Existence Is Resistance: Trans Visibility & Queer Activism Today
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概要
This week on Queer 101, Hugh and I are marking International Trans Day of Visibility — not just as a celebration, but as a call to action.
We start with some wins, because joy and recognition matter. Our Queer History Book Club is thriving. Caro De Robertis was just named a National Book Awards judge (as she should), and Tourmaline’s biography of Marsha P. Johnson is now a Lambda Literary Award finalist. We’re also shouting out new queer and nonbinary bookstores opening in Brooklyn. Our stories are being written, read, and protected. That’s powerful.
But visibility isn’t just about being seen. It’s about being safe. It’s about being resourced. It’s about being free.
So we dig into what queer activism actually means right now.
It’s not just marches and megaphones. It’s art. It’s organizing. It’s infiltrating systems that weren’t built for us. It’s making sure working‑class queer and trans people have healthcare, housing, food, safety, and job security — not just rainbow branding once a year.
We talk about rallies like Tax the Rich and the Doll Walk, and we look back at ACT UP to remember that activism has always been bold, strategic, and deeply intersectional. We connect history — from Oscar Wilde to today — and remind ourselves that queer existence has always disrupted systems of control.
And then we get honest about what we’re facing.
Anti‑trans policies — ID restrictions, healthcare bans, sports bans, Supreme Court cases — are not random. They’re connected. They’re about autonomy. About bodies. About who gets to decide who we are.
We break down:
- The myth of trans athlete “advantage”
- Olympic bans and sex testing backlash
- Double standards in football safety
- How sponsorships and capitalism silence activism
- Food and housing as human rights
- Birthright citizenship parallels
- Class versus caste — and why that matters to queer liberation
Because on International Trans Day of Visibility, we have to say this clearly:
Visibility without protection is vulnerability.
Visibility without policy change is performance.
Visibility without action is not enough.
We close by highlighting organizations doing real work — Gender Liberation, Black Trans Liberation, and Free to Be Youth — and by urging continued action beyond today.
Trans people have always been here.
Queer people have always organized.
And our visibility has always been political.
Get Involved. Check out these amazing organizations
Gender Liberation
Black Trans Liberation
Free to Be Youth Foundation
Follow us at:
- @peppermint247
- @hughoryan
- @pridehousemedia
Write to us at:
- questions@queer101podcast.com