6 minute read

Take a mile

by Gwendolyn Ann Smith

Youreally don’t need me to tell you that 2023 has been a challenging one for those of us who are transgender. We have seen nearly 500 anti-LGBTQ bills make their way through the statehouses of this country, with a majority of those being trans-specific.

At the same time, right-wing lawmakers and pundits have latched onto anti-trans animus as their big cause célèbre, using this as a cultural wedge issue to, they hope, drive people to the polls and vote for conservative candidates. This has gotten so bad, and so obvious, that right-wing attack ads in a battle over an abortion-rights amendment to Ohio’s constitution are not focusing on abortion itself – a hot button issue that has caused the right to lose a lot of elections since the U.S. Supreme Court’s Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization ruling that overturned Roe v. Wade –but instead deflects to the outside possibility that the amendment could allow for gender-affirming care for transgender people.

Even in this early part of the 2024 presidential election, you have the leading GOP candidates – former President Donald Trump and Florida Governor Ron DeSantis – trying to paint themselves as the biggest anti-LGBTQ voice. DeSantis’ camp has gone so far as to release an attack ad focused on Trump, claiming him to be a supporter of LGBTQ rights, to try to turn people off to him.

Meanwhile, right-wing pundits and activists are going after brands and other organizations showing support for LGBTQ – and in particular trans – rights. The Los Angeles Dodgers were pres- sured to initially drop support for the Sisters of Perpetual Indulgence, but later brought them back for the team’s Pride Night. Bud Light has ended up as shorthand for costly corporate fiascos after it provided trans influencer Dylan Mulvaney with a single beer can with her face on it, causing a nationwide rightwing performative boycott of the brand.

Target, too, has faced an ongoing series of attacks for providing a Pridethemed swimsuit for adults that has an easy-tuck option, some shirts, and other objects with a design by a trans artist, and even simply offering trans and other flags as merchandise.

In the midst of all this, transgender people in sports have been assailed, largely drummed up by a single trans swimmer, Lia Thomas, who had a sin- gle good outing and won the women’s 500-yard freestyle at the 2022 NCAA Division I national championship. That singular victory has remained in the forefront of the debate over trans people in sports ever since, eclipsing stories about long-distance runner Caster Semenya. Semenya, while not transgender, was still attacked as such due to her unusually high natural testosterone levels. Meanwhile, a Gallup poll found that support for trans rights has been slipping over the last two years. Fifty-five percent of the 1,000 or so Americans surveyed declared that it was “morally wrong” to “change one’s gender,” with 69% declaring that transgender athletes should only be allowed to compete against members of the sex they were assigned to at birth.

Perry, who has never had the chance to visit Montpellier, has already received an invitation from Autin.

For comparison, Gallup’s 2021 poll showed only 51% opposing transition, and 62% having an issue with trans athletes competing against members of their gender.

Now I’ve mentioned a couple times here about how it is the right who is continuing to keep trans rights in the news, still focusing on Thomas more than a year after she won in a competition, still focusing on Bud Light months after the Mulvaney endorsement, and Target stores long after their Pride displays were supplanted by back-to-school shelves.

Conservatives continue to talk about how trans rights are being crammed down their throats, even though they are the ones doing the shoving. Indeed, from many of my trans con temporaries, all I hear is that we just want to be left alone to live our lives in peace. We have no desire to be the po litical football that we’ve be come.

I totally get that myself. I’ve had to watch the right’s cynical attempts to use trans rights as a “culture war” scandal. I’m wary, by the way, to use the term culture war, given that it’s truly only one side that is attempting to mold the culture, while another just wants the right to exist.

Let’s take a moment, however, to consider something that might be a touch radical.

When Target, Anheuser-Busch, and the Dodgers faced right-wing attacks, they pulled back. This didn’t win them accolades – it just meant the vitriol became even more vicious, and the right demanded more. Likewise, the Interna- tional Swimming Federation voting to bar all transgender athletes from competitions against members of their authentic gender didn’t end the debate on trans athletes, and didn’t stop Thomas from being its punching bag. Far from it. We have spent 2023 being called the worst names they can throw at us. They have called us groomers and pedophiles, even while countless religious leaders, conservative politicians, and others from the right have faced sexual abuse accusations.

We need to be bold. We need to be brash. We need to push for everything we want, and then some.

We need to demand the government pay for our gender-affirming care. We need to ask that trans rights be an expectation, not a demand. We need to ask for everything we could want, and then a little bit more. We need to be the ones pushing the brands and companies to go further, to be bolder, to show some backbone. A single beer can and a quiet endorsement? No, it’s time to make transgender people the face of your campaigns, and promote products both by us and for us.

It’s not the time to hope to be left alone. It is the time to demand it: they won’t let us have an inch, but we must surely take a mile. t

Gwen Smith has never been exactly good at being a nice, quiet woman. You can find her at www. gwensmith.com went to Paris and Montpellier that year – the 20th anniversary of Montpellier Pride – hosted by Montpellier Pride and the U.S. Embassy.

Is the link between Montpellier and San Francisco a little-known aspect of Franco-American friendship?

“Yes,” according to Perry. “Marriage for All has given new meaning to the word ally. France and the U.S. have been allies since the American Revolution and remained so during both World Wars. They are now united in the fight for LGBT rights, thanks to Montpellier and San Francisco,” she said. Perry and Autin even agree that Marriage for All would not have been possible without heterosexual allies such as Newsom, who participated in the recognition of this right for all.

This year, Perry and Autin celebrated the 10th anniversary of their respective marriages and commemorated the 10th anniversary of the laws that made their unions possible.

<< NLGJA

From page 2

“We are thrilled to recognize the exceptional work of LGBTQ+ journalists through our Excellence in Journalism Awards,” stated NLGJA Executive Director Adam Pawlus. “It is truly gratifying to be part of an organization that uplifts and celebrates the best that LGBTQ+ journalism has to offer. Congratulations to all the winners, and thank you for your invaluable contributions to our communities.”

National board President Ken Miguel, a gay San Francisco resident who works for KGO-TV, expressed his enthusiasm for this year’s award recipients, stating, “On behalf of the association, I offer my congratulations to the winners of the 2023 Excellence in Journalism Awards. Each recipient has demonstrated outstanding skill, integrity, and commitment to reporting stories that are essential for

Separated by 10,000 kilometers, Autin, a Montpellier native, hopes one day to meet his Bay Area counterpart. Conscious of “the honor of having made history and now being part of it,” their long struggle has enabled young and old LGBTQ couples to get married but, above all, to love each other, freely. t

Malcolm Biiga is a young French Black straight ally and a political specialist of U.S.-France relationships. He previously worked at the U.S. Embassy in

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Jim Gladstone was recognized with an award from NLGJA: The Association of LGBTQ Journalists.

LGBTQ+ visibility and equality. Your dedication to highlighting diverse voices, uncovering important issues, and promoting understanding is an inspiration to us all.”

For the complete list of awardees, go to nlgja.org t

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