In one powerful tweetstorm, this woman demolishes the hypocrisy of fat shaming
I thought this tweet was important to include too
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@judithbutlerfletcher
In one powerful tweetstorm, this woman demolishes the hypocrisy of fat shaming
I thought this tweet was important to include too

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On the Women’s March ‘Guiding Vision’ and its inclusion of Sex Workers
I am proud of the work I’ve done as part of the Women’s March policy table – a collection of women and folk engaged in crucial feminist, racial and social justice work across various intersections in our country. I helped draft the vision and I wrote the line “…and we stand in solidarity with sex workers’ rights movements.” It is not a statement that is controversial to me because as a trans woman of color who grew up in low-income communities and who advocates, resists, dreams and writes alongside these communities, I know that underground economies are essential parts of the lived realities of women and folk. I know sex work to be work. It’s not something I need to tiptoe around. It’s not a radical statement. It’s a fact. My work and my feminism rejects respectability politics, whorephobia, slut-shaming and the misconception that sex workers, or folks engaged in the sex trades by choice or circumstance, need to be saved, that they are colluding with the patriarchy by “selling their bodies.” I reject the continual erasure of sex workers from our feminisms because we continue to conflate sex work with the brutal reality of coercion and trafficking. I reject the policing within and outside women’s movements that shames, scapegoats, rejects, erases and shuns sex workers. I cannot speak to the internal conflicts at the Women’s March that have led to the erasure of the line I wrote for our collective vision but I have been assured that the line will remain in OUR document. The conflicts that may have led to its temporary editing will not leave until we, as feminists, respect THE rights of every woman and person to do what they want with their body and their lives. We will not be free until those most marginalized, most policed, most ridiculed, pushed out and judged are centered. There are no throwaway people, and I hope every sex worker who has felt shamed by this momentarily erasure shows up to their local March and holds the collective accountable to our vast, diverse, complicated realities.
I’m gonna start a blog where I post nothing but this every hour of every day.
The homophobia that is prevalent in many countries often stems from Christian missionaries who spew anti-queer rhetoric as a part of spreading the message of Christianity. Queerness, third genders, and other complex, non-binary identities have existed for centuries. For example, in Tonga, where my birth father is from, they have a naturally existing community that plays a large role in their traditional society called “fakaleiti” which means “like a lady”. If a family has no daughters, the youngest son is often raised in the role of traditional femeninity, and respect and spiritual honor is shown to these individuals. This is similar to Mahu in Hawaii, fa'afafine in Samoa, and femminielli in Polynesian cultures. When Europeans and Americans colonized many of these countries, they brought with them anti queer ideologies that were then forced upon the people in an effort to “civilize” them. As a result, many of these countries that once organically embraced varying types of non binary existence are now completely the opposite. Mix in the weapons technology brought to many countries by Westerners and/or Europeans, and you have a recipe for violence against the ancestral traditions and peaceful ways of life that once existed in most cultures. The root of the rampant homophobia of countries such as Brazil and Jamaica is not in their ancestral traditions, but in their colonization by Europeans.
the lesbophobia thing
Lesbophobia is real. It’s the prejudice, bigotry, and oppression that exists at the intersection of homophobia and misogyny. Let me say it again: Lesbophobia is real. Hate for lesbians is real.
However, it is essential to acknowledge and understand that the term lesbophobia has been co-opted by a loud and growing contingent of LGBTQ women in communities that share troubling ties and ideology with factions that exist inside the alt-right movement — worse, the dangerous dogma that’s attaching itself to word the lesbophobia has found a new home at AfterEllen.
I first encountered the word lesbophobia in response to the post I wrote called Queer Women Take Over The 2016 Emmys. Her Story got a revolutionary nod for Outstanding Short Form. Kate McKinnon took home a trophy for Saturday Night Live. Sarah Paulson won for The People vs. O.J. Simpson. And Jill Soloway scored another victory for Transparent. On social media there was a small outcry that I hadn’t chosen the headline “Lesbians Take Over the 2016 Emmys,” despite the fact that Kate McKinnon was the only winner who explicitly identifies as a lesbian. (In fact, Sarah Paulson is on record saying, “I refuse to give any kind of label just to satisfy what people need.”) The reasons the handful of dissenters gave for my decision to call the Emmys queer was that I am a lesbophobe, an espouser and executor of lesbophobia.
To be very honest with you, I shrugged it off. The most unwinnable battle we have at Autostraddle is labeling LGBTQ people in a way that satisfies everyone. It’s such a constant struggle, we laid out an explanation about labels in our official comment policy. Recently on a Pop Culture Fix, I wrote about the new queer characters coming to The Good Wife spin-off. One of them will be a lesbian, according to the show’s writers; the other’s sexuality has not been labeled. So, I said, “The Good Wife spin-off will prominently feature two lesbian, bisexual, gay, homosexual, or otherwise queer-identified women.” Just to cover all my bases because it was almost Christmas and I was tired and I didn’t want to have to argue about labels. And yet, the cries of lesbophobia came in again. I got a couple of emails, a dozen or so tweets. Essentially: “Lesbian is not a dirty word! Saying queer is lesbophobic!”
So, on December 26, I tweeted something I think is a true, fair, and accurate analogy:
Yelling “lesbophobia!” when someone says “queer” is like yelling “war on Christmas!” when someone says “happy holidays.” Come on, y'all.
A couple of days later, AfterEllen’s official Twitter tweeted at me and said: “@theheatherhogan oh, agreed. It’s like yelling “biphobia!” and “transphobia!” when someone says lesbian.“
To which beloved Autostraddle cartoonist Dickens replied:
“AfterEllen is three weeks shy of transforming their website into an online support group for victims of wyt lesbian genocide. This is honestly the most ridiculously entitled white lesbian coated petrified bullshit I have seen in a long time. And if you don’t think white supremacy has reached out its dirty little fingers and touched a few groups of marginalized white folks, well. Keep an eye on their feed here and there. Keep an eye on their former writers. They aren’t just trying to Make Lesbianism Great Again… They are asserting their strength. They are erasing the visibility of the defectors. They are sliding their salty little asses into spaces and feeds where they must know they are clearly not wanted or cared for. I was never a fan of AE but this new image they’re building for themselves is a little too Nazi-adjacent for my galaxy Blaaaack aaaass.”
Dickens was, of course, correct. And her point was proven once again the very next day when an article blasted out to the 125,000 followers of AfterEllen’s official, verified Twitter account cried: “Lesbian Spaces Are Still Needed, No Matter What the Queer Movement Says”. It suggests that trans women and bisexual women’s desire to be included in queer women’s spaces is to blame for the decline of lesbian-specific spaces, which lesbians need to stay safe from trans and bisexual women.
That kind of rallying cry feels very much like the “Save Our White Neighborhoods” rallying cry of the alt-right, so I went on a deeper dive to try to find the origins of what I called “the lesbophobia movement” on Twitter. And what I found was more horrifying than I ever imagined.
A few weeks ago AfterEllen — which everyone presumed dead after the company that owns it effectively fired everyone, including longtime editor in chief Trish Bendix — announced it had acquired a new editor named Memoree Joelle. In October, Joelle, tweeted a Change.org petition that she’d signed called Take the L Out of LGBT. The petition is a direct response to a previously failed petition that called for GLAAD, the Human Rights Campaign, HuffPo Voices, The Advocate, etc. to Drop The T from LGBT. The most popular supporter of the petition is a guy you might know called Milo Yiannopoulos. He signed it, tweeted about it, and dedicated 3,000 words to it in a post on Breitbart. Thanks to Milo’s urging, Matthew Hopkins, one of the main perpetrators of Gamergate, wrote a post called “Why #GamerGate Should Help the ‘Drop the T’ Campaign” on his personal blog. Hopkins called it “one of the most politically important campaigns of our generation.”
In addition to signing and tweeting about the petition, Joelle commented her approval. When former AfterEllen writer Elaine Atwell brought Joelle’s support of the petition to light, Joelle’s comments disappeared from the petition, and so did Elaine’s byline from the hundreds of articles she wrote over the last five years at AfterEllen.
The comments on the Change.org petition mention lesbophobia multiple times and equate it with trans activism, as do the subreddits that discussed Joelle’s contribution to the petition. “Part of lesbophobia is hating us for our same-sex attraction, but another very big part of it is hating us for our rejection of men,” one user wrote on /r/GenderCritical/. (Trans women are almost always referred to as men on this particular subreddit.) Another Redditor on /r/actuallesbians decried the “male entitlement and lesbophobia” of protesting the petition. “The moment we talk about your rape culture or your male violence we’re ‘transphobic’ or ‘biphobic.’” (The men in this comment are actually trans women and “rape culture” refers to the constantly espoused idea in TERF communities that trans women are male predators.) The lesbophobia tag on the blog GenderTrender is a deeply disturbing trip down an anti-trans rabbit hole. The lesbophobia tag on the website 4th Wave Now is horrifying; it equates allowing trans kids/teens to come out and live openly as their true gender with child abuse, ideas that are — again — shared with Breitbart and Milo Yiannopoulos. Reddit and Tumblr are absolutely flush with lesbians using the word “lesbophobia” to back up the ideas presented in these “Drop the T”/“The L Is Leaving” petitions.
These spaces that use the word “lesbophobia” to attack trans and bi women or people who use the word queer share more than than an ideology with Breitbart. You’ll find them saying things like “trans women want to colonize the lesbian community.” You’ll find them using the phrase “SJW” (meaning Social Justice Warrior), a pejorative term coined by the Men’s Rights Activist movement. And you’ll find a lot of talk about how the correct “biology” is the thing that allows people access to the protections of the majority. And lots and lots and lots and lots of just truly sickening propaganda leveled at trans and bi women. It’s very much about creating an in-group and scapegoating an out-group through tried and true tactics that have been — I’m sorry — utilized by Fox News and the alt-right for years.
I wrote about these things on Twitter, and you can read Dickens further unpacking them here and here. (You should read that last thread before you jump in here and call her “my black friend.”)
Look, we didn’t just wake up one day with an openly racist, openly sexist, openly xenophobic, openly ableist, openly anti-semitic president in the White House, appointing the leader of the most dangerous white supremacist website in history to his top advisor position. We watched blatant and unabashed white supremacist language and ideas slowly take over the movement from the inside. We watched the most powerful scapegoat the most vulnerable. We watched Fox News make heroes out of the white men who murdered unarmed black children and terrify people with their whole War on Christmas bullshit and equate all Muslims with terrorists. A Nazi didn’t walk into the West Wing and have a seat; the slow creep of white supremacy laid the path for him.
Vox did a fascinating interview with former conservative talk show host Charlie Sykes earlier this year. He quit over Trump. But the whole interview is him agonizing about how, to him, the GOP had always been about fiscal conservatism and states rights and he believed in that ideological purity so deeply that he fooled himself into believing that’s what the GOP was about to everybody, despite the fact that he saw the white supremacy and fascism slowly gaining power and momentum until it took over.
To realize, first of all, that you’re part of a movement that was not the movement you thought it was, that you’re aligned with people that you didn’t really understand you’re aligned with, and to realize that everything that you thought about the conservative intellectual infrastructure was really piecrust thin. You thought you had this big principled movement and then suddenly along comes Donald Trump and you realize that it was just was just the pastry on top. So I think disorienting is a great term. Disillusioning is not too strong either.
To me, what we’re talking about with lesbophobia is a similar thing. Is lesbophobia a term some lesbians have rallied around to protest the prejudice and bigotry that exist at the intersection of homophobia and misogyny? Yes, of course. Absolutely. HOWEVER. I had to go searching for people using the word lesbophobia like that because my entire experience with the way the word kept popping up in my timeline and in my comments and in the comments sections of other websites was to decry the use of the word queer and to espouse anti-trans and anti-bi ideology. And that includes every single person who landed in my mentions on Twitter when I started talking about this. I did not click on a single profile without finding anti-trans, anti-bi language; or ask a single person if they believe trans women are women and have them say yes.
If you are a woman who is using the word lesbophobia to NOT do those things, and you’re more angry at me for pointing out that it’s happening than you are at anti-trans/anti-bi people who have hijacked its meaning, I … I truly don’t understand. What’s happening at AfterEllen is terrifying me. Maybe the website is technically dead, but it still has clout and power and it’s using it to push some really dangerous ideas about lesbian exclusivity, and those ideas are shared by a very loud group of people who use the word “lesbophobia” on their blogs, social media, Reddit, etc. to vilify the people (like me) who stand against them.
I don’t want to cause anyone pain. I don’t want to make anyone feel unsafe or unloved or unaccepted. I DO NOT BELIEVE LESBIANS ARE NAZIS. I AM A LESBIAN. If you truly think that’s what I was saying when I unpacked these ideas on Twitter, I’m sorry. It was not my intention.
I do think, however, that it’s imperative for you to open your eyes to how the word lesbophobia is being used to persecute and oppress trans and bi women in very vocal and influential spaces that have direct ties in ideology and language with the alt-right.
An incredibly important read.
This is a fantastic, fantastic explanation of a huge problem at AfterEllen and throughout the community.
(And in fact, the only other Tumblr post I’ve seen about it with a lot of notes was almost immediately hijacked by TERFs, piling on in the notes to gloat.)
There’s just one error in it: they didn’t just delete Atwell’s byline.
After they deleted her byline, and had several, screenshotted, discussions about it on Twitter, they abruptly changed their tune and started insisting that they had NOT changed her byline, because her articles “weren’t hosted on their site.”
They deleted dozens, maybe hundreds, of pieces Atwell wrote.
In a comment on AfterEllen.com, Joelle claimed that the reason that they removed the pieces was that the links broke because her byline was missing. And that any pieces of hers that were on the site definitely had her byline.
(I’ve been screenshotting the shit out of everything because both Joelle and AfterEllen have been deleting a lot of what they said as their stories change, then deleting the new stuff when the story changes again. Bog-standard gaslighting techniques throughout this whole thing.)
This is an excellent sample of the constant, contradictory lies they’ve been telling. The URLs for her pieces don’t contain her name and wouldn’t break with a changed byline. And there actually is at least one piece of hers left on the site that I’ve been able to find so far, that works perfectly well and is attributed to “AfterEllen.com Staff”:
(current version of the page) (original version)
I’ve been following the whole fiasco on Twitter, here are some more screenshots for the curious.
Keep reading

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Drive-By Lawsuits [CC]
This piece on 60 minutes as hosted by Anderson Cooper was pretty troubling to me; the piece appeared to be centered around how “drive-by lawsuits” abused the laws we have in place. Some who are sued complain that they are sued for such small details. The details matter, the details can cause pain, injury, or complete exclusion of your guests with disabilities, just because you’re not informed and aware on who or how, doesn’t mean it’s not true.
The focus should’ve been on that; on how inaccessibility can impact members of the disability community and how many businesses remain inaccessible to this day. Business owners are concerned, but for many, it’s the only way that changes would be made. It’s been 26 years since ADA was signed into law, that’s enough grace period, that’s enough time to get these buildings up to code.
People with disabilities have been asking for equality, fighting for equality for so long and it is exhausting (so much so, it’d be easy to understand why many don’t self-advocate, I know that there are times when I have the strength to stand up to injustices made and when I don’t). If a “shakedown” by “drive-by lawsuits” is needed to get things done, I say, so be it. If one finds that abusive, then advocate for more government involvement instead of justice and equality relying on claims, but either way, they will be held accountable. It’s time business owners take responsibility and accountability for their actions or rather, lack thereof.
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…my critique seeks to get beyond the exclusion/inclusion problematic that has dogged much of contemporary theorizing. My comments here are meant to engage the conditions under which something called black-queer-feminism (woman of color feminism) can be engaged. These conditions mandate a forgetting that is temporary but nonetheless quotidian (insofar as the repetition of such an exclusion is played out.)
The Erotic Life of Racism, Sharon P. Holland (85)
I am simply saying that to conceive of desire as a law unto itself [the s/m position]…and the key to destroying repressive sexual orders is to exaggerate the autonomy and intelligence of desire.
Butler, Lesbian S&M: The Politics of Dis-Illusion, quoted in The Erotic Life of Racism, Sharon P. Holland (via allslost)
WHERE WAS THIS WHEN I LITERALLY JUST DID A PRESENTATION ON BODIES THAT MATTER LAST WEEK???????
I can’t breathe.

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My favourite bit of Murder She Wrote is the intro, where Jessica Fletcher runs, rides a bike, fishes, hangs out with very young men, fights bears and punches out Donald Trump.
Jessica Fletcher’s Facial Expressions Appreciation Post - Part 1
Part 2 / Part 3
Murder She Wrote star Angela Lansbury has signed on for a mystery role in two upcoming episodes of Game of Thrones Season 7.
YAASSSSSS. I can J-Fletch and GoT at the same time!
She's one of our most enduring actresses, but is often most fondly remembered for her "Murder She Wrote" role.

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Readings on Sexuality/Settler Colonialism/Homonationalism/Pinkwashing
Settler Colonialism and Alliance: Comparative Challenges to Pinkwashing and Homonationalism
Gay Rights as Human Rights: Pinkwashing Homonationalism
Queers Resisting Zionism: On Authority and Accountability Beyond Homonationalism
Pinkwatching And Pinkwashing: Interpenetration and its Discontents
Gay Rights as Human Rights: Pinkwashing Homonationalism
The Empire of Sexuality: An Interview with Joseph Massad
On the censorship of ‘Gay Imperialism’ and Out of Place
Rethinking Homonationalism
Settler Homonationalism: Theorizing Settler Colonialism within Queer modernities
“Wanted For Love, But Not Here: The Travelling Rights of African LGBT activists”
Queer Eye for the Third World Guy: Homonationalism and the Fight to “Save” Africa”
Gay universalism, homoracialism and Marriage for All
Trending Homonationalism
Poor men.