An Intersectional Feminist Committed to Social Justice and Inclusion

Tag: LGBTQ+

Into the Binary They Go: Anti-Trans Legislation Harms Intersex Children

Intersex Flag, Photo Credit: Katie Rainbow, courtesy of Pexels

Anti-trans legislation makes it legal to conduct unnecessary surgery on intersex children.

On March 30, 2022, SB AZ 1138, one of the many legislation preventing trans children from accessing healthcare, was signed into law by Arizona Governor Doug Ducey. While this law, makes it illegal for minors to have gender reassignment surgery, there is an exception made for those who have a “sex development disorder including an individual with external biological sex characteristics that are irresolvably ambiguous.” A more preferred term over “sex development disorder” is intersex. Rather than operating out of a medical necessity, this legislation in Arizona and other legislation in several states, allows medical providers to operate on intersex children for the sole purpose of fitting them into the sex binary by assigning them male or female. It has been proved that sex is non-binary and that this surgery is harmful on both a physical and emotional level.

Idealization of the White Masculine Gay Male: The Latinx Protagonist in Love, Victor is Not Enough to Fix Love, Simon’s Mistakes

Hulu, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons

The beginning of the new Hulu show Love, Victor exposes the privileges and criticisms of its film predecessor, Love Simon. In the first scene Victor Salazer (Michael Cimino) is sitting on his bed scrolling through Simon Spier’s (Nick Robinson) Instagram. He then messages him angrily saying “Screw you!” making Simon acknowledge the privilege of happiness Simon has with his boyfriend and accepting parents that Victor feels is not attainable for him. Simon is white and from a middle class liberal family while Victor is Latinx and comes from a religious more conservative family. Originally from Texas, Victor moved to Georgia to attend the same school, Creekwood High School, Simon attended a few years earlier. Unlike living in the wealthy part of town like Simon, Victor moves into an apartment with his two younger siblings Pilar (Isabella Ferrerira) and Adrian (Mateo Fernandez) and parents Isabel (Ana Ortiz) and Armando (James Martinez). Unlike Pilar, Victor is open to a new experience at a new school in order to figure out who he is.

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