Posts tagged Queer
5:15 pm - Tue, Apr 17, 2012
1 note
Drag King Show at the White Horse Tomorrow!

Drag King Show at the White Horse Tomorrow!

2:38 am - Sun, Apr 15, 2012
568 notes

This is a guest post by Redlark. Redlark is a white, lower-middle-class queer activist working a pink collar union gig in the Twin Cities. They are working with an amazing group of friends and allies of CeCe McDonald to get CeCe’s charges dropped and help her move back into her normal life.

Cece McDonald stood up to bigots and survived a hate crime. Now she’s in the county jail waiting to be tried for second degree murder.

This is a story about intersectionality – what happens when a young trans woman of color goes up against white supremacy, misogyny and transphobia. It’s a story about what happens when you have to fight for your life.

**
It began last June, the night of the 5th, when Cece and her friends – all young, black and queer – decided that they wanted to walk to the grocery store.

The grocery store in question is in south Minneapolis just off Lake Street, the busy, polluted, vital artery running from the wealthy white neighborhoods by the lakes through blocks of working class, multiracial, immigrant businesses before it ends in upmarket gentrification at the river. The grocery store is between the police station and the the light rail in a historically contested neighborhood where communities meet, mix and sometimes contend: the older white working class who bought in during the seventies and eighties meets immigrants from Mexico, Somalia and Central America who came looking for work or for political refuge; Native people still under the gun of colonization; African-Americans who’ve lived in Minneapolis for generations or arrived from Chicago or New Orleans in the last few years; students, punks and radicals, mostly but not exclusively white, gentrifiers or born in the neighborhood.

To get to the store, the group had to walk past a dive bar called the Schooner.

Dean Schmitz and his friends were standing outside the Schooner’s side door. All were older – Dean was 47 – and all were white. When they saw CeCe and her friends walk by, they started yelling – “faggots” “chicks with dicks” “n*****s” – a litany of vile abuse targeted at a group of much younger strangers.

CeCe McDonald has a strong sense of justice – she decided to confront Dean and his friends. So she and her group walked toward the bar.

**
Before we go any further, let’s talk about CeCe.

She’s 23, a college student in fashion design, a trans woman, Black, femme, very funny and widely known to be a generous person – a woman who housed and took care of her chosen family of younger queer and trans folks. Her friends call her Honee Bea.

CeCe is someone who fights for social change who even from jail has been urging her supporters to help other victims of white supremacy – including the family of Jaime Gonzalez, who was killed by the Texas police while he was at school.

She is someone who has faith in herself, in her community, in her values. “Love is inevitable and overcomes any and all things,” she writes.

CeCe and her friends are brave and tough, strong enough to walk around being visible in a world that attacks and criminalizes you if you’re young and African-American, and doubles the assault if you’re young and African-American and trans and femme.

You probably know – if you’re trans you definitely know – that trans women of color face incredible, staggering rates of violence and homicide. In most places it is essentially legal to discriminate against trans people in housing, employment and social services. As a result, trans people, especially trans women, are socially vulnerable in all kinds of ways – and vulnerable turns into “criminalized”, whether it’s because you can’t change your legal documents to match your gender or because you’re homeless and panhandling or because you’re doing sex work to make the rent…or because you have to fight to keep yourself safe

Trans people are ten to fifteen times more likely to have been incarcerated than cis people. Nearly half of all African-American trans people have spent time in the prison system.

Seventy percent of the GLBTQ people murdered in 2010 were people of color. Forty-four percent were trans women.

If you’re vulnerable, you have to wonder – will someone assault you? Will you survive? Will anyone help you? That’s a pretty heavy thing to carry around in the back of your mind every day.

***
CeCe and her friends knew the statistics, but they still dared to rebuke hatred when it spoke. They walked up the Dean Schmitz and his group, and CeCe told him that her crew would not tolerate hate speech.

But hatred hits back. One of Dean Schmitz’s friends told them, “I’ll take you bitches on,” and smashed her glass into Cece’s face, puncturing her cheek and badly lacerating her salivary gland.

There was a fight. Multiple people were involved. At the end, CeCe was on the ground in a pool of her own blood. Dean Schmitz was dead.

***
When the cops came, Cece was the only one they arrested. They took her to jail, withheld medical treatment, and sometime in the small hours got her to sign a confession. She recanted it as soon as she was able to do so.

Later, the medical examiner discovered a swastika tattoo on Dean Schmitz’s body.

***
Let’s talk about white supremacy, because this it haunts this case.

White supremacy is a system, and it runs on routine plus terror. The routine is the dull grind of discrimination – the stop-and-frisks of youth of color in the hope of finding something to get their fingerprints are in the system, the heavy policing in black neighborhoods and the heavy discipline in schools when kids of color are involved, the biased, expensive court system, the unspoken but obvious job discrimination and always, always the white supremacist narrative in mainstream culture saying that people of color deserve what they get.

And then there’s terror. Whether it’s the Jim Crow South or the modern North, it’s the knowledge that at any time you can be attacked, hurt, killed and no one will do anything. That your body, your life, your friends’ lives could always be on the line.

Terror keeps the machine humming. If you act up – if you talk back – anything might happen to you.
***
An interesting thing about prosecutor Michael Freeman: in the last year, he’s dropped charges against three people who killed accidentally while fighting for their lives. But he’s leaning on CeCe to plead guilty, and he initially persuaded the court to set her bail at an outrageous $500,000 – as if CeCe, the injured survivor of a hate crime, was some kind of risk to her community.

The court system isn’t neutral.

If you haven’t been on the wrong end of the legal system, it’s very easy to assume that the courts will sort everything out. Privileged people – white people, middle class people, cis people – can grow up identifying with the court system and with the idea of “neutrality” – especially when articulate white men in nice suits are talking. Something happened, privileged folks think, and the courts will figure it out, they’ll assign blame correctly, someone will pay a debt to society, and all’s well that ends well.

Here is what really happens: CeCe is in jail. Visiting is severely restricted, so getting a trans activist in to see her so that her friends can find her a trans-friendly lawyer is difficult. That lawyer has to work for free, because CeCe doesn’t have enough money and neither do her friends, and all her support committee’s money is going for bail. It takes a month to get meaningful treatment for injuries from the night of the attack, so her cheek swells up with a lump the size of a golf ball. She gets put in solitary “for her own protection” – which means ‘because she’s trans’ – and the support committee has to organize call-ins to get her out.

In order for a prisoner to be able to call you, you have to pay a monthly charge to a phone security service, and her friends are struggling to get work. So money has to be found for that. And the trial date has been moved once. Every time a trial date is set, her support committee mobilizes people — thirty or forty people have taken vacation days or changed their schedules so they could show up. Will it be moved again?

It’s easier and cheaper for the court system when people plead guilty, and it results in a politically-useful higher conviction rate. In the United States, the number of plea-bargains has skyrocketed in the last two decades and the number of actual trials has gone way down.

This is how the courts get people to take a plea – prisoners get tired and worn and confused and low in spirits, so they plead guilty just for a little certainty and an end to the ordeal. And many, many of those are people of color.
***

This isn’t just about CeCe. It’s about the way young women are harassed and assaulted every day in every city. It’s about the way trans women are treated as disposable and the way black youth are criminalized. It’s about the constant social violence by which white supremacy, transphobia and misogyny are maintained.

And it’s about whose experience counts. When we believe CeCe, we’re saying that we hear trans women, we hear youth of color and we believe what they say about their own lives. We name racism, we name violence, we name prejudice – and we refuse them with all the strength we have.

***
We need to get the charges against CeCe dropped. There’s precedent, the prosecutor has the authority and a victory here would be a victory for so many people – for CeCe, for her community and friends, for youth of color and trans youth who face violence and hatred. To do this, we need to get Michael Freeman to listen. We need voices. We need media.

We need to make it clear to Michael Freeman that this case is visible – we aren’t going to forget about CeCe no matter how often the trial gets moved, and we aren’t going to forget about any miscarriage of justice, either.

You can call Michael Freeman at 612-348-5540, fax at 612-348-2042, and email at citizeninfo@co.hennepin.mn.us

Remember to remain polite but don’t be afraid to be assertive. Some key points to mention in your calls, emails, and faxes are:

*Identify yourself as a supporter, friend, family member, or community member calling about Ms. Chrishaun McDonald’s case.

*Tell the County Attorney’s Office why you’re concerned: Ms. McDonald was the target of a hate crime, but she was singled out for aggressive prosecution after the attack.

*County Attorney Freeman has declined to press charges in cases like this at least three times already this year. Remind him that he has the power to drop the charges against Ms. McDonald.

Tell Freeman not to side with Ms. McDonald’s white supremacist attackers: drop the charges against Ms. McDonald.

For more information and new developments: www.supportcece.wordpress.com. You can sign the petition calling for Michael Freeman to drop CeCe’s charges here.

(Source: transfeminism, via shuddertree)

8:38 pm - Fri, Feb 10, 2012

Job Opportunities at The Riley Center, SF

 The St. Vincent de Paul Society of San Francisco’s Riley Center offers safe and confidential services for women in abusive relationships, along with their children, from the point of crisis to a woman’s achievement of self-sufficiency

The Riley Center is hiring for two positions. One is a part time Case Manager focused on enhancing services for African American survivors at our Community Office and the other is an Overnight Women’s Counselor who is bilingual in Spanish and English.

For more information contact: Blyth Barnow | Community Office Supervisor | The Riley Center | St. Vincent de Paul Society

3543 18th Street Box 4, San Francisco, CA 94110 | P 415.552.2943 x306 | F 415.552.0337 | blyth@riley.svdp-sf.org

2:29 am - Sat, Sep 10, 2011
13 notes

queerlywritten:

Damn- excellent. Also Hot. 

2:40 pm - Mon, Aug 22, 2011
2 notes

Queer Artists age 18-25 SF September 12 

SEPTEMBER 12, 2011Art ClassFor Queer Artists age 18-25 interested in Queer History. All Supplies Included. Exhibition at LGBT Center Jan/Feb 2012. Class will start on Sept 12 at SOMArts, 934 Brannan Street, SF. Space limited - to apply for entry must go to a drop-in class on Aug. 1, 8, 22 or 29, 6-9pm and submit an application. To reserve a spot in the drop-in class, receive an application, or for info: katie@katiegilmartin.com

3:51 am - Sat, Aug 20, 2011

Fat Queer Cheap Clothing Oakland August 28th

TimeSunday, August 28 ·  12:00pm - 4:00pm
LocationHumanist Hall
Created ByBig Moves Bay Area
More InfoHooray, it’s back!

The fat-friendly, gender-inclusive clothing and bake sale where only the prices are small. Clothing for all genders in sizes large and up, up, up! Shoes and accessories too! Cheap, sustainable shopping with baked goods, benefitting wonderful, body-positive organizations. What’s not to love? 

We’re currently accepting donations: please email cindy@bigmoves.org, cupcakesandmuffintops@gmai​ l.com, or matilda@bigmoves.org to schedule a pickup in the Bay Area. We’re also looking for volunteers, so if you’d like to bake something and/or lend a hand, please let us know!

Proceeds benefit Big Moves Bay Area, Friends of NOLOSE and FatFriendlyFunders.


— 

1:23 am - Mon, Jun 20, 2011
2 notes

Library People- MLIS program at SJSU San Jose

Hey Library people! Do you know anyone in the MLIS program at SJSU? Tell them to sign up for LIBR 220-04—Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender, Intersex, and Queer/Questioning Resources and Services. There are not enough students registered and this important class is only offered once every three years.

            Crazy- SJSU- what’s up with that? 

11:59 pm - Tue, Jun 14, 2011
7 notes
But there’s something screwy about this. Because the main moral lesson we – as good liberals – always want people to learn about race and sexual orientation is that folks are folks. People are pretty much the same, and the differences people are fixating on (skin color, who people want to sleep with) shouldn’t make a difference. If gayness were, literally, a red laser that shot out of gay people’s eyes, it would make sense to be homophobic. Homophobia and racism drape themselves, publicly, in prudential, civic-minded concern. X-Men-style mutation ought to be equal-opportunity allegory for homophobia and racism, as well as for liberal values of tolerance. They aren’t called the Virtually Normal Men, after all.

X-Men: First Class — Crooked Timber

How very fascinating. Now I’m filled with a desire to do a search and replace in “Black Skin, White Masks” with “mutant” and “human. (If you aren’t familiar, part of what “Black Skin, White Masks” is about is the painful experience of trying to be an educated, cultured, virtuous man in a certain context (in this case, France and its colonies) that pretends ideas of education, culture, and virtue are race-neutral (“folks are folks”) when in fact they are not.)

It also reminds me of something I often have trouble explaining to certain folks about some of Samuel R. Delaney’s stories:

For many heroes, aliens, and monsters in science fiction, fantasy, and comics, the character is an amalgam — secret identity+superhero identity, man+monster, etc. And this split enables other characters — but more importantly the author and the reader to relate to the hero or monster in a dual way. We are expected to relate to and sympathize with the “man” side of that split.

But in stories like “Aye, and Gomorrah,” or “The Star Pit,” characters do not have that kind of division. Their monstrosity and their power and their otherness go all the way down, and are inextricable. And we can only relate to them on those terms. And if we cannot feel ourselves to be other, we cannot relate to them at all.

It seems to me that the X-Men movies (I haven’t read much of the comics beyond Joss Whedon’s run on Astonishing) are, in a sense, about a conflict between those two accounts of difference. Professor X and friends want to see themselves, and be seen by others, as humans+. Magneto and friends are content to see themselves as inhuman.

Which just goes to underscore how very much I would like to see the next movie in the series treat the X-Men as villains and keep Magneto as the protagonist. Not because Magneto is “right”, per se, but because the view from his side is far more interesting and illuminating and challenging.

(via kukkurovaca)

(via kukkurovaca)

10:03 pm - Sat, Apr 30, 2011

We had a visit from the security services:

it was late at night, in the wee small hours. Everyone was fast asleep. I woke when I heard the clamor and immediately guessed what had happened.” 

   Powerful story. Courageous writer, courageous father. 

3:37 pm - Tue, Mar 29, 2011
17 notes

Post by CANDACE CHELLEW-HODGE  

Richmond wonders why the church has singled out gays and lesbians for special condemnation and comes to this conclusion:

I think, is that it’s easy to condemn homosexuality if you are not gay. It is much harder than condemning pride, or lust or greed, things that most practicing Christians have struggled with. It is all too easy to make homosexuality about “those people,” and not me.
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