Fear and Loathing

Hong Kong: Gov’t urged to speed up gender recognition legislation after death of transgender woman

“Those who [are] opposed to legislation, and those who use the worst language and exhibit egregious behaviours to reject us as full members of society have blood on their hands.” Ray Chan

US: The Hate Crime Epidemic We're Not Paying Enough Attention To

Two transgender women of color have been murdered in the past month alone. On Sunday, July 2, Ebony Morgan was fatally shot in Lynchburg, VA. Just one week before, on June 25, 17-year-old Ava Le'Ray Barrin was shot and killed in Atlanta, GA. The deaths of these women, especially so close together, are tragic, gut-wrenching, and unthinkable. The saddest part is, Morgan and Barrin aren't the first transgender women of color to be murdered in 2017. In fact, Morgan, the most recent victim, is the 15th. Here is the growing list of murder victims so far in 2017:

  1. Jan. 1: Jamie Lee Wounded Arrow, 28
  2. Jan. 4: Mesha Caldwell, 41
  3. Feb. 8: JoJo Striker, 23
  4. Feb. 19: Jaquarrius Holland, 18
  5. Feb. 21: Tiara Richmond aka Keke Collier, 24
  6. Feb. 25: Chyna Doll Dupree, 31
  7. Feb. 27: Ciara McElveen, 21
  8. March 22: Alphonza Watson, 38
  9. April 9: Kenne McFadden, 27
  10. April 21: Chay Reed, 28
  11. April 21: Kenneth Bostick*, 59
  12. May 16: Sherrell Faulkner, 46
  13. June 13: Kendra Marie Adams, 28
  14. June 25: Ava Le'Ray Barrin, 17
  15. July 2: Ebony Morgan, 28

Morgan's killing isn't just some anomaly; transgender women of color may be more at risk for violence than any other members of the LGBTQ+ community. As The Advocate stated in 2016, this is because the increased threat to transgender women in the current political climate yields "a progressively hostile environment for trans folks that has emboldened our adversaries and resulted in an increase in hate-motivated violence."

Every year since 2010 has yielded more transgender murder victims than the last. To be clear, these are murders that are actually reported to the police and do not account for countless more violent acts and deaths that may go unreported across the nation every year. In 2015, 21 transgender murders were reported in America. In 2016, the number of reported victims climbed to 27.

Read more via PopSugar

US: Texas Bathroom Bill Has Emotions, and Stakes, Running High

“The bathroom bill distracts from the real challenges we face and would result in terrible economic consequences — on talent, on tourism, on investment, on growth, and on small businesses,” 

A Tool for Change

Historically, in the Asia-Pacific region the portrayal of the lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, intersex and queer (LGBTIQ) community in media has been largely negative, reflecting the general lack of acceptance of LGBTIQ people within wider society.

US: Bisexual teacher came out to help suicidal students but then lost his job

A Kentucky-based teacher lost his job after coming out as bisexual in an attempt to help suicidal students. 

Nicholas Breiner started teaching chorus three years ago at McNabb Middle School in Montgomery County, Kentucky.

In a press statement, he explained: ‘For years, it was my opinion that my sexual orientation was my business and nobody else’s. 

‘When a child is ready to take their own life because they love differently than those around them, you must prioritize their safety over your own privacy.’

He explained he was previously afraid his community wouldn’t accept him for who he is.

After a decade in the closet, he came out  with the hope of helping suicidal LGBTI students at his school.

‘I had stayed in the closet for years. But I have had two students attempt suicide this year. I have intervened on five others before they got that far.

‘The vast majority of these students were LGBT students,’ Breiner explained.  Read more via Gay Star News

Uganda's other refugee crisis: Discrimination forces many LGBT Ugandans to seek asylum

"LGBT persons face so many challenges in Uganda, from social exclusion — that is, being denied employment, education ... discrimination while accessing services that include health services — to worse: being arrested, disowned by family and friends and verbal and physically violent attacks,” said Frank Mugisha, executive director of Sexual Minorities Uganda.