{ LINK: U.S. Government Proposing Housing Protections for Trans/Queer }
“The federal government has proposed a policy to protect people from sexual orientation or gender identity discrimination after studies reveal a high rate of unfair practices when same-gender couples and transgender people sought housing.”
(via genderbitch)
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posted January 25 2011 at
4 PM
| 63 notes
tags: #housing #transgender #discrimination
{ something I feel like MSM is working very hard to quiet—the fact that all these protests are related to high food prices, housing crisis, lack of jobs, etc. }
EDIT: *WARNING* for mention of cissexist violence (this applies to all the links and everything below the fold)
The National Gay and Lesbian Task Force has just released a comprehensive new report on the depth of discrimination against trans and genderqueer people. The fact that it’s titled “Injustice At Every Turn” is, unfortunately, an accurate summary of its contents. (The executive summary and full report are available online.) This is the first national large-scale study ever of discrimination against trans and gender nonconforming Americans, and while we knew the situation was dire, it turns out that “extremely” or “impossibly” dire might be closer to the truth. Some key findings:
(Source: , via warblingbear)
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posted February 7 2011 at
11 PM
| 10 notes
tags: #national gay and lesbian task force #trans #genderqueer #cissexism #binarism #bigotry #terrible things #housing #jobs #discrimination #harassment #police brutality #racism #reports #statistics #activism #news #gender #gender identity #trans love
{ LINK: Gender-Neutral Dorms }
Hi, Please let your followers know about this list of colleges with gender neutral housing, in case any of them are in the college selection process and think that they will be more comfortable in an nontraditional rooming situation.
Submitted by maishaparadox
oh, nice. will take this into account.
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posted February 12 2011 at
6 AM
| 135 notes
tags: #gender #college #dorms #school #education #housing #gender-neutral
{ RESCUE MISSION IN PROGRESS: DRIVER NEEDED }
Here’s the deal:
I’m helping a transman friend of mine escape from his emotionally abusive (and neglectfully abusive) mother and move to somewhere much safer. He’s 16 so police won’t help him and consider him a ‘runaway’. I have a place for him to live and attend high school, but we have to get him from his hometown to Chicago.
So anyone in Chicago with a car who can drive to his town (it’s about 3 hours away) to pick him up and then drive him back, PLEASE CONTACT ME.
You can Ask Box me on here, or email me at ftmark1@gmail.com. I will tell you the town and the boy’s name.
Just to give you a little more information, the boy is also sick with pneumonia and his mother refuses to take him to a doctor and to let him see one on his own. He has been sick for over 2 months without any medical attention.
It can be any day this upcoming week (the sooner the better) and he needs to be in Chicago by 1:00 PM at the latest.
Please, if you live in Chicago - or know someone who does - and you either can drive - or know someone you can - I am begging you to step forward.
I know it’s an inconvenience, but you could help change this boy’s life with one short drive.
If money an issue I can help compensate the gas costs.
Please help spread awareness of this situation, he needs the ride by Friday at the latest.
I’m trusting in Tumblr and all those out there, I know someone will step up. Please, help if you can.
Here’s my sad face, you know you can’t say no to this:
{ LINK: A young Moroccan set herself on fire after being excluded from a social housing scheme because she was an unmarried mother of two... }
(Source: tinyfist, via custerdiedforyoursins)
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posted February 23 2011 at
4 PM
| 33 notes
tags: #morocco #Fadwa Laroui #housing #classism #Souk Sebt #governmental fuckery #terrible things #news
By ANITA CHANG, Associated Press – Sun Feb 20, 12:55 pm ET
BEIJING – Jittery Chinese authorities wary of any domestic dissent staged a show of force Sunday to squelch a mysterious online call for a “Jasmine Revolution,” with only a handful of people joining protests apparently modeled on the pro-democracy demonstrations sweeping the Middle East.
Authorities detained activists, increased the number of police on the streets, disconnected some cell phone text messaging services and censored Internet postings about the call to stage protests in Beijing, Shanghai and 11 other major cities.
Police took at least three people away in Beijing, one of whom tried to place white jasmine flowers on a planter while hundreds of people milled about the protest gathering spot, outside a McDonald’s on the capital’s busiest shopping street. In Shanghai, police led away three people near the planned protest spot after they scuffled in an apparent bid to grab the attention of passers-by.
Many activists said they didn’t know who was behind the campaign and weren’t sure what to make of the call to protest, which first circulated Saturday on the U.S.-based Chinese-language news website Boxun.com.
The unsigned notice called for a “Jasmine Revolution” — the name given to the Tunisian protest movement — and urged people “to take responsibility for the future.” Participants were urged to shout, “We want food, we want work, we want housing, we want fairness” — a slogan that highlights common complaints among Chinese.
The call is likely to fuel anxiety in China’s authoritarian government, which is ever alert for domestic discontent and has appeared unnerved by protests in Egypt, Tunisia, Bahrain, Yemen, Algeria and Libya. It has limited media reports about them, stressing the instability caused by the protests, and restricted Internet searches to keep Chinese uninformed about Middle Easterners’ grievances against their autocratic rulers.
Though there are many similarities between the complaints voiced by Middle East citizens and the everyday troubles of Chinese, Beijing’s tight grip on the country’s media, Internet and other communication forums poses difficulties for anyone trying to organize mass demonstrations.
Extensive Internet filtering and monitoring meant that most Chinese were unlikely to know about the call to protest Sunday. Boxun.com is blocked, as are Twitter and Facebook, which were instrumental in Egypt’s protest movement. Tech-savvy Chinese can circumvent controls, but few of the country’s Internet users seek out politically subversive content.
Anti-government gatherings in China are routinely stamped out by its pervasive security forces, which are well-funded and well-equipped. A pro-democracy movement in 1989 that directly challenged the Communist government was crushed by the military and hundreds, perhaps thousands, were killed.
On Saturday, President Hu Jintao ordered national and provincial officials to “solve prominent problems which might harm the harmony and stability of the society.”
One person sitting in the McDonald’s after the brief protest in Beijing said he saw Sunday’s gathering as a dry run.
“Lots of people in here are Twitter users and came to watch like me,” said 42-year-old Hu Di. “Actually this didn’t have much organization, but it’s a chance to meet each other. It’s like preparing for the future.”
With foot traffic always heavy at the Wangfujing pedestrian mall, it was difficult to discern who showed up to protest, who came to watch and who was out shopping. Many wondered if there was a celebrity in the area because of the heavy police presence and dozens of foreign reporters and news cameras.
As the crowd swelled and police urged people to move on, 25-year-old Liu Xiaobai placed a white jasmine flower on a planter in front of the McDonald’s and took some photos with his cell phone.
“I’m quite scared because they took away my phone. I just put down some white flowers, what’s wrong with that?” Liu said afterward. “I’m just a normal citizen and I just want peace.”
Security agents tried to take away Liu, but he was swarmed by journalists and eventually was seen walking away with a friend.
Two other people were taken away by police, including a shabbily dressed old man who was cursing and shouting, though it wasn’t clear if he was there because of the online call to protest.
In Shanghai, three young men were taken away from outside a Starbucks coffee shop in People’s Square by police, who refused to answer reporters’ questions about why they were detained. They trio had been shouting complaints about the government and that food prices are too high.
A couple dozen older people were drawn to the commotion and started voicing their own complaints and saying they wanted democracy and the right to vote. One woman jumped up on a roadside cement block to shout, “The government are all hooligans,” then ran off, only to return a bit later and shout again at the police and others crowded in the area before once again scampering away.
Security officials were relaxed toward the retirees and the crowd eventually drifted away.
There were no reports of protests in other cities where people were urged to gather, such as Guangzhou, Tianjin, Wuhan and Chengdu.
Ahead of the planned protests, human rights groups estimated that anywhere from several dozen to more than 100 activists in cities across China were detained by police, confined to their homes or were missing. Families and friends reported the detention or harassment of several dissidents, and some activists said they were warned not to participate.
On Sunday, searches for “jasmine” were blocked on China’s largest Twitter-like microblog, and status updates with the word on popular Chinese social networking site Renren.com were met with an error message and a warning to refrain from postings with “political, sensitive … or other inappropriate content.”
A text messaging service from China Mobile was unavailable in Beijing on Sunday due to an upgrade, according to a customer service operator for the leading service provider, who did not know how long the suspension would last. In the past, Chinese authorities have suspended text messaging in politically tense areas to prevent organizing.
Boxun.com said its website was attacked Saturday after it posted the call to protest. A temporary site, on which users were reporting heavy police presence in several cities, was up and running Sunday. The site said in a statement it had no way of verifying the origins of the campaign.
___
Associated Press writers Cara Anna and Charles Hutzler in Beijing and Elaine Kurtenbach in Shanghai contributed to this report.
this is oldish news but still relevant i think. i have trouble absorbing information presented news-style (i have no idea why) so it often piles up.
NOTE: this article, like too many others, calls some African countries “Middle Eastern”.
(via dancingonembers-deactivated2011)
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posted March 10 2011 at
8 PM
| 4 notes
tags: #china #news #activism #censorship #oppression #resistance #protests #governmental fuckery #terrible things #food #jobs #employment #housing #internet
{ LINK: Help For Delight }
Yes, I am going to continue promoting the Help For Delight auction until she gets the assistance she needs! Short story: Delight has significant expenses related to needing to get out of an unsafe housing situation while also supporting her mother through cancer treatment the insurance company will not pay for. We’re raising funds for her by auctioning off many cool things (including some from Tumblr folks!). Bid, win, donate money, get something awesome. There are auction items at a lot of different price-points for people of all wallet sizes.
Jewelry! Food! Original fiction! Crafts! Seriously, there’s some very cool stuff here, people.
The auction is hosted at Dreamwidth but you do not need to be a member to bid. You can log on with Open ID or bid as ‘anonymous’ (and add an identifying note like ‘this is so and so at [email address]’ so people have a way to contact you if you win). You can also contribute auction items, as the auction is a rolling affair! Again, you don’t have to be a member to contribute—email me (meloukhia at gmail) and I’ll put your item up for you.
Please link this far and wide, except on Facebook, by request from Delight for privacy reasons.
I already donated, but I’m going to keep signal-boosting this for as long as it’s necessary.
Keepin’ this going.
(Source: se-smith)
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posted March 17 2011 at
5 PM
| 18 notes
tags: #delight #help #funding #funds #fundraising #medical #health #medical expenses #urgent #action alert #activism #housing #cancer #treatment #insurance #health insurance #auctions #donate #writing #authors #jewelry #food #crafts #art #dreamwidth
{ Eff }
So I didn’t plan ahead and now I’m living off campus next year, except I don’t have a house/apartment/roommates/housemates. I’m psyched but this could also be rly rly bad. Everyone says I should just go on craigslist or the school’s livejournal and find other people, but here’s my problem:
OTHER PEOPLE AREN’T SAFE.
The majority of people I could live with are straight, cis, white, or some combination of those things. I want to live with other queers. I want to live with other people of color. I want to live with other trans people.
I do not want to constantly have to hide in my own damn house.
So! People of tumblr, but specifically people who live in pdx of tumblr:
How do I go about doing this?
Please help Sawyer out <3
Signal boostage
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posted March 30 2011 at
6 PM
| 20 notes
tags: #housing #bigotry #safe spaces #trans #queer #people of color #urgent #question #sawyer
{ Eff }
So I didn’t plan ahead and now I’m living off campus next year, except I don’t have a house/apartment/roommates/housemates. I’m psyched but this could also be rly rly bad. Everyone says I should just go on craigslist or the school’s livejournal and find other people, but here’s my problem:
OTHER PEOPLE AREN’T SAFE.
The majority of people I could live with are straight, cis, white, or some combination of those things. I want to live with other queers. I want to live with other people of color. I want to live with other trans people.
I do not want to constantly have to hide in my own damn house.
So! People of tumblr, but specifically people who live in pdx of tumblr:
How do I go about doing this?
Please help Sawyer out <3
Signal boostage
i have tumblr and IRL frands in pdx, so passing this along
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posted April 4 2011 at
9 PM
| 20 notes
tags: #help #sawyer #urgent #housing #bigotry #racism #heterosexism #cissexism #students #questions #information
