Author: Maëlys McArdle

  • Dare to dream

    Dare to dream

    The makeup of trans and non-binary people is rapidly changing.

    In 2019, the median income of trans and non-binary Ontarians was approximately $30,000. While that’s still significantly short of the $50,000 that the median over 16 made in the province, it is double the 2009 figure of $15,000.

    We are living in a special moment; the trans analogue of Pride’s inflection point where it went from amplifying the vilified in the 1970s to throwing change-makers under the bus as to comfort small politicians and large corporate donors. Turning away from those with the least security to centre those with the most is easy when it’s just the latter in the room, but nothing kills imagination more than doing just that.

    So, do you dare to dream?

    It’s a tall order. In this climate, security is accorded to those who are deemed most respectable, the ones who are closest to fit into existing social norms. It values the software developer over the sex worker; the cis-passing trans man over the trans woman with a beard. Those let into the club are further predisposed towards assimilation as the more one has, the more there is to lose by ruffling feathers. So the very security that is had by liberating ourselves from puritanical values also incentivizes us to pretend like they’re perfectly fine.

    It doesn’t have to be like that.

    Dare to dream.

  • Safe(r) cities for trans folks

    Safe(r) cities for trans folks

    On September 22nd, I’ll be participating in a panel called Safe(r) cities for trans folks. From the description:

    Trans, gender diverse and 2SLGBTQ+ communities are subjected to experience significant violence in Ottawa and across Canada. Despite progress on 2SLGBTQ+ rights, the everyday realities of many in our communities are largely unchanged.

    What role can our municipalities play in helping to prevent, challenge and address anti-trans violence?

    Certainly I have my fair share of stories of harassment in Ottawa. As do all of my gender diverse acquaintances.

    There is no simple remedy. However, here are some ideas to marginally improve conditions.

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  • Some good news

    Some good news

    Trans and non-binary people are the latest targets for those struggling with the visibility of the world’s beautiful diversity. Seeking a return to the homogeneity that only lived in the precipices of their ignorance, they’ve singled out gender diverse individuals as the wedge issue that will bring them back.

    I’ve been documenting transphobia for a decade, and one thing that’s notable in that time is the shift from implicit exclusion and ad-hoc incidents to mainstream organized movements demanding explicit exclusion. Yet also evident in that time is the extent to which trans and non-binary individuals have blossomed. Here’s some positive changes of the past ten years.

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  • A wave of anti-trans orgs

    A wave of anti-trans orgs

    Since 2019, organizations devoted to opposing rights for trans people have emerged across the world sharing these characteristics:

    • Their name includes the words ‘female’, ‘women’, ‘gender’, ‘sex’ or ‘gay’
    • …but they disregard all issues faced by these groups
    • …their messaging is instead entirely devoted to curtailing the acceptance of trans and non-binary people
    • …they offer no services or assistance to those they purport to represent
    • …they oppose legislation that would benefit their alleged base, such as the LGB Alliance opposing a conversion therapy ban
    • …they promote sexist/homophobic evangelicals and white nationalists that share an intolerance of gender diversity

    Their activism is not about lifting women or gay people up, it’s about putting trans and non-binary people down and doing so in a way that also victimizes the very people they’re claiming to protect.

    LGB Alliance celebrating the death of a bill that would have banned forcing people to undergo treatments to make them straight/cis.
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  • Newfoundland

    Newfoundland

    This past week, my partner Jamie and I have been visiting the northern half of the Avalon Peninsula in Newfoundland. We landed in St John’s where we procured a rental car and stayed in a cute Airbnb.

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