Attitude

EDITOR- IN- CHIEF’S LETTER

- @ CliffJoann­ou

Iwas a child when Margaret Thatcher delivered her notorious Conservati­ve party annual conference speech in 1987, through which she declared her belief that being gay was a choice.

“Children who need to be taught to respect traditiona­l moral values, are being taught that they have an inalienabl­e right to be gay. All of those children are being cheated of a sound start in life ,” she said, de void of emotion, utterly in different to the millions of identities she was erasing with those two sentences. Those words would lay the foundation for more than 15 years of upset for children and young people in schools across the country when Section 28 was introduced a year later.

My father was a Conservati­ve voter, and as Thatcher’s words were echoed across the national news, the then prime minister was giving sanction to adults and parents around the nation to stand strong in their belief that being gay was a perversion and socially deviant. I felt a little less safe at home and in school, while British society suddenly became a place that I was no longer a part of.

I also recall endless newspaper articles and television programmes discussing the validity of gay and lesbian identities. It wasn’t uncommon to question whether gay people had a ‘ right’ to properly participat­e in society, to have our jobs protected, or for our relationsh­ips to be given equal status. Our identity was up for debate. It took me years to find the inner strength and confidence to be‘ me ’.

The reality is that gay and lesbian people have only in recent years begun to emerge from the shadows. You couldn’t imagine those debates happening now. Yet they do; they’re just not generally directed at gay and lesbian people. It seems intoleranc­e and public discussion has moved from the rights of gay and lesbian people, to direct attacks on the trans community. Hate and fear perpetuate today in the abusive commentary that is directed at them.

Click- bait- hungry headlines feature opinion pieces that pick apart trans experience­s. It’s game on and acceptable to ‘ debate’ trans lives, and reduce their existence to their genitals or the ongoing and ultimately redundant argument about the use of bathroom spaces. Likening trans women to potential sexual predators waiting for the law to allow them to prey on cis- women in toilets is akin to the old debates likening gay men to paedophile­s which once proliferat­ed in the British media.

It’s disappoint­ing that today we fight for the freedom soft he very people who were on the front lines of the Stonewall uprising on that infamous night in New York on 28 June, 1969. That decade was a time of great social upheaval. Women’s liberation was making great strides forward and the black civil rights movement was beginning to transform US society. In 2020, in the face of a global pandemic and 50 years after the first Pride was held to mark the anniversar­y of the Stonewall uprising, the power of protest inspired by the energy of the Black Lives Matter movement and the steadfastn­ess of the Gay Liberation Front veterans has seen us taking to the streets to highlight the many challenges that trans people – and trans people of colour — face today.

As the government prepares to backtrack on its promises in regard to the Gender Recognitio­n Act, and high-profile authors likeJKR owl ing continue togrouptr ans women’ s rights with empowering sexual predators, we still have a long way to go. My trans friends have found themselves feeling relentless­ly assaulted by TERFs and bigots on social media. These people fi nd it acceptable to attack and erase the existence of a vulnerable minority.

The mental health toll this daily barrage takes on trans people is heavy. Their vulnerabil­ity has never been greater. We stand with every member of our incredible rainbow community. Solidarity!

“It took years to find the strength and confidence to be me”

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