Sexiest transman in stardom right now.
Sometimes I wish some “trans activists” would shut up. I honestly think a lot of them (not all) make trans peoples lives harder. Yeah like saying stupid shit like “die cis scum” is going to make people want to listen to you. Do some of these “activists” know how people work? If you insult them they’re not going to want to listen to you or understand you or care. Learn some basic people skills before you become any kind of activist.
Things like that actually make transphobia worse because people are going to associate the word “transgender” with psychos who call for violence against people. I know, I know “it doesn’t mean all cis people just cis people who are scum” even with this explanation personally I don’t think anybody deserves to die regardless of what their beliefs are on anything. Over 7 billion people on this planet, we are not all going to agree on everything. Another explanation I’ve heard: ”But it’s not actually supported by any violence nobody gets attacked for being cis alone but trans people get killed for being trans”. Yes the phrase isn’t supported by actual violence but it is a violent phrase and has no place in conversations about equality. Even if the phrase is a reaction to inequalities, does telling someone to die make things any better? It makes you as bad as they are.
Videos of some of these “activists” saying the term and insulting “cissies” as this person called them have actually gone viral online and from the thousands of comments it’s clear that some people actually now think that’s what trans people are like and of course they are going to insult trans people it’s because this person is insulting them. As if we didn’t already have a bad reputation/nobody gave fuck about us already. Now this? Now as long as explaining what trans is to people when they find out about me, I now have to go “nah not all trans people say that/what they mean by it is blah blah blah”. Who the hell thought of that phrase? and thought it would be helpful? I just want to live my life. No drama, just get on with it. I don’t want to have to face the wrath from people because of what some trans person over there said. Sometimes I don’t want to be associated with this “community” it embarrasses me.
I don’t want to adopt. I want kids of my own…like, I wanna look at ‘em and be like, “ay ‘lil dude, you came from my ball sack…”
Relationships are tough, and there probably isn’t a single person on the planet who has it all figured out. We all stumble through issues with communication, jealousy, petty disagreements, and so on. However, there are some issues that are more likely to come with the territory when you are a…
Today I was walking down the street (I live in the Bronx NY and I’m a PoC FAAB) and this man looked at me and called me a sweet babe and said he would like to “hit that.” I was extremely taken aback. He was speaking to me as though I were a woman, and even thought I was dressed in a pink and…
So you were born female, you were presenting as female and yet you are shocked that someone thought you were female? If it looks like a duck quacks likes a duck then it’s a duck. How the hell is this man supposed to know what genderqueer means? He thinks you’re a woman because you look like a woman, what do you expect? And what’s a “trans* queer riot hard femme boi” and what does that even look like?

English transgender activist and law professor Stephen Whittle.
During his childhood, he discovered he was sexually attracted to both men and women, and had a strong desire to be a man, grow a beard and have a hairy chest. When he was 16, he read an article about a person who had transitioned from female to male.
In 1974, he came out as transgender after attending a women’s liberation conference in Edinburgh, Scotland as a member of the Manchester Lesbian Collective. Whittle co-founded the Manchester TV/TS group, the first support group for transgender people in the United Kingdom in 1975.
He also founded and co-ordinated the U.K.’s FTM Network, which he led until 2007. Whittle is also the founder of Press for Change, one of the U.K.’s most successful trans rights lobby groups. He has actively worked to change the U.K.’s laws and social attitudes about transgender individuals, and allowed a television special to be made about his phalloplasty surgery in 2002.
After the U.K.’s Gender Recognition Act came into effect in 2005, he got a new birth certificate and legally married his partner, Sarah Rutherford. They have four children.
That same year, Whittle was made an Officer of the Order of the British Empire for his services to transgender issues.
Born May 29, 1955.
I am embarrassed to be a transsexual. There are just too many uncomfortable situations one can find themselves in. They mainly stem from pronoun misusage or what should be some insignificant occurance in our lives. We’ve all been there before, we’re having a great day the sun is shining and then…
