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Talking to a (generally) progressive friend about their islamophobe brainworms
  • Aside from the fact that the overwhelming majority of sexual violence is committed against Muslim people in Europe (primarily by policing and border control agents) and that in general most sexual violence is a result of intimate partner violence regardless of a person's cultural or religious background, there's something so weirdly insidious about being angry about Muslim men "bringing sexual violence" to Europe when you look at the overwhelming centuries of European soldiers bringing sexual violence to the Muslim world.

    Anyway, I have a lot of thoughts on this topic, but I think your request for Muslim feminist perspectives is absolutely the right move. So here's some recommendations, and I've added a bit of a focus on Palestine since you mentioned they were sympathetic to Palestinian liberation (including queer perspectives, which is intrinsically tied to feminism):

    Do Muslim Women Need Saving? - Lila Abu-Lughod (this one specifically addresses interventionist Western "feminism")

    Greater Than the Sum of Our Parts: Feminism, Inter/Nationalism, and Palestine - Nada Elia (look at feminist movements in Palestine, and the women's intifada)

    Palestinian Women's Activism: Nationalism, Secularism, Islamism - Islah Jad

    Strange Encounters: Embodied Others in Post-Coloniality - Sara Ahmed (this is about the way that culture creates the stranger, and touches on exactly the issue you're dealing with: a repetition of myth-building about the dangers of a specific out-group. I also recommend a lot of Sara Ahmed's other books, like Living a Feminist Life, Uprootings/Regroundings: Questions of Home and Migration, Differences That Matter: Feminist Theory and Post-modernism).

    Queer Palestine and the Empire of Critique - Saed Atshan

    Terrorist Assemblages: Homonationalism in Queer Times - Jasbir Puar (examination of the leveraging of "progressive" Western values in creating the terrorist body subject to Western violence and dehumanization, and how "feminism" was used as a primary tool in the wars on Iraq and Afghanistan)

    Embodying Geopolitics: Generations of Women's Activism in Egypt, Jordan, and Lebanon - Nicola Pratt

    Gender and Sexuality in Muslim Cultures - Gul Ozyegin

    Islamic Homosexualities: Culture, History, and Literature - Stephen O. Murray and Will Roscoe (kind of an old ethnography, but interesting nonetheless)

    Gender and Colonialism: A Psychological Analysis of Oppression and Liberation - Geraldine Moane

    Good Muslim, Bad Muslim: America, the Cold War, and the Roots of Terror - Mahmood Mamdani (this one isn't about feminism, but rather about the way that Islamaphobia has been inserted throughout western society and the shaping of western discourse on Islam. Mamdani has a lot of great books)

    Anti-Veiling Campaigns in the Muslim World: Gender, Modernism, and the Politics of Dress - Stephanie Cronin

    Veiled Sentiments: Honor and Poetry in a Bedouin Society - Lila Abu-Lughod (this one is more about getting to know the cultural feelings of womanhood in bedouin society)

    Writing Women's Worlds: Bedouin Stories - Lila Abu-Lughod

    Militarization and Violence Against Women in Conflict Zones in the Middle East: A Palestinian Case Study - Nadera Shalhoub-Kevorkian (This one is about the weaponization of sexual violence, which is an important piece of understanding how the West are the largest perpetrators of sexual violence against Muslim women, not Muslim men)

    Israel/Palestine and the Queer International - Sarah Schulman

    Even a Freak Like You Would Be Safe in Tel-Aviv: Transgender Subjects, Wounded Attachments, and the Zionist Economy of Gratitude - Saffo Papantonopoulou (quick essay on how Israeli "progressiveness" is leveraged to oppress queer Palestinians and pinkwash Israeli violence)

    Border & Rule: Global Migration, Capitalism, and the Rise of Racist Nationalism - Harsha Walia (not specifically what you were asking for, but has a lot of great information about how militarized borders are one of the largest vectors for sexual violence against women; anyone arguing about keeping certain people from immigrating is, de facto, arguing for supporting the funding of militarized borders to keep those people out, and thus adding to the amount of sexual violence)

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    Bulletins and News Discussion from September 2nd to September 8th, 2024 - We Love Our Trans Comrades - Chemicals of the Week: Estrogen and Testosterone
  • Supporting rebellion in the DRC and wanting the people of the DRC to achieve a revolutionary success is not even remotely in the same category as supporting US-backed militias from Rwanda doing mass murder and the displacement and death of the millions of people whose emancipation Cuba believed in. People aren't chess pieces in some grand strategy game. Revolution comes from the masses and is to free the masses. Revolution doesn't come from imperial militias doing murder and everyone starving and dying because the whole place is being ravaged for its mines. And there's nothing revolutionary about dismissing the deaths of the very people you supposedly believe should have a revolution as inconsequential because Rwanda has "valid reasons" for fucking killing them all.

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    Bulletins and News Discussion from September 2nd to September 8th, 2024 - We Love Our Trans Comrades - Chemicals of the Week: Estrogen and Testosterone
  • My comment was not in defense of China (though bringing up the Khmer Rouge as if that has any bearing on current Chinese foreign policy is wild), my comment is on the material benefit to the US for M23 to be attacking the DRC, which seems a rather important piece of information for understanding how a militia that is armed by the US and Israel and is attacking people to the US's benefit might be worth criticizing.

    But then you made it immediately clear that you believe in collective punishment, as if the millions of people of the DRC should continue to be ravaged by US imperialism because of some nebulous connection that they have as an entire people to the Rwandan genocide, which, frankly, is a troubling viewpoint to take.

  • Locked
    Bulletins and News Discussion from September 2nd to September 8th, 2024 - We Love Our Trans Comrades - Chemicals of the Week: Estrogen and Testosterone
  • May you expand on what reasons would validate taking weapons from the US and Israel and arming militias to attack a neighbouring nation where 7 million people are displaced and twenty years of war and have famine have resulted in millions of deaths?

    And do these valid reasons take into consideration that China became the largest stakeholder in the DRC's mineral mines about a decade ago, which coincides with the rise of said militias using US and Israeli supplied weaponry to murder people there? Or is it somehow coincidence that at a time when China is dominating the EV and green energy market (which relies heavily on imports from the DRC) and the US is openly asserting that they will crush Chinese EV and green energy markets, that US and Israeli supplied militias are just so happening to target the mining operations in the DRC?

  • Transgender vs Transexual for transfeminine people
  • Just a funny little quirk that is worth commenting on: my very argument that people are often unable to self-identify because the larger mainstream has decided that their personal identifiers are "offensive" has been demonstrated by the website's slur-filter.

  • Transgender vs Transexual for transfeminine people
  • Transgender, in its conception, was a coalitional term designed as an umbrella for all sorts of people who transgressed against cisheteronormative gender roles. This included transsexual people, but it also included crossdressers, drag queens/kings, stone butches, fairies, dykes, aggressives, removeds, and a whole slew of other identities (many of which would, in our current terminology, be considered "cis").

    It was only in the late nineties and into the early aughts that the term transgender started being viewed as synonymous with transsexual. This has led to a lot of interesting (though often inflammatory) shifts in the language used in queer communities. In the anglosphere, the language of institutionalized queer organizing gained prominence, and street-level identifiers fell by the wayside. There were lots of reasons for this: some identities were considered too niche, or too difficult to parse for cishetero audiences. For some, the terms that were symbols of self-realization in some communities were often considered slurs in others (and this is especially true of identifiers used by racialized and otherwise marginalized communities, as able-bodied, educated, wealthy white queer people became a focus for deciding which language was acceptable and which was "offensive").

    With the prominence of the coalitional term "transgender," which offered an opportunity to bridge the gap between a lot of different marginalized groups under a cohesive banner, transsexual came into a specific sort of cross-fire. On the one hand, you had a new wave of self-identified transgender people making arguments that transsexual as a term was "binary" and "reinforcing gender norms," which you may recognize as a parallel to arguments that "bisexual" as a term "reinforces the binary." (This is also a bit of a rehashing of the old lesbian movement's arguments that androgyny is the "correct" way to do lesbian feminism, and that femininity "reinforces the patriarchy." Turns out political movements are often doomed to recycle the same tired and divisive rhetoric).

    On the other hand, you had transsexual people who did struggle with accepting or understanding the larger coalitional movement, for a variety of reasons. For instance, there are transsexual people who were resistant to the idea that they could be "lumped in" with crossdressers, or queens, because (especially at the time) many people who were openly transsexual lived "straight" lives, and couldn't agree with the fact of their manhood or womanhood being conflated with queer sexual practices. There were transsexual people who considered themselves to have a medical issue unrelated to queer activism, or who desired to live lives of stealth. There were transsexual people who saw their very identity as transsexual get villainized by other queer activists as "reinforcing the binary," as though some identities could be inherently radical/more radical than others. There were transsexual people who were having their very specific transsexual needs sidelined under wider discussions of transgender activism and transgender rights.

    These were all very real and interlaced conflicts of language, the type that will come up in any coalitional organizing, by the way. Coalitions are great for getting people swinging together, but they can easily end up replicating systems of hierarchy and invisibilize the differing needs of the members within that coalition (check out Viviane K. Namaste's Invisible Lives: The Erasure of Transsexual and Transgendered People and Julia Serano's Excluded: Making Feminist and Queer Movements More Inclusive).

    This is all to say that there has been a very deep interplay of competing ideas of what it even means to be transsexual and transgender, that there is no consensus and that there can be no consensus because any consensus would at its heart replicate the very systems of assignment of identity and gender role that transgender activism erupted to combat. There is a very real effort by the bourgeois institutions of queer theory to create a containing and hegemonic ideal of queer identity that can be easily captured and consumed in the commodity market, and this has coloured the way that queer identity is understood and discussed at large. There is no "correct" term for anyone to use, and you simply cannot judge a person based on what words they use to relate to their personal experiences. Language is always in motion, and while often that motion is being directed by the institutions of power, those on the margins will always carve their own linguistic space, and it is incumbent on us to allow people the opportunity to self-describe.

  • should i quit my cushy bullshit job to go back to school to be a teacher?
  • I sort of fell into it by accident. I am the education coordinator for a small grassroots org, and as part of that I started volunteering as a tutor at a local nonprofit that teaches adult literacy. Then that nonprofit started piloting a programme to help adults get their high school diplomas (a thing that no other organization in the city helps with, and until recently was impossible for anyone over the age of 25 as they were considered to have aged out of the high school system). I tutored through the pilot year, and started helping with curriculum stuff, so when the educational authority approved the programme permanently and decided they wanted to roll it out everywhere, this nonprofit became the only place in the city adults can get their diplomas. They contracted me after that to help build the curriculum, and I've been working on that and with students ever since.

    So basically: if you're already in education, I recommend looking into whatever organizations in your area actually provide supports for adults attempting to learn. These organizations tend to be overlooked even more than the school districts, and while early childhood education and adult education are not the same, many of the skills are transferable, and a desire to actually be there is already a huge point in your favour. Lots of schools offer certifications (distance courses, diploma additions, professional development) that you can do to bridge the gap in your credentials if necessary, though depending on the organizations needs, that is not always essential to have upfront.

  • should i quit my cushy bullshit job to go back to school to be a teacher?
  • I can't say whether this would be a good decision for you to make, and I doubt anyone here could.

    However, if education is something you're passionate about, I might recommend looking into adult education to see if it's right for you.

    I love my job. It's hard. It's emotionally difficult. My students have been failed by society at every level: they are in prisons, they live in tents, they are parents, they are addicts, they have learning disabilities, they are adults who cannot read full sentences or do basic arithmetic. They are people who have had every opportunity taken from them, but they are showing up, not because parents are forcing them to, but because they want to learn and grow.

    Also, there is much less oversight about curriculum, so I have been able to build a curriculum that favours abolitionist viewpoints (which resonates, obviously, with many of my students who have been criminalized since childhood), Indigenous perspectives, queer ideas, and even Marxist teachings. Who will stop me? The schoolboards truly do not give a shit about these people and have already given up on them, and the educational authority of the state (not being specific so as not to dox myself) is not willing to invest the time and resources into actually providing and enforcing guidelines on my curriculum.

    What I do is heartbreaking, and tiring, and deeply rewarding. I just helped a woman get her high school diploma in her eighties, who was a grandmother that believed dropping out of school to work and raise her kids had meant that she would never have that opportunity.

    Not trying to proselytize, but education is truly such a powerful part of growing communities, and so if you have a feeling that it might be for you, it's at least worth looking into.

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    Bulletins and News Discussion from August 12th to August 18th, 2024 - Marshall Plan: Now As Farce - COTW: Ireland
  • The West doesn't even have "not being arrested on sight" if you're racialized. Black trans women get arrested on sight for presumptive involvement in sex work so much that they say they got picked up for "walking while trans."

    "In one American study, the largest-ever survey of transgender and gender non-conforming people, 41 percent of Black trans women reported having been arrested or jailed because of their gender identity" - Robyn Maynard, Policing Black Lives

    It's even worse if you're found with condoms on your person, that becomes "evidence" that you are engaged in sex work. So trans sexuality is inherently criminalized, as of course no one would choose to have sex with trans people if it wasn't some sort of illegal transaction.

    Truly the amount that economically secure, educated white queers are disconnected from the realities of further marginalized queer people domestically is astounding, and the fact that this disconnect allows them to position whatever colonial monstrosity they call home as being more "progressive" than the victims of imperialism that they castigate as being queerphobic is endlessly frustrating. But of course, having a vector of oppression such as queerness is seen to render them as pure victim, as completely divorced from the way they personally participate in and benefit from imperialism. As if queerness can wash away the blood that stains our hands.

    Endlessly tired of imperial core queer "solidarity" being based around nebulous demands for "human rights" that, to no one's surprise, often results in siding with the state against its enemies because they're just so backwards while people in the core are languishing in jail/detention centres and those queers abroad that are supposedly in need of saving get delivered aid missiles and IMF austerity.

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    Bulletins and News Discussion from August 12th to August 18th, 2024 - Marshall Plan: Now As Farce - COTW: Ireland
  • I love to recommend books, and so here is a smattering of books about Ireland from a variety of subjects and perspectives (largely focused on feminism as per my area of study).

    Celtic Heritage: Ancient Tradition in Ireland and Wales, Alwyn and Brinley Rees

    Gender and Sexuality in Modern Ireland, Anthony Bradley, Maryann Gialanella Valiulis

    LGBTQ Visibility, Media and Sexuality in Ireland, Páraic Kerrigan

    Outsiders Inside: Whiteness, Place and Irish Women, Bronwen Walter

    Ireland and the Magdalene Laundries: A Campaign for Justice, Claire McGettrick, Katherine O'Donnell, Maeve O'Rourke, James M. Smith, Mari Steed

    The Poor Bugger's Tool: Irish Modernism, Queer Labor, and Postcolonial History, Patrick R. Mullen

    Philosophical Perspectives on Contemporary Ireland, Clara Fischer, Áine Mahon

    Women and the Irish Nation: Gender, Culture, and Irish Identity 1890--1914, D. A. J. MacPherson

    Positioning Gender and Race in (Post)colonial Plantation Space: Connecting Ireland and the Caribbean, Eve Walsh Stoddard

    Queer Performance and Contemporary Ireland: Dissent and Disorientation, Fintan Walsh

    Gender and Colonialism: A Psychological Analysis of Oppression and Liberation, Geraldine Moane

    Dedication and Leadership: Learning from the Communists, Hyde Douglas

    The Irish Novel at the End of the Twentieth Century: Gender, Bodies, and Power, Jennifer M. Jeffers

    Contemporary Irish and Welsh Women's Fiction: Gender, Desire and Power, Linden Peach

    Literature, Partition, and Nation-State: Culture and Conflict in Ireland, Israel and Palestine, Joe Cleary

    Weaving Transnational Solidarity, Katherine O'Donnell

    Palgrave Advances in Irish History, Katherine O'Donnell, Mary McAuliffe, Leeann Lane

    Sapphists and Sexologists: Histories of Sexualities, Mary McAuliffe (not specifically Irish, but by an Irish author and it does explore lesbian desire in colonial Ireland)

    Trad Nation: Gender, Sexuality, and Race in Irish Traditional Music, Tes Slominski

    The James Connolly Reader, Shaun Harkin, James Connolly, Mike Davis (a great collection of Connolly's works including a few that are out of print or hard to find elsewhere, like Labour in Irish History though I think that's not so hard to get anymore with eBooks)

    Revolutionary Works, Seamus Costello

    A Literary History of Ireland, Hyde Douglas

    Myths and Folklore of Ireland, Jeremiah Curtin

    Early Irish Literature, Myles Dillon (also The Cycles of Kings and Irish Sagas)

    Celtic Women: Women in Celtic Society and Literature, Peter Beresford Ellis

    A Brief History of the Celts, Peter Beresford Ellis (also The Druids and Celtic Myths and Legends and A Dictionary of Irish Mythology)

    Fairy Legends and Traditions of the South of Ireland, Thomas Crofton Croker

    If you're looking for someone who is doing some really interesting scholarship on Irish indigeneity, coalition building with colonized Indigenous people globally, and preserving/resurrecting obscure and regional Irish-language terms and idioms, I recommend Manchán Magan.

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    Bulletins and News Discussion from August 12th to August 18th, 2024 - Marshall Plan: Now As Farce - COTW: Ireland
  • Ali Kadri's The Accumulation of Waste: A Political Economy of Systemic Destruction explores exactly such an economic model. He expands on the theory of waste as the primary commodity of neoliberal capital order in China's Path to Development: Against Neoliberalism and also its function as the driving force of imperial wars of encroachment in Imperialism With Reference to Syria and Arab Development Denied: Dynamics of Accumulation by Wars of Encroachment.

    I cannot recommend his work enough in understanding the way that imperialism under neoliberalism uses the production of waste as its primary mode of accumulation. War and destruction are often seen as the consequences of accumulation by resource theft, but Kadri posits that the waste itself is the commodity and resource theft is a secondary (although still desired and lucrative) goal in war. By de-reproducing labour, that is to say, by collapsing the labour time and resources necessary in reproducing labour to a single moment of liquidation, the entire value of that commodified labour is extracted at one go.

    Destruction is not a byproduct of war, destruction is the product of war, and the accumulation of wealth through waste production is an explosive industry with massive profits--and without the drawback of any value being clawed back by labour in their need to reproduce their class. It is the ultimate end of commodified "thingification" (objectification) of labour.

  • Can someone give me a run-down on whats going on in Sudan?
  • Omar al-Bashir (who has a warrant from the ICC for war crimes, crimes against humanity, and genocide in the civil war in Darfur in the 2000s) was ousted from power on April 11, 2019, following the pro-democracy December Revolution protests. The military took command.

    The Rapid Support Forces (RSF) was formed in 2013, and is comprised of the various militias that participated in the civil war and did a lot of the aforementioned war crimes. The RSF has extensive gold mining operations in Darfur.

    After Bashir's ouster, army chief Burhan named Hemeti (the head of RSF) his deputy.

    The protests continued, and on June 3, 2019 RSF massacred over 100 people.

    The Forces of Freedom and Change (FFC), which is a coalition of civilian protest organisations, was granted limited civilian governance until October of 2021, when another military coup put the country back into martial rule.

    Negotiations between the FFC, the RSF, and the Sudanese Armed Forces (SAF) to settle on a power-sharing agreement between the militias, the military, and the civilians, began with international interests vying to impose their preferred power structure on Sudan.

    However, the people of Sudan, desiring a complete toppling of the military regime, formed over 5000 Resistance Committees (RCs) across the country. As crackdowns on mass protests continued, the negotiations for power-sharing came to a halt as the relationship between the RSF and the SAF broke down, unable to agree on how the RSF would be integrated into the military.

    The RSF captured the airport in Khartoum on April 15, 2023. From there they began to siege Khartoum, and the fighting between the RSF and the SAF has continued until now. More than eight million people have been displaced, more than 13000 people have been killed, and more than 18 million are facing acute hunger as famine conditions ravage the country and the fighting continues.

    The RSF and the SAF are both backed by imperialist interests (the US has alternately sided with both factions, and are often opposed to KSA who also has backed the conflict). Ultimately, the goal seems to be to keep the country at war to maximize the waste commodity and open it up to complete dominance once both sides are weakened. The FFC has also largely been ineffectual after their limited governance run (and even then they sold the people out to the SAF/foreign intervention enough that the grassroots RCs sprung up to replace them as the dominant vehicle for expressing civilian discontent).

  • Bulletins and News Discussion from August 5th to August 11th, 2024 - LGBT - COTW: Iraq
  • The Zionist entity has been doing biological warfare since its inception, check out Benny Morris and Benjamin Z. Kedar's Cast Thy Bread: Israeli Biological Warfare During the 1948 War. The article pieces together documents on Operation Cast Thy Bread, which poisoned wells across Palestine and Egypt and caused a typhoid epidemic. Ben-Gurion even ordered the poisoning of wells in Cairo as a pre-emptive strike.

    Egyptian Prime Minister Nuqrashi Pasha told the UN Mediator for Palestine, Count Folke Bernadotte, at their meeting on 29 May, shortly after the Egyptian capture of the two Arab Platoon operatives outside Gaza contaminating ‘the water supply of the Egyptian army’ with ‘vials of cholera and dysentery germs’: ‘The Egyptian Government held the Jewish authorities responsible for this since this sort of thing had to be planned inasmuch as it was not possible to buy germs for such purposes in retail shops. Scientists and high officials had to be involved… [in] such well-planned acts.’

  • [mentions of transphobia and sexism] Support Pours In For Boxer Imane Khelif After She Is Wrongly Called ‘Biological Man’ & ‘Trans’
  • I think a lot of queer theory pushed by english-american academia spends too much time focused on dividing "sex" and "gender" in an entirely arbitrary and hegemonic way, perpetuating the idea that sex has some essential biological immutability, which not only holds back trans theory, it completely erases intersex theory.

    So, for anyone interested in reading a bit more about intersex:

    Challenging Lesbian Norms: Intersex, Transgender, Intersectional, and Queer Perspectives, Angela Pattatuchi Aragón

    Queer (In)Justice: The Criminalization of LGBT People in the United States, Joey L. Mogul, Andrea J. Ritchie, and Kay Whitlock

    Beyond Gender Binaries: The History of Trans, Intersex, and Third Gender Individuals, Rita Santos

    Normal Life: Administrative Violence, Critical Trans Politics, and the Limits of Law, Dean Spade

    Captive Genders: Trans Embodiment and the Prison Industrial Complex, Eric A. Stanley

    Sex/Gender: Biology in a Social World, Anne Fausto-Sterling

    Sexing the Body: Gender Politics and the Construction of Sexuality, Anne Fausto-Sterling

    Expanding the Rainbow: Exploring the Relationships of Bi+, Polyamorous, Kinky, Ace, Intersex, and Trans People, Brandy L. Simula, J.E. Sumerau, and Andrea Miller

    Intersex, Catherine Harper

    Intersex Matters: Biomedical Embodiment, Gender Regulation, and Transnational Activism, David A. Rubin

    Bodies in Doubt: An American History of Intersex, Elizabeth Reis

    Contesting Intersex: The Dubious Diagnosis, Georgiann Davis

    The Spectrum of Sex: The Science of Male, Female, and Intersex, Hida Vilori and Naria Nieto

    Queer Embodiment: Monstrosity, Medical Violence, and Intersex Experience, Hilary Malatino

    Body Guards: The Cultural Politics of Gender Ambiguity, Julia Epstein and Kristina Straub

    Fixing Sex: Intersex, Medical Authority, and Lived Experience, Katrina Karkazis

    Critical Intersex, Morgan Holmes

    Intersex Rights: Living Between Sexes, Nikoletta Pikramenou

    Transgender and Intersex: Theoretical, Practical, and Artistic Perspectives, Stefan Horlacher

  • [mentions of transphobia and sexism] Support Pours In For Boxer Imane Khelif After She Is Wrongly Called ‘Biological Man’ & ‘Trans’
  • I recommend checking out Alice Domurat Dreger's Hermaphrodites and the Medical Invention of Sex, which is one of the earliest works in the anglo world exploring intersex from a social perspective, and digs historically into the process through which western medical fields developed an entirely arbitrary distinction to biologically "sex" men and women, and how that was propelled into dominant social ideology.

    Despite her more recent anti-trans talking points, back in the day Dreger's work was a really big part of the developing intersex community (by community here I mean community as in, people beginning to "come out" as intersex or meet other intersex people and share their experiences and form an identity as intersex as opposed to the previously near-universal intersex experience of living in secret shame, believing you had an embarrassing and unique medical condition, or being left entirely in the dark as doctors performed surgeries on you and either never told your parents or your parents chose to bury it and lie to you).

  • KNEECAP feat . GRIAN CHATTEN - BETTER WAY TO LIVE (Gaeilge Hip-Hop)
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    KNEECAP feat . GRIAN CHATTEN - BETTER WAY TO LIVE (OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO)
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    MuinteoirSaoirse [she/her] @hexbear.net
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