• @[email protected]
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      327 months ago

      Most of the southern US won’t stone you or murder you in broad daylight though.

      Since October 1st 2023, 20 trans people in the US are known to have died from violence. Almost half of them died in the south (as defined by the US census). Are trans people in the south any safer for it happening under cover of night? Pretending for a moment none of them were killed in broad daylight (some were).

      Again, nobody is saying it excuses bigotry. Only a fucking idiot thinks bombing hospitals, schools, and civilians is going to somehow improve the lives of LGBT Palestinians (who everyone somehow neglects to give a shit about in these conversations except as a cudgel against western LGBT people).

      • PugJesus
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        7 months ago

        Since October 1st 2023, 20 trans people in the US are known to have died from violence. Almost half of them died in the south (as defined by the US census). Are trans people in the south any safer for it happening under cover of night?

        Yes, trans people in the US are safer than in Palestine. Jesus Christ.

        https://www.state.gov/wp-content/uploads/2023/03/415610_WEST-BANK-AND-GAZA-2022-HUMAN-RIGHTS-REPORT.pdf

        spoiler

        Violence against LGBTQI+ Persons: There were reported cases of violence,
        criminalization, or abuse based on sexual orientation and gender identity in the
        West Bank. OHCHR and NGOs reported Hamas security forces in Gaza harassed
        and detained persons due to their sexual orientation or gender identity. Both noted,
        however, that such cases were rarely reported, especially in Gaza, because of
        concerns about protecting the safety those involved.
        OHCHR observers reported PA security officers harassedand sometimes arrested
        individuals due to their sexual orientation or gender identity. LGBTQI+
        individuals were also victims of targeted hate crimes and violent acts. Media
        reported that Ahmed Abu Markhiya, a gay Palestinian, was killed by decapitation
        in Hebron on October 5. Abu Markhiya had been residing in Israel for several
        years under a humanitarian permit reportedly because of death threats he received
        while living in the West Bankand was awaiting approval of an asylum application
        to Canada, according to media reports. Palestinian police made an arrest and
        continued an investigation intothe killing.
        Media reported that lesbians in the West Bank and Gaza concealed their sexual
        orientation due to fear they would be killed by their families.
        The PA failed to protect members of the LGBTQI+ community. After an attack on
        members of the community at the Al Mustawde restaurant earlier in the year, the
        PA did not make any attempts to hold the culprits accountable for their action.
        Discrimination: The PA does not provide protection for or prohibit
        discrimination against the LGBTQI+ community. Homosexuality is widely
        considered to be taboo in areas under PA control and in Gaza.
        Activities associated with the LGBTQI+ community were met with strong
        opposition, and the Palestinian police often acted to prevent these activities. As a
        result of this and other discriminatory conduct, the LGBTQI+ community in the
        West Bank was driven underground and had no vocal representatives or NGOs
        willing to speak in the West Bank, according to observers. Similarly, in Gaza,
        according to observers, there was no visible LGBTQI+ community. Observers
        reported that human rights organizations in Gaza did not monitor and refused to
        address LGBTQ+ issues.
        Availability of Legal Gender Recognition: There is no legal method for
        correcting gender markers on identity documents.
        Involuntary or Coercive Medical or Psychological Practices Specifically
        Targeting LGBTQI+ Individuals: According to media reports, family members
        of LGBTQI+ individuals subjected them to involuntary or coercive medical,
        psychological, and religious practices throughout the West Bank and Gaza. Media
        reported that a Palestinian man confronted his son, age 18, after finding messages
        on the son’s mobile phone between him and another young man suggesting a
        same-sex relationship. The son claimed his father attacked him, beat him, and
        renounced him. The father forced him to meet with a cleric weekly until he
        attempted unsuccessfully to kill himself, according to the report.
        Restrictions of Freedom of Expression, Association, or Peaceful Assembly:
        The PA in cases limited freedom of expression, association, and peaceful
        assembly, although not explicitly based on sexual orientation or identity, and it
        tolerated such actions by vigilantes and armed militias. During the year, in the
        West Bank, peaceful assemblies and gatherings attended by LGBTQI+ individuals
        were disrupted. For example, the Warehouse (event space) in Ramallah was
        closed after a campaign of incitement, hate speech, and assault, which followed a
        June 17 attack on the venue and cancellation of a musical performance because the
        artist was “gay.” According to media reports, the attackers circulated a video on
        social media and, following the violent attack, targeted the performance space with
        an incitement campaign based on a false account of the events and the place.
        According to media, approximately 200,000 social media users participated,
        leaving thousands of hate-filled comments and incitement to murder (see 2.a.,
        Academic Freedom and Cultural Events).

        • @[email protected]
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          197 months ago

          Some states don’t even have LGBT hate crime legislation, and until recently (like, last year) multiple southern states didn’t. There’s no federal requirement for states to report the number of LGBT hate crimes that happen yearly. So until that change there is no concise way of answering both how many trans people died from general violence and how many from hate crimes. But anyone who thinks the answer to that is zero isn’t paying attention.

          I’m also not sure that the trans people murdered in the US get any solace from ‘only’ being shot or stabbed, or that the distinction helps anyone LGBT in the US or Palestine who is hate crimed.

            • @[email protected]
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              97 months ago

              They obviously aren’t the same. Anyone denying that the south is dangerous for LGBT people (trans people particularly) is just fucking stupid.

                • @[email protected]
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                  7 months ago

                  If it’s legal for you to piss in public restrooms in all 50 states then I’m really not interested in how hysterical you think someone who can’t do that is being.

                  Btw, here’s a story about a trans man who was arrested after being assaulted for following the owner’s instructions on which bathroom to use.

                  If you have no idea what kind of issues trans people in the US face on the regular it’s okay to just say that.

    • @[email protected]
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      27 months ago

      I think everyone even Arabs agree that the majority of people is homophobic/transphobic. Fine.

      But please state a source for people in Palestine being stoned, like at all, no matter the reason. What kind of place do you think Palestine is?

            • acargitz
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              7 months ago

              There is a huge fucking difference between a hate crime and stoning as legal punishment.

                • acargitz
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                  57 months ago

                  I’m not that person, so I won’t argue their point.

                  I am making a different point, that has to do with Palestine as a whole, not about individual criminals.

            • @[email protected]
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              57 months ago

              They weren’t stoned for being lgbtq though is the point. Israel is also homophobic and transphobic. It’s a common tactic by the IDF to kidnap and record gay people having sex so that they can blackmail them into becoming informants. I guess all of Israel all Jewish people are homophobic then? That is the logic you use. The logic of a racist.

        • @[email protected]
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          47 months ago

          Not joking at all. Don’t show me a Wikipedia article, show me a newspaper article about someone being stoned in Palestine.

          • @[email protected]
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            7 months ago

            Hamas doesn’t really do stonings, so you appear to be correct. It looks like just about every execution committed by Hamas involved a firing squad, most often performed in public.

            Hamas does torture and execute people for suspicion of being gay, though, even their own commanders.

            Free Palestine. Fuck the IDF and Hamas.

            • @[email protected]
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              17 months ago

              Yeah that was my point. It’s not that Arab societies are like super progressive and Palestinian people are suddenly angels just because they are victims of genocide. It’s just that doing stonings is an archaic practice that doesn’t exist in the Levant. Like people might be very conservative and live in authoritarian societies, but they still live in the 21st century and they don’t want that shit.

              That being said Hamas absolutely sucks, they are violent, corrupt dictators and while they currently are the biggest armed resistance against the ongoing colonization they shouldn’t have any place in a free Palestine.

            • @[email protected]
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              7 months ago

              So we’re talking about stoning people that’s allegedly happening due to violations of sharia law and you bring up a story from 2001 so probably during the second intifada about an incident involving illegal Israeli settlers.

              I wanted to assume that you maybe just don’t know better but this is just bad faith from your side.

                • @[email protected]
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                  7 months ago

                  Keep trying. This has nothing to do with stoning people as a punishment based on religious laws, for example for being trans. Which you claimed would be a common practice in Palestine. An unresolved incident involving illegal Israeli settlers during the second intifada inside the occupied West Bank has nothing to do with that. You’re the one moving goalposts, more like spreading false information and you know it.