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Notes from Syracuse

by: eastsidekate

Thu Jul 09, 2009 at 19:49:47 PM EDT


(Additional Information:

Facebook Page: Justice For Latiesha Green

Courtroom Twitter Feed: @TLDEF (Transgender Legal Defense & Education Fund)

For Bloggers/New Media Reporters/Legacy Reporters: The Lateisha Green Murder: Violence Against Transgender People Resource Kit

GLAAD's/glaadBLOG's Andy Marra and TLDEF's Michael Silverman will be covering the Latiesha Green Hate Crime Murder Trial from the courtroom.   - promoted by Autumn Sandeen)


This is difficult for me to write about, and I really hope I strike the right tone. I really, really appreciate the hard work that everyone in the trans, LGBTQ communities and our allies have placed on publicizing the senseless violence that takes places against trans people. I love that much (albeit not all) of the discussion has kept the humanity of the victims front and center. Nobody deserves to be murdered, much less to have their identity stripped away after the fact by the media, and by defense attorneys looking to justify the taking of a life. Lateisha Green’s murder troubles me deeply. I’m a transsexual woman and a mother. Talking about the taking away of somebody’s child because of who they makes me nauseous. I won’t be surprised if I spend much of the next week trying to stay away from news of the trial, because I simply can’t take it. I understand the need to focus on the horrifying consequences—and the need to prevent homophobia and transphobia (yes, the two are intertwined, and yes, that’s a discussion that’s been ongoing elsewhere).

Something about the response to Lateisha Green’s murder troubles me, though.

eastsidekate :: Notes from Syracuse

I live in Syracuse. My friends and neighbors live in Syracuse. I feel the need to point out that crimes like Lateisha’s murder don’t happen in a vacuum. Furthermore, while violence against trans and gender non-conforming people is one of “my” issues, something I take very personally, I also care about all of my friends and neighbors, be they cisgender or transgender. When I see people from around the country speaking up about one of my neighbors’ lives being treated as disposable due to her identity, while remaining unaware or ignoring the rest of my city, I feel uneasy. I live here, and this city’s issues are my issues. How can I expect my neighbors to fight for my rights, when people like me seem hesitant to fight for my neighbors’ rights?

Latiesha GreenDon’t get me wrong—anti-LGBT bigotry is an important fight for all of us. Community leaders in the near-Westside neighborhood where Green lived (including Green’s mother) are working to provide LGBT youth of color with a space safe from all the hostility and violence they often face. Just this week, my neighborhood is participating in a constructive response to anti-queer vandalism (for a look at what some folks are willing to say anonymously to get a rise out of people, check out the comment thread on the newspaper coverage of the incident).

However, it’s also important to address the perceived disposability of other parts of the community. Upstate New York is not disposable. Syracuse is not disposable, nor are other urban areas. The poor are not disposable. People of color are not disposable. People with disabilities are not disposable. Young people are not disposable. This shouldn’t be news to readers, yet on many levels, power structures treat the above groups (and many other) like garbage. This needs to change.  A focus on the issues of LGBT people is important, but it’s not enough to fix our communities nor is it all that is required to give many trans people the quality of life that they, like all people, deserve.

Why am I so upset? Well, here’s part of what I see in my city: I see rampant violence within groups of young men. I recall rerouting a recent trip out due to a massive brawl in the middle of the street, in the middle of the day. The issue here isn’t that I was inconvenienced. However, things seem to have gotten far too out of hand when violence is creating a traffic hazard, in addition to less frivolous concerns, such as the loss of a life earlier this week. A neighbor of mine who is about to be redeployed to Iraq complained that our neighborhood was more dangerous than Baghdad, and confessed his hesitancy to leave his loved one behind. I sense a heavy dose of hyperbole. Still, it is troubling when you hear someone emptying a magazine across the street from the playground where you take your child. While I’m not behind the drug war, I’m not at all torn about having to kick drug paraphernalia out of the reach of my daughter when we’re on walks, or about the strung out junkie who broke into a neighbors’ locked apartment and began rifling through her couch while she slept, only to be chased off by her mother. It’s painful to watch a city that at times seems on the verge of an outright race war, with epitats of all types clouding all parts of the city; the sidewalk, the grocery store, the playground, the post office. Regardless of your race, you simply can’t escape the threat of racially motivated harassment if you spend any time here. Of course, you can’t always escape violence, either; earlier this year a 14-year old sniper shot and killed a man as he got in his car to start the second shift.

There’s no single reason why so many of us experience such futility and violence. The economy certainly hasn’t helped. The latest recession has cost greater Syracuse some of its last manufacturing jobs, with Syracuse China and New Process Gear moving jobs out of the country, and Crucible Materials preparing to fold in the face of a disastrous market for American steel. As an Eastern outpost of the rust belt, this is simply an extension of a decades-long decline, marked by previous blows such as Carrier corporation’s foreign outsourcing. Speaking of the lack of media coverage that the media has given Green’s murder, economic considerations led Syracuse’s CBS affiliate (arguably the most community oriented station in town) to close its newsroom and effectively merge with our NBC affiliate, costing us jobs, and limiting the number of corporate perspectives of current events. In addition to the economy, Syracuse is faced with the same crises as many other cities.

We can measure the distain in which the powers that be hold us in slashed school budgets funded by unfair mechanisms, the environmental degradation of poor neighborhoods of color (and yes, segregation is an issue), in underfunded and borderline useless mass transit systems and the general lack of effective health and human service programs for many folks not privileged enough to live outside of the city’s South side (or the North side, or the East side).

What’s being done to allow all of the chance of upward mobility, or at least to be treated with dignity while we live in poverty? Thanks in large part to Gerrymandering, a city Republican and two conservative Democrats from outside Onondaga county are supposed to be representing us in the State Senate. Of course, if you’re playing along at home, you know that the Senate is (or until this evening was) in deadlock, as members of both parties court a tax cheat who openly flaunts campaign finance laws and a man indicted on two felony counts for beating his girlfriend. This whole schism largely seems to have been paid for by the former richest man in New York State, who recently moved his official residence to Florida in order to avoid paying his fair share of taxes. Of course, it’s not entirely clear that his tax dollars would have gone to help the majority of Syracuse residents, considering the incredible corruption in New York State government. While hundreds of millions of dollars of tax breaks went to help a developer build a “green” shopping mall (that may never be completed) finding the means to create actual jobs that pay a living wage has been elusive.

You could write a book (and people have) about what’s behind the violence within the poorer pockets of this (or any other) city, particularly among young men. Certainly, there are problematic issues with outdated, violent visions of respect and masculinity, and it takes strong families to keep children on the right path. However, it’s all too easy to blame violence on laziness or otherwise imperfect families, and doing so misses a massive part of the story. We as a society systematically disrespect the poor and people of color. The power structure in this country helps ensnare people in poverty. While violence is never excusable, much of our country seems to leave young men with very few outlets with which to make a living, or which to gain status within a community. This is complicated stuff, and discussions of it are fraught with peril—particularly discussion that involve a diverse audience. However, if we don’t all engage in a critical analysis of our actions and force ourselves to engage in dialogue on the tough issues, we’re merely enabling a culture where lots of human lives, LGBT or otherwise are treated as disposable. To me, the tragedy of Latiesha Green’s murder lies not only in the taking away of a human life for no good reason, but with my fellow white LGBT’s repeated unwillingness to consider the countless other lives snuffed out in Green’s neighborhood, or the rest of my city, or all of urban America, for no good reason. This stuff doesn’t happen in a vacuum.

Cross-posted from Duck, Duck, Gay Duck



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Thanks
Thank you for a great and thought-provoking post.  I often forget the extent to which social, employment, transit, and other needs upstate are often ignored, despite the fact that I grew up in a city with a lot of rust-belt aspects (Baltimore) and talk about how weird and bizarre it is to live in a city (NY) that actually functions, has low crime, and relatively decent schools.  I love rust belt cities, particularly my home town, but it's easy to become complacent when you live someplace like NYC and forget our responsibility to advocate for redistributing more money to elsewhere in the state with needs that are less concentrated but no less important.  (In case it's not obvious, I'm trying to balance in my comment the fact that NYC does pay out more to the state than it gets back, and has lots of needs of its own that often get passed over in favor of stupid megaprojects, but still gets way more attention and support than deindustrialized upstate cities and rural areas.)

Thanks for appending the links
Speaking of civility, this is a post that I sat on for a while before posting.  I was pissed about so many things in my community, and was really frustrated by what I saw as a shallow analysis of the issues at play.  That said, I'm not sure what I honestly expect activists who are covering the trial to do-- they can't fix the world with the internet and more than I can.  Frankly, I'm not sure what I should be doing to make my community a better place, although I, along with lots of people throughout the city are trying.  I guess I want to see a dialogue that values all human life, as opposed to merely focusing on the tragic taking of life.  It is possible to have that larger dialogue, and I've got high hopes based on some of what I've already seen from groups like TLDEF.

You're so very, very welcome on the links.

I tried to notify you that I added the picture, as well as was adding links to relevant groups in the promotion header, but your sign up email no longer works. (D'oh!)

But, I really do want you to know that I believe your piece above is very thought provoking piece. I'll add my personal thanks to LauraG and hardcorps80204 for your writing and posting this.

-----
~~Autumn~~

As if there were safety in stupidity alone.
--Henry David Thoreau


[ Parent ]
Thanks for this
I'm from Flint, MI, so it was like reading about home. The total devastation all through the Rust Belt is appalling. People have been referring to the Detroit area as "Beirut" for 20-odd years now because it's a war zone. I really don't see how some of these formerly-affluent & vibrant places can ever recover. That we as a nation just destroyed our manufacturing base & left the poor and working class to die is a national disgrace; as with the ongoing lack of assistance to the victims of Katrina, we seem unable or unwilling to help our fellow citizens. As long as there are (underpaid, often uninsured) baristas to fetch 'em their Starbucks, the intelligentsia doesn't seem to give a shit. They'll just tell you that there's no class system in America and so if you can't make ends meet, it's your own damn fault.
A community is kept alive by decent-paying jobs. A country is kept safe by its ability to make what it needs. Shipping all that overseas is incredibly short-sighted and contrary to our long-term interests. But it was done so thoroughly & gleefully that it's hard not to think it was deliberate; after all, how can the upper classes enjoy their status if there are no oppressed "wretched refuse" to compare oneself to? And if the poor turn on each other, so much the better: they won't have the time or energy to target their rage at those actually responsible for their dillema.
In a Puritan country being poor is always a sin. Over the years we've refined that idea to the point where the paradigm seems to be that if you're not a retired millionaire by your 30's then you're probably a worthless slacker who deserves nothing. It's no longer 'work hard & get ahead,' it's 'work yourself to death with 2 or 3 crap jobs if you can even find them and wind up homeless anyway.' I doubt this is what the Declaration of Independance what meant to lead to.  

Thanks
This definitely hits home as I am also from Syracuse and my friend is involved with the art gallery that was vandalized.  Your post is completely right on track, and while I live more on the southern outskirts of the city so I don't experience much of the violence you write about I will definitely attest to the fact that those of us from around where I grew up definitely don't feel safe driving into many parts of Syracuse.  I think the sad thing is I wasn't even aware of this young woman's death until two or three days ago.  I've always naively hoped that something like this wouldn't happen here, but unfortunately it has.  The question that I think needs to be asked and acted on is how can we as the Syracuse lgbt community even do our share to try and help turn this city around?  I feel as if there really is no connection for the lgbt community in this city to begin with unless you make friends at the bars.  Things around here really do need to start changing before more people have to die and i'm afraid that voting in new politicians will do absolutely nothing... I think everyone in Syracuse has to somehow find a way to start taking responsibility for ourselves our neighbors and our communities and helping those that really need it

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