Friday, November 30, 2007
Trans rocker endures setbacks and tragedy
November 2007
GENESIS P-ORRIDGE AND LADY JAYE |
To say that 2007 has been a challenging year for the pioneering and influential band Psychic TV is an understatement.
The gender-blurring band released its first album in over a decade, “Hell is Invisible ... Heaven is Her/e,” and has since faced setbacks, financial difficulties and discrimination on their most recent concert tour.
But it was the sudden and tragic death of one of the group’s core members, Lady Jaye, that brought the band to a halt.
The group was founded in 1981 by singer and artist Genesis P-Orridge, whose former band, Throbbing Gristle, helped to forge a sound that would evolve industrial music along with bands like Kraftwerk and Einstürzende Neubauten.
Psychic TV was an artier, more experimental progression of the industrial sound, where P-Orridge incorporated psychedelic rock into the mechanical sounds she had helped to create.
The group remained dormant after the mid-’90s, when P-Orridge decided to focus more on art and spoken-word projects. It was during this time that she met her soul mate, Lady Jaye, and began exploring what they would come to refer to as “pandrogyny.”
PSYCHIC TV Photo: Dan Mandell |
“Lady Jaye and I first met in New York in 1993,” P-Orridge said. “When we got married in 1995, I was the bride and Lady Jaye was the groom. From the minute we met, we were always cross-dressing with each other. It was very intuitive, I had found someone who was prepared to follow me in my fantasies and explorations no matter where I went. That natural attraction between us developed into thinking why we enjoyed being more like each other. We started to dress the same and do our hair and makeup the same. We decided that we wanted to explore our attraction to that process more deeply. We started to use cosmetic surgery and all the other modern technologies to physically look more like each other and that would become a third being, a third consciousness that we call the pandrogyn: the positive androgynous person.”
The two lovers further demonstrated their dedication to the concept of pandrogyny when they simultaneously received breast augmentation surgery on Valentine’s Day 2003. P-Orridge, who now identifies as female, explained some of the nuances of pandrogyny.
“We don’t want to change gender,” she said. “We want to include both genders. We started to look at creation legends from different cultures. We discovered that most creation myths originally stated that human beings were hermaphrodite and that the divine state of union is the hermaphrodite. The process of existence is the reclamation and reunion of male and female into one new being which we call the pandrogyn.”
P-Orridge and Lady Jaye were living in New York City when a friend of Lady Jaye’s, future Psychic TV drummer Morrison Edley (of the Toilet Boys) convinced P-Orridge to give the then-dormant band another listen.
“I realized that I did like listening to those songs,” she said. “They were pleasurable in and of themselves. We decided that we would do one gig and see what would happen and it was in New York in 2003. It was in the middle of a big blizzard but it was completely packed. That made me understand that there is a very strong fan base that care very much for what we represent to them.”
The enthusiastic response led the newly reformed band (featuring Lady Jaye singing on live samples) to do a European and North American tour in 2004 and head back into the studio in 2005 to record “Hell is Invisible ... Heaven is Her/e,” which was released in July.
The tour to support the album was fraught with setbacks and controversy. In August, the band was scheduled to perform Anderson’s Fifth Estate in Scottsdale, Ariz., which had made headlines last year after the owner banned transgender patrons. Apparently, owner Tom Anderson was unaware that Psychic TV had transgender members.
Transgender advocates planned to picket and crash the concert, but Psychic TV opted to move the show to a different venue to avoid a violent confrontation and the appearance of endorsing the club’s policies. (The club owner has since changed his policy and now allows transgender patrons.)
A planned European tour in October had to be cancelled after the band discovered that the tour’s organizers had misled them about the number of shows booked and that they would end up losing money on the trek.
The band was gearing up for a tour of the East Coast when tragedy struck. Lady Jaye collapsed and died Oct. 9 in her home in Brooklyn from a previously undiagnosed heart condition.
Jaye’s sudden passing was devastating to the band, and especially to P-Orridge, whose life was extraordinarily intertwined with Jaye’s.
“We were together for 14 years and because we were so fortunate that we tended to make money doing creative work of our own, we spent every minute of every day and year together,” she said. “Our intellectual life was an ongoing dialogue between ourselves about pandrogyny, evolution and identity. Every single aspect of my personal life was fully integrated with Lady Jaye.”
Psychic TV canceled all tour plans for the rest of the year until they can sort out their future.
“We really weren’t sure at first what we should do,” P-Orridge said. “Even now, when we have had offers to do concerts — we were offered to play with Bjork in Mexico City this month — we agreed that if we looked behind us and she’s not there, it’s going to be really hard. At the same time, luckily, she’s left a legacy of a great number of samples for what she’s already created and what she was working on for new songs. So we will be able to play again. It’s just going to be a very emotional situation for a while. Everyone in the band agreed we would wait until after the New Year before we’d start to get specific.”
P-Orridge said that Jaye’s spirit lives on, at the very least, in her art and idea, which she intends to continue on with.
“I don’t usually use the word ‘I’ anymore,” she said. “I’m training myself to say ‘we.’ Pandrogyny was fantastic when Lady Jaye was alive but since she passed on, we’ve received several very strange paranormal messages and phenomenon that suggest she’s still active in whatever the other dimension is that we travel to. So while emotionally it’s terribly difficult for my person to even function right now, intellectually, the pandrogyn is now two spirits and two different dimensions and one body. So we’re going to carry on changing my body to still look more and more like Lady Jaye’s.” . . .
Library of Congress Can Be Sued for Discriminating Against Transgender Veteran, Says Federal Court
WASHINGTON, November 28, 2007 (ACLU) – Rejecting the federal government’s attempt to throw out a transgender veteran’s sex discrimination lawsuit against the Library of Congress, a federal judge ruled today that the case can go forward.
The American Civil Liberties Union brought the lawsuit in June 2005 on behalf of 25-year U.S. Army veteran Diane Schroer who was offered a job as a senior terrorism researcher but was later told she was not a “good fit” after her future boss learned she was in the process of transitioning from male to female.
“After putting my life on the line for my country for 25 years, I couldn’t believe that I could be refused a job that I was told I was the most qualified for solely because I happened to be transgender,” said Diane Schroer, a former U.S. Army Special Forces Officer who specialized in fighting terrorism.
“But today’s decision makes me proud that I served a country that values equality and fairness.”
After retiring from the military, Ms. Schroer, who had been hand-picked to head up a classified national security operation while serving as an Airborne Ranger qualified Special Forces officer, applied for a position with the Library of Congress as the senior terrorism research analyst.
Soon after she was offered the job, which she accepted immediately.
Prior to starting work, Ms. Schroer took her future boss to lunch to explain that she was in the process of transitioning and thought it would be easier for everyone if she simply started work as female.
The following day, Ms. Schroer received a call from her future boss rescinding the offer, telling her that she wasn’t a “good fit” for the Library of Congress.
In its motion to dismiss, the government argued that Title VII, which protects against sex discrimination, does not protect transgender workers.
The court rejected this argument, ruling that the fact that Ms. Schroer is transgender does not bar her from bringing a sex stereotyping claim.
The court said: “Title VII is violated when an employer discriminates against any employee, transsexual or not, because he or she has failed to act or appear sufficiently masculine or feminine enough for an employe.” the court ruled
“Today the court sent a very clear message that employers can be held liable when they make decisions about whom to hire based on stereotypical views about gender as opposed to merit,” said Sharon McGowan, a staff attorney with the ACLU’s Lesbian Gay Bisexual Transgender Project.
“Employers, including the government, are now on notice that discriminating against transgender workers may land them in court.”
The court put off for a later day the question of whether Title VII’s ban against sex discrimination also bans discrimination based on gender identity.
However, the court did reject the government’s contention that laws barring sex discrimination are limited to a person’s chromosomal configuration.
The court explained: “It is well-established that, as a legal concept, ‘sex’ as used in Title VII refers to much more than which chromosomes a person has.”
LINK
Schroer v. Library of Congress - Case Profile ... from ACLU website. |
Trans Woman’s Library Lawsuit Moves Forward
Diane Schroer will get her day in court. The Library of Congress originally hired the military veteran as their top terrorism researcher. After hearing that Schroer - then David - planned on becoming a woman, the Library refiled her application in the trash can.
Schroer and the ACLU promptly filed a discrimination suit against the Library of Congress. The government attempted to dismiss the case, saying that federal law doesn’t protect trans folk and, therefore, they can discriminate all they want. A federal court, however, disagreed and said the case can move forward. Wouldn’t it be hot to see the government fucked by a trans woman?
New Poll Shows Hillary Leading Among LGB Voters
In a new survey released by Hunter College, Hillary Clinton leads all Democratic candidates in support among lesbian, gay, and bisexual (LGB) Americans. According to the poll, Hillary leads with 63 percent, 41 points ahead of the next candidate.
"I’m honored to have the support of so many in the LGB community," said Clinton. "Together, we can end the divisiveness of the past seven years and change the direction of this country so that we embrace the full diversity of our nation."
The poll also found that 72 percent of LGB likely voters consider Senator Clinton a supporter of gay rights. As President, Hillary will also work to end discrimination in adoption laws, sign hate crimes legislation and ENDA into law, and put an end to the failed policy of Don't Ask, Don't Tell. She will work to make sure that gay and lesbian couples in committed relationships have the same rights and responsibilities as all Americans. . . .
POV, Critique, Opinion: Proposed Sex-Ed Lessons for D.C. Schools Said to Falsely Claim Homosexuality Innate
WASHINGTON, D.C., November 28, 2007 (LifeSiteNews.com) - D.C. Public Schools’ proposed health learning standards would fail a true-false test, since many of the guidelines presented in the new standards are wrong and harmful to D.C.’s youth, according to an ex-gay advocacy group which testified before the D.C. Public School Board today. The School Board held its hearing today to listen to public comments on the new sex ed guidelines.
According to Regina Griggs, executive director of Parents and Friends of Ex-Gays & Gays (PFOX), the proposed teaching standards on sexual orientations excludes information on ex-gays; incorrectly implies that homosexuality is innate; and presents the viewpoint that gays, lesbians, bisexuals, and transgenders lead a healthy and normal lifestyle without including ex-gays in that mix.
The standards will introduce the concept of “gender identity” to sixth graders, which will include transgenders, transvestites, and cross-dressers. “This standard introduces transgenderism as perfectly normal and natural, even though ‘Gender Identity Disorder’ is classified as a mental disorder by the American Psychiatric Association,” Griggs said.
Grace Harley, an African-American and former transgender, testified on behalf of PFOX that the new proposed standards, in addition to being factually flawed, do not adequately reflect the values of the predominately African-American and Hispanic student populations that the D.C. public education system serves.
According to PFOX, thousands of men and women make a personal decision to leave homosexuality each year. Not including ex-gays in the discussion of sexual orientations amounts to viewpoint discrimination, according to the group. “The ex-gay community deserves tolerance and equal treatment,” said Griggs. “The public schools of the Nation’s Capital should not promote some sexual groups (homosexuals, bisexuals and transgenders) while censoring others (ex-homosexuals). Yet the standards will teach students that it is normal to change your gender (transgender) but not normal to change your unwanted same-sex attractions (former homosexual).”
PFOX is a national organization which supports families with a homosexual child, advocates for the ex-gay community, and educates the public on sexual orientation. It is especially active in working to eliminate negative perceptions and discrimination against former homosexuals. . . .
Remembering the T in LGBTQ
by Jack Harrison
This month, Georgetown University Pride is organizing a week of programming themed issues as well as issues of gender norms and expectations. But why is specific programming necessary for these groups when everything that Pride does is meant to apply to the entire LGBTQ community, which clearly includes the ‘T’?
There are examples of why this is necessary everywhere in the queer world—perhaps and, perhaps most notably in the form of the Employment Nondiscrimination Act that recently passed in Congress with the blessing of the Human Rights Campaign, the nations largest LGBT civil rights organization. The act is meant to protect against bias in the work place, but the provisions on sexual orientation (that would have done the same for gender identity and expression) were removed .
GU Pride is trying to correct past injustices and contemporary failures, at least in our microcosm of the far greater movement, by using this week as the beginning of a serious push to build a Georgetown community that is more inclusive of sexual and gender minorities and allies representing not only all queer identities, but also of diverse racial, ethnic, religious, and socio-economic backgrounds.
I grew up on the back of a small mountain outside of Chattanooga, Tennessee and attended six years of all-male Christian school, during four of which I was open about my homosexuality. The picture that this may evoke in terms of the bigotry I faced is more extreme than my actual experience. I come from an exceedingly supportive home and always surrounded myself with socially liberal people, and find that geography actually plays less a role than one might think. My city and school situations posed problems for me as a homosexual male, but I never witnessed hate violence of the caliber we have seen on this campus this semester. The important thing about what I did go through before coming here, though, is that I have not been discriminated against and hated because of my sexuality, but rather because of my femininity—though the two have been unfairly conflated by many an aggressor.
What I do in the privacy of my bedroom is of little concern to most people. The real issue lies in how uncomfortable it makes people that I, along with countless others, do not fit neatly into the box labeled “man” and exhibit all the behavioral expectations that go along with it, which is, ultimately, a more minor version of the identical problem faced by the transgender community.
I find it is ridiculous when activists on both sides of the line call for a split between these two causes. As if it weren’t enough that a man loving another man is, in its base, a transgression of gender roles, a substantial group within the transgender population identifies sexually as other than straight (from bisexual transmen, natural born females who identify as men, to butch women who live complex lives between transmen and lesbianism) and a substantial portion of sexually queer people exhibit examples of gender non-normativity (from screaming queens to androgynous lesbians and cute, spunky gay boiz).
The problem arises from people’s assumptions of the lines that divide us. Heterosexual cross-dressing men worry that people will believe them to be gay; transsexuals fret that genderqueers playing with their expression will cause people to take their largely static identity less seriously; gender-normative homosexuals often feel held down by stereotypes of butch lesbianism and femme homosexuality. The goal of this week is to emphasize the importance of engaging with individuals and emphasizing who they feel they are over how they are perceived.
Gender theorists Gordene MacKenzie and Paisley Currah describe the term ‘transgender’ as referring to a “gender galaxy.” So do all of us represent specific interactions of the various elements of our identities, and only through exploring those can we begin to get a clearer picture of who we are. . . .
TSA plan could make travel particularly unsafe for some
Ina Fried
Major air carriers are opposing a Transportation Security Administration plan to collect the birth dates and genders of airplane travelers, along with their full names, saying the added data collection will create needless hassles.
While the new data collection could add to the annoyance of air travel for the masses of air passengers, the move would pose a special challenge for those of us for whom the question of gender is more complicated than checking one of the two boxes.
Now, I fly a lot. And while some people may see me as female, and others as male, the fact of the matter is that almost no one looks at the gender written on my driver's license. It's there, but right now, the only time it is being checked is when a screener double-checks that the name matches the one on the ticket. Besides, most people use their eyes to determine gender and only if they are particularly confused, will they look at such documentation.
But adding gender to the screening process is bound to make life difficult for many transgender people. Within the transgender community are people who appear opposite their legal gender, but haven't--or can't--change their legal gender.
In some states, a legal gender change is a relatively straightforward process, while other states demand proof of medical intervention such as surgery or hormones, options that many transgender people cannot afford and some would just rather not pursue. A few states, such as Ohio, where I was born, won't let someone change their birth certificate at all, no matter what steps they take. Federal agencies like the Passport Agency and the Social Security Administration have their own rules, which can be more stringent than state rules. So that means some people may have a drivers license that says male, but a passport that says female, or vice versa.
I'm all for making the skies safer, but security for all should not come at the expense of making an already vulnerable group even more likely to be singled out for harassment. I hope that, in addition to making sure the benefits of any changes outweigh the costs and hassles, that the TSA privacy folks also looks into making sure that the system provides for the safety of those of us with complicated genders. . . .