Term coining… I guess.
So we’ve always wanted a quick term to describe the intersection of transphobia and disablism/ableism, esp as someone who has a Neurogender. Ableism is inherently part of transphobia and many trans people are disabled in one way or another, so I feel like this would be a really irrelevant term.
So without further a-due, 
TransAnapirophobia: the intersection between transphobia(including transmisogyny, transandrophobia, exorsexism, etc) and Anapirophobia(a general term that includes ableism, disablism, sanism, etc)
I’m currently very tired and dissociated so I do not have time to list out some of the examples of TransAnapirophobia, but I will be doing that to this post in the future to further elaborate upon that
But I do want to add this quote from the transgender law center
“Ableism is at the core of transphobia — transgender people are often labeled “sick” “mad”, “ill”, or “freaks” for simply being trans. This is a deliberate use of ableism, well known for its success in determining who is worthy and who is disposable. We are told that to be “sick” “mad” or “ill” — terms many of us now use to empower ourselves — means that we are perceived as less than human. That we are to be feared and neglected, rather than respected and valued. Even as transgender identities and experiences become more mainstream, being disabled, deaf, and ill have not. To be trans and disabled means that our genders and sexualities are under greater scrutiny. We are infantilized, fetishized or both. All of the expansive and gorgeous parts that make us who we are are never welcomed together. More often the complexity of our lives and experiences are used to dilute our rights to agency, resulting in trans disabled people being relegated to where we always are — a life where we are repeatedly disposed of.
What’s more, ableism at its core both perpetuates and is fueled by white supremacy — the two oppressive forces intertwine to shape and define the concept of the “other” as being dangerous and disposable. White supremacy creates conditions in which white disabled people are pitied while Black disabled people are feared. We cannot address ableism honestly without also addressing the ways that white disabled, sick, deaf, and mad people benefit from white supremacy, even within the violence that ableism presents”
Tagging for reach: @radiomogai @rwuffles













