All posts by GayFriendschat.com

Wanted: Economic Equality for the Gender Diverse Community

Wanted: Economic Equality for the Gender Diverse Community
Every minority group aspires to social equality, and the gender diverse (a.k.a. transgender) community is no different. Gender diverse persons want the same rights and opportunities as every other citizen: Not special rights or special treatment, but equality in every area of life. No more, no less.

No one deserves to be marginalized or denied their rights simply because of who they are, who they love or how they express their gender. Social equality, including both legal equality and lived equality, is a worthy goal for every person. Everyone warrants the opportunity to build a good life and to work hard to pursue their dreams. Nevertheless, what many fail to recognize is that, particularly for minority groups like the gender diverse, there can be no social equality without economic equality. For a large percentage of the gender diverse community, employment is a struggle — and without a way to earn a living, economic equality will remain little more than a far-off, seemingly unattainable goal.

That is a tragedy for society on a number of levels. Generally speaking, gender diverse workers tend to be skilled, talented people who make excellent employees when provided the opportunity to work. Employers who discriminate against the gender diverse are depriving their organizations of strong contributors and are surrendering a competitive advantage in the global war for talent. Meanwhile, gender diverse workers are being forced to experience the trauma of rejection, economic insecurity and a lack of employment opportunity — not because of an inability to contribute, but because of their gender status.

Recent studies, including “A Broken Bargain for Transgender Workers” and “Injustice at Every Turn: A Report of the National Transgender Discrimination Survey,” tell us that gender diverse persons report unemployment at twice the rate of the population as a whole. For gender diverse persons of color, the rate is four times the national average. More than one in four gender diverse employees have lost a job due to workplace discrimination, and more than three fourths have experienced some type of discrimination or harassment on the job. Treatment like this is certainly not conducive to long-term employment. In fact, many trans workers have reported changing jobs to avoid discrimination or the risk of discrimination at work.

When someone cannot achieve economic equality through gainful employment, the consequences are predictable. If you have no job, you have no income. If you have no income then you can’t afford food, a home, a car, a phone, health care, or other things that most of us would consider necessities to maintain a decent standard of living. When you don’t have the necessities of life, it’s not much of a stretch to imagine that you might become desperate — and desperate people often do desperate things.

According to the National Center for Transgender Equality, extreme levels of poverty due to unemployment lead one gender diverse person in eight to become engaged in underground economies like sex and drug work. People do what they must in order to survive. As we might imagine, mental and physical health often suffer when one has no way to make a living. Homelessness is a common experience for such persons. Due to economic inequality, gender diverse persons deal with depression, alcoholism and drug abuse at a startlingly high rate in comparison to the rest of society.

Also, and saddest of all, the “Injustice at Every Turn: A Report of the National Transgender Discrimination Survey” indicates that 41 percent of gender diverse persons have attempted suicide. This is nearly nine times the national average for the general population.

So, this is what happens to gender diverse people who cannot achieve economic equality because they suffer discrimination in the workplace. Their hope of social equality is essentially extinguished. The dream of a better life through employment and a living wage dies. The dignity afforded by meaningful work fades away. As the cold, hard reality of poverty closes in, the desperation factor increases exponentially until few, if any, options appear to remain. Is it any wonder that homelessness, hunger, a diminished sense of self-worth, chronic depression, addictive behaviors and suicide are at such high levels among this population?

We can do better than this — and we must. Gender diverse people are human beings of innate worth and intrinsic value. They deserve the same rights as every other citizen under the law. That includes the right to employment based on merit and the ability to do the job. While some statutes and state/federal laws have been put in place to protect workers against discrimination on the basis of gender identity, high unemployment and economic inequality remain extensive throughout the gender diverse community. There can be social equality until that untenable situation changes.

As with most complex social problems, there is no quick fix or easy answer. Remedies usually tend to be as multifaceted as the problems themselves. Solutions are often incremental rather than immediate. However, there are some efforts we can pursue to address these difficult circumstances — and as a society, we owe it to ourselves to get this done. It harms everyone when a segment of the population is placed into a dire economic situation that is not of their own making. Conversely, and as the cliché reminds us, the rising tide of employment and economic opportunity can lift all boats. Here, in no particular order, are a few suggestions for improvement.

• Educate, educate, educate. When people become more aware of the gender diverse phenomenon, they begin to realize that trans persons pose no threat to anyone. It’s more difficult to discriminate once the fear of “difference” dissipates and we realize that we’re all just people here.

• Put organizational non-discrimination policies in place that prohibit discrimination on the basis of gender identity and gender expression.

• Support and mentor gender diverse workers. Help equip them with the skills necessary to gain employment, build careers, and achieve economic equality.

• Actively recruit talent from within the gender diverse community. That talent is out there waiting to be discovered.

• Recognize the staggering scope of the economic equality crisis for the gender diverse community. Resolve to keep it in mind and encourage your organization to help by seeking out, recruiting, hiring, training, and retaining gender diverse talent.

Social equality is attainable for the gender diverse community, but only if the economic inequality problem is addressed and solved. When that happens, trans persons will be able to assume a legitimate role as significant contributors to their employers and as assets to the larger society.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

www.huffingtonpost.com/vanessa-sheridan/wanted-economic-equality-for-the-gender-diverse-community_b_7044852.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Empire's Cookie Lyon Brings Betrayal and Revenge to 'Sesame Street' on SNL: VIDEO

Empire's Cookie Lyon Brings Betrayal and Revenge to 'Sesame Street' on SNL: VIDEO

Cookie

SNL guest host Taraji P. Henson sends Sesame Street into chaos when she pays a visit as Empire ex-con and aspiring music mogul Cookie Lyon, who will stop at nothing to get what she wants.

Find out what happens when Cookie the monster meets Cookie Monster,
AFTER THE JUMP


Andy Towle

www.towleroad.com/2015/04/empires-cookie-lyon-brings-betrayal-and-revenge-to-sesame-street-on-snl-video.html

Hillary Clinton Announces Run for President: VIDEO

Hillary Clinton Announces Run for President: VIDEO

  2016_clinton

Hillary Clinton has officially launched her bid for the White House, opening a campaign website emblazoned with the quote, “Everyday Americans need a champion. I want to be that champion.” A Facebook page also went live.

She repeated the quote in a video in which she announced, “I’m getting ready to do something too. I’m running for President.”

Clinton adviser John Podesta made the announcement earlier  in an email to donors and supporters on Sunday afternoon in which he said there would be a formal kickoff next month.

Watch the video, AFTER THE JUMP


Andy Towle

www.towleroad.com/2015/04/hillary-clinton-announces-run-for-president-video.html

Hilary Swank Says Transgender Acceptance Has 'A Long Way To Go'

Hilary Swank Says Transgender Acceptance Has 'A Long Way To Go'
This was a different kind of acceptance speech.

Hilary Swank, who won an Oscar for portraying a murdered transgender teen in 1999’s “Boys Don’t Cry,” says acceptance of transgender people has progressed somewhat.

“I think we’ve taken strides since that movie,” she said Thursday on “The Meredith Vieira Show.” “We have a long way to go.”

“It’s astonishing to me that we are here in 2015 and there are so many issues that need to be looked at and handled and we shouldn’t dictate who people should love,” Swank elaborated. “Let people love people.”

The issue of transphobia has emerged in the headlines lately. Transgender teen Taylor Alesena committed suicide after allegedly being bullied by classmates.

On the White House website Wednesday, senior adviser Valerie Jarrett wrote a post calling for a ban on conversion therapy, ABC News noted. The letter was in response to a transgender youth who committed suicide in December after being forced into the practice.

Watch Swank’s interview above.

— This feed and its contents are the property of The Huffington Post, and use is subject to our terms. It may be used for personal consumption, but may not be distributed on a website.

www.huffingtonpost.com/2015/04/12/hilary-swank-transgender_n_7049850.html?utm_hp_ref=gay-voices&ir=Gay+Voices

Chad Allen Says Goodbye to Acting, Public Life, and His Fansite in Reflective Video: WATCH

Chad Allen Says Goodbye to Acting, Public Life, and His Fansite in Reflective Video: WATCH

Allen

Actor Chad Allen, a former teen actor with more than three decades in the profession who rose to fame on Dr. Quinn: Medicine Woman and went on to appear in dozens of shows including St. Elsewhere, Highway to Heaven, Star Trek, the Next Generation, and Dexter, published a video this week in which he bid good-bye to his fansite and said he’s leaving the profession of acting for a more private life.

As many will recall, Allen was forced out of the closet in 1996 during Dr. Quinn when a tabloid published photos of him kissing another man. After coming out, Allen made it a point to get involved in LGBT activism, and said he plans to continue to do so. He also fully embraced his sexual orientation on screen, portraying Donald Strachey, a gay detective in a series of TV movies, and played a young gay addict who is placed into an “ex-gay” Christian retreat to be “cured” of his homosexuality in the drama Save Me.

“I’ve been focusing on my education and working as a clinical psychologist, which is something that I’m super excited about and I feel like it will give me an opportunity to take my life experiences and my passion for well-being and human growth and particularly my passion for helping young gay people grow in a healthy, confident way and I’ll be able to effect the world in a slightly different way. I like to think of my work as an actor and my work in psychology as being kind of similar. They’re both human behavior. One’s an artistic perspective and this one a scientific.”

Added Allen: “I plan on being much less public, finishing my doctorate in clinical psychology, writing, working in private practice and maybe teaching some. And getting to finally try living somewhere besides New York and LA! obviously I’ve been tied to those because of the business.”

Watch the video, AFTER THE JUMP

We wish Chad well in his future endeavors!


Andy Towle

www.towleroad.com/2015/04/chadallen.html