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Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Protesting DADT, diverse GetEqual military veterans, arrested after chaining themselves to WH fence

NOTE FROM PAM: One of my co-bloggers at PHB, Autumn Sandeen was arrested during GetEqual’s military veterans protest today where they chained themselves to the White House fence, with Dan Choi. The action was about the slow-motion effort to repeal DADT this year by this administration. As I knew well in advance about this direct action, I asked Autumn to share her thoughts about what she was about to do. I’m proud of her, particularly because as a member of the transgender community, she has steadfastly stood by the progress and pain that affects LGBs, I wants that to be remembered when trans issues come to the fore, something we all know garners much less attention, and much less activism by LGBs. Autumn puts not only her military pension at risk; being arrested now subjects her to detention; being transgender, will be placed in harm’s way many will never know. Thank you, Autumn.


What Autumn told GetEqual to say about her participation in this protest for repeal of DADT.

Petty Officer Autumn Sandeen is a transgender veteran. Repealing Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell will not result in the allowing of transgender servicemembers to serve openly. Autumn Sandeen believes; however, that the transgender subcommunity is part of the broader lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) community: Issues that effect lesbian, gay, and bisexual people are LGBT community issues, so disabled, transgender veteran Autumn Sandeen is here as an intra-LGBT community ally.

Autumn’s words to me a day ago that she asked me to share with readers:

I encounter a lot points of view on the web, that being true within the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) netroots as much as anywhere else. I’ve seen lesbian, gay, and bisexual people appreciate when straight allies support their causes. I’ve also seen gay fellows get upset when non-gay people use the antigay f-word epithet. I’ve seen LGBT organizations like GLAADand The Task Force move to fully include trans people in their mission statements and their actions; I’ve found wonderful intra-community allies at the grass roots. I’ve also watched the HRC in September of 2007 go from mouthing the words of strong support for trans people’s civil rights, to by early 2008 fully supporting the version of Employment Non-Discrimination Act that didn’t include gender identity or expression protections. I’ve also read articles and comments LGBT media sites and forums, as well as on sites ran by gay bloggers, that at times have called for removing the T from LGBT, and at times have blasted GLAADand others for taking up fights over when antitrans epithets are used in media—heck, they don’t want trans issues taken up by “gay and lesbian community” at all.

But I remember what Martin Luther King Jr. said:

The good neighbor looks beyond the external accidents and discerns those inner qualities that make all men human and, therefore, brothers.

One of my communities is the lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender community. If just one subcommunity of the broader community finds an issue to be an important issue—even if that issues doesn’t affect my community or me personally—then it’s my issue too.

Repealing Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell (DADT) is an issue that will not directly effect those who identify as trans, nor will it directly effect me. If DADT were to be repealed tomorrow, lesbian, gay, and bisexual servicemembers would be able to serve openly, but trans servicemembers wouldn’t.

Currently, when a servicemember is identified by the military as lesbian, gay, or bisexual, he or she is usually given an discharge that indicates their service was honorable. Currently, when a servicemember is identified by the military as transgender, he, she, or ze is often subject to a discharge that indicates that the trans servicemember has a personality disorder. Those trans servicemembers who are unfortunate enough to be given that discharge that indicates that he, she, or ze has a personality disorder find that pedophiles are given the exact same kind of discharges indicating personality disorder.

Repealing DADT won’t change anything for trans servicemembers. They still won’t be able to serve openly; they still would be subject to discharges that indicate personality disorder.

But, the good neighbor looks beyond him-, her-, or hirself, discerning those inner qualities that make all humankind human, and therefore, siblings. Repealing Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell may not help my trans siblings, but it helps my other siblings in the LGBT community. Their issues are my issues.

“We are confident. We have ourselves. We know how to sacrifice. We know how to work. We know how to combat the forces that oppose us. But even more than that, we are true believers in the whole idea of justice. Justice is so much on our side, that that is going to see us through.”
~Cesar Chavez

So what do we know how to do regarding DADT? We knowhow to have an inside game—we have LGBT civil rights organizations lobby Congress. We know how to have a “15-minute activist” game—that is, we know to talk to our congresspeople and tell them we want DADT repealed. And, as GetEqual has begun reminding us with grassroots action, we know how to engage in the outside game of civil disobedience, with all the consequences that go with engaging in civil disobedience.

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Posted by Pam Spaulding at 04:56 PM • (3) Comments