I'll take a wild guess here and say that's not what the marriage papers read, possibly even the church ones.
I'll take a wild guess here and say that's not what the marriage papers read, possibly even the church ones.
So it's wrong, it happens.
I have a feeling that 25 years ago or whatever, when she married her wife, she didn't identify as a woman.
Yep just like this judge passed the wrong veredict
see what I mean?
No, i don't.
I'm pretty sure that's the correct usage of the word.
I know.
Say ok if you agree you're retarded.
Well ok then.
See I can do that too
This is about 50% hilarious. or 100% depending on your standing about LGBTCISNORMATIVEBINGBANG
Years ago, in a darkened parking lot in the middle of the night, Kathy Padilla would meet with fellow transgender people who sought support from one another in a society that treated them like outcasts.
How things have changed since then for transgender men and women in America, who have made great strides in recent years toward reaching their ultimate goal: to be treated like ordinary people. On Tuesday, they won another victory when a Massachusetts judge became the first to order prison officials to provide sex-reassignment surgery for a murder convict, saying it was the only way to treat her gender-identity disorder.
The ruling marked the latest milestone in the increasing visibility of a class of people once roundly derided as freaks or used as a punch line.
"Now there are transgender delegates at the Democratic National Convention," said Padilla, a 55-year-old transgender woman from Philadelphia who has been an advocate since 1984. "And a number of transgender people have been invited to the White House."
In recent years, more than a dozen states have revised anti-discrimination laws to include transgender people, giving them hate-crime protection and providing rights as basic as restroom access. Transgender officials have helped raise the movement's profile by winning elective office in city halls, landing coveted appointments in the White House and, yes, sending delegates to political conventions.
The Massachusetts court ruling, though, shines a light on what many advocates view as the worst form of discrimination still faced by transgender people: lack of access to medical care.
Read more: http://www.beaumontenterprise.com/ne...#ixzz25pz1lPAD
Actually I think it'll be pretty funny yet sad if the Transgender community is embracing a movement started by a convicted murderer.
That's a pretty fucked up Rosa Parks you have there.
lol
Have you forgotten how to read?
Sound it out like a big boy
lol