![]() That’s not really my experience, but perhaps because I follow so many trans women as intellectual leaders on queer politics, and have more queer and trans women as friends-with-shared-politics than masculine people and I refuse to see that experience as so very unusual, because why should it be? So I’m reading this book by Shiri Eisner, and there’s a bit about how the word “bisexual” and bisexual movements are particularly conceptualized as transphobic, not that they aren’t but that they may be criticized as reinforcing the gender binary more often than “gay” or “lesbian” are. ![]() ![]() Trying this thing where when I learn a new piece of politics that may be shifting my framework, I write it down. ![]()
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