On the Invisibility of Trans People
Nov. 16th, 2004 09:04 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
"There will not be a situation that could cause embarrassment," she added.-- an article on the new "see through your clothing" machines at Heathrow
"There will not be a situation that could cause embarrassment," she added.-- an article on the new "see through your clothing" machines at Heathrow
(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-16 02:08 pm (UTC)(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-16 02:55 pm (UTC)Alice had her SRS few weeks ago. Upon going thru airport screening to travel home to recuperate, the new "see thru clothes" x-ray system picks up a rectangular mass in her pelvis region. She’s nervous and her body structure aspects that suggests questionable gender status. The TSA security staffs have their flags go up. A standard pat down reveals nothing. A TSA watch supervisor is not comfortable with the x-ray images and the whole feel of the situation. Alice is taken to a more private holding area, while her scheduled flight leaves without her. In the private holding area a nurse is called and a cavity search is performed on the nearly hysterical Alice, the inspection reveals Alice’s plastic “surgical stint.”
(no subject)
Date: 2004-11-17 12:37 am (UTC)It would be a different kind of embarassing for a trans person than for anyone else. Quite frankly, I'd be more worried about trans people and airport security in queer-phobic nations that do things like arrest people for 'falsifying' their sex in order to get married. Not naming any names.