Mark Daniel Snyder is the Communications Manager at Transgender Law Center. An outspoken advocate for queer liberation and social justice, he has worked in communications for the Boston Alliance of LGBTQ Youth, Our Family Coalition, and COLAGE. In 2000 Snyder founded QueerToday.com, one of the first online hubs to utilize social networking to organize large-scale protests which were covered in international news media. Snyder has been featured in news stories, books, and documentaries about bullying, family, and gender expression. Most recently, Snyder has appeared in the documentary, The Butch Factor.
The proposed bill in Arizona that would allow businesses to deny restroom entry to anyone suspected of being transgender -- or if they just don't like how masculine or feminine you are -- is yet another illustration of how important it is for the gay, lesbian and bisexual community to...
My father had been missing for days, and I had begun to accept that he was likely dead, when I discovered that he had been arrested at a fast food restaurant for agreeing to pay for sex with an undercover cop and a fictitious minor. I know now that he...
A decade ago no news about transgender issues was usually good news about transgender issues. Although the rate of murders and violence against transgender people, especially against transgender women of color, continues to be a tragedy (and one that remains largely unaddressed), historic gains have been made. And today, when...
I had never heard of the EEOC before my coworker said we were hoping for a ruling from them that would protect transgender people under Title VII, the law that prohibits employment discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, and national origin. I asked around, and most of my friends...
I disagree with Elisabeth Hasselbeck quite often, but during the Jan. 25 episode of The View, she brought me to tears with her eloquent support of transgender and gender-nonconforming children. Here's what she said:
We think about protecting our children in terms of safety and health, but we also...
On Jan. 12 Tennessee State Representative Richard Floyd (R-Chattanooga) said he would "stomp a mudhole" into any transgender woman he saw attempting to use a women's restroom. That phrase means to sexually and violently assault someone to the point where they are unable to fight back.
This week, Transgender Law Center teamed up with the San Francisco LGBT Community Center and the Transgender Economic Empowerment Initiative to condemn the promotions for the forthcoming ABC television show Work It, set to premiere Jan. 3.
According to ABC, Work It is about "two unrepentant guy's guys who, unable to find work, dress as women to get jobs as pharmaceutical reps. ... They've learned the hard way that the current recession is more of a 'man-cession' and their skills aren't in high demand."
People have asked me why we would make a fuss over a comedic television show, and others have worried that speaking out would only give the show higher ratings. Some folks have said to me, "Oh, lighten up." We owe it to our constituents to speak out anywhere we see an injustice, no matter how big or how small. This show will be seen by millions of viewers nationwide, and the icky promotions are already in full swing.
One advertisement shows the two main characters in drag, standing at urinals. I believe that images like these only make it more difficult for transgender people to gain full equality -- including the important right to access public accommodations appropriate to their gender identity.
These advertisements uphold the same rigid gender norms that have been used to keep all of us from safely expressing our authentic selves. To be frank, any man who has been called a sissy and any woman who has felt pressure to be hyperfeminine is impacted when pop culture promotes rigid gender norms.
Contrary to the absurd premise of this show, that it is easier for people who present as women to get a job, women continue to face high rates of workplace discrimination and get paid less than men. Furthermore, transgender and gender non-conforming people face extraordinary levels of violence and discrimination in their communities and the workplace.
Recent reports show that transgender people encounter especially high rates of discrimination.
The report "Injustice at Every Turn," published this year by the National Center for Transgender Equality and The Task Force, showed that compared to the general population, transgender people face:
Double the rates of unemployment
A strong correlation between job lost due to bias and other ruinous consequences, such as four times the rate of homelessness
Four times the likelihood of a household income of less than $10,000 a year compared to the general population
We know ABC can do better because they've celebrated positive portrayals of LGBT people and people who transgress societal gender norms on past shows, from the young boy on Ugly Betty to Chaz Bono on Dancing with the Stars. Let's hope they have a change of heart. In the meantime, we'll be fighting for full...
The show Modern Family on ABC is well scripted, funny, and does a great job introducing the notion that gay people raising children is no big deal. What the show doesn't portray is the real demographics of American families.
Through my recent involvement with COLAGE: People with a...
Thirteen years ago Matthew Shepard was clinging to life as a result of a brutal, anti-gay attack. The voices of my mom and brother still haunt me: "That could have been Mark." It was only a few weeks prior to Matthew's attack that I was contemplating suicide, having endured years...
(24) Comments | Posted March 28, 2013 | 3:06 PM