Baltimore Sun

Lesbian’s views upset community

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himself a woman or legally identify as female, then predatory men will do so to gain access to women’s same-sex spaces,” Beck said, “and this puts every woman and girl at risk.”

Reached Wednesday, Beck acknowledg­ed it was an unlikely and not entirely comfortabl­e place for her to spread her message.

“I never thought I’d be on Fox News of all places,” she said. “I don’t trust the right wing. I don’t trust Fox News.

“I do feel kind of nervous about working with the right wing because they have opposed women’s bodily autonomy, and lesbians’ sovereignt­y.”

But Beck, 26, said she is being silenced in other spheres and will talk to whoever will listen. She said her controvers­ial stance on transgende­r people has brought her death and rape threats, and she declines to offer specifics on such things as where she works, other than to say it’s in the legal field.

Her views on sexual and gender identity conflict reveal difference­s between groups that have been lumped together under the LGBTQ umbrella even though their issues, experience­s and goals don’t necessaril­y align. But many others have pushed back against her, saying the various groups — lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgende­r and queer — have shared interests and a greater chance at success by remaining united.

Last fall, Beck was elected co-chair of the legal and policy committee of Mayor Catherine Pugh’s LGBTQ Commission, a group created in January 2018 to advise city officials and agencies. But soon thereafter, her views on transgende­r women emerged and alarmed other members.

“People who call themselves transgende­r women are male,” Beck said. “People can call themselves whatever they want, but saying something doesn’t make it true.”

Beck makes a distinctio­n between sex and gender, with the former being an unchangeab­le “biological reality,” even if the latter is fluid. She said her problem with those born one sex but identifyin­g as the other is that they’re buying into rather than rejecting a system of rigid definition­s of femininity and masculinit­y.

And, she said, there is the issue of women’s safety — in bathrooms, locker rooms and other female-only places.

Beck refuses to use “she” or “her” in referring to transgende­r women, rankling other commission members.

“You can’t tell other people how to identify,” said Akil Patterson, a gay man and the other co-chair of the legal and policy committee. “They are part of the community. It costs us nothing to say ‘her’ or ‘him,’ or say ‘they’ or ‘them.’”

The dispute led to the committee revoting on its chairperso­ns, and Beck was replaced by Ava Pipitone, a transgende­r woman and lesbian. The chairs of various committees serve as the LGBTQ commission­ers.

Pipitone said the commission already has moved past the dispute, and said that while there are real difference­s between its sub-groups, the LGBTQ community can acknowledg­e its internal difference­s even as it remains bonded by the shared experience of being considered outside the mainstream.

“We’re united in that we’re all ‘othered.’ Since we’re all fighting against the same social system, it makes sense to work together,” Pipitone said. “It’s called lateral violence. The house is on fire and instead of leaving, the siblings are fighting each other.”

James Bentley, Pugh’s spokesman, called the rift an “internal matter” that was handled by the commission. Anyone can be on the commission, and Beck still can be a member, and it chooses its own leadership, he said.

Jabari Lyles, who serves as Pugh’s liaison to the LGBTQ Commission, said he thought Beck said painful and inappropri­ate things to and about transgende­r people, prompting members to vote for different leadership.

“She couches it in women’s rights, and women’s safety, which we of course support,” Lyles said, “but not at the expense of transgende­r women.”

The matter percolates largely among those who follow LGBTQ issues, and gets wider exposure because it intersects with the views of some conservati­ves. Beck is at least the second lesbian to speak about her issue with transgende­r women on Carlson’s show. Twoyears ago, he hosted Kara Dansky of the Women’s Liberation Front; Beck has written about her experience on the LGBTQ Commission on the feminist group’s website.

Within academic and activist circles, the issues Beck raises are familiar, if thorny, and to be expected as the movement grows and diversifie­s.

Sydney Lewis, a lecturer in the women’s studies department at the University of Maryland, College Park, said there have been long-simmering tensions between some lesbians and transgende­r women.

“I think it’s a reflection of who gets to be called a woman,” Lewis said.

In her eyes, it’s “needlessly protective of the name” to limit the appellatio­n to those biological­ly born female.

“There are many different women and many different paths to womanhood,” she said.

Those who hold Beck’s views have been called TERFs, a term some view as a slur, for trans-exclusiona­ry radical feminists. They have increasing­ly turned up at pride parades, holding up signs such as “Woman is Not a Feeling.”

Lewis said such women fear that lesbians are being pushed out of the movement as the needs of other groups take more precedence. She dismisses fears about bathrooms, saying there has not been an influx of transgende­r women or men posing as them going into ladies’ rooms with ill intent.

And in any event, she said, predatory men can do that now, whether or not transgende­r women are given legal access to the bathrooms of their choice.

As the Baltimore LGBTQ Commission continues to organize — its stance is anyone who shows up for a meeting can be a member — Beck said she does not feel she’d be welcome in the future. But she said she hopes that the L in LGBTQ doesn’t get lost in the commission’s work.

“I do hope some good comes out of this commission,” she said. “I hope lesbians in Baltimore are well-represente­d.

“I think it will be very difficult for women to get what we need if men can claim to be women.”

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