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#multigender – @aph-japan on Tumblr

(((I Will Outlive)))

@aph-japan / aph-japan.tumblr.com

Chai * (*"Kari" in DigiAdvs & 02 fandom; close friends may use another particular name). THEY/THEM. {JEWISH} + AUTISTIC&G.A.D + Disabled ABOUT + FAQ. (READ BEFORE Interacting extensively/directly on my posts) DIGIMON (ADVENTURE/02/Tri/Kizuna/2020/"02 Movie"). Cardcaptor Sakura/TRC/CLAMP. Bishoujo Senshi Sailor Moon (+ Crystal). Yu-Gi-Oh (DM.) Pokemon (anime/games/rgby/gsc+hgss/rse+oras/ Zelda. Kagepro/Vocaloid. Utapri. Kingdom Hearts. Professor Layton. K [Project]. Madoka Magica. Miraculous Ladybug/PV. +more! READ MY RULES & FAQ BEFORE INTERACTING ship list / permissions / other/past blogs * This blog's (and all of my other blogs') r18+ (or r18+ implied) content is now tagged #r18! However, please note it is infrequent on all of my blogs! *
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starryjoy

So, it seems like multigender people are now slowly becoming the focus of hate from exclusionist groups, which I can only assume happened because these groups felt forced to have to respect multigender people for a few months as the website's opinion of them was that they were cool, and now these bigots are finding each other and, claiming that it is in order to "protect other trans people", are shitting on the "fagdykes" around.

What I want to say is this: for the love of everything that is good, if you find a post that is claiming that one specific kind of generic trans person is hurting another kind of generic trans person, actually think critically about said post.

  • Did this imagined person have to be a kind of trans person? Would there be a reason as to why op would like you to think certain trans people hate all other trans people?
  • Do these certain trans people really find any advantage in hating other trans people? Do they have any reason to do so? Or are they also under the same societal oppression that hurts them for the same reasons as other trans people?
  • Do *you* find any advantage in hating these people? Or are you two under the same societal oppression that hurts both of you, and hating these people serves no purpose to anyone but our oppressors to keep us divided?

Stay strong out there everyone. We gotta stick together.

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i don't really see a lot of support for genderfluid people, so here's to every genderfluid person

here's to every genderfluid person whose gender changes throughout the day or day by day, here's to every genderfluid person whose gender rarely changes, here's to every genderfluid person who identify as gays and lesbians, here's to every genderfluid person who have just a few genders, here's to every genderfluid person who has many genders, here's to every genderfluid person who identifies with other terms like multigender, genderqueer and nonbinary, here's to every genderfluid perso with weird genders, here's to every genderfluid person who's never a man or a woman, here's to every genderfluid person who refuses to "simplify" their identity for everyone else.

every genderfluid person is amazing, and experiencing fluidity in gender and presentation is a beautiful way to walk through life

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Finally, an informational post on genderqueer identity!

(Image description: ten square images with blue, white, and lavender gradient backgrounds; every image has a border across the top and bottom with a thin black line framed by a black diamond on each side and every image also has black text.

1) Large centered text that reads “A Brief Introduction to Genderqueer History and Identity”, below that is the instagram handle “@genderqueer.positivity”

2) “Genderqueer is a term that was created in the mid-1990’s to cover a wide range of Queer experiences of gender, as well as marginalized gender identities and expressions. In its earliest usage, "gender queer” was a term for those who were Queer specifically because of gender, rather than sexuality.“

3) "The earliest usage of "gender queer” comes from the April/May first edition of the zine GenderTrash From Hell, edited by Xanthra Phillippa Mackay.“ Below this is a quote from page 19 of the zine reading "gender queers & gender outlaws are what we & only we are, since lesbians & gays seem to think that queer means lesbian/gay (& sometimes bi) only”.

4) “The terms "gender queer” and “gender trash” would appear in another set of zines two years later, the In Your Face newsletters published by Riki Anne Wilchins. It’s unclear if Wilchins drew inspiration from the GenderTrash zines, or if she created these terms independently; however, she claims to have coined the term “genderqueer” and she is the one most commonly credited with creating and defining the term.“

5) A quote that reads "I coined the term “genderqueer” back in the 1990s in an effort to glue together two nouns that seemed to me described an excluded and overlooked middle: those of us who were not only queer but were so because we were the kind of gender trash society couldn’t digest.” Smaller text below attributes the quote to Riki Wilchins, from an advocate.com article titled “Get to Know the New Pronouns: They, Theirs, and Them”

6) A second quote that reads “It’s about all of us who are genderqueer: diesel dykes and stone butches, leatherqueens and radical fairies, nelly fags, crossdressers, intersexed, transexuals, transvestites, transgendered, transgressively gendered, intersexed, and those of us whose gender expressions are so complex they haven’t even been named yet.” This quote is also attributed to Riki Wilchins and comes from the first edition of a gender activism newsletter called In Your Face, published in Spring 1995.

7) “Today, Genderqueer is both an umbrella term and a specific gender identity label. As an umbrella term, Genderqueer still covers a wide range of Queer experiences of gender. As the basis for a gender identity, Genderqueer can be used as a label by any person who feels that their gender is best described as Queer, or anyone who actively chooses to Queer their own gender identity and/or expression.”

8) “Genderqueer is used by some individuals to describe having a gender identity outside of the male/female binary. However, it is also possible to have a binary or binary-aligned gender and be Genderqueer. Genderqueer can be used as a stand-alone label or as one of multiple gender-related labels used by an individual.”

9) This slide has text along the bottom that says “This is the Genderqueer pride flag; this version was created by Marilyn Roxie in 2011.” Above that is a square image of a Genderqueer pride flag on the left side; the flag has three stripes of the same width: a lavender stripe on top, a white stripe in the center, and a chartreuse green stripe on the bottom. To the right of the flag is text which describes what each color represents. Lavender represents “queerness and androgyny”, white represents “gender neutrality and genderlessness”, and green represents “genders unrelated to the binary”.

10) The last slide has a stock photo in the top/center of the image; in the stock photo a person stands on a staircase with beige walls and a white ceiling in the background, holding a large genderqueer pride flag up to a natural light source which isn’t visible in the picture, the person wears khaki pants, but otherwise can’t be seen from behind the flag. Below the stock photo is text that reads “Genderqueerness is radically inclusive, deeply personal, fiercely political, and beautiful.” After the sentence is the outline of a black heart emoji.)

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