In August, a doctor in Toronto received an unexpected email.
It was from a stranger in Maryland, telling the doctor that
one of the transgender patients whose care he was overseeing “regularly attacks
women on social media who have a lesbian feminist polititical [sic] opinion.
That is, he harasses us and establishes fake Twitter accounts to harass us…
Query whether this is the kind of experience one must have to ‘live as a
woman.’ - you bully other women?”
The clinic supervisor quickly wrote back, “Please be aware
that our centre finds this email in violation of ethical practice, our
anti-oppression principles, and offensive to trans* persons.”
That email came from Cathy Brennan, an attorney, radical
feminist, and lesbian activist who is well known for her beliefs that
transgender women should be considered men. In the name of feminism, Brennan
has advocated against a UN policy that aims to protect transgender people from
discrimination.
The Canadian patient, Emily Horsman, had been sparring with
Brennan on Twitter, mocking and publicly questioning Brennan’s brand of
feminism, and even setting up a Cathy Brennan parody account. In recent years,
Brennan has become known for taking online arguments into real-world territory.
She has contacted a trans woman’s employer, posted the OK Cupid dating profiles
of trans women, and contacted the mother of an outspoken supporter of
transgender issues.
“There’s something about Internet culture where everyone
thinks everything they post just exists in this Internet bubble,” Brennan
explained to the website Bustle in a recent interview. “And I’m not of that
generation. If you are going to send me abuse, I am going to find out who you
are.”
The people who are affected by Brennan’s activism clearly
disagree.
“This kind of conduct is incredibly dangerous to trans
women,” Horsman says. “We are a very marginalized minority and violence occurs
to us constantly. Outing us in a workplace or school environment could easily
damage our future and put us at risk for physical violence.” Horsman made the
email to her doctor public because she believes “Brennan stepped past a
boundary that even other radical feminists think is rash.”
The marginalization of transgender women in feminism is not
new, but the decades-long debate has taken on new dimension thanks to social
media and the ease of finding strangers’ personal information online.
In her 2013 article “Unpacking Transphobia in Feminism” on
the website The TransAdvocate, writer Emma Allen explained that radical
feminists such as Brennan assert that trans women are a problem because they
perpetuate the idea that “gender roles are biologically determined rather than
socially constructed” is the antithesis of feminism. “Radical feminists claim
that gender oppression can only be abolished by getting rid of the whole
concept of gender and they view transgender people as a threat to that ideal,”
Allen wrote.
Janice Raymond’s 1979 book The Transsexual Empire: The
Making of the She-Male shaped the notion that transgender rights have no place
in feminism. Max Wolf Valerio reflected on the book in his 2006 memoir The
Testosterone Files: My Hormonal and Social Transformation from Female to Male,
writing that “Raymond postulated that all transsexuals were dupes of the
patriarchy, ‘mutilating’ their bodies in order to live out stereotyped sex
roles instead of changing those roles through a rigorously applied program of
radical feminism.” Other feminist writing of the 1970s also hit on the
anti-transgender ideas. Mary Daly’s 1978 book Gyn/Ecology compared the drag
queen “phenomenon” to blackface and included assertions such as: “The surgeons
and hormone therapists of the transsexual kingdom… can be said to produce
feminine persons. They cannot produce women.”
Drawing from that history, Brennan, fellow attorney
Elizabeth Hungerford, and other modern-day feminists continue to actively
question the inclusion of trans people in women’s spaces. These feminists refer
to themselves as “radical feminists” or “gender critical feminists.” In 2008,
trans women and trans advocates started referring to this group as
“trans-exclusionary radical feminists” or TERFs, a term Brennan considers a
slur. Cristan Williams, managing editor of The TransAdvocate and founder of
Houston’s Transgender Centre and the Transgender Archive, asserts that TERFs
should be recognized as a hate group by the Southern Poverty Law Centre. (To
that end, a petition calling for the Southern Poverty Law Centre to track the
activities of the Gender Identity Watch website as a hate group was recently
circulated and garnered nearly 7,000 signatures.)
This debate is not just feminist-theory inside baseball.
Though outspoken, politically active trans-exclusionary radical feminists are
relatively few in number, their influence on legislation and mainstream
perceptions of transgender people is powerful and real.
For example, transgender people were able to readily obtain
government-funded healthcare prior to 1980. That year, Janice Raymond wrote a
report for the Reagan administration called “Technology on the Social and
Ethical Aspects of Transsexual Surgery” which informed the official federal
position on medical care for transgender people. The paper’s conclusion reads,
“The elimination of transsexualism is not best achieved by legislation
prohibiting transsexual treatment and surgery, but rather by legislation that
limits it and by other legislation that lessens the support given to sex-role
stereotyping.” In her book Transgender History, Susan Stryker says that the
government curtailed transgender access to government social services under
Reagan, “In part in response to anti-transgender feminist arguments that
dovetailed with conservative politics.”
These days, trans-exclusionary feminists’ voices seem louder
than ever, as they use social media to amplify their message. If you start
following feminist conversations online, at first it seems like there’s a
chorus of individuals running websites that speak out against the dangers of
accepting transgender women as women. But then it becomes clear that numerous
websites and Twitter feeds come from just one person: Cathy Brennan. On her
personal site, Brennan lists her numerous blogs: Gender Fatigue (which recently
published a tirade about Janet Mock’s gender that would make Piers Morgan
blush), Pretendbians (devoted to documenting transgender people who “oppress
Lesbians”), Name the Problem (which posts mug shots of alleged sex offenders
along with write-ups about trans activists), the aforementioned Gender Identity
Watch (which posits to watch "legal developments that erase female
reality"), and a private site called Fauxmosexuals.
And while it's hard to confirm who is behind social media
accounts, transgender advocates suspect Brennan has been involved with tweeting
from at least six Twitter handles, some of which have been suspended:
@ActualDykez, @NametheProblem,
@MmePierreDugay, @JenderFatigue, @orgwomenslib, and @PegasusBug.
Advocates also believe Brennan is involved with the Organizing for Women’s
Liberation Facebook page, which has gained 100,000 “likes” for its mix of
cheerful posts (like celebrating Zora Neale Hurston’s birthday) and commentary
about how transgender women are men, often linking to Brennan’s sites.
Personally, I’m not above jumping into online arguments.
After seeing Brennan’s e-mail to Emily Horsman’s doctor, I angrily tweeted that
“Brennan is scum.”
After my initial outburst, the writer in me became
interested in understanding more about the role TERFs plays in feminism today.
I e-mailed Brennan requesting an interview. We exchanged nearly a dozen
e-mails—and I made it clear that my politics do not align with hers. Soon,
Brennan found my angry tweet and told me to never contact her again.
I figured I would eventually wind up on one of Brennan’s
sites, but I didn’t think it would happen so quickly. Within a few hours of her
email about my tweet, there I was on Gender Identity Watch. Later, I was
mentioned in a separate post, where I was lumped in with other writers critical
of Brennan who, the post asserts, demonstrate “that third wave feminists have
no ethics when it comes to advancing their anti-woman, homophobic agenda.” The
idea that I’m homophobic and anti-women was upsetting, given that I’m a queer
woman.
The belief that transgender women are “not really women”
sadly finds traction among many people—not just conservative politicians, but
some mainstream feminists. However, few people use the tactics of the most
outspoken trans-exclusionary activists to promote their ideas.
“TERFs do a good job of colonizing feminist discourse by
framing their hate as a ‘feminist critique of gender,’ thereby representing the
hate that follows as the feminist position. It’s not,” says TransAdvocate
editor Williams.
The problem is that when trans-exclusionary feminists speak,
a lot of people listen. Take the Michigan Womyn’s Festival for example which
takes place each August and attracts performers like Le Tigre and the Indigo
Girls. Since its inception in 1976, the feminist music festival has asked that
only “womyn-born-womyn” attend. In 2006, the festival’s founder, Lisa Vogel,
defended her stance, writing, “As feminists, we call upon the transwomen's
community to help us maintain womyn-only space, including spaces created by and
for womyn-born womyn.”
In response to a 2013 petition opposing the festival’s
ongoing exclusion of trans women, Vogel continued to defend the festival’s
stance, writing, “The Festival, for a single precious week, is intended for
womyn who at birth were deemed female, who were raised as girls, and who
identify as womyn. I believe that womyn-born womyn is a lived experience that
constitutes its own distinct gender identity.”
This idea that "women-born-women" need space away
from transgender women impacts not just music festivals, but legislation. As
policies promoting the creation of gender-neutral bathrooms continue to gain
traction around the country, Brennan and other trans-exclusionary feminists
have devoted time to arguing that trans women are somehow dangerous to
cisgender women in public restrooms. In 2011, Brennan and Elizabeth Hungerford
teamed up to write a letter to the United Nations urging opposition to laws
prohibiting discrimination based on gender identity and gender expression. In
her interview with Bustle, Brennan explained her thinking:
“Our whole lives we are raised very much aware of our
vulnerability as women, so I don’t understand why when a man says he’s a woman,
all of a sudden the penis is no longer (an issue)… Men rape women and girls in
bathrooms all the time, so it’s not like women’s concerns about that aren’t
reasonable. And these laws are broadly enough written to justify the entry of
anyone into a (women-only) space.”
To imply that trans women pose a threat to cisgender women
in restrooms is misinformation that preys on unfounded fears. I searched for
news stories in which transgender women have assaulted cisgender women in
bathrooms, coming across nothing but news stories detailing the attacks on
transgender women themselves.
Indeed, if anyone is in harm’s way in public restrooms, it’s
trans people, who can face abuse or assault no matter which restroom they
choose. A 2011 survey of 6,000 transgender Americans found that more than half
of the people surveyed reported experiencing harassment in public
accommodations, including bathrooms, restaurants, and hotels. This is why there
has been a push to make public restrooms a little safer for those who are
trans, including legislation in Philadelphia that requires all new or renovated
city-owned buildings to include gender-neutral bathrooms. There’s also
California’s School Success and Opportunity Act, which mandates that
transgender students must be included in school activities on the basis of their
identified gender rather than their assigned sex. This extends to using
bathrooms and locker rooms consistent with their gender. The Transgender Law Centre
heralded the law, which passed in August 2013, as a change that will save
lives.
In contrast to that positive, progressive narrative around
gender-neutral bathrooms, there was one story about the “dangers” of trans
girls in girl’s restrooms that popped up in the fall. In October, the
right-wing organization Pacific Justice Institute altered press that a
transgender teenager was harassing students in the girls’ restroom at Florence
High School in Colorado. The Daily Mail, Fox Nation, and at least one local TV station
picked up the story, with Fox posting a short piece including the misgendering
line, “When parents complained, school officials said the boy's rights as a
transgender trumped their daughters' privacy rights.” While some outlets
referred to the minor as
Jane Doe, Gender Identity Watch posted the name of the teen
in question, describing her as a “male student” who “claims to be transgender.”
It turns out, the story was false. The TransAdvocate's
Cristan Williams quickly called the school’s superintendent to inquire about
the story and was told that the story was based on the complaint of one parent
who was opposed to allowing the transgender student to use the girl’s restroom;
there were no actual reported incidents of harassment.
After this incident, the teen’s mom said her daughter was
struggling with harassment because of the story and was in such bad shape, the
family had her on suicide watch.
It's clear from this example that trans-exclusionary
feminists don’t just spend their days making waves on social media—some get
mainstream attention and hold successful, powerful positions. Cathy Brennan has
used her skills as a lawyer to threaten legal action against a magazine that
published an article critical of her. She also served as a liaison to the
American Bar Association’s Commission on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity
from 2008-2009. She appeared on Roseanne Barr’s weekly radio program
specifically to discuss her radical feminism and beliefs on female biology and
gender identity. Trans-exclusionary feminists Janice Raymond and Mary Daly
worked as well-respected, tenured professors. Like-minded feminist thought
leader Sheila Jeffreys is still an established professor in Australia. Her
forthcoming book Gender Hurts, from major publisher Routledge, will argue that
“the ideology and practice of transgenderism” is harmful.
This approach to feminism is beyond troubling—it’s downright
dangerous, considering that the transgender community is one of the nation's
most vulnerable. According to a 2011 study from the Anti-Violence Project, 40
percent of anti-LGBT murder victims were transgender women. A report from the
National Transgender Discrimination Survey conducted by the National Gay &
Lesbian Task Force and the National Centre for Transgender Equality, found that
transgender people faced double the rate of unemployment of the general
population, with 63 percent of the transgender people surveyed reporting they
experienced a serious act of discrimination that majorly affected their ability
to sustain themselves. These numbers are even worse for trans people of colour,
especially trans women of colour, the deaths of whom have been deemed a
"state of emergency."
For these reasons, the concern these feminists elicit among
trans women is serious. Trans blogger and womanist Monica Roberts has been
blogging as TransGriot for years, discussing the intersections between race and
the violence experienced by trans women of colour and writing about the
importance of knowing black trans history. Roberts routinely writes about how
closely white privilege is tied to radical feminists’ ability to incite scorn
toward a vulnerable minority and not only get away with it, but remain
gainfully employed in the process.
Activist Prerna Lal told me recently that Cathy Brennan’s
name alone strikes fear in trans people. Brennan’s brand of trans-exclusionary
radical feminism activism is “a witch-hunt against people who look like me,”
Lal said.
One woman who has been on both sides of this feminist debate
is Dana Taylor.
Taylor has an interesting history: she is transgender and
used to identify as a Transsexual Separatist—someone who thinks society will be
better off if trans people don't participate in spaces meant for women. She
signed Brennan and Hungerford's letter to the UN, calling for the removal of
trans protections. She also ran a website where she actively fought the
transgender community. It’s a time in Taylor’s life that she is now deeply
ashamed of.
“When you are a bigot, you don’t know it. Your thinking is
very biased and you think that your cause is noble. You are totally unaware of
the actual harm you are causing to others with your agenda,” says Taylor. “I
caused real harm to a lot of my brothers and sisters and didn’t even realize
it.”
In 2012, Taylor started to become disillusioned with the
trans-separatist crowd. She got wrapped up in a messy online debate over what
is now referred to as the Cotton Ceiling, stemming from a Toronto Planned
Parenthood workshop that aimed to “explore the sexual barriers queer trans
women face within the broader queer women’s communities.” Brennan and her
allies sent out a press release asserting that the workshop is was a
"misogynistic, anti-woman, anti-lesbian" effort and that “trans women
are not entitled—individually or as a class—to have sex with ‘cis’ lesbians, as
they call us.” In short: trans women were painted as potential rapists.
“I saw my sisters being dragged through the mud and publicly
shamed and humiliated for being who they are,” Taylor says.
Taylor pulled away from radical feminism after the debacle
and began trying to make amends to her community, though her past continues to
haunt her. Brennan and Raymond recently contacted Taylor’s employer and in the
days since, Taylor has been diagnosed with PTSD and General Anxiety Disorder.
“When someone is in your face all the time constantly
talking about your genitalia and sexuality, telling you that you are not a
woman, you are a man, and robbing you of your right to have autonomy over your
own existence, it can cause severe personal problems. And I want to state that
I have caused this kind of pain to my own community,” Taylor says, noting that
41 percent of all trans people attempt suicide. "Demonizing, dehumanizing,
humiliating, and body shaming this vulnerable community increases that number.
Pushing transphobia as acceptable is literally dangerous.”
It has been said that feminism has failed the transgender
community. It’s hard to disagree. Trans women have been weathering a storm of
hate and abuse in the name of feminism for decades now and for the most part,
cisgender feminists have failed to speak out about it or push against it.
I’ve found it difficult myself to speak out against
trans-exclusionary radical feminism. Was it my place to jump in? Would I be
perceived as trying to speak for trans women? What would happen to trans women
if a bigger spotlight was shined on TERFs?
Intensifying these concerns was a comment that writer Flavia
Dzodan of Red Light Politics recently made on a blog post about Brennan called
“Naming the Problem."Dzodan echoed what trans activist Sophia Banks has
routinely discussed on Twitter: To bring up Brennan in any way can have the
effect of just making her double down on her activism. Dzodan went on to say
that this mechanism makes it even more difficult to expose her, writing, “If we
do, we are tangentially contributing to the violence. If we don’t, we are
complicit in it,” Dzodan wrote.
Despite these seemingly overwhelming challenges, it seems
the tide is turning. People in queer communities are demanding that the
silencing of trans women be addressed. Cisgender feminists are speaking out
about Brennan’s activism. Radical feminists like Julie Bindel are distancing
themselves from trans-exclusionary groups. Healthcare is becoming more accessible
for trans people, including the removal of health exclusions. Workplace
discrimination bills are being expanded to encompass gender identity and as
discussed previously, gender-neutral bathrooms are becoming law. “Transphobic”
is now in the Oxford English Dictionary and even Facebook now has the option to
set your gender to “custom.”
Though change has been far too slow and painful, trans
pioneer Autumn Sandeen, who was the first to be officially recognized by the
Pentagon as a transgender service member, expresses hope that transphobia is
becoming less acceptable.
“Every major gay-rights organization includes trans people
in their mission statements. Trans people are more public than ever before and
the media is moving beyond telling transition stories. Even though we’ve
experienced so much hate from certain feminists, the real support is coming
from feminist and queer circles,” Sandeen said. “Transphobia is no longer
acceptable in the name of feminism, so while people like Brennan are free to
express their anti-trans sentiments and meet with like-minded feminists while
excluding trans women, there is now a cost for expressing those viewpoints.”
A recent piece written by feminist icon Gloria Steinem
reflects this slow progress. Steinem was long considered transphobic because of
the stance she took in writing about professional tennis player Renée Richards,
who transitioned in the 1970’s. Steinem’s 1983 book Outrageous Acts and
Everyday Rebellion cited Janice Raymond’s work and discussed how transsexuals
“mutilate their own bodies.”
In October 2013, Steinem penned a mean culpa of sorts for
The Advocate, writing:
“I believe that transgender people, including those who have
transitioned, are living out real, authentic lives. Those lives should be
celebrated, not questioned. Their healthcare decisions should be theirs and
theirs alone to make. And what I wrote decades ago does not reflect what we
know today as we move away from only the binary boxes of ‘masculine’ or
‘feminine’ and begin to live along the full human continuum of identity and
expression.”
Trans women have been saddled with the responsibility of
taking on trans-exclusionary feminists for far too long—but it’s not their
issue to deal with alone. Cisgender feminists, such as myself, have to make it
clear that our feminism loves and supports trans women and that we will fight
against transphobia. As Williams said, it’s time to expose trans-exclusionary
feminists for who they really are.
“I’ve often wondered
what their [radical feminists’] end game is. Do they really believe that
they’re going to cause thousands of companies and hundreds of towns to roll
back trans protections?” Williams asked. “TERFs were the first to politically weaponries
the trans-bathroom meme back in 1973 and they pioneered the end of trans
healthcare in the 1980s. It's high time that 40 years of focused, unrelenting
hate be pulled into the light of day.”
Tina Vasquez is a staff blogger at In The Fray and an
associate editor at Black Girl Dangerous. You can follow her on Twitter @TheTinaVasquez.
Text illustrations are by Michelle Leigh.
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