Transgender Movement Pushes Beyond Visibility Alone
Transgender advocate Sally Goldner argues visibility is insufficient. The movement now focuses on concrete legal protections and medical care.
The transgender community increasingly questions what visibility truly means. Sally Goldner, a transgender rights advocate, argues mere visibility is not enough. Real societal change must happen.
Many transgender people find visibility complicated. They want recognition and acceptance. Yet visibility brings real risks. Some face increased violence and discrimination. Goldner says the movement must do two things simultaneously: be visible and ensure safety.
Focus now shifts to practical issues. Transgender people need access to quality medical care. They want easier legal gender recognition. They seek protection against dismissal based on identity. These concrete problems matter far more than acceptance alone.
Goldner identifies three simultaneous priorities. First: raising awareness among people unfamiliar with transgender experiences. Second: strengthening laws that protect transgender people. Third: building stronger, more connected transgender communities.
This approach is more realistic than hope alone. It acknowledges change is slow and difficult. Yet it provides direction. Visibility is merely the beginning. True equality remains the genuine goal.