It Could Happen Here - The War on Trans People: Part 3, The TERF International
Episode Date: March 23, 2022In part three we look at the horrific results of the spread of terfs to Mexico before returning to the US to see a transphobic alliance of TERFs and Evangelicals fuse with QAnon to create the current ...anti-trans movement in America. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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On Thanksgiving Day 1999, five-year-old Cuban boy Elian Gonzalez was found off the coast of Florida.
And the question was, should the boy go back to his father in Cuba?
Mr. Gonzalez wanted to go home and he wanted to take his son with him.
Or stay with his relatives in Miami?
Imagine that your mother died trying to get you to freedom. Listen to Chess Peace, the Elian Gonzalez story,
on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Welcome to It Could Happen Here,
a podcast that this week is about the war on trans people.
I'm your host, Christopher Wong.
If you've been around the left long enough, you've probably heard people call trans-exclusionary radical feminism, or TERFism, a colonial ideology.
Broadly, the accusation of colonialism is about the erasure of non-Western genders that fall outside the Christian gender binary.
But TERFs are colonial
in another sense as well. Exported by white academics through a network of fall feminist
and anti-trafficking groups, the ideology has imposed itself on the global South with devastating
and violent consequences. As a product of this colonial imposition, Mexico has become one of the
front lines in the war against trans people. I spoke to Emi Flores and Julianne Neuhauser,
two members of the Sexual and Gender Dissidence Resistance Network,
a group of activists aligned with the Zapatistas
who've been documenting and resisting the spread of TERFs in Mexico.
When the new TERF wave started in Mexico several years back,
at the time,
I thought of it as something of a radicalization that went too far.
Thinking back to the New Left,
and there was a point
during the New Left
when suddenly everybody
joined a Maoist cult,
and they were angry
for the right reasons, but it just
went off
at some point.
I thought that's what was going on
in Mexico, but then
it started to come out more
that more and more TERF groups
had ties
to political parties.
And foreign agents. And foreign agents.
And one of the most dramatic cases
is from Toluca, a city near
Mexico City.
Just recently, at the International Women's Day protests, there were
turf groups that had made a pinata out of the trans flag, had been burning the trans flag.
Also in this same city, one of the main turf groups turns out that their leader is on government payroll.
And if you've seen Roma, for example, the political incident that happens in that movie is based on a real incident from the 70s.
And the tactics of that political party, which is the party that controls the state government of the state Toluca is in, basically hasn't changed.
And they seem to have been using these TERFs basically as shock troops.
At one point, there were two sit-ins outside the state congress,
one to push for a gender identity law
and another to push for legalization of abortion,
which are obviously both important things.
The latter, however, was controlled by these TERF groups,
who later mysteriously never seems to appear at other protests asking for
the legalization of abortion.
But they were there and they ran off the trans encampment.
One of the big incidents was defending the sanctity of the women's bathroom with barbed
wire wrapped baseball bats.
Jesus.
These groups have deep ties to right-wing Mexican political parties, the police,
and the growing Turf International.
And they seem to be very chummy with the local police.
Yes. Funny that, huh?
Their leader
gives classes,
gives like trainings
to the state
government.
Like, it's
not subtle.
You can see
live streams of their
quote-unquote protests, and it was mostly
them drinking coffee
with the cops.
They were on first-name basis
with the cops, while the
other camp had
trans women that were too scared to go
to the bathroom because they were going to be
attacked.
That's the starkest
group, I think, right? The
Toluca Terfs, which are...
It's funny because almost every party
has their own
group, but
it's no surprise that PRI is the scariest.
We should also
say that these groups are
affiliates with Sheila Jeffries' Women's Declaration International. And so this is also a case of an ideology developed in the first world, in this case, England, which is largely a safe country, where even as fascist an ideology as terfism doesn't, or only very rarely leads to real violence.
And,
but it gets exported to countries that are not safe where it does turn into
real violence.
So another affiliate of Sheila Jeffrey's woman's declaration in Mexico would
be Las Brujas del Mar,
who is another case of at first they seemed to be
a group that was just they just radicalized a bit too far then photos came out of their leader who
was on the time 100 a couple years back with felipe calderon an ex-president of Mexico, and by far one of the worst in the country's history.
And not like just, oh, I saw you walking in the street.
She was at a book signing.
It was not a casual encounter.
It was a clear sign of admiration.
And it's been more than confirmed since then
that her political ambitions lie with the PAN, the farthest right mainstream political party in Mexico.
This political alliance between the TERFs and the right has benefits for both sides.
The TERFs gained funding and institutional backing for their war against trans people.
funding, and institutional backing for their war against trans people.
The right gained a way to attack the vaguely center-left Mexican president,
Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, by blaming him and trans people for Mexico's horrific wave of femicides while distracting from its actual sources,
NAFTA and the war on drugs.
Mexico's trans population, however, gained a new, western-educated threat.
When I say that radical feminism was a complete
import it's from its very beginning and the for a long while there was like one turf in mexico
and she was she's called uh jan maria yoyotl don't even try to pronounce her name i don't
think she can even pronounce her name because she's white as hell and she always dresses like she's a fucking
rachel doles from mexico yeah like the the amazing irony that the first originary
turf in mexico is also the mexican rachel doles like right because she went abroad and was like
the only mexican everyone knew so even though she's white as hell and has blue eyes, she started wearing some Coachella motherfucking ass feathers and shit.
Right?
Yeah.
I've seen,
I've seen these pictures.
It's,
it is,
it is like,
it is,
it is the Mexican version of,
and not even just the Mexican version.
It is the Mexican version of those people at Coachella who like wear indigenous headdresses,
who are just like,
just like look, look like they're descended from like Heidrich
Himmler or something
it's incredible
she has like
half French half Spanish name
and she changed it to a half Maya
half Navajo name it's gross
so this person has been active
since the 70s, right?
She was present in the first Pride in Mexico.
And that was
also the two-year
anniversary of the 68
massacre. So
Pride was, from the start,
really leftist here in Mexico,
but it also had this kind of people
who went to
the UK, France, and the United States.
And I think she was there when
Janice Raymond was
sending her friends with guns to
threaten trans women, right?
her friends with guns to threaten trans women, right?
So
she was
there when the turf wars
were at the
highest point during
the 70s, and then came back
and
she participated
in a lot of history of Mexican feminism,
but
she came back
In 2016
With that letter
With that backing
Because she is also close to Janice Raymond
With the Coalition Against Trafficking in Women
Who
The Coalition Against Trafficking in Women
The Coalition Against Trafficking in Women
CATW
Has a lot of The Coalition Against Trafficking in Women, CATW,
has a lot of... After the turf wars,
they went underground in academia and the universities, right?
Because they were no longer accepted.
But they were in the process of building NGOs
that could globally affect policy
on specifically sex work and trans rights.
And you can tell that Jean-Marie saw that that was her only opportunity to resurface
and to make her 70s ass.
She saw that 70s rat femme discourse was retro now.
And so she became like this founding matriarch
for the new generation of transphobes.
One of them,
which is Laura Lecuana,
who is part of FEMBA.
And Jean-Marie and Lecuana
were not faced at all
by the accusations of
laying with reactionaries
because they know their history.
They know where they come from
and they know that this is how Dworkin survived.
This is how Sheila Jeffries and Janice Raymond survived.
This is where you get the fucking money.
And Laura Decona, Jan Maria and Brujas del Mar
turned the whole environment around them
into these
well, these
tough questions. The only two
issues that we talk about nowadays
in Mexican feminism
are
precedent and trans people.
It's kind of gross.
Jesus.
And that, like,
remember, there's only a handful of states that have
legalized abortion there's femicides happening all the time and but we're
we continue to debate these two issues over and over and over again like a feedback loop
and like as trans people we don't have any choice because we're
the targets of this right and it's not it's not an academic debate last fall um there was some
tarps who had taken over a public park to set up their separatist space and there was a disabled cis woman and her
trans girlfriend who were
denied entry to the park and
threatened with tasers.
And so when they're
taking over these public spaces
and
using violence to defend them
because the next week there was a protest
over this and
they tased a trans man.
And it's like, this is
a public park.
Of course we have to defend ourselves.
Welcome. I'm Danny Thrill.
Won't you join me at the
fire and dare enter?
Nocturnum, Tales from the Shadows, presented by iHeart and Sonora.
An anthology of modern day horror stories inspired by the legends of Latin America.
From ghastly encounters with shapeshifters
to bone-chilling brushes with supernatural creatures.
I know you.
Take a trip and experience the horrors
that have haunted Latin America since the beginning of time.
Listen to Nocturnal Tales from the Shadows as part of my Cultura podcast network
available on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Ed Zitron, host of the Better Offline podcast, and we're kicking off our second season
digging into how Tex Elite has turned Silicon Valley into a playground for billionaires.
From the chaotic world of generative AI to the destruction of Google search, Better Offline is your unvarnished and at times unhinged look at the underbelly of tech from an industry veteran with nothing to lose.
This season, I'm going to be joined by everyone from Nobel-winning economists to leading journalists in the field. And I'll be digging into why the products you love keep getting worse and naming and shaming those responsible.
Don't get me wrong, though. I love technology.
I just hate the people in charge and want them to get back to building things that actually do things to help real people.
I swear to God things can change if we're loud enough.
So join me every week to understand what's happening in the tech industry
and what could be done to make things better.
Listen to Better Offline on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever else you get your podcasts.
Check out betteroffline.com.
Hola mi gente, it's Honey German and I'm bringing you Gracias, Come Again,
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On Thanksgiving Day, 1999, a five-year-old boy floated alone in the ocean. He had lost his
mother trying to reach Florida from Cuba. He looked like a little angel. I mean, he looked so fresh.
And his name, Elian Gonzalez, will make headlines everywhere.
Elian Gonzalez.
Elian Gonzalez.
Elian.
Elian.
Elian Gonzalez.
At the heart of the story is a young boy and the question of who he belongs with.
His father in Cuba.
Mr. Gonzalez wanted to go home and he wanted to take his son with him.. His father in Cuba. Mr. Gonzales wanted to go home
and he wanted to take his son with him.
Or his relatives in Miami.
Imagine that your mother died
trying to get you to freedom.
At the heart of it all is still
this painful family separation.
Something that as a Cuban,
I know all too well.
Listen to Chess Peace,
the Elian Gonzalez story, as part of the My Cultura
podcast network, available on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
The Coalition Against Trafficking in Women, or CATW, an international anti-sex worker group,
which provided a refuge for white TERFs driven from mainstream feminism in their home countries,
has been a major source of TERF influence in Latin America.
The reason there is so much importance of this ideology towards radical feminists in Mexico
is that they needed something to say and something to do,
radical feminists in Mexico, it's that they needed something to say and something to do and something to fill the void in organizing and in NGOs.
And the people who stepped up were Janice Raymond's KW, right?
The Coalition Against Trafficking in Women, who, since the 90s uh spent a decade and a half building uh contacts in the in the un
in the oas in several international organisms to extend their influence across the whole continent
specifically in latin america and you can see this affecting stuff like Venezuela, where they broke up sex worker unions
with the OAS, right? And in Mexico, the founding leader of the Mexican branch of KW,
Teresa Ulloa, used to be a UN employee. Specifically, it's drug and crime segment.
And before she was like a radical feminist,
she used to conduct drug raids in Chiapas.
And...
Yeah.
And after that, she became the founding member
of CADW Latin America and the Caribbean.
And with Janice Raymond
they they
you can see
them go
together to
the 1995
Beijing
Conference on
Women and
they influenced
like they
were a big
part of why
gender is not
recognized as a
social construct
by the UN
they allied
with the
Holy See
with the
representative
from the Vatican in the UN,
got together with a
couple of radical feminists, and pushed
back against gender being recognized as a social
construct. In 1995.
So,
that's the level of influence
these groups had. In Mexico,
these groups, which
morphed into the
Cat W,
supported the war on drugs from the get-go.
They were very... In some of the biggest events inaugurating the war on drugs, they were present right there.
Because if you're fighting drug trafficking, it's very easy to just sleep the word human right there right
no politician is gonna say no they all fucking love to say yeah i'm hard on human trafficking
and the way that uh showed itself was just targeting trans sex workers and migrant sex
workers and with that and that feeding the agenda of janice raymond perfectly sheila jeffries got a
basically survived the whole 2000s on writing garbage for reports for the un
most of her published works during the 2000s and early 2010s is stuff paid for uh cat w
and they
they
in 2016
they started pushing for more
and more anti-trans legislation
worldwide because they could see the writing
on the wall right
they were behind
the women's declaration
Sheila Jeffries is not
she is part of KW
I think KW Australia
she has her own other collective
called Space International
which is behind FOSTA-SESTA by the way
in the US
where she allied with a couple of conservative sheriffs
to write that legislation
so
we could go on and on
on how people that read about trans issues
think are gone and forgotten by history, right?
The authors of these horrible books
that haunt us to this day
are still active and not just in the US.
They're active in Mexico, in the UK,
in France, in South Africa, in Korea. Korea is huge. I think I would say
Korea has as big a problem as Mexico and the UK. We just don't talk to them as much and we can't
realize that. But if you check the languages that have signed the Sheila Jeffries declaration against trans people, which is
a specifically genocidal
declaration, it doesn't stop at
legislation. It wants to exterminate
us outright.
And most of them, you
are going to see a lot of Brazilian flags,
a lot of Mexican flags, a lot of Korean flags,
even more than
United States flags.
And if you track the USA flags
it's mostly like weird
randos that have yoga classes
and shit, it's not relevant politicians
but if you track the other countries
you're gonna find some of the biggest collectives
in their own countries
or just spooks
you're gonna find a lot of people who have
really weird careers that
spend a lot of time in Italy
and Uganda.
It's a never-ending
rabbit hole
of spooks,
of conservatives,
of has-been feminists
that have re-branded as NGOs
to get money from those groups
and direct it towards breaking up trans rights,
towards affecting sex workers,
towards breaking unions, breaking student movements.
It's a global movement that is birthed by conservative thought,
but getting more and more reactionary
and more and more organized as time goes by.
That international transphobic movement has increasingly found purchase in the US.
I spoke to Lee Leaville and Kai Shevers, two members of Health Liberation Now with
intimate experience with the TERF movement, who spent years particularly documenting its rise.
So my first question is, can y'all explain what Wolf actually is? And I guess subsequent to that, what the relationship to Hands Across the Aisle is?
um with at this point extensive ties to right-wing organizations um they've worked with family policy alliance heritage foundation alliance defending freedom concerned women
for america family research cultural among others um but they um they got their start um they started back in 2013 um around when um they were founded by leah keith
who also was one of the leaders of deep green resistance and she basically got like um kind of
run out of anarchist and environmentalist groups and then kind of like went over to uh established
like turf communities to try and recruit there.
So I sort of like started out trying to like recruit from these like older TERF and transphobic lesbian communities.
And then after Trump got elected and, you know, the conservative Christians on the far
right became more mobilized and more empowered, they kind of like rebranded themselves and
were like, oh, let's form alliances with these right-wing groups and they kind of like traded their sort
of like like uh crunchy lesbian feminist like like image for like kara dansky who like you know is
a straight fairly feminine looking woman who used to work for the ACLU and then like a Democrat and like
you know she's way more presentable to like a conservative audience you know by working with
the right then they have access to like money and power and they can it's easier for them to get on
the media like like Kira Dansky is no longer with Wolf but like she was with them for years and still
has relations like like good relations with them and she's been on the Tucker Carlson show like many times.
So I think one of the important pieces when it comes to understanding like how this relationship
with the right started. So in in late 2016, Wolf put forward their filing against the U.S. Department of Justice and U.S. Department of Education, right?
And they were going up against aspects of like trying to reform Title IX to include gender identity, you know, to protect folks who need to be able to use their like women's restroom or locker room or whatever,
right? And this is the case that they ended up getting some of that ADF funding for. So it's
like one of the first official seeds, I guess, of the direct collaboration that ended up happening.
A lot of that stuff did eventually end up getting leaked. And then they started doing some more
official collaborations just a few
months later when they were working with like family policy Alliance to file
amicus briefs against Gavin Grimm, again, on a bathroom case.
Yeah. They took something like,
I think it was like $15,000 from the Alliance defending freedom,
which is one of the main like right-wing groups, like past,
like trying to pass all these like anti-trans bills,
like going
after a pediatric transition and trans girls and in women's sports so they took that money and then
yeah and then later like i think like um the whole working with family policy alliance i believe was
the first time they like publicly allied with with the white ring group i think so that happened
in january of 2017 yeah and then they've just sort of like, yeah, like, they also
were involved with, like, the Amicus
brief against, was it Amy Steffens?
Another Supreme
Court case? I can't remember.
Yeah. It wouldn't surprise me.
And, like, members of Wolf have appeared on, like,
Heritage Foundation panels. They helped,
like, release a parent resource
guide, an anti-transparent resource
guide that was also sponsored by, like, Heritage Foundation, Family Policy Alliance.
This is very similar to almost exactly what you see in Mexico with just sort of slightly
less physical violence, which, yeah, it's a lot of, you know, and the other thing is
that these are, to a large extent, exactly the same organizations.
And that was one of the other things I want to talk about was the influence of Sheila Jeffries and the women's declaration,
which has been all over this whole movement.
Yeah. The one thing to point out. So like, you know,
the women's declaration international is in this,
in the U S is led by Kara Dansky who, you know, she like,
basically like left, she worked at Wolf for a long time and still has, you know, lots of connections with them, is on good terms with them,
but she, like, left and now is, like, working with Women's Declaration International of the U.S.
branch, so. And also, like, she winds up having kind of, like, a foot in both worlds at the same
time, too, so, like, she'll, like, the U..s chapter of women's declaration international previously
like women's human rights campaign before they had to rebrand um they would possibly for legal
reasons yeah but it look if you if you read the stuff it's yeah yeah yeah, exactly, exactly. So what ends up happening is that Kara Dansky will either, like, have the chapter sponsor particular events, or she herself will become actively involved in the formation of the events right which we saw happen with um women pick at dc last year
where they were parking themselves outside of that was like it was a well that was that was a whole
big thing oh god it was a protest that happened on international women's day to protest the uh
the equality act yeah in dc it's not like it's people's first time
dealing with the equality act either i mean like so prior prior to that point which and this starts
to to go into the um like hands across the aisle coalition because they were actively involved in opposing the equality act as well so
to kind of roll back a little bit the hands across the aisle coalition this was something
that started developing in early 2017 you know not that long after wolf started building the
more direct relationships with the right. And so that the
people of this coalition would have members of the right itself. And in the process of that,
towards the beginning of 2019 in May, they filed this joint letter to the um house of representatives speaker nancy pelosi to oppose
things like the equality act um and they did so alongside with natasha chart representing wolf
concerned women for america american college of pediatricians family research council
you know a whole bunch of really just awful names in there.
Oh, yeah, the ADF was involved in that one, too.
Yeah, it's really the Rose Gallery of all of the people who were anti-gay marriage until,
still are, but have downplayed it.
And yeah, all the people who led the anti-gay marriage campaigns,
all of the sort of weird right-wing pseudo-medical bodies.
Welcome.
I'm Danny Thrill.
Won't you join me at the fire and dare enter
Nocturnal Tales from the Shadows
presented by
iHeart and Sonora.
An anthology
of modern day horror stories inspired by the legends
of Latin America.
From ghastly encounters with shapeshifters to bone-chilling brushes with supernatural
creatures.
I know you.
Take a trip and experience the horrors that have haunted Latin America since the beginning of time.
Listen to Nocturnal Tales from the Shadows.
As part of my Cultura podcast network.
Available on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or is the podcast for you. We're talking real conversations with our Latin stars,
from actors and artists to musicians and creators, sharing their stories, struggles,
and successes. You know it's going to be filled with chisme laughs and all the vibes that you
love. Each week, we'll explore everything from music and pop culture to deeper topics like
identity, community, and breaking down barriers in all sorts of industries.
Don't miss out on the fun, el té caliente, and life stories.
Join me for Gracias Come Again, a podcast by Honey German,
where we get into todo lo actual y viral.
Listen to Gracias Come Again on the iHeartRadio app,
Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Hi, I'm Ed Zitron, host of the Better Offline podcast, or wherever you get your podcasts. that time's unhinged look at the underbelly of tech from an industry veteran with nothing to lose.
This season, I'm going to be joined by everyone from Nobel-winning economists to leading journalists in the field, and I'll be digging into why the products you love keep
getting worse and naming and shaming those responsible. Don't get me wrong, though.
I love technology. I just hate the people in charge and want them to get back to building
things that actually do things to help real people.
I swear to God things can change if we're loud enough.
So join me every week to understand what's happening in the tech industry and what could be done to make things better.
Listen to Better Offline on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
wherever else you get your podcasts.
Check out betteroffline.com.
On Thanksgiving Day 1999, a five-year-old boy floated alone in the ocean.
He had lost his mother trying to reach Florida from Cuba.
He looked like a little angel. I mean, he looked so fresh.
And his name, Elian Gonzalez, will make headlines everywhere.
Elian Gonzalez.
Elian Gonzalez.
Elian.
Elian.
Elian Gonzalez.
everywhere. At the heart of the story is a young boy and the question of who he belongs with.
His father in Cuba. Mr. Gonzalez wanted to go home and he wanted to take his son with him. Or his relatives in Miami. Imagine that your mother died trying to get you to freedom.
At the heart of it all is still this painful family separation.
Something that as a Cuban, I know all too well.
Listen to Chess Peace, the Elian Gonzalez story,
as part of the My Cultura podcast network,
available on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts,
or wherever you get your podcasts.
The next thing I wanted to ask about is what's been happening in the last couple of years with the fusion. You already have your alliance between the TERFs and the evangelicals.
but in the last couple of years we've seen a i don't know if a full scale is the right term to use for it but we've seen a merger of this with save the children and q anon stuff i was
wondering if you could talk about that that's okay so that's an interesting one because like i've
i've been digging into the timeline of this stuff extensively. It's like, I've got hundreds,
hundreds of listings trying to figure out where different pieces are coming
from and trying to understand like the, the phases, right?
So you've, you've got like the, the formation, the solidification,
and then the escalation and we're kind of in the escalation stage right now.
and then the escalation and we're kind of in the escalation stage right now but so one of the things that i i started to notice is that elements of this crossover like the cross-pollination that
was happening actually predated certain key events that we now know are affiliated with QAnon, right? So if we think about
the actual, like, development of QAnon itself, so you've got the Pizzagate thing that was happening
in, like, October 2016, I believe that was, you know, right before Trump was getting elected,
you know right before trump was getting elected and you know kicking up some stuff about like you know hillary clinton's emails and stuff like that to go up against her election campaign in
opposition to trump and then you know folding in the the harassment towards um comet ping pong to
the point where like edgar madison wells shows up at comet ping pong in uh december of
2016 with an ar-15 style rifle and starts you know firing off his shots and stuff like that right
and so eventually um most people know that the timeline of the q anon drops happening around
like october 2017 like if you look up the original like the first known q drops happening around like October, 2017. Like if you look up the original, like the first known Q drops,
I believe that was like October 28th, 2017 on 4chan.
But the thing is that if you look at references to save the children or save
our children on like Twitter, the hashtags, and you're also looking
for transphobia related stuff, you can actually start to see that crossover happening before
the original Q drops happened, right? Yeah. I found, I found tweets that were connecting
trans inclusion education in schools to pedophilia and using the save the children hashtag in august of 2017
the q drops hadn't started yet so and this is something this pattern continues to happen right
there were also multiple um you know tweets or facebook posts or whatever that would start to
use things like save the children save save our children, wake up America
and stuff like that before you would have the big scale takeover by QAnon when things were
starting to get really popular because the save the children thing really went viral in the summer but you could still see elements of it before that point repeatedly so another early instance
of using both save the children and wake up america hashtags started happening on um april
i believe that is of 2019 and bear in mind wake up america um is a hashtag that's not only used by q anon proponents
um in relation to the whole like acceleration as i'm trying to you know deep state stuff um but
also like aaron brewer one of the people that was involved in some of the clinic protest harassments
was using that
hashtag winner no it wasn't just it was wasn't just brewer it was like both for it was that was
the the clinic protest that involved both um partners for ethical care pec which brewer was
a member like one of the founders of at the time one of the leaders of and uh joey brights like
can i get a witness like they teamed up to stage a bunch of clinic protests and they
used Wake Up America
was one of the slogans that they used and one of the hashtags.
To get out of that.
To make sure
we're getting this,
these are protests against clinics that
offer gender-affirming care. Yes.
Yeah.
Yeah.
That
happened.
The Wake Up America one was in um salt lake city new york city and la yeah and they also i mean speaking of of um hashtags they
also have used the the slogan pull back the curtain um which has also been used by uh like anti-choice activists
yeah like that was i remember like like finding like they use pull back the curtain a lot to be
like they what they mean is like they're like expose the evil gender industry but like this
other this like um anti-abortion group i'm blanking on which one uh at the top of my head
but they also use that
um pull back the curtain to go after planned parenthood yeah oh boy which i think is like
problem like that doesn't i haven't found a direct connection but it seems like that's
too much of a coincidence in a lot of ways one of the one of the things that i really want to
stress about this whole like what i call t and on thing
is that like the seeds for this the cross-pollination that we are seeing happening
between the gender critical movement pizzagate and q anon like these were already in place before
q anon formally developed as its own phenomenon this keeps keeps happening. It's, you can't really, like,
figure out where one particular type of rhetoric is necessarily coming from in terms of its source,
because it just keeps going back and forth repeatedly. People are acting like,
they're coming up with a lot of the same ideas together because in the end in the end
they are of the same roots they are in fundamental agreement with each other whether they're calling
themselves different names i think that's that's worrying to me in a lot of ways partly because
you know i mean this has always been something where if you look at the rhetoric
that these people are spreading it's like it's explicitly exterminationist like it's it's you
know like they they're they're stochastic terrorists like in search of a like a quote
unquote lone wolf and in a lot of you know and in the 70s i think they were there's there's a lot
more explicit violence that these people are doing directly.
Now they're kind of like – they're trying to find people who will do their dirty work for them.
And there are places where they found them already.
We've seen this in Mexico.
And in the U.S., the people who they seem to be recruiting are people who are extremely dangerous.
We've seen QAnon people have killed enormous numbers of people um you know we've there's a long history of abortion clinic bombings and people
getting assassinated for that i mean i think you know one of the connections that i've been
sort of like looking at is the extent to which this stuff is connected to the atlantis shooting
because if you look at the stuff the atlantis shooter believes it's you know like he's in this like in the same sort of christian patriarchal
project and his thing is specifically about sex workers but hey look if you look at uh
yeah but also particularly asian sex workers and you know if if you if you look at the
anti-trafficking groups you look at the christian anti-trafficking groups and you look at the venn
diagram with them and the turfs it's like oh yeah and people are involved in both yeah
big in that particular world yeah and and yeah there's there's this kind of vice closing in on
trans people where on the one hand you have these people attempting to employ the violence of the
state and on the other hand you have this
sort of stochastic terrorism where they're attempting to incite violence by sort of
individuals and then also i mean i think i think there's you know there's sort of two forms of
this right there's the people who are explicitly like quote-unquote political right you have you
have your sort of like ideological street fascist you have like you know you you have your people with baseball
bats covered in barbed wire but then you also have the stuff that's been fueling anti-asian
violence where it's not necessarily like you know there isn't this is an organization that
like hates asian people it's we will just sort of passively increase the rhetoric until the level
of violence increases yeah yeah kind of got like
you've got the street bash and then you've got the intellectual bash yeah well and then i think but i
think also there's there's another like if it was just those people i think it'd be less bad but but
there's also just the way in which just random people who are encountering this become very
quickly radicalized and it it becomes part of sort of i mean and transphobic violence has always been
part of the sort of background violence in the same way that anti-black and
i mean you know okay the level of anti-black violence is much higher but like the the level
of violence against black trans people in particular and the level of anti-asian violence
we've been seeing that has just sort of because it's just a part of the background violence of
american society and that the levels of those things
the more this rhetoric gets circulated and the more this activism happens that background level
of violence increases and that to me is also terrifying because it means like it's not just
sort of like fascist you can track it's just someone on the street yeah yeah and then yeah they're just sort of like trying to like like yeah associate like well i mean a lot of the extreme like yeah that like people like like
felix and aaron um alexandra and the gender mapper and joey bryant stuff like that like
they're they're hardcore like eliminationists like they're like they say over and over there
can be no compromise and i would also especially like anti-fascist networks to pay more attention to it because, you know, the solidarity with trans people is just as important as solidarity with like racial and ethnic minorities when it comes to combating fash, right? right especially since like there are a number of us that are in multiple categories so like
let's all work together and try to like you know be proactive about combating the threat right so
my my tn on um collections i guess like i only have two reports on it so far because getting into the full detail is just it is a lengthy project and i
keep getting distracted by by the conversion therapy stuff there's just like there's so much
stuff to research and there's like more like two people and and yeah anyway so i also have a life to try to live in terms of finding the like
the original kind of like broader views of tianan both like what it is in terms of like the 101
kind of stuff and also like the the timeline of where it came from you can find it on health
liberation now.com we have a little tab
there that has like analysis and then if you go down to key issues you can find a tn on tag there
right and it'll have that stuff in there this has been a thing that throughout this entire series
which is that most of the information on this stuff has been compiled by a very small number of trans people and that cannot stay the state of this because there are just not enough trans people
and they are extremely overworked yeah yeah and if if that's a project that you can take up please
do that um yes please yeah hands on deck. Yeah. Because the seriousness of this is such that if you want there to be trans people living in a way that does not actively destroy them, you have to act now.
Yeah.
Basically.
Yeah.
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Suppress your local TERFs before it's too late.
Goodbye.
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Hi, I'm Ed Zitron, host of the Better Offline podcast, and we're kicking off our second
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On Thanksgiving Day, 1999, five-year-old Cuban boy Elian Gonzalez was found off the coast of
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