ENDA Discussion

Terrance of The Republic of T has a couple of great posts about ENDA, which he’s also cross-posted to Pam’s House Blend. For that matter, Pam’s House Blend is filled to the brim with ENDA-related posts that are worth reading.

In Terrance’s first post, LGB-T = ENDA, pt. 1, he discusses his experiences with the kind of incrementalism used to justify the removal of gender protections. He says, about the statement, “the implication of gradualism is that some people will have to continue to endure injustice without remedy,”

Its one thing to be an incrementalist and at least be honest about that last sentence. It’s quite another to declare that it is the right thing to do to ask others to continue to suffer injustice without remedy is the right thing to do, that they ought to be glad to do it, and that they are wrong for objecting to it.

That’s what’s asked of of gay folks by progressives on the marriage issue. And now that’s what gay folks are asking of transgender folks on employment discrimination, which for some transgender people is literally a matter of life and death.

That’s it in a nutshell. GLB-rights activists (for they are surely not *T rights activists) who magnanimously sacrifice someone else’s chance at fairness or equality to get theirs first aren’t really making concessions - a true concession requires you to give up something that matters to you.

Terrance continues with LGB-T = ENDA, pt. 2. Here he nails down just what workplace discrimination against trans people means. Seriously, even in San Francisco where trans people have a large number of civil rights protections, you’re looking at something like 75% unemployment. Looking at numbers like that, it’s hard to see how anyone could argue that we don’t need our civil rights yet if it means everyone else waiting an extra year or two. Because, really, unlike John Aravosis’ belief that including T could set his civil rights back decades, we were really close to having enough votes to get a trans-inclusive ENDA passed in the House, and we don’t even know for sure if we didn’t have those votes. People have observed a few irregularities surrounding the alleged whip count.

Terrance mentions how getting employment can be a matter of life or death for trans people, and specifically mentions trans women who had been murdered by men who discovered their trans status, who were in sex work to support themselves because of the difficulty in finding employment. This is called “survival prostitution.” The four women he names are trans women of color, who not only had to deal with transmisogyny, but also racism and sexism. Since transphobia and transmisogyny barely register as unacceptable to many people, it’s also more acceptable to turn up the heat on the racism and sexism.

Terrance highlights that the lack of protection for transgender people really is a matter of life or death. To call us selfish, to tell us we’re holding the gay rights movement back because we are very clear on how badly we need those rights, demonstrates a profound lack of compassion. I would like to know how many trans women have to turn to prostitution to survive, have to live on the edge of homelessness, how many have to die before we’ve earned our place at the table. Is it because the trans people who suffer most - who die most often - are trans women of color? Why is this lack of protection acceptable to civil rights “activists” like Joe Solmonese? Why does John Aravosis constantly characterize our need for these protections as selfish and demanding?

LGB-T = ENDA, pt. 3 further condemns incrementalism as a political strategy, emphasizing the cost to those whose rights are sacrificed “for the greater good.”  As he states in these two paragraphs:

If Democrats and progressives are convinced that righting for legal marriage isn’t effective right now, then we need to find another way to protect our families right now, not ten or twenty or thirty years down the line. We need to do more than shake our heads and say it’s a shame that happens. If civil unions are the answer, then great. Let’s craft legislation, or pour resources into states where it’s achievable. But let’s do something besides “just wait.”

If we believe that employment discrimination transgender persons is wrong and shouldn’t happen, and an inclusive ENDA isn’t gongi to work right now, then we need to find another way to protect transgender persons right now, not ten or twenty or thirty years down the line. We need to do more than shake our heads and say it’s a shame that happens. Let’s start educating Congress on transgender issues now, get a panel of transgender persons who’ve experienced workplace discrimination in front of a committee hearing, or sitting down with key members of congress, or pour some resources into public education campaigns in key states or districts where legislators might be influenced. But let’s do something besides “just wait.”

I wish we had more voices like his.

His posts are also on Pam’s House Blend: LGB-T = ENDA, pt. 1 and LGB-T = ENDA, pt. 2.

On Pam’s House Blend, AHiddenSaint tells her personal story.

Autumn Sandeen discusses the dilemma for some representatives - whether it was worth voting against civil rights legislation in order to oppose the trans-exclusive ENDA.

Daimeon talks about picking up the pieces now that we’ve been thoroughly backstabbed and thrown under the bus.

Also, keep an eye on Donna’s ENDABlog as she posts post-mortem analysis. Donna Rose was on the HRC board until HRC voted to not oppose the trans-exclusive ENDA, at which point she resigned.

12 Responses to “ENDA Discussion”

  1. Terrance Says:

    Thanks so much. I hope that in all that I managed to say something helpful in all of that.

  2. Lisa Harney Says:

    I think you did. I hope it makes an impact.

    Thank you so much.

  3. misscripchick Says:

    i’m glad we have YOUR voice.

  4. Lisa Harney Says:

    The hard part about doing this blog is that I keep asking if it’s worth it to dredge up years’ old articles and essays and disassemble them, and whether it’ll help…but I went back to the MWMF forum and looked at some of the discussions I’d been in… My favorite being the woman who told me that the very existence of transsexual people was enough to drive some women to suicide and that I had no idea what kind of gender policing butch lesbians have to suffer.

    That’s right, some “gender is a construct” people would rather kill themselves than acknowledge that what trans people experience is genuine, and trans people don’t suffer from gender policing.

    So, anyway, yeah, the arguments keep recycling, they don’t really change. Unpacking them is helpful - is essential because these come from people who are allegedly also fighting for civil rights, and these attitudes are what get us thrown under the bus.

  5. michelle Says:

    My favorite being the woman who told me that the very existence of transsexual people was enough to drive some women to suicide and that I had no idea what kind of gender policing butch lesbians have to suffer.

    ~!@#$%^&()@#$%@#%$^&($%$$%%&(*&**@#$%^&*(

    !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Holy holy crap.

  6. Lisa Harney Says:

    Yeah, I tried to engage them, and learned some stuff about engaging bigots and speaking their bizarre moon language. Those conversations (if you can call them that) are a big reason I talk about negotiating from a lack of privilege often means surrending bits and pieces for nothing more than a pat on the head.

    If you want the full quote, e-mail me and I’ll show you. I may or may not use that stuff in the blog, but I’m undecided right now.

  7. michelle Says:

    Okay, emailed you (*flinch*)

  8. matttbastard Says:

    Thank you so much for this and everything else you’ve done in such a short time, Lisa. Discovered your blog via Obsidian Wings and Women of Color Blog. Really need to get reading up on the SPLENDA aftermath, so I can do my own (bitter) write up; lately it seems like my plate is is rapidly (over)filling or the surface has shrunk. Thankfully, the sources you’ve pointed to here should provide a good jump off point.

    Initially wrote about ENDA here, here and here, but unfortunately haven’t kept up the coverage as much as I’d like. To be blunt, Aravosis’ martyr-posing contrarian bullshit–which so perfectly encapsulated the privileged perspective of the queer establishment–put me into a depression. Afterwards, I’d read the daily email updates, include some posts in a link farm, but my own voice was too constricted with…sadness? Disappointment at how once again self interest trumps solidarity, once a power disparity is uncovered. So I spent the last several weeks waiting for the inevitable crushing sacrifice of principle in the name of expediency (love how quickly “don’t worry, we’ll come back for you later” became “I got mine–get your own damn civil rights.”

    Less like being thrown under a bus than tied to railroad tracks, watching as the light gets closer and closure until…

    Thing is, I’m coming at this from a position of privilege, being both A. Canadian and B. not identifiably trans (which is not to say that my gender identification is in any way fluid, but for all intents and purposes I identify as ‘bisexual’, because it’s a lot easier that trying to explain a concept that I myself have trouble grasping. But I was always under the (apparently mistaken) perspective that the ‘T’ part of LGBT was an OG fixture of the community. The notion that there’s this new queer bourgeoisie that’s squicked out by teh transfolk is, frankly, alien to me.

    Maybe it’s a matter of geography, or perhaps I’ve just been spoiled/sheltered from community politics. Regardless, I feel like there has been a measurable schism in the US gay rights movement, one that will have broad ranging consequences for even the new ‘acceptable’ segment, of which, at least, superficially, I reside. But what use is having privilege if it’s achieved through sacrificing those on the margins, those most in need of solidarity? A Pyrrhic victory, if ever there was one.

    On a less ponderous note, have added you to the bastard.logic blogroll. This is one of the best new sites I’ve stumbled across in ages. Hope you’re able to keep up the pace!

    :-)

  9. matttbastard Says:

    I think I may have had a comment get either caught in moderation or your spam filter. Hopefully you can fish it out, since wordpress seems entirely convinced that it’s already been posted (hey, if you need incentive, it includes a not-at-all-gratuitous dig @ John Aravosis). Anyway, to summarize (since it WAS rather wordy): excellent work, Lisa. Found you via ObWings and brownfemipower, and am lovin’ everything you’re doing.

    :-)

  10. Lisa Harney Says:

    It’s not really a new bourgeoisie, it’s just been less noisy for the past few years. The most notable anti-trans voices were Norah Vincent (and oh, wow, she’s offensive) and Jim Fouratt, among others. It’s just that removing gender protections from ENDA heartened these heroic gay men to stand up and tell the rest of us how much trans people should be hated.

    I agree that there has been a schism in the US GLBT rights movement. We have to deal with the fact that nearly everyone stood against HRC and the queer bourgeoisie on the subject of trans inclusion, that HRC reversed its position and betrayed trans people on the ENDA debacle, and that if we want to get a gender-inclusive ENDA to go anywhere, we need the current bill to not pass. Plus, we need HRC’s support - they’re the best funded, largest, most influential GLBT rights organization, and they hold all the keys… and in the past, whenever they found out trans people were trying to talk to congressmen, they sabotaged our efforts.

    And we have to get their cooperation to get the rights we need.

    I am so frustrated right now.

    Also, sorry about the spam filter. I’ll up the number of links allowed, as I meant to do earlier. Two is just too low.

    Thank you for the kind words. :)

  11. bastard.logic Says:

    Sunday Blogwhoring: Armistice Anxiety

    by matttbastard
    Desperately need a personal assistant to keep up with my rapidly expanding agenda. Rest assured I’d never be so intemperate an employer as the late Linda Stein, former manager of the Ramones, who was recently bludgeoned to death b…

  12. Feministe » Telling it like it is Says:

    [...] to get them used to voting for LGBT rights. Unfortunately, Frank also found it was necessary to throw trans people to the wolves as part of this effort to create a kinder, gentler, gay-friendlier Congress, a habit he’s [...]

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