barbieprivilege:

itsjoanie:

fuckrashida:

itsjoanie:

itsjoanie:

WE ONLY HAVE 3 DAYS LEFT! HELP US RAISE $3600 TO REACH OUR STRETCH GOAL OF $10K AND TAKE OUR (ME, @fuckrashida, and @feelingpussy) PROJECT TO THE NEXT LEVEL 🌟 

“THREE TRANS WOMEN, AND BEST FRIENDS, DOCUMENT A YEAR IN THEIR LIVES WITH NOTHING BUT EACH OTHER AND A HAND HELD CAMERA.”

MAKE SURE TO DONATE TO SISTERHOOD’S KICKSTARTER HERE! WE MADE OUR FIRST GOAL, BUT WE STILL HAVE $3600 TO GO BEFORE WE REACH OUR STRETCH GOAL OF $10,000!

AGAIN, SISTERHOOD ONLY HAS 3 DAYS TO GO!!!! NOW MORE THAN EVER WE NEED TO SUPPORT FILMS MADE BY TRANS WOMEN! SUPPORT TRANS ACTRESSES! 🎥💖

AGAIN, WE ONLY HAVE 3 DAYS TO GO!!!! PLEASE HELP US REACH OUR STRETCH GOAL! 💖🚨

Joan and I have been planning this project since February! If we reach $10,000 we can double the length of the short, acquire better equipment, submit to more film festivals, and take Sisterhood on the road!

NOW MORE THAN EVER WE NEED FILMS DIRECT BY AND STARRING TRANS WOMEN

WE ONLY HAVE 24 HOURS LEFT!

‼️‼️‼️‼️‼️🚨

Why We Say Latinx: Trans & Gender Non-Conforming People Explain

projectqueer:

The letter “x,” instead of say an “o” or an “a,” is not a typo. In fact, that final letter is very intentional. The “x” makes Latino, a masculine identifier, gender-neutral. It also moves beyond Latin@ – which has been used in the past to include both masculine and feminine identities – to encompass genders outside of that limiting man-woman binary.

Why We Say Latinx: Trans & Gender Non-Conforming People Explain