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In order to understand why transphobia and cissexism persist and are continually perpetuated throughout feminist communities, particularly the vegetarian-ecofeminist community, it is important to consider the origins of anti-trans advocacy as a conscious project of prominent, elite White feminists in the 1970s. In the late sixties and early seventies, trans people were very active in the women’s and queer liberation movements. The Compton’s Cafeteria and Stonewall rebellions of the sixties are evidence of that, as are women like Beth Elliot of the Daughters of Bilitis, Sandy Stone of Olivia Records, and Stonewall veteran Silvia Rivera who was a founding member of the Gay Liberation Front and the Gay Activist Alliance.

So it’s important to keep in mind that trans women, and trans people more generally, were an integral part of the early women’s liberation movement. But in the mid- to late-seventies, there was a transphobic backlash within feminism to systematically remove and exclude trans people, explicitly transsexual women, from the women’s and queer movements. For example, Rivera was targeted and physically attacked by cissexist women separatists at a gay rights rally. Elliot was targeted by Robin Morgan and separatists at a lesbian women’s conference. Stone was targeted by Janice Raymond and forced out of Olivia Records with threats of a boycott. And Gloria Steinem of Ms. magazine openly attacked trans women.

Over the last couple decades, there has been an increase in organizing and activism by trans people, yet we continue to be the targets of a systematic backlash from elite feminists. So-called ‘women-born women’ policies are still used to exclude transsexual women from participating in our own movement. And while trans women are disproportionately targeted by homelessness, prisons, and sexual and physical violence, an alliance between anti-trans feminists and the state has been used to circumvent human rights laws in order to bar us from many vital women’s facilities and services. Trans women have even been forced out of women’s services organizations they helped create.

Reblogged from Struggle Is a Circle
ugh i wish i lived in the 50s and 60s
— white people and white people only (via antistellar)
Reblogged from Minty fresh posts

There has always been racism. But it developed as a leading principle of thought and perception in the context of colonialism. That’s understandable. When you have your boot on someone’s neck, you have to justify it. The justification has to be their depravity. It’s very striking to see this in the case of people who aren’t very different from one another.

Take a look at the British conquest of Ireland, the earliest of the Western colonial conquests. It was described in the same terms as the conquest of Africa. The Irish were a different race. They weren’t human. They weren’t like us. We had to crush and destroy them. No. It has to do with conquest, with oppression. If you’re robbing somebody, oppressing them, dictating their lives, it’s a very rare person who can say: “Look, I’m a monster. I’m doing this for my own good.” Even Himmler didn’t say that.

A standard technique of belief formation goes along with oppression, whether it’s throwing them in gas chambers or charging them too much at a corner store, or anything in between. The standard reaction is to say: ‘It’s their depravity. That’s why I’m doing it. Maybe I’m even doing them good.’ If it’s their depravity, there’s got to be something about them that makes them different from me. What’s different about them will be whatever you can find.

— Noam Chomsky (via noam-chomsky)
Reblogged from Social Uprooting

mslorelei:

AIN’T I A WOMAN? Alfre Woodard reads Sojourner Truth’s 1851 speech to feminists.

(via The Most Powerful Performance Of History You’ll See This Month | MoveOn.Org)

Reblogged from Ideas and Opinions.

Another one of those discussion on the facebook page that I thought some of you might enjoy. And feel free to contribute aswell!

brooklyntheory:

History, Religion, Money, Government & You, Greenpoint

brooklyntheory:

History, Religion, Money, Government & You, Greenpoint

Reblogged from FUCKYEAH ANARCH@PUNK
‘For instance,’ [Meryl Streep] says, forking at a bread-crumbed oyster, ‘we are taught about Benedict Arnold, the first traitor in America, but I’ve never heard—until I went onto the [National Women’s History Museum] Web site—about Deborah Sampson, the first woman to take a bullet for her nation. She was 21 years old in the Revolutionary War. She enlisted on the American side under a man’s name, wore boys’ clothing, was cut with a British saber across her forehead, and took a musket ball in her thigh.’ She’s a good storyteller, with a warm, urgent voice. ‘And her compatriots carried her six miles to the doctor’s, and he stitched up her head and she wouldn’t let him take her pants off—because he would discover she was a woman!’ So did she die of her wound? ‘No—she was very good with her needle, so she cut the musket ball out and sewed her own leg up and served another eighteen months. In 1783 she was discharged, went home and had three children.’ Sampson was granted £34 by the state of Massachusetts for exhibiting ‘an extraordinary instance of feminine heroism by discharging the duties of a faithful, gallant soldier, and at the same time preserving the virtue and chastity of her sex unsuspected and unblemished.’ Amazing story. ‘And I am 60 years old and I learn this story,’ says Streep. ‘I should have learned that story in the fourth grade. Because it helps you as a child to know that it is not just Paul Revere riding a horse and calling, ‘The British are coming, the British are coming.’ It’s not just Benjamin Franklin and George Washington and the battles won, it’s the bravery of all these people that are undiscovered, unknown.’
Reblogged from Sugar Yum Yum
They call themselves conservatives but that’s not it, either. They don’t want to conserve what we now have. They’d rather take the country backwards – before the 1960s and 1970s, and the Environmental Protection Act, Medicare, and Medicaid; before the New Deal, and its provision for Social Security, unemployment insurance, the forty-hour workweek, and official recognition of trade unions; even before the Progressive Era, and the first national income tax, antitrust laws, and Federal Reserve. They’re not conservatives. They’re regressives. And the America they seek is the one we had in the Gilded Age of the late nineteenth century.
Historically, the most terrible things - war, genocide, and slavery - have resulted not from disobedience, but from obedience.
— Howard Zinn (via caraobrien)
Reblogged from Fierce...Flawless...
History doesn’t repeat itself, but it does rhyme.
— Mark Twain
Tags: quote history
There is a story, which is fairly well known, about when the missionaries came to Africa. They had the Bible and we, the natives, had the land. They said “Let us pray,” and we dutifully shut our eyes. When we opened them, why, they now had the land and we had the Bible.
— Desmond M. Tutu

Yesterday’s Sandwich by Boris Mikhailov

knowhomo:

LGBTQ* People You Should Know
Dorothy Thompson
* American Journalist
* Time magazine named her one of the two most influential women in America in 1939 (the other was E. Roosevelt)
* Known for her column “On the Record”
—> printed thrice-weekly nationally
—> was read by millions and one of the most popular columns of it’s time
* Thompson interviewed Adolf Hitler in 1931 (for Cosmopolitan)
—> first reporter to write about the threat of Hitler
* Though married to Sinclair Lewis, it was well known that their marriage was not a happy union and Thompson had many affairs with women. 
—> including writer Christa Winsloe and Gertrude Tone
No people ever recognize their dictator in advance. He never stands for election on the platform of dictatorship. He always represents himself as the instrument [of]the Incorporated National Will. When our dictator turns up you can depend on it that he will be one of the boys, and he will stand for everything traditionally American. And nobody will ever say “Heil” to him, nor will they call him “Führer” or “Duce.” But they will greet him with one great big, universal democratic, sheeplike bleat of “OK, Cheif! Fix it like you wanna, Chief! Oh, Kaaaay!” — Thompson, 1935
some information taken from the text: Queers In History: The Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Historical Gays, Lesbians and Bisexuals

knowhomo:

LGBTQ* People You Should Know

Dorothy Thompson

* American Journalist

* Time magazine named her one of the two most influential women in America in 1939 (the other was E. Roosevelt)

* Known for her column “On the Record”

—> printed thrice-weekly nationally

—> was read by millions and one of the most popular columns of it’s time

* Thompson interviewed Adolf Hitler in 1931 (for Cosmopolitan)

—> first reporter to write about the threat of Hitler

* Though married to Sinclair Lewis, it was well known that their marriage was not a happy union and Thompson had many affairs with women. 

—> including writer Christa Winsloe and Gertrude Tone

No people ever recognize their dictator in advance. He never stands for election on the platform of dictatorship. He always represents himself as the instrument [of]the Incorporated National Will. When our dictator turns up you can depend on it that he will be one of the boys, and he will stand for everything traditionally American. And nobody will ever say “Heil” to him, nor will they call him “Führer” or “Duce.” But they will greet him with one great big, universal democratic, sheeplike bleat of “OK, Cheif! Fix it like you wanna, Chief! Oh, Kaaaay!” — Thompson, 1935

some information taken from the text: Queers In History: The Comprehensive Encyclopedia of Historical Gays, Lesbians and Bisexuals

Reblogged from -KNOW Homo-
There’s a problem, though, with that message. To suggest that bad people were racist implies that good people were not. Jim Crow segregation survived long into the 20th century because it was kept alive by white Southerners with value systems and personalities we would applaud. It’s the fallacy of “To Kill a Mockingbird,” a movie that never fails to move me but that advances a troubling falsehood: the notion that well-educated Christian whites were somehow victimized by white trash and forced to live within a social system that exploited and denigrated its black citizens, and that the privileged white upper class was somehow held hostage to these struggling individuals. But that wasn’t the case. The White Citizens Councils, the thinking man’s Ku Klux Klan, were made up of white middle-class people, people whose company you would enjoy. An analogue can be seen in the way popular culture treats Germans up to and during World War II. Good people were never anti-Semites; only detestable people participated in Hitler’s cause. Cultures function and persist by consensus.
Reblogged from new wave feminism