🐱 Trans People Are Not Dangerous, And Our Bodies Are Not The Problem Here - Assaulting children isn’t the problem okay, shitlords

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The Washington Post recently reported that a cisgender woman confronted staff at a spa in Los Angeles because she had been “traumatized” when she saw a penis while in the women’s changing area. The story has been updated to indicate that the event may have been a stunt. The transgender woman who was discriminated against has not been publicly identified, so there is speculation about the truth behind the attacker’s story. But this fact remains: Too many cisgender folks falsely anticipate or claim violence and trauma when they know (or think) they may be in the presence of transgender people. You are doing more damage to us than we have ever or will ever do to you, so kindly knock it the fuck off.


Every day transgender people and our bodies are scrutinized. We are looked at as oddities and with inappropriate curiosity in some cases, and in others we are told we are disgusting and dangerous. Our bodies are sexualized and stigmatized. Our lives are put at risk because too many cisgender people believe that our existence is an excuse to deny us basic health care needs, access to housing, jobs, and bathrooms. Transgender women especially are threatened, attacked, and killed by the hands of cisgender people who use transphobic excuses as their defense.


The woman at the Los Angeles spa was playing on the common and unfounded fear that transgender women in public spaces, specifically women-only spaces, are dangerous. They do this for several reasons. They don’t believe that transgender women are women; they believe predatory men will dress up as women to gain access to prey; they believe all transgender women have penises; they believe cisgender bodies and genders are the “correct” bodies and are the only bodies worth protecting.


These beliefs are products of a lack of education, social constructs and biases around gender, religion, and negative representation of transgender people in the media.


In many cases, like the one at the spa, the cisgender woman couldn’t — and wouldn’t — verify that the transgender woman was being threatening or inappropriate. If the sight of a penis was threatening to the customer, that is because cisgender men have used their dicks as weapons; not because transgender women are dangerous. The spa worker defended the transgender woman’s right to use the women’s changing area and any part of the spa because she is a woman. Period. She let the cisgender customer know that if she was uncomfortable, she was welcome to leave.

That is also a big reason why folks jump to fear and harassment when they think their personal space is being threatened by transgender people: they mistake discomfort with being unsafe. Plenty of things make us uncomfortable (math, traffic, a new job) but that doesn’t mean that we are unsafe. Discomfort shouldn’t get in the way of taking stock of what we need to learn about ourselves and others so that we can extend respect and understanding to those around us.


What would help, too, is if schools provided better and inclusive sexual health and reproduction education. These topics are told as if everyone is existing in binary, cisgender identities. They are also taught through the lens of heterosexual relationships that define sex as penetration from a penis into a vagina. This foundational, default setting is wrong. It’s like building a house on the beach and wondering why it collapses. Cisgender people like the woman in the spa are the hurricane to transgender bodies and queer relationships.

Not all women menstruate. Some men do. Not all boys have penises. Someone women do. Breasts and body hair exist on all genders.


Educate yourself. And parents, please educate your children. In the rare event that schools try to make their curriculum LGBTQIA+ inclusive, some parents will claim that they’d rather have those conversations with their kids than allow schools to be introducing something they don’t think is “age appropriate.” That’s another excuse for saying y’all don’t want to talk about it and a fancy way of saying “don’t talk about it thatway.” Not talking about sex, bodies, and identities outside of the heteronormative is what perpetuates unfounded fears and crimes done to queer people.

I recently bought a book called “Let’s Talk About It: The Teen’s Guide To Sex, Relationships, and Being a Human.” It’s a graphic novel for teens to discuss sex and relationships, and is one of the first genuinely inclusive books I have found. I bought it to read and have ready for my children when we start talking more about dating and adding layers of meaning to consent and healthy relationships. Most of the content isn’t relevant for my 10- and 8-year-old children, but the images of the different types of bodies and the discussion of ways bodies might experience puberty are perfect for them. We are a queer family and while the representation of queer relationships and transgender bodies is important to us, it’s equally important — if not more so — for cisgender kids and non-queer kids to see and understand too. Another inclusive book that is geared for younger folks but also appropriate for teens and adults is called “Sex Is a Funny Word: A Book About Bodies, Feelings, and You.”


Do yourself a favor and watch the Netflix documentary “Disclosure“; it is hosted by Laverne Cox and features other transgender actors, activists, and humans who talk about the portrayal of transgender people in the media. The film will show you why you carry around the biases you do, and will teach you the damage you contribute to our lives by buying into harmful tropes and stereotypes.

Transgender folks know our bodies are valid and normal; we need everyone else to know this so that we can live our lives in peace and without the constant risk of harm. The folks who feel entitled to cisgender-only spaces are not the ones in harm’s way; the real people in danger are the transgender folks just trying to live their lives.
 
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Well of course not all women menstruate. Some women have already gone through menopause or have had surgeries and diseases that rendered them infertile. However, transwomen will never menstruate. Because they aren't women.

Also, the author fails to understand why some women might be traumatized by male genitalia. Imagine a rape survivor is in a locker room undressing and sees a nude man with his dick on display.

These places need to just make a neutral area which will no doubt be the dirtiest both in morals and sanitation.
 
Not all women menstruate. Some men do. Not all boys have penises. Someone women do. Breasts and body hair exist on all genders.
This is just unequivocally false by our current biological standards, why are they so insistent on changing our views so radically? Literally only women menstruate, only men have penises, why is these very simple facts such a contentious issue in America? It sounds literally insane to me, like it's just fucking nonsensical.
 
This is just unequivocally false by our current biological standards, why are they so insistent on changing our views so radically? Literally only women menstruate, only men have penises, why is these very simple facts such a contentious issue in America? It sounds literally insane to me, like it's just fucking nonsensical.
It’ll make the current era a laughing stock to future generations.
 
These beliefs are products of a lack of education, social constructs and biases around gender, religion, and negative representation of transgender people in the media.
No, it's because it's the fact your harboring around and normalizing a literal mental illness. We don't need you or anyone else telling kids that they may be "the wrong gender".
Not all women menstruate. Some men do. Not all boys have penises. Someone women do. Breasts and body hair exist on all genders.
Bull. Shit. This is literally impossible unless birth-defect mutations come into play, which rarely, if never occur at all. Okay, so there's the concept of a hermaphrodite, but I've never seen one outside of porn videos and hentai.

Do yourself a favor and watch the Netflix documentary “Disclosure“; it is hosted by Laverne Cox and features other transgender actors, activists, and humans who talk about the portrayal of transgender people in the media. The film will show you why you carry around the biases you do, and will teach you the damage you contribute to our lives by buying into harmful tropes and stereotypes.

Transgender folks know our bodies are valid and normal; we need everyone else to know this so that we can live our lives in peace and without the constant risk of harm. The folks who feel entitled to cisgender-only spaces are not the ones in harm’s way; the real people in danger are the transgender folks just trying to live their lives.
Yeah, I'm not watching that shit. I don't need to be lectured on why a man who thinks he's a woman is somehow "normal". You and your bodies are not valid and only exist for your sexual pleasures. Remember this and remember this clear, there are only two chromosomes, and you will never be a real woman. Cope, Seethe, and Dilate, faggot.
 
That is also a big reason why folks jump to fear and harassment when they think their personal space is being threatened by transgender people: they mistake discomfort with being unsafe.

It's amazing how many other parts of the article were so quotable to other posters. This one stuck out to me though, a true statement though they aren't applying it to themselves first: Trannies experiencing discomfort does not mean trannies are in an unsafe situation. Calm the fuck down.
 
As ever, the harmless FTM serves as cover for dangerous MTF perverts.

You're right, Karen, your pussy in men's spaces is a danger to no one but yourself, but do try to stay on track: It's MTF trannies, who are more likely to be sex offenders than other men, who pose a danger to women and children. They need to fuck off unless your delusional ass wants to bear the brunt of the anti-tranny backlash along with them.

These places need to just make a neutral area which will no doubt be the dirtiest both in morals and sanitation.

That spa already has a space for both sexes. Trannies refuse to use it because they can't get their freak on it's not validating.
 
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