Patrons praise opening of Lufkin’s 1st alternative lifestyle club Saturday, Feb 14 2009 

Patrons praise opening of Lufkin’s 1st alternative lifestyle club

Now, this probably does not mean anything to 99.99% of you out there, but bear with me? My father’s side of the family resided in the Lufkin, TX and my father and paternal grandmother are buried there. It’s a city of 35,000 in the middle of the East Texas forests, and that’s about all you can say about it. And they opened a gay bar there…

Okay, so the newspaper calls it an “alternative lifestyle club” which makes it sound like either a swinger’s club or BDSM hangout (hmmmmmm….), instead of using the GAY word in the headline. And they to try to tone down the LGBT nomenclature in the article. But let’s be thankful that a) a gay bar opened where I’d never expect to see one and b) the local newspaper didn’t treat it like the coming of Satan Incarnate.

Take victories where you can.

Rare benefits: Goldman Sachs covers sex changes – Feb. 8, 2008 Saturday, Feb 9 2008 

Rare benefits: Goldman Sachs covers sex changes – Feb. 8, 2008

Wall Street is typically considered a pretty conservative place to work. But the classic white-shoe investment bank is loosening things up by adding health benefits that cover sex-change operations.

Not only is Goldman Sachs ranked No. 9 on Fortune’s list of 100 Best Companies to Work For, it also appears on what could be a list of transgendered job-seekers’ ideal employers as well.

Goldman added health-insurance coverage of sex reassignment surgery as part of a push last year to attract top talent and recruit and retain a more diverse workforce, the company said.

Sex change doctor guilty of misconduct | Special reports | Guardian Unlimited Friday, May 25 2007 

Sex change doctor guilty of misconduct | Special reports | Guardian Unlimited

Sex change doctor guilty of misconduct
David Batty
Friday May 25 2007
The Guardian

The UK’s best-known expert on transsexualism was today found guilty of serious professional misconduct for rushing five patients into sex-changing treatments, but avoided being struck off.

The General Medical Council ruled that Russell Reid, who retired last year, could only return to work under strict conditions imposed for the next 12 months that mean he can only work under strict supervision.

He must provide the GMC with a record of his treatments of any patients with gender identity disorders such as transsexualism every three months.

The disciplinary panel ruled that Dr Reid must no longer prescribe patients with sex-changing hormones at the first appointment, nor without a firm diagnosis that they are transsexual or a proper psychiatric assessment.

The panel determined that the consultant psychiatrist was too quick to provide patients with hormones and to refer them for genital surgery.

“The panel considers that the seriousness of your misconduct lies in your lack of caution in initiating hormonal and surgical gender reassignment treatment in these patients without more careful and through investigation and assessment,” said John Shaw, the panel chairman.

“The panel therefore determined that your misconduct was serious, and that you are guilty of serious professional misconduct.”

Mr Shaw said Patient D, who mistakenly believed she was transsexual as a result of suffering from manic depression, only narrowly avoid an “unnecessary mastectomy” as a result of Dr Reid ignoring the second opinion of another psychiatrist that treatment should proceed with caution.

The panel chairman added that Patient C, a convicted paedophile, was still uncertain about his gender identity after having a sex change. The male-to-female transsexual has returned to living as a man and wants surgery to try to reverse his gender reassignment.

Mr Shaw said that although patients B, E and F remained in their reassigned gender roles and appeared not to have suffered harm, Dr Reid’s treatment of them “fell well short of the standard of care to which [they] were entitled.”

But the panel decided against striking Dr Reid off or suspending him because it did not consider “it would be in the public interest to deprive the [transsexual community] of an experienced and otherwise well-respected doctor.”

Mr Shaw said: “[The panel] determined that it would be proportionate and sufficient, in the public interest as well as your own interest if you were to return to practice under strict conditions.”

Speaking afterwards, Dr James Barrett, one of four NHS psychiatrists who brought the complaints against Dr Reid, said: “I’m pleased that it was felt that it amounted to serious professional misconduct. And I’m pleased that conditions to his practice were imposed for a year that mean he will operate in line with good practice.”

But a former patient of Dr Reid, not involved in the GMC case, said she was “disgusted” with the verdict.

Claudia, who regrets changing sex, is one of six former patients bringing a separate legal claim for damages against Dr Reid. She said the decision not to strike Dr Reid off was “absolutely scandalous”.

“I’m deeply disappointed with the GMC ruling,” she said. “If this had been about another group of people – not transsexuals – I think there would have been a much tougher sentence. Everything that has been taken from me – both physically and in the broadest human sense – can never be recovered.”

However, Charles Kane, another former patient of Dr Reid, said he was glad the “kind-hearted” psychiatrist was not struck off.

Mr Kane, who complained to the GMC about Dr Reid but did not participate in the hearing, said: “I am happy with the verdict because with these conditions he cannot really treat anybody else the way he treated me.”

Mr Kane had surgery to reverse his sex change in 2004. “I really believe that Dr Reid and the general public should view gender reassignment and sex change very seriously and this is a warning to doctors and patients not to rush into it,” he said.

However, he added: “I think generally he [Dr Reid] is a kind-hearted doctor and he didn’t really mean to be malicious to the patient. Most of the patients came here to support him because of this quality in him. He is a caring, almost father-figure.”

The ruling came after a three-year investigation into Dr Reid, who the GMC earlier this week said had treated the five patients inappropriately, against their best interests and contrary to international guidelines on the treatment of transsexuals.

The disciplinary panel said he had provided the patients with hormones and referred them for genital surgery without an adequate assessment of their health or proof that they were transsexuals.

He was found to have repeatedly breached guidelines set by the Harry Benjamin International Gender Dysphoria Association, regarded as the minimum standards for the treatment of transsexuals.

Despite the verdict, Dr Reid continues to command wide support in the transsexual community, many of whom regard him as their saviour. A blog set up by his supporters attracted more than 250 messages in his defence.

Copyright Guardian News and Media Limited

The Lavender Heart of Texas | TIME Tuesday, May 22 2007 

The Lavender Heart of Texas | TIME

A wonderful article in this week’s Time on how accepted gays are in Dallas. I’ve been amazed at just how accepting the city is, and how gays and lesbians are part of not just society but government as well.

If only the rest of the country was as accepting…

That Newsweek article Monday, May 14 2007 

By now you have probably read the cover story in Newsweek on gender. I was actually quite impressed with how well it’s written, and that they chose to speak with a variety of people who have transitioned successfully.

Of course, there are a few things that irritated me…

Like, Dr. Renee Richards:

Richards and other pioneers reflect the huge cultural shift over a generation of gender change. Now 70, Richards rejects the term transgender along with all the fluidity it conveys. “God didn’t put us on this earth to have gender diversity,” she says. “I don’t like the kids that are experimenting. I didn’t want to be something in between. I didn’t want to be trans anything. I wanted to be a man or a woman.

Well, that’s you, Renee. Some people are still searching, others do not feel they need to be locked into one gender type. Maybe you ought to remember what it was like when you were trying to understand yourself?

Alexis Arquette:

I’ll say it a million times—my documentary is a vain pursuit, and I can see why a lot of people could say gays are narcissistic, but it is just as important. Until all of us can feel we can walk down the street without ridicule, none of us really will ever be safe from Hitler’s Gestapo.

A little paranoia, here? Yes, it is not exactly peachy if you are a transperson nowdays. There is still prejudice, still a real risk of losing jobs, friends, family, social standing, and being harmed in many ways. And as much as the present administration wants to turn us solidly into a right-wing state, I can’t compare it to Nazi Germany. She may have been exaggerating for effect, but doing that often turns people away from our cause.

Where are the sidebars with transmen? And while the story is very positive, there should have been some mention of how hard it is for many people to transition, or even find the kind of help they need to understand what they are.

Okay, kudos for a link to the Southern Comfort Conference, which I support and am a part of. More on that particular subject in the future.

But mostly, seeing a major publication treat transgender as a real subject and not as a freak show? Wow.

11/10/09-Edited Newsweek link to point to new location of article.