“As the federal government seeks to roll back the progress we have achieved toward equality, we in New York will never stop fighting to ensure the LBGTQ community and all Americans are afforded the equal protections guaranteed to them by the United States constitution.
“The misguided action taken by the federal government last night runs contrary to the New York Promise of individual freedoms. With the stroke of a pen, they seek to move this country backwards.
“Today, I am urging the State Education Department to issue a directive to all school districts making it clear that – regardless of Washington’s action – the rights and protections that had been extended to all students in New York remain unchanged under state law.
“In New York, whether you are gay, straight or transgender, Muslim, Jewish or Christian, rich or poor, black or white or brown, we respect all people – and we will continue to enforce our laws and stand united against those who seek to drive us apart.”
The Governor issued the following letter to the State Education Department:
February 23, 2017
Commissioner MaryEllen Elia
New York State Education Department
89 Washington Avenue
Albany, New York 12234
Dear Commissioner Elia:
In light of the federal government’s action to rescind federal protections for transgender students, the State Education Department needs to immediately issue a directive to school districts making it clear that transgender students in this State are expressly protected from discrimination and harassment under New York State’s laws and policies.
Under State law, all students must have the opportunity to learn in an environment free from harassment and discrimination. As you may recall, in 2015, I directed that the State Education Department and the Board of Regents inform school districts of the law and clarify the rights of transgender and gender non-conforming students. The State Education Department subsequently took action, making it clear that, under federal and state laws, schools must ensure that a student’s gender identity or expression is not a basis for discrimination and intolerance.
The recent change in federal policy does not alter the protections we afford to transgender students. There can be no confusion in this State. New York State schools must continue to enforce the law and protect transgender and gender non-conforming students. Specifically, the Dignity for All Students Act (DASA), which is a State statute, expressly requires schools to protect students from discrimination, harassment or bullying based upon gender, which includes a student’s actual or perceived gender, their gender identity or expression.
No student should be confused about their rights or fearful of losing these important protections. By immediately issuing this directive, the State will provide clarity to all school administrators and provide our transgender students with the reassurance they need to maximize their potential and understand their rights. Equally as important, it will demonstrate to all that we speak with a single voice: we do not and will not tolerate discrimination in the State of New York.
Sincerely,
ANDREW M. CUOMO
Cc: Chancellor Betty Rosa
New York State Board of Regents
ftm
42 Incredible Erotic Art Pieces featuring Trans Men (NSFW) →
#This
#WeWillBeWatching
#MLK bust behind #PresidentElectTrump#WeWillBeWatching your every move#BlackLivesMatter #FlintWaterCrisis #NoDAPL #PlannedParenthood #LGBT pic.twitter.com/uuAiYLUUod
— Christian Ledan (@angelindiskies) November 10, 2016
Please do not compare #transgender people to #RachelDolezal. The #spiritual essence of a #trans individual deserves #respect.
— Christian Ledan (@angelindiskies) June 17, 2015
Call Her Caitlyn But Then Let’s Move on to the Issues Affecting the Trans Community →
To tell Caitlyn’s story with care is to demand justice for trans people.
We must not tell Caitlyn’s story in a vacuum that erases the history of trans organizing, mobilizing, and celebrity of the many trans women who came before her and made her Vanity Fair cover possible. Janet. Laverne. Major. Sylvia. Marsha.
We must not exclaim that Caitlyn looks “fabulous” without interrogating our standards for which trans people get to grace the covers of magazines and all the while continuing to keep the health care that brings life to trans people out of reach.
We must not celebrate Caitlyn without mourning Islan, Lamia, Penny, and the hundreds of other trans women, mostly of color, we have lost to violence. This violence isn’t just at the hands of hateful partners or strangers, but violence in the arms of hateful and exclusionary systems.
Blake was a transgender boy from Charlotte, NC who tragically killed himself recently. While looking at his blog, I noticed he tagged certain post and selfies #smileblake. Please remember him.
Brownboiiimagic.com/tagged/smileblake
NEW YORK FIRE DEPARTMENT HAS FIRST TRANSGENDER FIREFIGHTER →
Brooke, whose last name was withheld for privacy reasons, is New York City’s first transgender firefighter, the NY Post reports:
The tall blonde, who now goes by Brooke, is a third-generation firefighter, with her father still on the job. The Post is withholding her full name.
Around Metrotech headquarters, where she is currently assigned, the famously macho department – almost 100 percent male with only 32 women on the job – is taking her transition in stride.
…The firefighter initially was assigned to Ladder 172/Engine 330 in Bensonhurst, according to department sources, before taking a desk job at FDNY headquarters where she works scheduling appointments for recruits.
Said Brooke to the Post: “I am appreciative of the support that the FDNY has given me during this time in my life. However, it is my expressed wish that the details of my personal and professional life remain private.“
Read more: http://www.towleroad.com/2011/10/new-york-fire-department-has-first-transgender-firefighter.html#ixzz1Zk9SdrEL
UN Council Approves Historic Resolution on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity →
Tom / Trans / Thai is a short, experimental film that explores the intersections between tom identity, trans-masculinity and Thai id entity in a transnational context through writing and dance. It opens a door within Thai discourse, in the hope that a conversation between tom and female-to-male (FTM) transgender identity can begin.
I interviewed toms and trans-masculine Thais living in Chiang Mai, Bangkok and the US. I look at the ways gender is culturally and linguistically constructed and communicated in Thailand and the US and how that affects toms and Thai trans-masculine people, and how the presence of “tom” and “trans” influence each other.
I found that the demand to gender oneself in the Thai language, under the guise of politeness and respectability, often silences us and renders invisible and illegible our inhabitations of queerness and masculinity. Positive information around the possibility of FTM transgenderexpression within Thailand is nearly nonexistent and available only via the internet, which isolates Thai trans men, sometimes even from toms, leaving them with the painful task of finding a language to explain who they are.
Thai Americans often felt that their gender or gender non-conforming presentation excluded them from Thainess, and that being Thai (and having Thai mothers) conflated Thainess with femininity, rendering their transition as a transition away from Thainess. Many toms had pride in being both Thai and tom without separation, although their ethnicity and gender came into question when they traveled outside Thailand, without the presence of tom or queer community.
An introduction to the subject of Thai masculine gender expression and the research I have gathered so far, I attempt to visually represent a gender non-conforming experience that exists outside gender binaries, include tom identity within an archive of Thai trans-masculinity and create a language for our kind of being.
The film “Tom / Trans / Thai” has been supported by ComPeung as part of their contribution ‘ComPeung featuring Jai Arun Ravine’ for exhibition ‘Chiang Mai Now’ @ Bangkok Art and Culture Centre, April – June 2011. ComPeung is the first non-governmental artist-in-residence program in Thailand. Since 2005 ComPeung aspires to provide a platform for explorations and questioning in the arts.
*To acquire a DVD of the film, please email eucalyptusravenATgmailDOTcom.
(via smells-like cinnamon)