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Thread: Another case of white racism?
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06-23-2011 #11
Re: Acceptable airline attire.
He has to be someone's congressman, surely?
But pleasures are like poppies spread
You seize the flow'r, the bloom is shed
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06-23-2011 #12
Re: Another case of white racism?
A Tory MP my guess.
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06-23-2011 #13
Re: Another case of white racism?
But pleasures are like poppies spread
You seize the flow'r, the bloom is shed
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06-23-2011 #14
Re: Another case of white racism?
Lol!
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06-23-2011 #15
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06-23-2011 #16
Re: Another case of white racism?
This guy didnt even have the decency to put a wig on.
Originally Posted by tjinla2001
I AM A GUY NOT A TRANSSEXUAL!
I AM A GUY NOT A TRANSSEXUAL!
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06-23-2011 #17
Re: Another case of white racism?
A risky business. What if his flight had been diverted to Alaska or Newfoundland.
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06-23-2011 #18
crossdressing is illegal in a few states and countries
he could of been arrested
Oakland
Atlanta Georgia
http://www.myhusbandbetty.com/2010/0...still-illegal/
http://www.myhusbandbetty.com/2010/0...still-illegal/
http://oaklandlocal.com/article/cros...l-oakland-1879
http://oaklandlocal.com/article/cros...l-oakland-1879
Crossdressing Still Illegal?
Posted by helenboyd – May 5, 2010
Who knew? Crossdressing is still illegal in Oakland, California, & has been for 130 years. Maybe it won’t be soon:
“These laws have a history of being used as a tool of oppression,” said Kaplan, Oakland’s first openly lesbian elected official. She said laws similar to Oakland’s have been “an excuse for persecution” against the LGBT community and people who don’t conform to traditional gender rolls.
She noted that police in New York City used a similar statute when they raided the Stonewall Inn in 1969, setting off demonstrations in an event that became a seminal point in the gay-rights movement.
In Oakland, the cross-dressing ordinance is not enforced and hasn’t been in recent memory. City officials also believe it is unconstitutional. But a report from Kaplan’s office noted that under the existing language, women in uniform working in the police and fire departments could be subject to arrest and misdemeanor charges.
Attention divas, daggers, dykes, sissies and studs: sashay shante, y’all. According to Oakland's Code of Ordinances, your style is illegal.
Immoral Dress Code 9.08.080 has been in place since 1879: “It is unlawful for any person in the city to appear in any public place nude or in the attire of a person of the opposite sex, or in any indecent or lewd attire.”
In terms of concentration of same sex couples, Oakland is ranked among the top five major metropolitan areas in the nation. Certainly our city is as socially conscious as it is diverse. Yet shockingly, in 2010, cross-dressing remains an offense “against public peace and decency.”
I first learned of this wacky time warp while attending an Oakland LGBT Roundtable meeting. Stephanie McLeod, pictured above,an intern with City Council Member Rebecca Kaplan’s office, created a slide show presentation which contextualized the ordinance.
The civil war ended and the 15th amendment was ratified. Population explosions accompanied the gold rush and the transcontinental railroad; the latter saw Oakland grow from 1,500 people in 1860 to more than 36,000 in 1880. As the railroad’s western terminus, Oakland experienced a rush of new businesses, new manufacturing industries and new jobs. Migrants from the south, and immigrants from China and Southern Europe, changed the demographics of the area.
“People who were not perceived to be part of the social ‘norm’ were marginalized and criminalized,” said McLeod. “Everyone is affected by this, not just queer people. If this law was enforced today, all the women on the police and fire departments could be charged with a misdemeanor for cross-dressing.”
Though I have been out of the closet for 18 years, I admit sometimes I avoid learning about atrocities of the past; I'm already overwhelmed and frustrated by present day inequality. But after McLeod's presentation, I got curious.
San Francisco preceded Oakland with a similar law in 1866. By 1930, most cities in California had dress code laws. From the mid-19th century, the state enacted all kinds of legislation against LGBT behavior; convictions led to forced sterilization, castration, indefinite hospitalization and life imprisonment. The law lumped child molesters and homosexuals together as “perverts.” Women suffragists wore pants in protest. German theorist Karoly Maria Kertbeny disputed the criminalization of “homosexuality” (a term he coined). Racist medical texts linked the idea of "degenerate" races with "degenerate" sexualities.
In the wake of immigration legislation in Arizona, legislation that enables racial profiling, can we afford to leave vague laws on the books, laws that are subject to the interpretation of the times? Political climates change. In 1850, the state of California outlawed “crimes against nature.” Before 1900, this mainly applied to public sex, rape, and sex with a minor. But the early 20th century experienced a heightened anxiety over visible gender difference in urban communities, and homosexuals were increasingly arrested for “crimes against nature.”
As McLeod emphasized, “It could happen again.”
Shush! What’s that sound? Is it the bang of 1,000 fairies fainting in disbelief, falling to the floor? Nope. It’s the vogue boom of butch-queens dropping into suicide dips, their backs clapping the ground. An elegant tranny lip syncs Mary J. “You can’t keep a good woman down!”
http://www.nytimes.com/reuters/2010/...nder.html?_r=1
https://www.cia.gov/library/publicat...k/geos/gy.html
I wonder if it is illegal for women to wear trousers in
guyana? And if they are very strict about the enforcement
would that turn regular cops into "fashion police"?
GEORGETOWN (Reuters) - A group of transgender men in Guyana have asked the country's Supreme Court to strike down laws that leave them open to arrest following a police crackdown on male cross-dressers.
Police in the tiny South American country, where both homosexuality and transgender dress have been illegal for decades, detained and briefly held six transgender males in jail last February on charges of "cross-dressing."
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06-23-2011 #19
Re: Another case of white racism?
at 21:15 INTO THE VIDEO they talk about how it was a crime to masquerade.
An 1845 statute made it a crime to masquerade. Drag was an arrest able offense.
cross-dressing laws (including a 1845 law making it a crime to masquerade) ...
you had to have three articles of male clothing on not including.....see video
http://www.dragqueendiaries.com/blog...go-this-month/
http://cinemawithoutborders.com/revi...-uprising.html
In the conformist 50's (think "Suddenly Last Summer") gay people were often sent to insane asylums by family members: the victims of punitive cures: aversive electric shock therapy, lobotomies, sterilization even castration. California's Atascadero State Hospital (known as the 'Dachau for queers') practiced a sort of experimental pharmacological water boarding. Confined homosexuals were driven mad in institutions.
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06-23-2011 #20
Re: Another case of white racism?
is that a picture by Weegee... love his stuff.
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