kind queer community
At one point, after securing a male alpaca, Logue parted some of the thick black-brown fiber in his saddle, which provides the highest-quality fiber. She pointed to the crimp in it, which is desirable because it makes better yarn.
“Good boy!” she said, rubbing the alpaca’s neck.
Toby holds an alpaca's head while Tom shears its "saddle."
Toby holds an alpaca's head while Tom shears its "saddle."Ash Kreis
Most of the alpacas were quiet and calm during shearing. Others would make a high-pitched, vibrating trill in protest, and some would spit at volunteers. By the end of each day, most volunteers were covered in a layer of dirt and hair, having helped shear between 50 and 60 alpacas.
One volunteer, Juliette Angotti, drove from Denver on the second day of shearing. As a cisgender person, she said she wanted to support the ranch’s mission because trans people’s lives are “on the line” and the ranch, by providing a safe space for people, saves lives.
She said she loves how shearing requires teamwork. Volunteers would pass their knowledge of shearing down to new volunteers as they showed up, which would repeat throughout the day as new people circulated in and out of the shearing barn.
“I loved it, because it’s therapy, being around the animals,” Angotti said. “I was very impressed by all the workers and everybody on the ranch. It’s hard work.”
The livestock help support the ranch, and they provide some of the residents with daily work that doesn’t require them to enter the traditional job market. According to the 2015 U.S. Transgender Survey, 16 percent of trans respondents who had ever been employed reported losing a job due to their gender identity or expression. Of those who had applied for a job in the previous year, 27 percent reported being fired, denied a promotion or not hired for a job they applied for due to their gender identity or expression.
Daisy Hand, who moved to the ranch in July 2020 from Albuquerque, New Mexico, said she wasn’t suited to “life outside” or “the capitalistic world.”
“I was a functional alcoholic, and I needed the alcohol to function,” Hand, 38, said. “Once I cut that off, then I was no longer able to do anything really. I was depressed for a long time.”
After receiving therapy and coming out as trans, she began following the ranch and Kat Gibes, one of Logue’s two girlfriends, on social media. Though there isn’t any more room in the Earthship, Hand said she was able to move to the ranch because she has her own trailer.
On the ranch, she does chores and cares for one of the newborn alpacas, or crias, after it was rejected by its mother. She also cares for three lambs, which need to be bottle fed every few hours.
Being on the ranch has given her the space to be herself, she said, and “figure out who that is, really.”
“There’s definitely a sense of community here that I never really got out in the world,” she said.
‘We want to save everyone’
The three-day shearing was the largest gathering the ranch has ever had, Gibes said.
Though more press coverage and a growing social media following has opened them up to more harassment, Gibes said it has also made them a destination for queer people. The shearing captured that part of the ranch’s mission.
“Reminding yourself how many of us there are, it’s really good,” she said. “And then when they’re all under one big tent, and they’re all there for the same reason — even if they’re not all helping with shearing, that’s fine, they’re just here for the experience — I live for that.”
The ranch also wants to provide more housing to queer people who need it, but it’s out of space. Logue and Nelson said there’s another property with an additional 40 acres just over the hill from where they currently live that they’re interested in buying, but the new Earthship on it won’t be completed for another two years. In the near future, they hope to expand the sewer system on their current property, which would allow them to house 10 more people.
“It’s been a tough juggling process, because we want to save everyone,” Gibes said.
In addition to expanding their housing, the ranch founders are trying to help other people do what they’re doing. Logue said they’re in talks with an Indigenous group that wants to start its own ranch in Arizona for the Indigenous queer community. Logue said they plan to cosign for that ranch, put a deposit down and give the residents a herd of alpacas to get started.
“Hopefully we can get back some ancestral land, which is really a top priority for us,” she said, referring to land that originally belonged to Indigenous people. “We feel that, as opposed to expanding this location, we really want to stay on mission and get other locations in other states going, because that’s what makes it easier for people to get to these places, is to have at least one in every state.”
A similar project, inspired by the Tenacious Unicorn Ranch, is starting independently in Washington state. Jacey Cronin, who lives in Tacoma, said she and her partner will close on a 5-acre farm in Bellingham, about a two-hour drive north, in August.
“I was really kind of blown away with all they were doing out there,” Cronin said of the Tenacious Unicorn Ranch, which she started following on social media about two years ago. “There’s this group of bold people just kind of doing their thing out in Colorado. I thought that that would be really cool — to have our own little family of queer folks and our own little polycule do something similar.”
She said they plan to have livestock and use permaculture techniques to grow food. She hopes to also provide emergency housing for local queer people or at least a safe place people can visit.
“When you look out into the rural areas, some of them are a bit unfriendly,” she said. “I think the political climate that we’re also in has really polarized a lot of folks, so having our own space of like-minded people, that creates a safe space for us to live in.”
Nelson and Logue said the community response to the ranch is what drives them to want to expand.
“At the end of the day, if it was up to me and Bonnie, we’re pretty private people,” Logue said. “We love what we’re doing up here, but we don’t want 30 people here all the time. But that is what the community needs. We respond to what the community asks of us.”
Nelson quickly added, “We pull the sails and steer as best we can.”
“But the community’s the wind,” Logue said.
CORRECTION (July 18, 2021, 11:30 a.m. ET): A previous version of this article misspelled the last name of one of the volunteers. She is Salina Grey, not Gray.
That's it, they were trying to make him a gay sex slave! Converting him to non trans!1. Lure tranny to white supremacist compound
2. ???
3. Profit!
You can make one and ask - once. Then you'll be blocked for being a bigot. Kiwis who make several accounts just to watch or fuck with people are a step above my paygrade.Sometimes I wish I had a twitter so I can ask accounts like theirs if they could be any more full of shit.
This implies the troons would have to do manual labor and go outside their comfort zone.Can anyone check to see if there's any missing children in or around Colorado? The Tenacious Unicorn Ranch may be abducting children and giving them HRT.
I feel like they're there so someone doesn't nicely say "Wow! You pass so well, I couldn't even tell you used to be a woman." Imagine the embarrassment.he "she/her" patch on the plate carrier still kills me, don't wanna get misgendered in battle hahahaha
Not going to waste my time, it was more of an idle Sunday thought.You can make one and ask - once. Then you'll be blocked for being a bigot. Kiwis who make several accounts just to watch or fuck with people are a step above my paygrade.
Your honor how can it be a hate crime if I love doing it?Oh we got a fucking goldmine today don't we? I'm posting stuff that wasn't covered because wow.
NEW FLUFF PIECE!!! Here
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Entire Fluff Piece Text for Kiwis who don't want to click:
At the Tenacious Unicorn Ranch, trans farmers raise alpaca, patrol for threats
Westcliffe, United States
Leah Millis
Updated today18 images VIDEO
The ranch hand walks along rocky ground, the beam of her flashlight cutting through the moonlit night. She holds a shotgun loosely at her side during her patrol of an alpaca ranch founded as a haven for transgender and non-binary people.
Penny Logue, who grew up on a farm, started the Tenacious Unicorn Ranch in Colorado in 2018. It had been two years since Logue had begun her transition and the U.S. Human Rights Campaign, an LGBTQ advocacy group, had just declared 2017 the deadliest documented year so far for members of the trans and gender non-conforming community, with 31 people killed.
Logue says she saw that many in the LGBTQ community had nowhere to feel safe and struggled to find employment, housing, and peace of mind.
"You have people that are brilliant, that just can't interact with society in a normal way," Logue says. "They just get shoved down every time they pop their head up and you watch it over and over and over again."
VIDEO
Video Player
Logue initially rented a ranch in northern Colorado to raise alpacas, whose wool is sold as a prized weaving material. In March 2020 the operation moved just outside the small town of Westcliffe in southern Colorado with 86 alpaca, 20 chickens, 40 ducks, several dogs and cats, and nine people.
On the ranch, gender is never assumed. Inhabitants are free to love who they love and be who they are. Rainbow and anti-fascist flags adorn the walls, including one featuring the three arrows of the World War II-era German anti-Nazi, anti-fascist Iron Front.
"I got here and I experienced a love and acceptance that I never did before," says ranch co-owner Bonnie Nelson. "I had true family for the first time."
AN UNSETTLING DEMONSTRATION
As they settled into Custer County, the newcomers offered to do odd jobs for neighbors, started a community garden, and helped helm a recycling program.
Logue says that won them a number of residents' support, despite some ideological differences with conservative Custer County, home to about 5,000 people.
On July 4, 2020, Logue and Nelson headed into town for coffee at their favorite spot. The Westcliffe Independence parade had been canceled because of pandemic restrictions. Logue and Nelson saw a steady stream of protesters, a number of whom were openly carrying guns. Some wore body armor.
Amid American flags, one demonstrator carried a banner bearing the emblem of right-wing militia group the Three Percenters, video of the event shows. Another wore a shirt that declared, 'It's OK to be White.' The phrase, according to the Anti-Defamation League, has become a rallying cry among white supremacists.
Logue said she was the grandchild of Armenian genocide survivors and grew up on stories that taught her to respond to "anything that looks like fascism." She wrote in a tweet that same day: "The Fourth of July parade in #westcliffe was a Nazi propaganda parade, I've never been so unsettled."
Alpacas are seen lounging near a 50 ft rental tent, which is decorated with trans and anarchist flags for "Shear-A-Palooza".
Messages and calls expressing transphobic hatred and disdain for the ranchers' anti-fascism began then, according to Logue. Reuters has reviewed several hostile and anonymous online messages, two containing death threats. One was an image manipulated to show a gun pointed at the ranch house.
In March, a volunteer escorted two armed men away at gunpoint after they were spotted climbing the hill toward the ranch house, Logue says. The identity of the men is unknown.
The ranchers talked about the hostility in media interviews, hoping increased attention would scare off harassers. Logue says they installed cameras, obtained body armor, began to build a taller fence, and stepped up firearms training.
The ranchers have not reported any of the threats to the Custer County Sheriff's Department. The ranchers said they declined to do so in part because they had seen Custer County Sheriff Shannon Byerly in a video speaking at a 2015 rally held near Westcliffe on the anniversary of the founding of the right-wing Oath Keepers, whose members believe the federal government is encroaching on their rights and who try to recruit, among others, law enforcement officers.
Byerly confirmed to Reuters that he spoke at the rally, but said that he does not belong to the Oath Keepers. In the speech, a video of which was reviewed by Reuters, he spoke about gun rights and his feeling that some unnamed U.S. leaders were showing signs of "tyranny." The Oath Keepers did not immediately reply to requests for comment.
Byerly said his deputies checked out media reports of threats against the ranch and found no evidence. He said ranchers were not contacted for the informal investigation because his deputies did not feel welcome at the ranch.
In an initial interview with Reuters, he described a "confrontational" exchange between armed ranchers and one of his deputies, who he said was barred from entering the ranch when he went to investigate an April 22 car accident involving a ranch hand.
Kallen Ondrejkovics, Hand, Logue, and Sky Nelson tie down an alpaca so it can be sheared.
Footage from the deputy's body cam video during his visit the day of the accident, obtained through a public records request, shows a single ranch hand, not visibly carrying weapons. The ranch hand told Reuters she was unarmed. The video shows the ranch hand greeting the deputy at the gate, being questioned about the accident, and offering contact information. Asked about the discrepancies, the sheriff acknowledged in a subsequent interview he had been mistaken in his account.
ALWAYS ON GUARD
On a recent day in late June, ranchers and volunteers formed a semi-circle, spreading their arms wide and corralling a few dozen fuzzy alpaca into a holding pen for shearing.
May Quinty Dynamic and Jamie snuggle on the couch after a morning of volunteering during "Shear-A-Palooza” event
May Quinty Dynamic, a transgender woman from Denver, was among the volunteers. Dynamic said she was thrilled to be surrounded by so many other transgender people. She met Logue, who, like her, also began to transition at the age of 35.
"I've been able to talk to everybody and tell my little story over and over," Dynamic said.
Logue glances outside as she works in the kitchen.
After a long day, Logue made her way back to her room as the sun began to sink, sending shafts of light through thick indigo storm clouds above the Sangre de Cristo Mountains.
Sore from a day of wrangling alpaca, Logue collapsed onto her mattress and closed her eyes. Outside her door, the sounds of warm chatter and dinner prep filtered down the hallway from the kitchen.
As she began to drift off to sleep, she rolled toward the edge of the bed. Logue's hand fell off the side of the mattress and came to rest, instinctively, on her rifle.
HIGHLIGHTS:
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(The hand i believe is Daisy) but we HAVE A NAME on the first troon.
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This made me lol...
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Confirmed number for March 2020 on alpaca and other animals including troons. If you remember my autismposting earlier I went through EVERY article to try to get a count.
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So. This absolutely triggered me here and I will turbo autism on this in a second...
THE TRUTH ABOUT CRIME STATS AND WHY TROONS LIE ABOUT THIS
Official Criminology Statistics;
Non-Official Criminology Statistics:
Specific Crimes:
Notable Criticism: not evert department is required to report to the UCR so this is voluntary. Thus, there is indeed more crime than is reported in the UCR and more police misconduct etc. of an unknown manner. However their usage of anonymous crime reporting generally can balance it to an extent. The UCR is the best we have at the moment. Better crime reform would be mandatory reporting of all data collected and reported.
All Police departments may record things differently when it comes to gender self- reporting (which inflates violent crime for women). To combat this misnomer, I used data to look at all self-reported transgendered persons according to an advocacy site.
It is also noteworthy that what someone is often charged with as a crime is not their inherent conviction. Usually, hate crimes are used to add more punishment to a normal crime such as reparations to victims or added time incarcerated.
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Here's our hate crime stats for 2017.
(Note: the one for gender (the last one) is a bit iffy because there are rapists or murderers who ONLY target women and usually a type of woman and generally have negative feelings on women. This could be technically considered a "hatecrime" but usually isn't.
According to the UCR which has data from anonymous and formal crime reporting for all LGBT people, LGB individuals were more targeted!
According to THIS source in 2016 1.4 million adults identified as transgender. According to Penny there were 31 murders per this population. So 31 per 1,400,000...
The American Murder rate was 5.3 per 100,000 in 2017...
To make the units comparable: we do 5.3x14 and 100,000x14 to make it 1.4mil(you could also mathfag backwards).
72.2 per 1.4 mil -general murder rate (of normal people)
31.0 per 1.4 mil -troon murder rate (Of all troons)
So the trans rate of murder is LESS THAN THE GENERAL POPULATION BY DOUBLE.
I've also attached an autistic PDF on the categories and crimes recorded as "hate crimes" for your perusing interest.
Ladies and gentlemen: they got him.
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Jesus fuck, is that some kind of focal lens fuck up? I haven't seen that skinny leg to massive torso/arm ratio outside of a Bruce Timm super hero.
You're still assuming anything happened at all besides impromptu photo op in the troonmobile because it's a slow Sunday for them.I don't know why I don't follow this thread more closely.
Optimistic guess: A troon broke down/ran out of gas in a rural area due to their own incompetence, and was too bigoted about country folk and self aware of their garish appearance to ask for aid.
Pessimistic (aka more likely): they hitched out there torape a childassist a queer minor in danger and were catfished, too scared of getting vanned to hitch back out.
This may be the new grift: "Oh, we need your money to fund totally real rescue operations in Minecraft to save poor abused trannies!"Ladies and gentlemen: they got him.
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The plot twist was that the white supremacists there were also trannies.1. Lure tranny to white supremacist compound
2. ???
3. Profit!
I can't believe you would leak the details of Earlette's transition before she was ready to come out.The plot twist was that the white supremacists there were also trannies.
"Reputable" outlets figure that someone's going to present the social justice clown show, and they may as well be the ones to get paid for it.All these puff pieces from “reputable” outlets are starting to piss me off. I can only hope they inflate the trancher’s egos to even higher levels and we get Waco 2.0 soon.
Oh, definitely. The thing is that the more you insist the troon totes passes guys! the more it does slide into the category of "If you think they're going to be homicidal if they find out you're trans, why the hell are you having sex with them?!" And it's just plain...rape-adjacent if you don't mention shit like that to somebody you're thinking about fucking, especially if you're not telling them because you think they'd NOPE right out if you did tell them.In most places it's really limited, like you convinced them you were their husband in the dark. Anyway the majority of people who do this didn't "panic" at all because they only killed the trans person after willingly having sex with them. So much like "gay panic" they're not defending themselves, they're just disgusted at something they voluntarily did and take out their anger on the victim. That's still more or less murder, more or less depending on the level of premeditation and other circumstances.
Contrary to troon claims, there is nowhere in the U.S. it is "legal to kill trans people."
And then wonder why the trust in them keeps dropping. Can't possibly be because the public is noticing..."Reputable" outlets figure that someone's going to present the social justice clown show, and they may as well be the ones to get paid for it.