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Ashley Love

Ashley Love

Posted: July 6, 2010 02:32 PM

On Stonewall Riot Initiator Sylvia Rivera's Birthday, Her Words About Gay Oppression Against Trans People Still Ring True

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Sylvia Rivera's Words Exposing Gay Inc.'s Oppression of Trans People Still Ring True Today on Her Birthday.
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Today, July 2nd, is LGBT pioneer Sylvia Rivera's birthday. Media Advocates Giving National Equality to Transsexual & Transgender People (MAGNET) and many LGBT people honor this heroic transgender woman, who is credited by historians as being the person who "threw the first heel" in the Stonewall Inn that fateful night in 1969, when the LGBT community decided to fight back against police brutality. Rivera and many other trans and gender non-conforming people of color at the inn that night were "guilty" of having "gender inappropriate" clothing, which is the excuse the police used to exercise their prejudice with violence. The police were surprised when the guests at the bar decided to fight back! This riot catapulted the modern LGBT movement, and Rivera and other trans people were responsible for kicking things off.

Rivera continued to advocate for LGBT equality, particularly for those disenfranchised and homeless. Sadly, after the gay establishment was done using her to get publicity to raise money, she was abandoned by the gay community, and actually died impoverished. They expressed that "transgender issues are too extreme". The lesbian separatist "radical feminist" community would exclude her from women's conferences, and she was even one time escorted out of a queer women's conference by transphobic lesbians. She was banned from the New York Gay Center for publicly, and aggressively, asking them to take better care of homeless queer youth. When Rivera used her voice to call out the oppression of trans, poor and/or people of color from Gay Inc, she was blacklisted from many organizations, media outlets and social circles. Though the Gay Male Media Mafia tried to silence her truth telling, shortly before she died she foretold the future saying,

One of our main goals now is to destroy the Human Rights Campaign because I'm tired of sitting on the back of the bumper. It's not even the back of the bus anymore -- it's the back of the bumper. The bitch on wheels is back.

Today, a new documentary is making the festival circuit called Stonewall Uprising. Shockingly, but not surprisingly, the white gay and lesbian people primarily responsible for making the film totally "white washed" what really happened, by mainly interviewing white subjects, to having only white men on the promo poster. And it gets even more inaccurate and appalling- the film totally belittles the involvement not only LGBT people of color had in initiating our movement, but it downplays the significant role trans people had in igniting the flame that Stonewall accomplished.

Sorry Gay Inc, no matter how hard you try, your desperate attempt to rewrite history, therefore oppressing trans folk and people of color, will not work. There's a new Stonewall happening, and this "oppress our own pattern" is getting harder to maintain as the people continue to speak out.

Before there was Harvey Milk, there was Sylvia Rivera. Yet the gate keepers of LGB"T" media all too often marginalize her influential place in history.

If Sylvia Rivera were alive today, how would she feel about the current status of transsexual, transgender and intersex people in the LGBTQ community? How would she feel about the cries of LGBT people of color who are protesting that their voices and needs are not being appreciated or included by the gay hierarchy?

On this special day honoring Sylvia Rivera's birthday, we are calling on all gay and lesbian people to remember who started Stonewall, and to try to be more understanding, compassionate and inclusive of your trans brothers and sisters. We call on Gay Inc to remember that it was not the privileged assimilationists who first stormed the gates making it possible for this 40 year campaign for equality. In reality, it was lower income people of color who bravely defied transphobic and homophobic violence with such a resistance that the whole world knew the LGBT community had had enough, resulting in irreversible revolution.

Happy Birthday Sylvia Rivera, and thank you for taking a stand!

Sincerely, Ashley Love- organizer of MAGNET.

My blog is "Trans Forming Media" : http://www.transformingmedia.blogspot.com/

 
 
 
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10:57 AM on 08/28/2010
As a social change strategist - a human being, who happens to be a transgender woman and an ordained minister- it's amazing to me the way the "gay media" uses transgender stories to further their agendas while abusing transgenders. I'm for basic human rights for everyone, and that's regardless of gender, sexuality and everything else, yet most of the high-visibility LGBT organizations have no substantive T agenda and our association with LGB reinforces false stereotypes.

Maybe it's time to recognize the truth: while some Ts are gay, most are not, and the advocacy we need is about gender identity and expression, and not primarily about sexual orientation or expression. Maybe it's time to go play with human beings who truly love their neighbors - as Christ advocated - appreciating who we are and not just what we do for them.

God bless the Soul of Sylvia Rivera.
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Kelli Busey
Blogs planetransgender and columnist at Frock Maga
08:54 PM on 07/07/2010
Thanks Bill, as a transwoman I LOVE and support my gay, lesbian and st8 family. There has been incredible heartfelt advocacy for trans rights in the past few years originating from our family. Sadly there remains a misogynistic contingent within the GLBT community. Ashley you are doing a wonderful job confronting and ostracizing those who wish ill for the trans community, keep up the good work.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bill J4321
04:12 PM on 07/06/2010
As a white, male, gay American, I understand where you are coming from.

All too often, the LGTB community 'forgets' about the 'T' in that acronym. I have always found that particularly odd, as those are the people in our community who are treated the worst. They are treated with disdain and with open, celebratory abuse. Many LGB people participate in this abuse. I have seen it firsthand. I always speak up about it. Trans people NEED us. They NEED our support & our inclusion. What they do not need is our abandonment of them in favor of our OWN civil equality.

I have always been of the 'all or nothing' mindset where this issue is concerned.

Any civil rights gains that gays and lesbians achieve to the exclusion of our Transexual brothers and sisters does not really make US any better than the heterosexuals who work to keep LGBT people marginalized.

The only thing I can imagine that is more difficult than being gay in America, would be to be a Trans citizen - a person that society, families, our government and its laws see fit to exclude from nearly ANY protection at all.

Much of heterosexual America seeks to keep their very own LGTB children marginalized via unjust laws.

Do LGB Americans REALLY want to turn around & do this to others?

We should do better. And we CAN.
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HUFFPOST BLOGGER
Ashley Love
Journalist, Activist, Poet
05:07 PM on 07/06/2010
Wow! Your post gave me the chills, it's very inspiring to hear a gay man defend his trans brothers and sisters publicly, and even go as far as to admit that even some gay and lesbian folks are possessed with transphobia. Thank you for understanding, and please send this article to your gay and lesbian friends. Ashley
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bill J4321
08:32 PM on 07/06/2010
Keep writing. Keep speaking out. It is all we can do at this point. I do not know why I was given such compassion for trans people, but I was, and I feel it quite deeply. I feel that, as a gay man, I am quite familiar with human nature and often see the worst of it in my daily life as a gay man. With that in mind, any LGB citizen should be able to consider the hatred that they have had directed at them throughout their lives, and multiply that by 1,000 to understand how much pain the trans community must feel. If LGB people can not empathize with trans citizens, who else IS there????

I support you. I support you. I support you!!!

I will keep speaking out and keep supporting your community in any way that I can. Pain is pain and love is love, and ALL people know those emotions.

I hope that one day the world will live to deserve you. (and me, too!)

Peace, Sister. Much love.