Recently there has been conflict over the inclusion of queer and trans women in lesbian spaces between the two main websites for women, Autostraddle and AfterEllen. And, more specifically, between their editors, Heather Hogan and Memoree Joelle. The conflict is due to the fact that Joelle, the newly hired editor of AfterEllen signed an “L is out of GBT” petition that states lesbians’ interests are not being served by LGBT organizations. It specifically mentions focusing on trans issues as being one of the problems. One of the previous pro-LGBTQ writers for AfterEllen tattled on Joelle for this, calling it bigotry. It’s hardly a firebrand petition. And it was tame compared to the Drop the T petition headed by a gay man. This incident is the perfect example of what has been happening with LBQT identity politics in general. Gay men are spared much of this as they are a somewhat larger population than lesbians, and they are men. And bisexual men and FtMs attracted to men are a much smaller group relative to the gay male population.

I touch on these issues in “Lesbians and Queer Culture” and in this video, “The Collapse Of The Lesbian Community & Why You Should Resist It,” ‬ that covers the cotton ceiling mentally, the poor quality of women’s websites, and how the insistence on inclusivity has become oppressive.

The Other McCain, a right-wing Christian blogger has an interesting post on the incident. Not that I am a supporter of right-wing Christianity. I most certainly am not. But he documents all of Hogan’s tweets and does a good job of summing up the conflict.

For the past few years, there has been an ongoing battle within the LGBT community between (a) so-called “queer feminists” who favor an “inclusive” approach toward sexual identity, and (b) actual lesbians, who are tired of being told by their alleged allies that it’s wrong for them to prefer the exclusive companionship of women.

Heather Hogan paints lesbians who are frustrated by issues that arise with always having shared space with bisexuals and trans people as akin to the alt-right and white supremacy.

And here in her post “the lesbophobia thing” she says, “That kind of rallying cry feels very much like the “Save Our White Neighborhoods” rallying cry of the alt-right”

Heather Hogan is Wrong

The queer community has become a place that, at times. is anti-lesbian. I’m saying that as someone who doesn’t identify as a lesbian. Technically I’m bisexual, even if it is lopsided towards women. There are lesbians that are vehemently anti-bisexual and anti-trans. That exists, as prejudices and infighting are part of human nature. But looking at this issue objectively, on "queer" women’s websites, LGBT websites, and other liberal media outlets, there is an anti-lesbian bias. Some of this is overt, but most of this is because of lack of direction and willful neglect of relevant issues. Heather Hogan’s position is wrong and hypocritical. Autostraddle had a major triggered meltdown because they featured a movie review that failed to "call out" the racism of an animated taco character in a movie that made fun of everyone, Sausage Party. The review also participated in horrific "bi-erasure" by labeling her a lesbian taco when she really was a bisexual taco. Hogan blocked me for pointing out her hypocrisy, which is to be expected.

These are the problems with women’s websites and "queer" culture in general and how it negatively affects lesbians listed in order of less serious to more serious.

1) Bisexuals and MtFs affect the quality of discourse for lesbians in spaces that cater to "queer women."

It’s the unfortunate truth. But I’m middle-aged, so I had access to lesbian focused and controlled magazines and books when I came out. It’s not that there is anything inherently wrong with mixed spaces. There may be times when lesbians benefit from and want shared spaces. It’s just that’s all there is now. All-inclusive LBQT spaces (gay men still have their own) sound like a good thing. And many people in the LGBT community believe this, even some lesbians. Most of the far-left lesbians that control "queer" women’s websites and civil rights organizations believe this. And some that well that control the more informal message boards as well where I have seen graphic descriptions of fellatio, numerous stories of “lesbians” bailing on their identity for a man, bisexuals with husbands asking for advice on how to pick up women, and lots of tone policing, mostly from women that will never wind up in a long-term relationship with another woman. The only lesbian-only website is on Zetaboards, a very harsh place with almost no moderation, so even people who mostly agree with each other can be nasty. This is what young lesbians have out there to support them now.

I just find it odd that so many bisexuals don’t seem to understand why some lesbians get angry being forced to be exposed to all of this when they are looking for spaces that prioritize women, that prioritize homosexuality and make them feel supported in their identity as a group of people who are under 1.5% of the population. Bisexuality and homosexuality have some overlap, but, in many ways, are very different life experiences. The entire world supports a woman being attracted to a man. Gay men and lesbians don’t relate to all of the romantic plotlines, in the barrage of heterosexual romantic comedies and episodes on television the way that bisexuals can. Only being able to be happy with a woman, having all of your emotional and sexual needs dependant on women, and all from an excruciatingly tiny and incestuous dating pool, is not the same experience as falling in love with a women because you are attracted to both genders. And you would also be perfectly happy to settle down with a man and never touch another woman again as long as you live. Lesbians go to these places because they want a break from the dominant heterosexual culture. Also, having gender dysphoria and transitioning isn’t the same experience as being a biological female. One isn’t better or worse than the other and people should celebrate their identities. They just aren’t the same. And acknowledging this isn’t necessarily hatred or bigotry.

Bisexual women absolutely should have bisexual centered spaces. There is no quality news or pop culture website for bisexuals. And bisexuals deserve that as well. They should have places where they don’t have to censor their attraction to males or risk lesbians rolling their eyes at them. But for some reason, bisexual women don’t seem motivated to connect with bisexual men and create these spaces. Most of the energy is focused on making websites that were mainly for lesbians supportive of them and their heterosexual relationships. If you can’t see why this creates conflict, you lack an understanding of basic human nature and of what minority stress is all about.

And trans people defend their right to gather with each other to focus on their needs, but then use their status as “the most oppressed group” to argue that lesbians should not be allowed to insist on the same. This is despite the fact that FBI stats show higher rates of gay bashings than trans bashings, that lesbians are raped and murdered in gay hostile countries, and just genuinely have some differing experiences.

So this is what happened to lesbians for wanting to get together in the physical world in Portland,Oregon documented in Who Crushed the Lesbian Bars? A New Minefield of Identity Politics (Willamette Week):

...someone who didn’t identify with traditional female conventions like the pronoun “she”—confronted her…The person was hostile, and wanting to pick a fight…This person was offended and said they would tell their friends that we were a group of people who were non-inclusive and not respectful of their gender.

Then the Portlandia lesbians were accused of “trans women exterminationism”

in August, the organizers of Temporary Lesbian Bar apologized for imagery used to promote the inclusive monthly event at Mississippi Pizza. The offense? Using the labrys—a double-sided ax often associated with Greek goddesses and a symbol of female strength—as the group’s icon. “Hold this group accountable,” wrote a transgender lesbian, on Facebook, noting the image’s connection to Greek fascism and violence against trans women.

I like inclusivity for most things. I don’t like forced inclusivity all of the time. It’s oppressive. I don’t even like cake lawsuits against homophobic bakers. But those cases involve public businesses where I am equally forced to serve people whose beliefs I find offensive in the interest of existing in a civil society. Michfest was harassed by trans activists and other LGB liberals and shut down as a private event. I don’t have a problem with people excluding me, as long as they respect my civil and human rights.

2) The only infighting that is acceptable to discuss on queer women’s websites and other liberal media is to "call out" biphobic and transphobic lesbians. All other conflicts or even outright abusive behavior is no-platformed.

Biphobia is a real thing and a relevant topic. But "queer" women’s websites print articles about lesbians’ biphobia almost to the point of obsession. In general, these articles don’t solve any problems, often centering on women in heterosexual relationships and laying all the blame for these tensions on the lesbian community. Here is a list of just some of these articles that do that:

“What Lesbians Think About Bisexuals” Is Hopefully Not What Lesbians Think About Bisexuals” (Autostraddle), “Becoming Visible: On Coming Out As Bisexual” (Autostraddle), “You Need Help: Your Girlfriend Is Jealous Of Hypothetical Boys”(Autostraddle), “What Do You Do With A Problem Like Romi Klinger: On Bisexuality, Biphobia and Media Representation” (Autostraddle), “The AfterEllen Bisexuality Roundtable (Part 1): Real Talk About Stereotypes and Misconceptions”(AfterEllen), “The AfterEllen.com Bisexuality Roundtable (Part 2): Dating While Bisexual” (AfterEllen), “How Lesbians Can Be Better Allies to Bisexual Women”(AfterEllen), “The L Word” Reinforces Negative Bisexual Stereotypes”(AfterEllen), “What it’s like to be a bisexual woman on Tinder” (AfterEllen), ”Lez Be Honest: Isn’t it Time We Said Bye to Biphobia? (Diva), “I WISH I WAS GAY-Bisexuality is still a touchy subject for the LGBT community” (Diva), “Bisexual Bias – Why Can’t We All Get Along?(Curve), “Bisexual Visibility: Yup, We Are Real”(Curve)

And on other queer and liberal websites

“Biphobia: Why Is Everyone So Threatened By Bisexuals?” (Metro), “Why are lesbians so biphobic?” (Disrupting Dinner Parties), “Bisexuals Lack Support — and It’s Literally Killing Us” (Advocate), “Being Bi in a Gay World” (Huffington Post), “Are Bisexuals Shut Out of the LGBT Club?” (Daily Beast), “Why are gay people even more biphobic than straights?” (Gay Star News), “New Report from the UK Highlights Biphobia Within and Outside of the LGBT Community”(HRC), “Biphobia: The Author Strongly Argues That Bisexuals Face Their Own Discrimination, Especially from Straight Population” (AlterNet), “3 Ways Biphobia Hurts Bisexual People’s Mental Health” (Everyday Feminism), “5 Ridiculous Reasons People Won’t Date Bisexuals” (Pride).com, “It’s Time To Get Over These 7 Misconceptions About Bisexuality” (EliteDaily), “11 Ways To Be A Good Lesbian Ally To Your Bi Girlfriend” (Curve), 5 Outdated Myths Everyone Still Believes About Bisexuality (Cracked), ”5 Common Myths About Bisexuality & Pansexuality Debunked!” (Bust), “8 Common Myths About Bisexuality” (Huffington Post), “11 Myths About Bisexuality Dispelled On OkCupid” (BuzzFeed), “Just a phase’? This is why we need to talk about biphobia” (Metro), “Eradicating Biphobia Within Gay Communities And Gay Media” (Feministing), “This Video of Bisexuals Taking Down Biphobia + Talking About Dating Lesbians Is *So* Important”(Pride.com), “AfterEllen’s “The Trouble With ‘Bisexual” Aand Why I am not a Cheetoh” (Feministing)

And I found one article that actually conceded there are maybe hurt feelings on both sides of the lesbian bisexual world, “BYE, BIPHOBIA-Can lesbians and bisexuals find love together?” (Diva)

I don’t have a problem with productive discussions about biphobia. Bisexuals are an extremely diverse group you can’t lump into one category. What bothers me is the one-sidedness of all of these articles. The treatment of lesbians as if every single issue they have with bisexuals are all due to things that are just figments of their imagination. That lesbians never really get left for a man because their bisexual girlfriend got bored with women. That bisexuals have never ever used lesbians to make themselves feel edgy. That the appearance of the fact that no matter how many women bisexuals may have dated in their twenties, they almost always wind up marrying men in their thirties is just an illusion. Or if it isn’t an illusion, it’s just a numbers game and has absolutely nothing to do with the fact that heterosexual relationships have higher status, men have more money and power, and can provide biological children. And none of these issues can be discussed because they aren’t real. They are just one of the 3, 5, 11 myths about bisexuals in the paranoid minds of man-hating, bigoted lesbians.

There are also conflicts between some lesbians and the trans community

Here are some articles focusing of transphobic lesbians.

“What is the cotton ceiling and how does it affect trans women in the lesbian and bi community?” (Diva), “A trans woman and cis lesbian fall for one another in “Her Story” (AfterEllen), “NOUS SOMMES TOUS TRANS-Why trans rights are our business but trans identities are not” (Diva), “HOW TO BE A TRANS ALLY-Listen and ask lots of questions, but don’t be an asshole, says Paris Lees” (Diva), “Dear Lesbians: How to Be a Good Ally to Trans Friends and Family”(AfterEllen), “Intersectionality and the Lesbian Community: How Minorities Can Help Support One Another & Work Together” (AfterEllen), “Michfest Could Change Its Trans Female Exclusionary Intention Only If It Tried, Only If It Wanted To”(Autostraddle), “Getting With Girls Like Us: A Radical Guide to Dating Trans* Women for Cis Women” (Autostraddle), “So You Can Fuck Us; What’s Next? Going Beyond Sex With Trans Women” (Autostraddle)

If someone actually delves into this topic of the “TERF” (trans exclusionary radical feminist) lesbian, you find that the vast majority of them fully support trans rights to anti-discrimination laws in housing and employment and deplore violence against them. They mostly just want the freedom to gather amongst themselves without harassment, they question the legitimacy of trans women that make no effort to pass to get access to any female space, and whether or not a 7 ft trans woman should compete on a women’s basketball team. It’s not unreasonable to debate these issues.

If I see actual transphobic things I say so when I do. That exists. I’m sure there have been lesbians that have been verbally abusive on-line towards trans women. But why is that the only topic relevant for the call-out culture in the world of queer women’s websites is lesbians’ transphobia and biphobia? Radical lesbian feminists, and even other more moderate women are harassed, even sexually, and threatened with violence by trans activists all the time. There are dozens and dozen and dozens of screenshots documenting this reality, graphically violent threats, complete with pictures of trans women posing with knives threatening women that disagree with them. I’m not asking these sites to take a radfem position. I’m not a radical feminist, more of a skeptic type. I’m asking them to expose this abusive behavior once in a while. AfterEllen felt the need to call out Cathy Brennan and Diva magazine felt the need to call out Julie Bindle with little intelligent analysis of what these women’s arguments actually are. But a lesbian gets called a “fucking cis white bitch”, at Reed College, as the director of Boys Don’t Cry was, and it is crickets from them. But commit the atrocity that is bi-erasure by calling a bisexual animated taco a lesbian and Autostraddle is on the case.

For just some of these violent threats, visit Terfisaslur.

Here are just some of the articles that guilt lesbians for not making themselves emotionally and sexually available to trans women written not by Tumblrites, but by virtually all of the top MtF leaders of the trans movement, “Can Cis Lesbians and Trans Women Learn to Get Along?” (Parker Molloy), “ENOUGH WITH “I DATE WOMEN AND TRANS MEN” (Jos Truitt), “Guess Who’s Coming to Dinner’: Lesbian Trans Exclusion Gets Noticed” (Dana Beyer), “The Cotton Ceiling is Real and it’s Time for All Queer and Trans People to Fight Back” (Avory Faucet non binary), “The Transgender Dating Dilemma” (Raquel Willis), “The Struggle To Find Trans Love” (Julia Serano).