Hey, You Can Put Away Your Razors Next Month
Hair! Whether it’s on your head, your legs or your crotchular region, you’re going to have to deal…
Hey, You Can Put Away Your Razors Next Month
Hair! Whether it’s on your head, your legs or your crotchular region, you’re going to have to deal…
Liberty Lit #25: War and Peach
by carolyn & riese
Books! They are really great. You just won’t believe how great they are. You may…
Definitely Read “What Makes a Baby” To Any and All Children
When I first received What Makes a Baby by Cory Silverberg, and illustrated by Fiona Smyth, I was…
A phrase that often arises in this movement is “ni de aqui, ni de alla,” (neither from here nor there), and it speaks to the ability we seek as queer immigrants to define home as we choose, whether in a geographic sense, within our communities, or a gendered sense, within our bodies. Transnational actions such as this point to how we, as affected people, can continue to queer the narrative around migration, by rejecting the constructs of borders and citizenship and by affirming our right to simultaneously inhabit multiple homes. Through fighting to bring them home, we also fight to reconcile the multiple parts of our community that remain invisible, strewn across deserts over unmarked graves and stuffed into too-tight suitcases straining from the impossible task of simply surviving the journey.
DeAnne Smith’s Questionable At Best Asks “What’s too Jewy?”
Once again it’s time for DeAnne Smith’s totally awesome podcast Questionable at Best!
This week…
A Talk With The Fighters From The First UFC Match Between Two Lesbians
Feature Image via UFC
Five months after its first-ever female fight, the Ultimate Fighting…
Undocumented & Queer: How Lulú Martinez is Melting Borders
Lulú Martinez is fond of cats and lists her political views as “queer liberation.” A Chicago…
Six Badass Sci-Fi Women of Color You Should Know
Here at Autostraddle, we’ve covered fictional kickass heroines, hot sci fi women, fictional female…
Real-Life Sophia Bursets: Transgender Women Face a Nightmare in Men’s Prisons
The clear breakout star of Netflix’s new series Orange is the New Black is actress Laverne Cox who…
Brittani’s Video Party: A Hot Year with a Bear and Crotch Sweat
Greetings. This is Brittani’s Video Party, where I bring some of the “best” videos from all over my…
VIDEO: Unicorn Plan-It Episode 205 “Dinah Blow Your *Unicorn* Horn”
Hello cupcakes! It’s here! The moment you’ve all been waiting for! Welcome to the fifth episode of…
19 Ways Our Queer Weddings Won’t Suck
by Ali and VanessaWEDDING SEASON IS UPON US. Isn’t it wacky how the sanest of humans can go…
A Prairie Homo Does New York: Moving at the Speed of New York
A couple of days ago I stepped off the train and a middle-aged man walked right into me. I think he…
There’s been a lot of uproar the last couple of days as Tumblr has rolled out new “family-friendly" standards that seemingly block LGBTQ tags from searches. Users have complained that tags like “gay," “lesbian," “bisexual" and “transgender" are blocked from some search engines for fear that they’ll turn up NSFW content.
David Karp has since cleared up some of the confusion — basically, words like “gay" and “lesbian" are blocked by default from some mobile apps because they are frequently attached to porn, but this is only a temporary fix until Tumblr figures out another solution. The tag “LGBTQ" is still searchable in all mobile apps, but as this Autostraddle piece explains, that’s not enough.
Those of us who are left have been asked to use the moderated “LGBTQ," which could force those who don’t like or use that label to accept it as the only way their posts will get exposure. It cripples any subset of the acronym, making it that much harder for queer communities to break down the stereotypes that made “lesbian" synonymous with “hardcore girl-on-girl" in the first place.
Seeing as Tumblr is known particularly for its ability to foster strong communities, it seems counterintuitive to disable some of the most important tools for growing those communities. And with all the lip service queers give to Tumblr, one would think we might get some sort of advanced notice that our tags would be taken away. Instead, we’ve been left to ask questions in the aftermath, meaning many tempers have flared and conclusions been jumped to before Tumblr took the time to tell us what was happening. …
"Wouldn’t it be great if Tumblr users could flag their content themselves?" Abeille asks — and that’s precisely the point. Does Tumblr not trust its users, who frequently dedicate themselves to strengthening communities for everything from fandoms to social justice, to apply that same dedication to flagging content? Can we not be counted on to improve the site we value so much? And, most importantly, can we not count on Tumblr to value each of us in return?
This post happens to have been written by another recent j-school grad and one of my favorite people in the world, Kaitlyn Jakola, who will no doubt be bringing us more internet-centric queer commentary as her Autostraddle career takes off. (Follow her here!) Until then, let’s not keep quiet about this Tumblr nonsense. It’s good that they know we’re pissed off.
This examination of state/local laws is crucial because, as Michelle Alexander writes in The New Jim Crow, Federalism (the division of power between the states and federal government), was a device employed by the Founding Fathers specifically “to protect the institution of slavery and the political power of slaveholding states." In other words, white supremacy has enabled “Stand Your Ground" from day one, and day one was a really long time ago.
this is also excellent