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The Dictatorship

Why this 19-year-old trans woman says it’s clear that Trump wants people like her dead

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Why this 19-year-old trans woman says it’s clear that Trump wants people like her dead

Last week, President Donald Trump signed yet another executive order targeting the rights of transgender people in this country. This one bars federal funds from going to health care providers that provide gender-affirming care to trans people under age 19.

Because the order blocks 18-year-olds, legal U.S. adults, from accessing transition care, early speculation among some legal observers is that bumping up the age of restriction to 19 instead of limiting it to under-18s provides federal courts with a precedent that brings the administration closer to enacting a complete ban on all gender-affirming care, including for adults. Understandably, the executive order quickly spread further panic among trans people, who have faced action after action from the White House over the first two weeks of the new presidential term.

“It really feels like we took two steps forward and are now being dragged backwards. It’s kind of terrifying living day to day waiting to see what’s going to be stripped away next.”

Already as president, Trump has signed executive orders that have led to a ban on trans people serving in the U.S. militarya bathroom ban in federal government buildingsthe Equal Employment Opportunity Commission reserving the right to investigate any employers who allow trans employees to use bathrooms according to their gender identity, and the Education Department to investigate funding for any schools that accommodate trans students. The White House also ordered government staff to remove pronouns from their email signatures, and the State Department removed “TQI” from the standard LGBTQI or LGBTQI+ abbreviation on a number of resource pages, addressing only LGB users.

“It’s really … demoralizing,” Lyra, a 19-year-old trans woman from New York, told me. “I started estrogen when I was 18, and it was a large reason as to why I could continue my studies in college.”

Trump’s actions appear to be a blatant attempt to wholesale wipe out a highly marginalized minority by fiat. There will, of course, be legal challenges ahead, but with a firmly conservative Supreme Court in place for the foreseeable future, any court wins will likely be temporary at best.

For Lyra, who only just recently passed the 19-year-old threshold laid out in the medical order, the expansion into restrictions on young adult care for 18-year-olds is particularly concerning. “It shows that this isn’t just about ‘kids’ as they say, because so many are already waiting for that 18 [year old] barrier for informed consent,” she said. “They’re pushing the line here, and mixed with all the other EOs relating to trans people, it really feels like we took two steps forward and are now being dragged backwards. It’s kind of terrifying living day to day waiting to see what’s going to be stripped away next.”

Along with threatening funding cuts to facilities providing youth gender-affirming care, Trump’s order seeks to politically overturn the medical consensus undergirding the current protocol for providing gender-affirming care. It orders the Department of Health and Human Services to disregard the current World Professional Association for Transgender Health guidelineswhich have been formed over decades by the leading medical experts in transgender health care, and states the Trump administration will conduct its own review of the science behind gender-affirming care.

It’s a move similar to that of Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis in 2022, when he appointed a political lackey to run the Florida Department of Health and produce a sham “review” of the evidence behind gender-affirming care, which a team of experts reviewed and stated was “thoroughly flawed and lacking scientific weight.”

We’ve seen politicians work to politically banish health care they disapprove of before. They did it with abortion care, they’re doing it now with birth controland they’re well on their way to overriding the many doctors, experts and caretakers who know best what trans kids need.

This is lifesaving, medically necessary care according to mainstream legitimate medical authority in the United States, including the American Academy of Pediatricsthe American Medical Associationthe American Psychological Associationthe Endocrine Societythe World Professional Association for Transgender Healththe American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologistsand many others.

Accessing gender-affirming care already saved Lyra’s life once.

Lyra’s parents disowned her when she started estrogen at age 18, she tells me, and she says without the care she currently receives, she fears she would be dead by now. Her care “was a large part of why I was able to claim financial independence,” she said. “Otherwise, I’d likely have been in a much worse state today even if I was still with [my parents]being made to watch my body mature another year. I’d likely have turned to do-it-yourself” — meaning ordering her own hormones from a black market website and guessing at her dosage — “instead. Access to testing and medical offices really helped, making sure I was safe and that my dosages were correct.”

The conservatives in power want us to disappear. They want to purge us from society. Existing is the best revenge.

Without elaborating further, Lyra said she has contingency plans for accessing her hormones should a full adult ban come down from the White House. It’s a calculation that hundreds of thousands of trans people are having to make right now.

I want to finish this piece by directly addressing the trans people reading this. I know these are dark, hard times. We have so little information right now, and we don’t know what else is coming down the pike. But our community has been here before. There might not have been a total ban on our care, but there was a time not long ago when only the wealthiest among us could access legitimate health care.

We persisted then and we can persist now. Look after your trans friends, check in on them. Reach out to others if you need help. Find a reason to keep going.

“A lot of the reason I made it through my youth was in spite of my family, and I think some part of that continues on here,” Lyra said. “I’m motivated to keep going in spite of the bans and hate.”

The conservatives in power want us to disappear. They want to purge us from society. Existing is the best revenge.

If you consider the potential impacts of blocking people from receiving vital, lifesaving care, the message feels painfully clear: “[Trump] wants us dead,” Lyra said — “so I’m not doing it.” We have to live, if only to prove to those who are trying to erase us today that they are wrong.

Katelyn Burns

Katelyn Burns is a freelance journalist based in New England. She was the first openly transgender Capitol Hill reporter in U.S. history.

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The Dictatorship

Trump urges Israel to seize chance for peace ahead of Egypt summit and presses for Netanyahu pardon

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Trump urges Israel to seize chance for peace ahead of Egypt summit and presses for Netanyahu pardon

SHARM EL SHEIKH, Egypt (AP) — President Donald Trump called for a new era of harmony in the Middle East on Monday during a global summit on Gaza’s futuretrying to advance broader peace in the region after visiting Israel to celebrate a U.S.-brokered ceasefire with Hamas.

“We have a once-in-a-lifetime chance to put the old feuds and bitter hatreds behind us,” Trump said, and he urged leaders “to declare that our future will not be ruled by the fights of generations past.”

The whirlwind trip, which included the summit in Egypt and a speech at the Knesset in Jerusalem earlier in the day, comes at a fragile moment of hope for ending two years of war between Israel and Hamas.

“Everybody said it’s not possible to do. And it’s going to happen. And it is happening before your very eyes,” Trump said alongside Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sissi.

Nearly three dozen countries, including some from Europe and the Middle East, were represented at the summit. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu was invited but declined, with his office saying it was too close to a Jewish holiday.

Trump, el-Sissi, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and Qatari Emir Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani signed a document outlining a broad vision that Trump said would lay the groundwork for Gaza’s future.

Despite unanswered questions about next steps in the Palestinian enclave, which has been devastated during the conflictTrump is determined to seize an opportunity to chase an elusive regional harmony.

He expressed a similar sense of finality about the Israel-Hamas war in his speech at the Knesset, which welcomed him as a hero.

“You’ve won,” he told Israeli lawmakers. “Now it is time to translate these victories against terrorists on the battlefield into the ultimate prize of peace and prosperity for the entire Middle East.”

Trump promised to help rebuild Gaza, and he urged Palestinians to “turn forever from the path of terror and violence.”

“After tremendous pain and death and hardship,” he said, “now is the time to concentrate on building their people up instead of trying to tear Israel down.”

Trump even made a gesture to Iran, where he bombed three nuclear sites during the country’s brief war with Israel earlier this year, by saying “the hand of friendship and cooperation is always open.”

Trump’s whirlwind trip

Trump arrived in Egypt hours late because speeches at the Knesset continued longer than expected.

“They might not be there by the time I get there, but we’ll give it a shot,” Trump joked after needling Israeli leaders for talking so much.

Twenty hostages were released Monday as part of an agreement intended to end the war that began on Oct. 7, 2023, with an attack by Hamas-led militants. Trump talked with some of their families at the Knesset.

“Your name will be remembered to generations,” a woman told him.

Israeli lawmakers chanted Trump’s name and gave him standing ovation after standing ovation. Some people in the audience wore red hats that resembled his “Make America Great Again” caps, although these versions said “Trump, The Peace President.”

Netanyahu hailed Trump as “the greatest friend Israel has ever had in the White House,” and he promised to work with him going forward.

“Mr. President, you are committed to this peace. I am committed to this peace,” he said. “And together, Mr. President, we will achieve this peace.”

Trump, in an unexpected detour during his speech, called on the Israeli president to pardon Netanyahu, whom he described as “one of the greatest” wartime leaders. Netanyahu faces corruption chargesalthough several hearings have been postponed during the conflict with Hamas.

The Republican president also used the opportunity to settle political scores and thank his supporters, criticizing Democratic predecessors and praising a top donor, Miriam Adelsonin the audience.

Trump pushes to reshape the region

The moment remains fragile, with Israel and Hamas still in the early stages of implementing the first phase of Trump’s plan.

The first phase of the ceasefire agreement calls for the release of the final hostages held by Hamas; the release of hundreds of Palestinian prisoners held by Israel; a surge of humanitarian aid to Gaza; and a partial pullback by Israeli forces from Gaza’s main cities.

Trump has said there’s a window to reshape the region and reset long-fraught relations between Israel and its Arab neighbors.

“The war is over, OK?” Trump told reporters traveling with him aboard Air Force One.

“I think people are tired of it,” he said, emphasizing that he believed the ceasefire would hold because of that.

He said the chance of peace was enabled by his Republican administration’s support of Israel’s decimation of Iranian proxies, including Hamas in Gaza and Hezbollah in Lebanon.

The White House said momentum is also building because Arab and Muslim states are demonstrating a renewed focus on resolving the broader, decades-long Israeli-Palestinian conflict and, in some cases, deepening relations with the United States.

In February, Trump had predicted that Gaza could be redeveloped into what he called “the Riviera of the Middle East.” But on Sunday aboard Air Force One, he was more circumspect.

“I don’t know about the Riviera for a while,” Trump said. “It’s blasted. This is like a demolition site.” But he said he hoped to one day visit the territory. “I’d like to put my feet on it, at least,” he said.

The sides have not agreed on Gaza’s postwar governance, the territory’s reconstruction and Israel’s demand that Hamas disarm. Negotiations over those issues could break down, and Israel has hinted it may resume military operations if its demands are not met.

Much of Gaza has been reduced to rubbleand the territory’s roughly 2 million residents continue to struggle in desperate conditions. Under the deal, Israel agreed to reopen five border crossings, which will help ease the flow of food and other supplies into Gaza, parts of which are experiencing famine.

Roughly 200 U.S. troops will help support and monitor the ceasefire deal as part of a team that includes partner nations, nongovernmental organizations and private-sector players.

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Megerian reported from Washington. Associated Press writers Will Weissert and Seung Min Kim in Washington contributed to this report.

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Follow the AP’s coverage of the Israel-Hamas war at https://apnews.com/hub/israel-hamas-war.

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The Dictatorship

Naked bike riders demonstrate against troops in Portland…

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Naked bike riders demonstrate against troops in Portland…

PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — Protesters rallying against the Trump administration in Portland put the city’s quirky and irreverent reputation on display Sunday by pedaling through the streets wearing absolutely nothing — or close to it — in an “emergency” edition of the annual World Naked Bike Ride.

Crowds that have gathered daily and nightly outside the immigration facility in Oregon’s largest city in recent days have embraced the absurd, donning inflatable frog, unicorn, axolotl and banana costumes as they face off with federal law enforcement who often deploy tear gas and pepper balls.

The bike ride is an annual tradition that usually happens in the summer, but organizers of this weekend’s hastily called event said another nude ride was necessary to speak out against President Donald Trump’s attempts to mobilize the National Guard to quell protests.

Rider Janene King called the nude ride a “quintessentially Portland way to protest.”

The 51-year-old was naked except for wool socks, a wig and a hat. She sipped hot tea and said she was unbothered by the steady rain and temperatures in the mid-50s (about 12 Celsius).

“We definitely do not want troops coming into our city,” King said.

Bike riders made their way through the streets and to the city’s U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement building. Authorities there ordered people to stay out of the street and protest only on sidewalks or risk being arrested.

The city is awaiting the ruling of an appeals court panel on whether Trump can send out the federalized troops after a federal judge on Oct. 5 ordered a temporary hold on deployment.

“Joy is a form of protest. Being together with mutual respect and kindness is a form of protest,” the ride’s organizers said on Instagram. “It’s your choice how much or little you wear.”

Fewer people were fully naked than usual — likely because of the cool, wet weather — but some still bared it all and rode wearing only bike helmets.

Naked bike rides have thronged the streets of Oregon’s largest city every year since 2004, often holding up traffic as the crowd cycles through with speakers playing music. Some years have drawn roughly 10,000 riders, according to Portland World Naked Bike Ride.

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Weber reported from Los Angeles.

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The Dictatorship

China calls for US to withdraw tariff threat

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China calls for US to withdraw tariff threat

BANGKOK (AP) — China did not back down Monday in a back-and-forth with the U.S. over trade, calling for U.S. President Donald Trump to withdraw his latest threat of a 100% tariff and other export control measures announced over the weekend.

In the latest escalation of the trade war between the two nations, Trump issued the tariff threat on all Chinese imports into the U.S. after China placed stricter restrictions Thursday on rare earths, a vital resource used in electronics.

The Chinese announcement was an apparent surprise to Trump, who called it an “out of the blue” move. While Trump did not withdraw the economic threat, he sounded more conciliatory than in the past, saying in a Truth Social post Sunday, “The U.S.A. wants to help China, not hurt it!!!”

China’s Ministry of Commerce issued a lengthy response Sunday saying the U.S. was “severely damaging the atmosphere of trade negotiations.”

“China urges the U.S. to promptly correct its erroneous practices,” Chinese Ministry of Foreign Affairs spokesman Lin Jian said Monday. “If the U.S. insists on going its own way, China will certainly take resolute measures to safeguard its legitimate rights and interests.”

Both nations have leveraged multiple dimensions of the trade relationship in the trade war, with actions ranging from U.S. restrictions on China’s ability to import advanced computer chips, China ending purchases of American soybeans and an exchange of tit-for-tat port fees.

Economic indicators show the retaliatory actions and uncertainty are impacting trade between the countries. Chinese trade data release Monday showed exports to the U.S. have fallen for six straight months, dropping 27% in September from the year before.

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