• @[email protected]
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    8 months ago

    Not in the UK. I’ve read enough of the BBS archive and Susan’s to ugly cry sometimes at how trans people had it so easy in the late 90s- 2000s would transition in like 2 years and no one would care. I’ve been on a waitlist for 10 years and just now getting to SRS. My gf will never be seen by anyone. There’s no hope of affording anything private. We all DIY hormones ofc, but can’t DIY surgery exactly.

    In the UK hate crime is on the rise, the media tries to suppress it because they cause it. The police is also less likely to investigate it. The media are instigators, inciting hatred as much as they can and pushing boundaries, most coverage around trans issues is outright false, or in the case of the BBC transparently misleading, almost as a directed insult in some Orwellian dystopia.

    Meanwhile levels of transphobia per polls in the general public are extremely high in terms of actual support for any of our rights. Most think we shouldn’t have healthcare or use locker rooms/bathrooms of our gender.

    US is a paradise in comparison, but I could never afford to move there, all I can do is count my blessings I escaped Russia and managed to at least stick around in the UK. I do hope reps don’t win with the project 2025 over there though.

    I do not give a shit about the climate, but we must eradicate reactionaries before then out of politics or the ensuing immigration crisis will turn the average Joe fascist, and by extension his country, and then yeah, things will get even worse.

    • @[email protected]
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      68 months ago

      I mean that’s an NHS problem, not a trans problem, isn’t it? The healthcare system in the UK is messed up. You got long wait times for most things.

      • @[email protected]
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        78 months ago

        It’s a long video, but this video by Philosophy Tube explains why it’s definitely a trans rights problem, not just the broken NHS. The long wait times across the board is what makes the trans healthcare side of it so outrageous, because it’s structured in a way that takes an already bad problem (shortage of services) and makes it so much worse through gatekeeping and bureaucracy.

        Your comment also inadvertently highlights one of the especially insidious aspects of UK trans healthcare being broken and nonsense — it’s fairly common knowledge that the NHS is on its knees, so activism aimed at making trans healthcare less shit is often perceived as an attempt to “jump the queue” so to speak, which feeds into anti-trans sentiment. (To be clear, no negativity is intended towards you here, I think that unless you have direct experience of trans healthcare in the UK, it’s hard to know just how bad it is).

        I was going to give a couple of examples of the kind of gatekeeping I mean, but I’m bad at brevity; if you’re someone who watches video essays, I would strongly recommend the Philosophy Tube one above. It’s even pretty entertaining, for such a grim topic.

      • @[email protected]
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        18 months ago

        Long but not 25 years long. I got my entire ADHD sorted while I was waiting just for a surgical appt

    • @[email protected]
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      28 months ago

      I read your comment and desperately wanted to reply with something reassuring, but you’re right, it’s utterly fucked and it’s terrifying. It makes it hard to be hopeful. This is probably the opposite of “reassuring”, but I’d rather acknowledge how awful things are and be here with you for a moment than to scroll by. I’m cis, but being in community with trans folk in the UK has made it clearer than ever that none of us are free until all of us are free. Sympathy and solidarity to you, and the strength to keep resisting.