Anyone else think it's weird that in a time of increased hostility and attacks on trans people there's a group of people on this website who say they're transfeminists who are dedicated to convincing trans women to isolate themselves from the rest of the queer community and trying to kick trans people who aren't trans women out of trans activism while at the same time insisting that Real Transfeminists (tm) h8 amerikka and luv Stalin >:3! Want to kill all biological females đ! Sleep with little girls đ!!1! If you have a problem with this then you're a TERF đĄ!
These are feds, right? This is a psy-op, right? These are mostly right-wing agitators trying to create infighting and turn people against trans women, right?
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An (updated) retrospective on Tumblr's movement to make gender essentialism trans-friendly.
This post contains excepts from a longer article on Medium. If you have the time, please read the full article! I also request that you link the longer article if you use this as a source.
All links have been updated with archived versions of posts that have since been deleted (and otherwise might be deleted or lost sometime in the future). I have revised some sections, and included more context and examples, in order to clarify and strengthen arguments.
Disclaimer
Transmisogyny is real, and requires much more acknowledgement than it currently receives. The trans community is very much capable of transmisogyny, and often does enact or enable it; likewise, trans people also often enact and enable transphobia against other parts of the trans community. Trans women suffer at least as much as the rest of us, and trans women â as a class â are not privileged, and do not hold the power to oppress anyone else.
If you take only one thing away from this post, take this:
Trans people all need to work on being better allies to each other. None of us can gain anything without the rest of us.
Establishing an Ideology
The first post on Baeddelism was by Tumblr user @unobject, on October 2nd, 2013:
The post was quickly liked by @lezzyharpy, also one of the first to call themselves âBaeddelsâ.
This post first provided the name and defining ideology of the Baeddel movement. The implication of the post was, essentially, that because the root of the word âbadâ was âbaeddelâ, and because âbaeddelâ referred to intersex people and âwomanish menâ, this old English slur was proof that transmisogyny was the worst form of bigotry; and even, perhaps, the root of all bigotry. (Itâs worth noting that this interpretation of the etymology has been problematized.)
While @unobject was the first person to make this connection, @autogynephile (âEveâ) eventually became, in essence, the figurehead of the movement. Of the other Baeddels, some of them were explicitly aware and supportive of the ideology behind Baeddelism, some of them were young or newly-out trans women seduced by the personalities involved, and some of them were tangential enough to the movement that their understanding of it was wholly different from the understanding those at the core of the movement held and promoted. Baeddelism was a sort of trend, for a time, and many participants wore the name without entirely knowing what it meant.
Itâs important to acknowledge that as much as there were dedicated members of Baeddelism, and as much as there was a unified ideology behind it, there were also individual Baeddels who did not understand â let alone support â the ideology.
The Ideology
Baeddels essentially built upon the foundation of @monetizeyourcatâs ideology that had been gaining traction on Tumblr in the years prior, with some additions that ultimately defined their movement:
Transmisogyny is the form of oppression from which all (or most) other forms of oppression stem.
Privilege is granted on the basis of assigned sex. (âAFABâ or âAssigned Female at Birthâ vs. âAMABâ or âAssigned Male at Birthâ)
These fundamentals of Baeddelism were essentially a rebranded form of Radical Feminism. In particular, they drew from the Radical Feminist idea that misogyny was the âprimaryâ form of oppression; that which all other oppression stemmed from. Baeddels only tweaked this idea to replace âmisogynyâ with âtransmisogynyâ, which led to the rest of the conclusions Baeddels drew:
There is no âtransphobiaâ
All âtransphobiaâ stems from transmisogyny first, and transphobia as it impacts non-trans-women (or, sometimes, non-transfeminine people) is incidental.
There is no âTransâ
If âtransphobiaâ isnât real, what else is left of the transgender identity?
While this is by no means the dominant understanding of transgender identity or community, the equivocation of oppression to identity is, in many ways, core to Baeddel ideology (and we see the lasting impact of this in still-widely-used âTME/TMAâ termingology). By this logic, if transphobia doesnât exist, neither does trans identity or trans community (though they obviously believed that transmisogyny, and subsequently trans women, do). Therefore, there are no âtrans menâ, and belief in the existence of ânonbinary peopleâ is highly contingent on whether an individual believes in the oppression of nonbinary people.
âAFAB Privilegeâ
The idea that within the queer and/or trans community, people who were AFAB/CAFAB (Assigned Female At Birth) receive unique privilege and positions of power that people who were AMAB/CAMAB (Assigned Male at Birth, a counterpart to âAFABâ and âCAFABâ) do not.
Trans Lesbian Separatism
⊠was what the movement was ultimately defined by, as the logical conclusion of their other beliefs (much like Lesbian Separatism was the logical conclusion of Radical Feminist beliefs).
Baeddels believed that only trans women can understand, or be truly safe for, other trans women; therefore, contact with anyone who was not a trans woman was deemed âdangerousâ and highly discouraged.
Trans Men
⊠also played an important role in Baeddel ideology, and the resulting treatment of trans men is what is often remembered today. Baeddels generally believed the following, either explicitly or implictly:
Trans men are not oppressed, or experience so little oppression that it hardly matters.
Trans men do not experience misogyny, even prior to transition.
Trans men have access to male privilege, or trans men have an easier time passing, and frequently go âstealthâ; thus benefiting from male privilege as well as cis privilege.
Trans men are often (or always) misogynistic and transmisogynistic, and are not held accountable for this.
Trans men oppress cis women.
Trans women enacting violence on trans men is âpunching upâ at oppressors, and therefore not only permitted, but encouraged.
Trans men are inherently violent, or become aggressive and violent when they go on testosterone HRT (Hormone Replacement Therapy)
The impact of this ideology is often discussed among transmasculine people because of the depth of harm it caused, directly and indirectlyâââand it was very much intended to. Harm caused to transmascs was not only permitted or excused, it was often actively celebrated.
Nonbinary People
⊠are often overlooked when summarizing Baeddelism, but Baeddels did have plenty to say about them. Baeddel ideology relied on the idea that privilege was granted on the bases of assigned sex, and nonbinary peopleâs genders were thus treated as irrelevent; they essentially did not believe nonbinary people truly existed.
CAFAB nonbinary people are either trans men attempting to invade womenâs spaces, or cis women pretending to be trans.
CAMAB nonbinary people are actually just trans women who havenât accepted it yet. They must transition, or they are transmisogynistic.
Intersex People
Intersex experiences, and intersex history, were often co-opted and erased by Baeddelism. This was often more a byproduct of their beliefs than an overtly-stated idea, but most notably, the term âBaeddelâ itself is likely more applicable- if not exclusively applicable- to intersex people, rather than trans women. Making their reclamation of it as a âtransmisogynistic slurâ, or their claim that the wordâs existence means that âtransmisogyny is the root of all oppressionâ, incredibly ignorant- if not actively harmful misinformation.
Notably, Baeddels also believed that intersex people- being âmore androgynousâ (a harmful misonception)- were able to pass more easily as the opposite assigned sex, and that intersex people (even within transfemme spaces) had âintersex privilegeâ. Some even believed, and openly claimed, that intersex people were âhermaphroditicâ; a slur against intersex people, and typically implying that the individual has both sets of reproductive systems simultaneously.
Trans Women
⊠did not receive universally positive treatment, either. Baeddelism was very much a cult-like group built around the firmly-held conviction that they were absolutely correct, and that anyone who disagreed with them was The Enemy. Trans women who disagreed with them were generally seen as brainwashed and self-hating, and trans women who did agree with them were expected to subjugate themselves to the ringleaders of the movement.
Within Baeddel circles, trans women were most frequently victimized by the abusers allowed to run rampant because âtrans women do not, and cannot, harm anyone else.ââââincluding, apparently, each other.
âThey were also bad shitty abusive people in general.
â⊠a bunch of them passed around a pile of smear campaigns and false rumors about virtually any trans woman that they had a even the slightest animosity for. Including the victim of the kinkster rapist. Theyâve done other fucked stuff, like chased two twoc off this site for trying to make a zine, but yeah. Thatâs like, just some of it. Iâm not up for going over the messy details of the whole shitparade.
âFull disclosure, I made a lot of excuses for these sacks of crap, even while they were out there spreading false crap about me [âŠ] I wasnât aware of the worst shit they were doing until much much later.â
- @punlich
Inside the Movement
Though individual Baeddels often existed in vastly different social circles from each other- particularly offline- those who lived through the movement highlight commonalities in their experiences.
One interviewee recounts the manipulation present in their initial involvement with the movement:
âIt came to me at a point where I was very quick to weaponize anything anyone told me about their experiences, because I was always a fighter. Iâve been an activist for a long time, you know, and when these trans women would come to me with their experiences I would believe them. I wanted to. But the way they acted didnât add up when compared to what they were saying. I felt really lonely there, and stupid all the time. I felt like I was being a bad trans person.â
[âŠ] âOnline they were more willing to say things that were, for lack of a better word, stupid. They would say things that lacked any kind of logical sense. But in person, they would go into this kind of toxic femininity- this weaponization of weakness. And I think thatâs because online they were often in these echochambers, but in person they had to rely on much more subtle manipulation.â
- Vera
It seems at points that the environment created within this movement- and the social circles that composed it- was almost cult-like in nature and in need for control.
âIt was very isolating. I didnât see my friends for a while, I was kind of just living with them, cooking and cleaning for them, starving myself, and slowly growing crazy. I was just being consumed by this weird academia and theory that had no basis, because everything was online and Tumblr-based.â
- Vera
Perhaps most chilling, however, are the patterns in their attitudes toward sexual assault. One interviewer recounts being subject to sexual assault, and upon posting about their experience to a Facebook group, being met with hostility from Baeddels present in the group- who quickly used their social influence to have them banned from some of their only support systems at the time.
âI ended up with pretty much no one to talk to about the experience at a time when I was already really, really struggling, and itâs one of several factors that led to me dropping out.
âThe Baeddel who got me banned also messaged me directly at some point during all of this, and I tried to get her to understand the pain she was causing me. She basically laughed it offand said it was my fault. She seemed to find a lot of joy in how much it hurt me, and blocked me soon after.â
- Anonymous
Another recounts sexual consent violations from a friend-turned-Baeddel:
â[My ex-friend] had previously been fetish-mining me for her mommy kink. I was freshly estranged from my own mum, and she stepped in to be like, âIâm your new mum now,â and would pester me to call her âmumâ in Welsh- as at that point she was going by a Welsh name. I played along, but it transpired that she was basically using that to get off, and she had a thing for infantilising transmascs and being this mum/mom figure.â
- Luke
And yet another interviewee discusses verbal sexual harassment during interactions with another Baeddel:
âI had one [Baeddel] directly tell me that Iâm beneath her as a trans man, and that I should âShut my smelly cooch upâ and only use my voice to uplift trans women. I was a minor at the time.
âShe then sicced her followers on me, and they bombarded me with messages telling me Iâd ânever be a real manâ, that I needed to âsit on the side and allow them to have the spotlightâ, and even telling me to kill myself- because I was inherently toxic to them. I was 16 years old, pre everything, and I couldnât even pass at the time. They didnât seem to care that I was a minor, or a newly hatched egg.â
- Anonymous
While Baeddel ideology itself does not explicitly condone or excuse sexual assault, itâs striking how common these stories are; especially considering how small in numbers actual Baeddels were.
It was, in fact, this exact problem that would eventually cause the movement to dissolve.
The Downfall of Baeddelism
Sometime between the groupâs formation in 2013 and their downfall near the end of 2014, @autogynephile (also âEveâ), the defacto âringleaderâ of the Baeddel movement, began what Baeddels referred to as a âtransbian safehouseâ.
This was apparently intended as a place for unhoused trans woman lesbians and trans women who, in general, had sworn off contact with men; the ultimate goal of the lesbian separatist ideology at the core of the Baeddel movement. It was thus also referred to as a âcommuneâ by some, and as a âcultâ by others.
One occupant of the âsafehouseâ- Elle- later posted to Tumblr that they had been raped by Eve during their stay, and detailed their experiences.
The Baeddels, rather than believing the victim and ousting the rapist from their movement, chose to close ranks around Eve instead.
Various reasons were given for this:
The victim must be lying
The victim- and anyone who believed them- was simply transmisogynistic.
Anyone who disagrees with the Baeddels is an Enemy Of The Movement, a âcarceral thinkerâ, and a danger to trans women as a whole.
Trans women are incapable of sexually abusing anyone.
âStanding with Eveâ was the ultimate sign of loyalty to the movement, and thus a mark of pride and honor.
It was okay to keep being a Baeddel no matter what, because Rape Accusations Should Be A Personal Matter.
(You can read more about Eveâs own denial of these events here and here.)
Years later, even people involved in the initial group have spoken out against the movement and actions of those involved:
âI was in ~the Baeddels~ for years and like⊠we straight up did horrible shit.
âWe harassed anyone that disagreed for any reason, our politics were terrible, our isolationism made an environmental ripe for abuse that I have firsthand experience of, there is nothing in that group worth salvaging or defending.
âAlso acting like people are just bringing this up out of the blue is silly like⊠itâs being brought up because people are still trying to defend the shit we did instead of fucking recognizing that it was wrong.
âCreating this myth that hate on the Baeddels is just a way of keeping trans women in line is a tacit defense of the horrid shit we did.â
- @lezzyharpy
âlike Iâm sorry but I served my time in shitty awful Baeddel group in early mid 2012s and it fucking sucked ass.â
â⊠Like itâs straight up cult-like the way you build this self-reinforcing network wherein ayone on the outside looking in with any criticism is unsafe, not to be trusted, only there to hurt trans women, and the only people you can trust is this self-selected group of trans women.â
- @lezzyharpy
Why It Matters, and Why Baeddelism Never Really Fell
Baeddelism itself has seen multiple attempts at resurgences by various individuals, including documented experiences with self-proclaimed Baeddels as recently as 2018- well after the movement first âfellâ in 2014.
Most proponents of âBaeddelism 2.0â, a revival of the original movement, argue that the abuse that occurred within the original movement was either completely fabricated by detractors (sound familiar?) or, at minimum, not actually inherent to the ideology.
And, of course, there are some original Baeddels still active on Tumblr today.
Baeddelism never actually went away.
âBaeddelismâ was only one name for a set of beliefs that existed long before the specific term did, and hasnât gone anywhere since the original Baeddel movement died down.
What the Baeddels did was put a name to the ideology @monetizeyourcat was cultivating before them, and what Cat did was popularize, centralize, and justify a way of thinking that had existed before she ever made her blog.
This ideology has since been referred to, loosely, as âTIRF-ismâ: Trans-Inclusive Radical Feminism.
It is rare that anyone actually refers to themselves as a âTIRFâ, and there is no real centralized TIRF movement; rather, a loose collection of radical feminist beliefs circulates various transgender spaces. The validity of these beliefs is generally taken for granted: of course (trans) women are The Most Oppressed People; of course (trans) women are Inherently and Unequivocally Victims In All Situations; of course (trans) men are Inherently Oppressors; of course (trans) men are Dangerous and Evil⊠and so on.
Like Radical Feminism, and subsequently Trans-Exlcusive Radical Feminism (TERF-ism), those ideas are fundamentally dangerous.
The defining tenants of radical feminism are that misogyny is the root of all oppression, and that rather than misogyny being an issue of power and control on a society-wide level, it is instead, or also, a matter of oppression and privilege on an individual level: men are always oppressors, and women are always victims.
These beliefs fundamentally exclude and erase the experiences of other marginalized people.
Namely, people of color and indigenous people, whoâs experiences with and concepts of gender do not fall within the strict and rigid lines that white, western, colonialist peopleâs do.
Radical feminism is not a redeemable ideology. It cannot be reshaped into something good. It is fundamentally broken, and the movements born from it- lesbian separatism, political lesbianism, TERF-ism, TIRF-ism, and Baeddelism- are proof enough of that. They each promote only surface-level variations of what is fundamentally cult-like thinking: only the in-group can be victimized. Only the in-group is safe; the out-group is inherently and universally dangerous. Only the in-group understands you. All members of the in-group are, fundamentally, incapable of abuse.
We cannot allow these ideas to be perpetuated within or without the trans community.
Learn the Signs & Prevent Harm
Hereâs what we can do to prevent this from happening again:
Learn what Baeddel ideology and TIRFism look like, even detached from the name.
Learn what radical feminism looks like, even detached from the name. Even from people who claim to oppose radical feminism.
Act on dogwhistles. Call them what they are.
Do not allow people to downplay the harm all forms of Radical Feminism have caused. Remind each other that Radical Feminism is not a redeemable ideology, and seek out other branches of feminism instead.
Remember the harm that has been caused. Remember that it will be caused again if these things are allowed to go unchecked.
Listen to and uplift marginalized people. Allow them to speak to their own experiences, identify their own needs, and name their own oppression.
Remember who the real oppressors are, and do not pit marginalized people against each other. The people perpetuating and benefiting from transphobia are cis people- and more specifically, cis people in power.
Build solidarity with other marginalized people. One group of trans people cannot gain liberation without liberating all trans people, and one group of trans people cannot be targeted without the rest of us suffering as well.
Remember that there is no group or identity incapable of enacting abuse, violence, harassment, or other harm against another. Victimhood should not be determined based solely on an individualâs identity.
Remember that there are no acceptable targets for violence, cruelty, harassment, and abuse.
For more context and a list of red flags, read the rest of the article here:
A Comprehensive Retrospective of the BĂŠddel Movement
I have never seen anyone say that only trans men should access HRT. Transneutral is a real identity, you just hate nonbinary people. I've never seen a "transandrobro" ally themself with MAGA. Something tells me this person just sees trans men existing as an attack on trans women
Anyway add begone-transandro-goon to your blocklist
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I at least have some peace in knowing this will likely end exactly as it did the first time: with all of them raping and abusing each other into obscurity once more.
I didnât even know the whole baeddel movement had happened until recently, but know that Iâve read up on some of it I really see how pervasive it was. I wasnât on tumblr back then but I still heard enough very similar view points that I felt like I couldnât talk about my problems as a trans masc person because that would be taking the focus away from people with real problems.
I didnât say anything about being stressed that when I suddenly went from never being out alone to spending most of my day at bus stops or on the bus surrounded by strangers from a very conservative town while medically transitioning. I kept telling myself that I would be fine, it wasnât people like me who got hurt. That I had to be brave about it because I wasnât a direct target.
When some stranger cornered me on the bus and kissed my hand without permission I felt like I had to laugh it off, joke with my friends about it cause Iâm a guy so another guy doing that kinda thing is ridiculous. Laugh at the, âlol, what if he realized you where a guy? Heâd be so uncomfortable,â or âyou should have asked if he was gay,â instead of acknowledging how nervous I was about that. About how this person who was all up in my space could have noticed the binder, or the bits of facial hair that recently started showing up, or how, since I was nervous, I couldnât help but use a higher pitch and that was causing my voice to crack. Itâs not like I could move, I was in a window seat, I was stuck next to this person and had no idea how they would have reacted to that information. But I felt like I couldnât tell my friends that I was afraid because that would be ridiculous. Iâm a trans man so obviously he would have just gotten embarrassed, maybe cussed me out, and then left me alone /s. I really thought that I was an idiot for being afraid because I was convinced it wasnât people like me who where at the most risk, and that I should have said something to him.
I didnât hear this from people being openly malicious to trans mascs either. I hear it from people, other trans mascs included, who seemed like they were genuinely trying to do the right thing. The right thing being focusing on the most serious problems the trans community was facing, and that trans mascs werenât the targets of those problems. And I hate that it seems like it might be having a resurgence because Iâm sure there are going to be people who see it and decided to bottle up their problems because they donât think itâs important enough to talk about.