tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-69489012523304358602024-03-19T16:46:39.149+08:00Yuki's Box Of ChocolatesCommentaries, Lamentations, Opinions, Undercurrents, Thoughts...Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.comBlogger146125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-39571106824329778582019-04-07T16:13:00.000+08:002019-04-07T16:24:21.566+08:00LGBTs and Muslims: An Intersection.<table align="center" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" class="tr-caption-container" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto; text-align: center;"><tbody>
<tr><td style="text-align: center;"><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEha8yZbJZOa6XbTAfbgN4rzYhwmBuwerzw2ghSu2w1NrRUSmppNarFOzqW4WP0W4Pwo3rmwcIvEKFv9IwmOnqkiJ6wD1sf2JUORl3s1Xr0faVQ-ObTc9FQDfsUPU1U9C_YS8u_niKug4sw/s1600/LGBT-Against-Islamophobia.jpg" imageanchor="1" style="margin-left: auto; margin-right: auto;"><img border="0" data-original-height="639" data-original-width="960" height="266" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEha8yZbJZOa6XbTAfbgN4rzYhwmBuwerzw2ghSu2w1NrRUSmppNarFOzqW4WP0W4Pwo3rmwcIvEKFv9IwmOnqkiJ6wD1sf2JUORl3s1Xr0faVQ-ObTc9FQDfsUPU1U9C_YS8u_niKug4sw/s400/LGBT-Against-Islamophobia.jpg" width="400" /></a></td></tr>
<tr><td class="tr-caption" style="text-align: center;">Image from American Freedom Party. LGBT people are terrorized by Brunei's new law. At times in many countries, Muslims are already living in terror.</td></tr>
</tbody></table>
<br />
<div class="MsoNormal">
There are a lot of comments bandied about, but many are not
seeing the complex issues at play here.</div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
<br />
The lack of knowledge about LGBT issues, is equivalent to
the lack of knowledge about Muslims.<br />
<br />
<o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
The "LGBT" face brandied about by non-progressives
to be of relevance in holy books such as the Quran or the Bible has no meaning
to what LGBTs really mean in terms of sexual orientation nor gender identity.<br />
<br />
<o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
And the face of "Islam" practiced by non-progressives
is being taken as evidence that Muslims are backward, uncivilized and are
promoting terror to get what they want, far away from the context of what Islam
is teaching.<br />
<br />
<o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
You have a brainwashing exercise that started back in the
early 19th century, politicians using minorities, creating non-existent
monsters with them, then proposed themselves as a solution, and misused
religion or ideology to add power to such fascism. Affecting both sexual
minorities and Muslims.<br />
<br />
<o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
What is happening today affects both sides, one in
increasing human rights scope, the other in increasing migration to other
countries.<br />
<br />
<o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
It is not about the fact that it happened in Brunei, in a
country ruled by hypocrites who will run Sharia to all Muslims except the
royalty themselves who have been living against all Islamic practices.<br />
<br />
<o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
No, it is not merely "their country". It is now
this; Brunei aims to kill citizens in the world that have done nothing wrong,
one of the few extreme cases in the world where people are being murdered for
simply existing being born different than what we call normal, and people are
relating to that, being born lesbian, gay, bisexual or transgender, worldwide.<br />
<br />
<o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
And in many countries especially in Europe, where Muslim
migrants have failed to integrate into another culture, society, demanding
their non-progressive values to be enshrined into the fabric of life from
school to public, against the country's laws and constitution with acts of
disobedience and provocation, some leading to terrorism, already has the
non-Muslim world in the state of Islamophobia.<br />
<br />
<o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
The latter is what feeds certain quarters against Muslim
migrants. And how Muslims treat the former is now used as a prime example of
why Muslims should be turned away. No, this is not an issue with just one small
country.<br />
<br />
<o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
It is a reflection of a much larger problem brewing. If what
happened in the incident with two mosques at Christchurch, New Zealand, brought
everyone to believe that ignorance can be bloody wrong and no ideology should
demand supremacy, and silence haters... <br />
<br />
<o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
... the treatment of sexual minorities in Brunei will get
the same community that was once oppressed, to start oppressing their own
minorities, which is why there are no shortages of non-progressive Muslims
being "proud" of the association via Islam to the act of terror by
the Brunei sultanate against sexual minorities.<br />
<br />
<o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
Just as some fascists read the Christchurch terrorist's
manifesto with pride. Just as many countries are rejecting, even ejecting,
Muslims from their own homes, some by force like what is happening in
Palestine.<br />
<br />
Just as some fascists are continually shouting on the pulpits in the
United States, even in Malaysia, creating the illusion of evil in the face of
innocent lesbians, gays, bisexuals and transgender people, resulting in unjust punishments,
all the way to the murder proposition.<br />
<br />
<o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
No, this is not about one country. It is about the LGBT and
the Islam community as a whole worldwide. When you go arms up against a
minority, remember that in another country, people are going arms up against
you.<br />
<br />
<o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
Do you know, homosexuality, and transgenderism, actually
existed long before religion did, and at those times, no one bothered them,
because they are recognized as part of the diversity of what makes us human?<br />
<br />
Do
you know what back in the beginning of Islam, the civilization was responsible
for the advancements of science and mathematics, giving birth to algorithm and
alchemy, and were world leaders in philosophy?<br />
<br />
<o:p></o:p></div>
<div class="MsoNormal">
How wonderful life could be if we live and let live, and
progress. Unfortunately, it is so much easier to hate, than to love one
another. Because the biggest sins are not worshipping the right god or being
attracted to the same sex. It is to worship 'another god', and to kill.</div>
<div class="separator" style="clear: both; text-align: center;">
</div>
Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com19tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-22728629798909255672011-07-25T21:00:00.002+08:002016-06-08T13:09:59.812+08:00So What Is Wrong With The Malaysian LGBT Movement For Sexual Rights?It has been almost a year since I promised myself never to get involved in Seksualiti Merdeka again. One of the reasons was because I knew someone I love may be part of the set-up. However, the major reason was total disillusionment with the festival and the people. From what I used to believe to be a group of well-intentioned activists determined to fight for the rights of sexuality minorities, it has become a nightmare full of backstabbing, framing, glory-hunting, lies, manipulation, politics and sex parties galore. What used to be something to look forward to has become all hope lost for me.<br /><br />I do not know how to quantify my experiences there. I do acknowledge that some of them helped me heaps emotionally and financially. I admit that for a short while I had guidance in seeking direction in my life. And receiving help is no excuse, reason or justification to discredit me and attempt to rally people against me just because I have different sets of values and opinions, along with wanting what is truly the best for the LGBT community especially trans people, as proven by positives happening now overseas.<br /><br />We unfortunately do not have unity. Instead, we have leaders who, as if without other topics, like to talk to teenagers as young as 18 about group sex. One of them happens to be with <a href="http://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/groups/pflagmalaysia">PFLAG</a>, and he was earlier cornered by these leaders attempting to hijack the group (<a href="http://www.blogtalkradio.com/wake_up/2009/04/26/pflag-meeting-malaysia">listen entirely and judge for yourself</a>). I have been at the end of such hijack attempt before when TransMalaysia was organized, and instead of reprimanding the transgender backstabber, these activists took the opportunity to put me deeper into the ice box and made her a spokesperson for an anti-bullying video. Birds of the same feather flock together would come to mind.<br /><br />Insecurities arise when I mentioned I discourage sex work. Hello? This is my opinion, and that does not mean I reject sex workers. In fact, I only criticize any LGBT movement that devalue the hardships and experiences of transsexual females such as myself, especially from one famous drag performer; but bear in mind please, have I ever forsaken or ignored any member of the community, including transvestic fetishists? Have I ever condemned anyone for being in sex work? It is utterly shameful that these LGBT leaders took this as a chance to further invalidate my work, and the responses from some of the trans leaders are ridiculous indeed. Do they realize that their expressions of grievous hurt only serve to prove my point?<br /><br />The treatment lashed out to me is so similar to the treatment they gave to an openly gay Muslim writer I know, just because he pointed out the obvious to the oblivious. And as sure as they tried to hatemonger to me about him being a terrorist with connections to enough religious authorities to destroy Seksualiti Merdeka, I know exactly the kind of deceptions that has intentions to make LGBTs avoid conversing with me to maintain their dipping support while crying victim. In fact, by the same chance the self-implied leader of these activists tried to sell me another story, one about my ex co-feminist for Kakak Killjoy.<br /><br />I refuse to submit to such tactics, so it saddens me when a leader of a lesbian/bisexual event organizer who was also given the cold shoulder by them last year decided to pander and has been trying to desperately seek support from LGBTs there like a lost bitch. It seems that networking and connections is the priority of the people from most of the LGBT groups as they seek to blaze the trail to self-glory and patting themselves at the back after another meeting to bring everyone together for another fellowship of internal LGBT meets while kicking out those who do not conform to their views or are rejecting their stances, refusing to take criticisms for their actions as they stampede on others to get their way.<br /><br />Credit must also be given to a certain HIV/AIDS prevention foundation for doing nothing much. PT Foundation does not throw people under the bus; they are content in their position as people continuously throw them under the train. They are happy to just receive funding from LGBTs and government ministries while the <a href="http://www.hmalaysia.com/2011/03/mak-nyah-bertaubat.html">latter continue to discriminate – yes discriminate – transgender people as purely lost souls whom they hope one day with some programs it will make them “masculine” while transgender males seem to be non-existent to them</a>. And what happens when LGBT matters go to the parliament? <a href="http://rama4change.wordpress.com/2011/04/29/nasib-golongan-transeksual/">They of course do not condone the “lifestyle” which they claim is not part of their culture while hoping transgender females will one day “change”</a>. So after many, many years of the PT Foundation’s work with religious groups, Malaysian AIDS Council, the Women, Family and Community Development Ministry (etc), most people in Malaysia still know nothing about LGBTs, especially the transgender population while invalidating and trivializing our inert needs as non-existent.<br /><br />As the years go by, and I have been walking side by side with these groups for the past few years, the connections to the straight world is reducing to the point misinformation about LGBTs is increasing rapidly as with homophobia and transphobia. Transgender issues are becoming more and more sidelined. Lesbians are becoming marginalized within. Ideas which were stolen are now lacking as many move on from the main LGBT activism groups. In fact, they will probably respond to this posting by insecurely trying to be in denial over everything. Well, they have the right to hide themselves from truth: they have little intention of advancing the LGBT movement to the public arena unless there are some motivation for them to do so; until then they are contented to fill their coffers and maintain their jobs, soaking up connections and basking in glory of LGBT “events” with little information for the straight public while continuing their full artistic ways of LGBT expression. Opportunists, while little gets done.<br /><br />So what do we have from them lately? Oh yes – The <a href="http://www.seksualitimerdeka.org/2011/05/here-are-29-ways-towards-lgbtiq.html">29 ways toward an LGBT friendly Malaysia</a>, which can easily be boxed into 3 (1 – Tell everyone to treat us right, 2 – Tell people in authority / representatives of the people to treat us right, 3 – Ask everyone to create / attend those LGBT events) boxes. The first question I could think straights would ask is – Why should I? So one wonders just how this “29” is going to be executed. I can imagine silent politicians, police arresting LGBTs, and LGBTs getting laughed at because we ask the public to stop calling us names. But I am sure the LGBT events will get them more fresh meat to fuck – oops! I mean more avenues to increase their FB friends while enlarging their connections.<br /><br />The LGBT movement in Malaysia has come to the point where they are so used to having their little internal discussions, meetings and events, that they become too exclusive instead of inclusive and fail to engage with the world – the straight world. Year after year, straight people’s participation of Seksualiti Merdeka has been dwindling, and so is the straight crowd, while the LGBTs increased. As LGBTs in activism groups, being so busy with politics, or as aspiring activists wanting to get famous in the community and an ultra-liberal collective that still lacks so much knowledge in LGBT issues ending up with preaching half-truths and opinions, we have ultimately failed to provide adequate information to the rest of the non-LGBT population, to the point we only call ourselves victims quietly while sucking our thumbs when tabloids like Metro and Kosmo become the source of “LGBT education” to the straights. Yes, we failed to engage Malaysians to get to know us. And to some with best opportunities to speak for us, the fear of losing funding and social status creeps in.<br /><br />Activism in Malaysia has become a popularity contest. We are too ignorant to assimilate into the norm of society and instead choose to just continue to sell creative artistic thoughts instead of getting the public to know us. We lost the battles, so there is no war to be won. So what else can we expect from LGBT activism? A <a href="http://www.theklword.com/2010/12/it-gets-better-malaysia/">hijacked and mangled “It Gets Better” campaign with videos</a> which are mostly sharing and confession videos and not <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Public_service_announcement">PSAs</a>, without a next course of action (Around <a href="http://www.asianewsnet.net/home/news.php?sec=1&id=17325">425 young people reportedly killed themselves in the first 9 months of last year</a>. Where is the push to question our government to get them to check how many of them committed suicide due to prejudice and discrimination toward LGBTs)? <a href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/asia/malaysia/8403613/Lady-Gaga-takes-on-Malaysias-censors.html">Lady Gaga failed to inspire us to create a wave of activism to remove censored parts of her song</a>. <a href="http://www.seksualitimerdeka.org/2011/05/29-ways-towards-lgbtiq-friendly.html">International Day Against Homophobia (IDAHO) in Malaysia was a horribly done mash up</a> that absolutely nothing came out of it to fight homophobia (and talks to ourselves 29 times again). Things only gets done when it is convenient.<br /><br />We wait for the next big hoo-hah to send whatever letter thrown towards brick walls. We can accept the blatant fact that there are no updates on almost all researches done by PT Foundation on behalf of Malaysian AIDS Council and the Health Ministry, no news on meetings with religious groups / political leaders in conferences or privately, no follow ups on previous letter campaigns and fund raising activities after they have gone silent, no next course of action after tons of forums done; in fact, I personally expect nothing whatsoever from SM, PT, or whatever, to give any individuals any glimmer of hope that things can change for us. We expect them to be absent again when Transgender Day Of Remembrance comes this year, boycotting a dissenting voice, instead of focusing and supporting – the cause. (Or worse, they may even hijack it to do their own one that rejects almost all of TDOR’s guiding principles).<br /><br />We can expect more dissenters being rejected unless they toe the line. And some may even pander back for favours. But many of us left on our own accord, hoping that in the years to come, the LGBT community will start to see that nothing concrete had ever come out of some of their beloved organizations, and that new organizations will be formed to seriously addresses the LGBT issues, and most importantly, improve support from society by simply letting them get to know us. And I sincerely hope the current movement takes a hard look at what they intend to accomplish, and analyze whether they are truly going in the right direction, for the sake of everyone involved. By then, we would not create useless steps and “ways” that will end up hit by a train of incomprehension, misinformation and ignorance. We would instead concentrate on practical LGBT population building and assimilation to society, as well as education and information dissemination to the public, along with handling discrimination and prejudice at jobs, healthcare and others. We seriously do not need to talk among ourselves anymore. Let us start speaking to a Malaysian population and build beautiful bridges on our world.<br /><br /><em>Yuki Choe is a Chinese transsexual feminist who believes it can only get better when the world can get to know us. After all, there is more to advocacy than sex and glory-hounding; the main solution is simple, the movement should stop throwing tear gasses and shoot chemical water, and start communicating with those "banned" “illegal” voices.</em><br /><br />This post is supported by “<a href="http://kakakkilljoy.wordpress.com/">Kakak Killjoy</a>” and “<a href="http://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/groups/pflagmalaysia">PFLAG Malaysia</a>”.Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-47787491513898250902011-07-18T18:26:00.008+08:002016-06-08T13:16:17.784+08:00Transsexual Woman Who Needs Gender Change On Personal Documents, Is Discriminated And Misrepresented.I wish I can find his photo but there was none. I am talking about the picture of Judge “Justice” Mr. Mohd Yazid Mustafa, who was <a href="http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/7/18/nation/20110718120419&sec=nation">reported</a> to have formally rejected the application of transsexual woman Aleesha Farhana Abdul Aziz, 26 (formerly known as Mohd Ashraf) to change her name to that of a woman, and also the gender markers to “perempuan” or female. I really want to display the judge’s photo because I need to show exactly what the face of total ignorance and bias looks like, one of third world mentality.<br /><br />Two months ago when the <a href="http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2011/5/26/nation/8756927&sec=nation">news of Aleesha’s request</a> broke out, Mr. Mohd Yazid claims the judgment was a difficult one to make because, quoting him, ‘it might have an impact on society’. I would ask Mr. Mohd Yazid, what kind of impact, asteroids falling into earth? Or does he think because of <a href="http://ai.eecs.umich.edu/people/conway/TS/Prevalence/Reports/Prevalence%20of%20Transsexualism.pdf">1 out of 1,450 who is born with gender identity disorders causing transsexualism</a> seeking to correct a birth defect and hopes it would be reflected on her birth certificate and identification card, society would end? To him, probably.<br /><br />His excuses which was explained today, is even more ridiculous. He claims ‘there was no legal statute to grant such an application based on the factor of a sex change’. Hello? There was no legal statute to NOT grant it either. It seems Aleesha had been treated at Pantai Medical Centre here in Kuala Lumpur, so I believe she has her medical documents, but it seems that both Mohd Yazid and the other idiot, Adha Abu Bakar, seems unified in their uneducated and uninformed thinking that Aleesha’s female nature is only “external and not internal”. Furthermore, Adha claimed that there is no doctor’s report that psychologically, Aleesha is a natural woman. I say, What The F**k?! Why do I smell an obsession to sex organs here? If a female nature is external in expression, that is her gender, you f**ktards!<br /><br />Mohd Yazid further shows he has total zero knowledge on gender and sex (something he shares with Adha) that Aleesha did not satisfy his poor understanding of “criteria for being declared a woman – chromosome count, and exterior as well as internal organs”. Again, What The F**k?! Someone should ask Mohd Yazid to further his studies to find out about how <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XY_gonadal_dysgenesis">XY women</a> are still women, why <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M%C3%BCllerian_agenesis">women with no uteruses and cervixes</a> are still women, because he just insulted some cisgender women worldwide born with these conditions!<br /><br />With his kind of medically void argument, women with breasts removed due to cancer and surgically implanted a new pair of breasts, are not women. In fact, XYY women would not be considered women to him either. I think he has a problem with women in general to make that statement. Perhaps he needs a woman with a big gaping womb that covers his face and giant breasts for him to declare her a woman. This invalidation of people’s medical condition known worldwide as <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_identity_disorder">Gender Identity Disorder</a> is disturbing. Adding to that, the insistence of “The Star” newspaper journalists to be fixated with calling Aleesha with the wrong pronouns and attempted to make her a circus show, with both the article titles having the word “Man” in front.<br /><br />Well, we can expect no world standard for reporting from “The Star” that has been churning out junk news for the past few weeks due to <a href="http://www.facebook.com/home.php#!/pages/BERSIH-20-OFFICIAL/213938935311531">Bersih 2.0</a>, so I doubt they would even adhere to international class guidelines such as those from <a href="http://transreference.transadvocacy.org/reference/ap%20stylebook%202000.pdf">Associated Press Stylebook</a> that was updated for one sole reason - to respect transgender people, especially transsexuals. What we should expect, is a judiciary that is familiar and up to date with the medical world in regards to people living with Gender Identity Disorder. We also hope to see real judges that is learnt and informed about gender issues. Our country is severely behind in intellect and mentality, so we need judges that work based on real time information. The ultimately obtuse Mohd Yazid just does not cut it.<br /><br /><p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-41867382074568723652011-07-10T21:18:00.007+08:002016-06-08T13:17:15.516+08:00BERSIH 2.0: Another Way Of Looking At It.I was still, at 11am, rushing to an appointment at Summit Subang USJ, excitingly wanting to join the Bersih 2.0 rally after that. However, I was stuck in a massive police induced bottleneck that reduced 5 lanes to 1 including the new highway towards Persiaran Kewajipan, causing a drive that usually needed 10 minutes becoming an hour (and there were not much private transportations on the street). Busses were not spared. On the Bersih 2.0 twitter, crowds were mushrooming at locations near Sogo Mall, Pudu Jail, Maybank Tower and KLCC, while the radios announced that no one had turned up just yet. After lunching and discussing business at the Summit, I tried to rush home to change only to be caught in another 3 roadblock induced jams, one across the street from Summit, near Persiaran Tujuan and another on Federal Highway. If the police were this hardworking, the crime rate here will be at an all time low. I managed to get home onboard a near empty LDP highway.<br /><br />The radio at home was still declaring that though there were arrests at Sogo, Pudu and at the LRT stations, generally there was no one at the rally. However, my friend who was at Jalan Hang Tuah seems to brisk-walking while talking to me on the phone while many people were chanting in his background. That was when I knew who was telling the truth. Going without the Bersih 2.0 shirt to avoid detection at the LRT, I quickly drove to the Kelana Station where surprisingly policemen were no longer there. The KL Sentral, Pasar Seni and Masjid Jamek stations were closed, and I only managed to alight at Dang Wangi Station. At 2.30pm, while walking through dozens of people seemingly taking a stroll, I FaceBooked and found out shots of tear gasses and chemical laced water were already fired in some Bersih 2.0 hotspots around KL city. I was hoping to be part of the action when I was met by a large group of policemen at Jalan Raja Chulan.<br /><br />Seriously, if there were “not much civilians involved at the ‘illegal’ rally”, you would not need a hundred of them in one location. By the time I reached Jalan Tun Perak, it was an awesome sight. On my right, like a scene from a Hollywood made movie, an endless flood of thousands of people were walking through the streets, with sudden rushes all over the place as water cannons were deployed. Many attempting to walk in to join this crowd were arrested by the police. I knew that it was too late to join that large gang. On my left however, were another hundred of policemen and FRUs arresting anyone suspected of wanting to join the rally. As I strolled quietly towards the Pudu bus station, with very heavy scent of tear gas still surrounding that area, one by one the police were walking with civilians, all whose hands were bound by a plastic rope, including a young couple that was somewhat surprised they were arrested.<br /><br />Chasing after my friend who was running about to not be spotted by mobilizing policemen while avoiding getting caught as a stray myself, was not an easy task, but I did manage to reach Jalan Bukit Bintang, and then the Jalan Hang Tuah and Jalan Imbi intersection by directly walking to the policemen and asking for directions. After all, “berani kerana benar “, right? This would probably keep me safe. The police themselves seemed red-eyed and dazed, so knowing they were still distracted by the gigantic scenery upfront, I took the opportunity to go along Jalan Hang Tuah on foot looking for my fat guy friend in pink and found him with the group at Stadium Merdeka which was guarded by the police at all entrances. Then it dawned upon me that we at least reached the targeted destination safely. Elsewhere, the Bersih 2.0 Twitter reported that their memorandum was unable to be handed over to the Istana as they were blocked.<br /><br />We walked through Jalan Petaling where I was told how it all started. By then, Bersih 2.0 was over. We ended the afternoon at the mamak around central market, where Bersih 2.0 supporters and police force who ended their hostility were also around. There, through social media, we were able to get all the latest news of the aftermath, involving several people from the steering committee. Some of whom were even arrested. As we FaceBooked and twittered away, revelations of Bersih 2.0 supporters being beaten bloodied, and hospitals around the Puduraya area getting tear gassed made me sick to my stomach. As evening comes, at home in my room, news of this rally made international headlines throughout the world making them our witnesses, as videos after videos were released via social media showing the violence of policemen and FRUs against a peacefully done rally. The mass media again lied through their teeth to contain the government wrong doings. And many of us were witnesses of what really happened at Bersih 2.0.<br /><br />I am deeply regretful to have missed the crux of the action before me, because I believe one has to go through the ordeal to really understand what was won there. It was freedom. The Bersih 2.0 supporters knew exactly what they were doing. No trash was thrown. The streets were clean. No building was vandalized. But what happened today perhaps vindicated my presence there and validated what Bersih 2.0 is for. “Peaceful?” the New Straits Times declared. “Defiant” was how the Star painted the Bersih 2.0 supporters. And within the first few pages, attempts to downplay Bersih 2.0, lies and deception, wordplay that attempted to demonize participants, and even a show of inflated ego by the Home Minister, showed exactly why we need reforms not only in the election system, but the government system as well.<br /><br />This is the truth; I saw with my own eyes many more on the streets itching to join Bersih 2.0, but were not allowed to join the rally with the threat of arrest by the police. And many who tried to sneak in were arrested after all. The police did their best to stop supporters from all states at bus terminals to the highways to the LRT. In the end, please do not insult my intelligence; I have been at the Bukit Jalil National Stadium at near full capacity to judge. It was indeed easily tens of thousands of supporters on that road near Jalan Tun Perak, as many peeking down the LRT train at Central Market can see themselves, and even on ground. (I do not know about KLCC because I am not there, but I heard it was a huge group as well). Yes, as most would realize, the number could have been much, much more. Also, a friend once told me, a good liar needs a good memory. The mainstream newspapers backtracked on their words, were inconsistent in their reporting and clashed ideas in terms of what happened. The police were able to control the situation simply because the protest was peaceful; until they started firing.<br /><br />And yes, Tung Shin Hospital was hit by the tear gasses and chemical water as well. At the time I was not there, so how did I know? Because everyone I asked were consistent with their story of what happened with pictures to prove. Unlike the media that brushed off this unthinkable act, along with contradicting reports all the way on radio and newspapers. The government again acted indecisively; they knew the international media is watching and Bersih 2.0 would love to let the world see how the policing works here, so why the hell did they step on a seen trap? Why would they react violently against peaceful protests? The latter was a question our dear information minister stuttered like a child to answer at Al-Jazeera’s channel.<br /><br />The incredible traffic jams that lasted two days were due to the police, not Bersih 2.0. Any person of a reasonable thinking capacity knew that it was just the police being desperate enough to avoid more people coming in to Kuala Lumpur city, not “maintaining order” as claimed. If the police had really wanted to guard the rally, they would have just stopped all intercity roads going towards Stadium Merdeka like the MRR1, Jalan Kinabalu, Jalan Syed Putra and many others. The police force was just paranoid and overreacted to the situation by blocking all access roads across the whole territory of urban Selangor. The same paranoia that caused the Home Minister to declare a call to action for a peaceful march for a clean, fair and just election, as “illegal”. And correct me if I am wrong, there is not one single law available to arrest people with shirts associated with any movement, yet the police force who was supposed to protect its people, found just simply wearing a symbolic yellow Bersih 2.0 shirt a big offence.<br /><br />Bersih 2.0 somehow brought out the worse of the federal government and their authorities. Whether it is the fact that the police, with such commitment and hard work at stopping a peaceful rally, failed to stop the mat rempit menace and snatch thefts. Or the thoughts that came out from some minister’s mind about the alleged “damage” to economy amounting to billions. Even lazy-to-drive-outside-KL-for-clients-during-demonstration taxis were given wasted space in the newspapers for giving excuses on staying back and charging ridiculous rates, and much more. However, I would look and say the Bersih 2.0 rally did bring out the best in people. 1Malaysia happened in the most extraordinary circumstances, where all races, all religion, all education backgrounds, all ages, all gender, all sexuality, and all the factors of Malaysian people, gathered in the midst of scorn by orders of the Home Ministry. A proud, priceless moment in Malaysian history however the government will try to spin and ignore its importance.<br /><br />Democracy also happened. What cannot be expressed in votes, were expressed in numbers of marching people who came against all odds, who braved the wave of tyranny, in friendship of the strangers around them that they can now call friends, to absolutely get their voices heard, voices that were usually silenced by the media and the government. Chants of reforms, realizing that there is a better future for Malaysia beyond the walls of the coconut shell we have been living under for so long, resounded for that brief couple of hours amidst the pain in their eyes and nostrils caused by tear gasses. The worse kind of freedom is one that you do not even know you have and are bound far away from it. However, the 9th of July 2011 will be remembered by many as the day many awakened and realized that they have been had, and the news will spread fast on what we have missed from the government for so long, and what they have not been telling us, to the lies they have been feeding the public for decades.<br /><br />I sincerely, as a citizen of Malaysia, really hope that the federal government, instead of being defensive, would effectively join us to seek change. I humbly ask the federal government to finally look in the mirror themselves and start serving the people instead of attempting to brainwash and keep them out of the loop with the media. The people’s interest should come first, not themselves. It is time that countless letters to the government be replied, services be improved, corruption be addressed in the best possible manner, and stop wasting money on projects that will drain our finances for the sake of pocketing from the people. The rich is getting richer and the poor is getting poorer, so it is time that we Malaysians step out as equal partners to each other, with equal opportunities. One may wonder why I am writing this, that negates from Bersih 2.0’s demands. It actually transcends even that. One clear message we have sent on this day, is that we can unite as one, for a common Malaysian cause and to defend anything that is worth risking our lives and livelihood for. I can finally say, seeing what happened in those few hours, being in the climate of love and courage during a time of atrocity, I am very proud to be Malaysian. Thank you Bersih 2.0 for the experience, showing our hearts out to the government. We hope our future leaders will one day take the same lead, to overcome all the roadblocks for a better Malaysia.<br /><br />(Many thanks to those who were there one way or another and saw a part of our Malaysian history in the making, especially my few transsexual sisters who represented our small community with their big hearts on fire in love.)<br /><br />(This post is dedicated to the illusive fat guy in pink: Read his first hand account here in <a href="http://dubmeshalom.tumblr.com/post/7420818284/bersih-2-0-from-the-eyes-of-the-fat-guy-in-pink">DubMeShalom</a>)<p><p/>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-19643423711948622892011-04-14T19:38:00.005+08:002016-06-08T13:17:09.451+08:00Yuki's Tips: How To Be Gastronomically Green.As we head towards an age of environmental consciousness, more people are looking for ways to go green. Green dining is a relatively new concept that recently reached Malaysian shores, with an increasing number of eateries and restaurants promoting eco-friendly dining facilities that lessen the impact to the environment.<br /><br />Individual health has become a major concern with an increasing number of patients battling heart and cardiovascular problems as well as diabetes that plagued countries across the globe. These greatly involve bad eating habits and incorrect diet that increases health risks even for children.<br /><br />Green Dining is not only about sustaining the earth; it is also about sustaining our lives.<br /><br /><br /><strong>Produce</strong><br /><br />Buying locally produced food, or better yet growing our own, can reap incredible rewards for our lives, other than saving the environment. The purchase of sustainable foods, especially those organically grown, supports the maintenance of ecosystems and agriculture for generations to come, while reducing the use of toxic pesticides and fertilizers than potentially harms our health. It helps a country’s economy and drops pollution rates by lessening transportation and travel time between producers, distributors and consumers.<br /><br />Organic fruits are tasty, fresh and healthy for our diets and fights heart disease and cancer. It promotes natural beauty by promoting skin regeneration and increases body hydration and body functionality.<br /><br /><br /><strong>Seafood</strong><br /><br />When you go to your next seafood restaurant trip, do think how many sea animals have been caught whether by purpose or accidently, and then left at the sea dead or injured, like some sharks that are caught and their fins cut off for our later consumption while they are thrown back into the ocean without them to limp and die. This slowly destroys the eco-system, damage the habitat and harm the marine life. Yet, these are the symptoms of the efforts of our beloved fisherman to make sure we get our feast of large prawns, favourite fishes and sharks’ fin soup.<br /><br />70 percent of the world’s fisheries have been over-fished to the point of near depletion, presenting a scenario where in the future there will not be a steady supply of fish from reliable sources to dine on. While fishes like tuna, sardines, salmon and mackerel are heavily advertised as prime fishes to eat due to its omega-3 content and calorie reducing properties, they often contain high dosages of PCBs, mercury and other toxic contaminants that pollute the waters that present a health hazard to children as well as adults especially women who are childbearing if consumed more than once a week.<br /><br /><br /><strong>Meat and Poultry, Eggs and Milk</strong><br /><br />Meat preparation for the general market is harmful to the environment as it increases greenhouse gas emissions with its factory based farming, transportation and has huge wastage and pollution levels. But there are types of meat that are less impactful, such as chicken, fish and eggs. It always pays to go vegetarian with a milk diet for energy, or at least take smaller portions of meat.<br /><br />And if you are into animal rights, you could also try to check on the welfare of the chickens that lay our eggs, for instance, whether they are kept in captivity without any freedom of movement for the rest of their lives, or injected with antibiotics, bovine growth hormones or other substances. Growth hormones are often injected into cows to increase milk production. These may end up within your body once you consume them.<br /><br /><br /><strong>Coffee, Tea and Bottled Water</strong><br /><br />Most of us drink coffee and tea without realizing that the plantations built to harvest their seeds contribute to tropical rainforest deforestation and habitat destruction especially for birds. Many growers resort to chemicals and pesticides to mass produce in meeting demand. However, there are alternatives. Switch to organic coffee. Organic coffee farmers are required to avoid pesticides and rotate crops to maintain natural soil fertility. You can also get coffee from bird-friendly or fair trade sources.<br /><br />Bottled waters are unavoidable as they are cheap and convenient. Most manufacturers are now heavily promoting dispensers, especially filtered water dispensers, for home, officers and around the neighbourhood in order to cut down on the use of bottles. We can do our part by reusing the bottles at least another three to four times, which is still safe to use. Also look at the manufacturer’s details on the bottled drinks, and only buy from organizations that do not need to travel much to supply them. This would encourage facilities to serve by state and discourage much transportation, which also saves their cost.<br /><br /><br /><strong>Try These Easy Tips To Be More A Green Diner.</strong><br /><br />• Say no Styrofoam and Polystyrene when you take-away your food. Use a tiffin carrier or reusable containers instead. Or get yourself a bento box or lunch box.<br /><br />• Bring your own cup or bottle the next time you head to a fast food outlet or kiosk.<br /><br />• While you are at it, bring your own utensils as well.<br /><br />• No more plastic bags. Hand-carry your take away food instead. Work your muscles!<br /><br />• Do not waste food. Make sure finish food that is stored. If you really cannot finish it, then pack and store the leftovers.<br /><br />• Really, why do you need straws? And seriously, you need lids on your cups too?<br /><br />• Go vegan. If you cannot, go vegetarian. Remember, meat contributes to global warming.<br /><br />• Start your own garden and grow your own food. You can always start with some pots if you do not have space.<br /><br />• Look for green restaurants to dine in.<br /><br />• Avoid seafood and buy sustainable foods.<br /><br /><p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-77833784750767296112011-04-09T15:54:00.016+08:002016-06-08T13:17:15.577+08:00Five Months – Part Two: The One Year Wait For Godot, The Death, And That Accident.<em>("Five Months" are stories of some events that had happened in my life leading up to December 2010)</em> <br /><p></p><br /><p></p><strong>Starring Role</strong> <br /><p></p>It was May last year when Singaporean theatre director Rohaizad Suaidi and Malaysian independent artiste Jerome Kugan personally approached me and seasoned actress Dara Othman to be involved in a play that is the reinterpretation of the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waiting_for_Godot">Samuel Beckett classic, Waiting For Godot</a>. So instead of two homeless tramps on a street during the World War, the first idea that came out was actually two sex workers on a street at a red light district in Kuala Lumpur. Then the final new adaption was finalized as two transgender female sex workers on a red light district. And I was picked to be one of the two. <br /><p></p>We were barely two weeks into our initial meetings when the project was halted due to Rohaizad’s inability to commit because of his work. The project was then passed to a certain Ms. Kimmy after that, but for the past one year, there was no movement on the production. Until Kimmy Kiew called me up, explaining to me that the project is now on under the umbrella of the <a href="http://www.klpac.org/">Kuala Lumpur Performing Arts Centre (KLPAC)</a>. I went to KLPAC for the first time, and had a short audition. Two weeks later, while attending a forum at Penang, I received a call from Kimmy that I secured the part, and will start rehearsals the following week. <br /><p></p><br /><p></p><strong>The Evolution Of Waiting For Godot</strong> <br /><p></p>There I met my co-star Fairuz Tauhid, who will eventually be Estragon or Gogo, while I was given the role of Vladimir. After much deliberation on the script, we managed to change some words into Malay and even one in Chinese. The tree was replaced with a lamp, the mount into stairs, and Vladimir’s hat became my hair band. Rehearsals were intensive within the space of two months, with almost all my evenings after my current job and most Saturdays and Sundays reserved for rehearsals under Kimmy. <br /><p></p><img style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 266px; DISPLAY: block; HEIGHT: 400px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5593498675883945186" border="0" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg07VXW0ey4ohSa-GlR4DK0-wvFAmFlVo38XiuQ8kNlXCCP4_5yym_ukWzGR_lgulbHpvhP8iqDsDzhHINeBNTZZwj6XktlIeaA3tcfsOPph7AuB8upz6B8bVQoCVvLC4_78Gv7NiyDHDI/s400/WTG+-Full.jpg" /> <br /><div align="center"><em><span style="font-size:85%;">(from right: Fairuz Tauhid, Kimmy Kiew, Jerome Kugan, and me)</span></em></div><em><span style="font-size:85%;"></span></em><br /><p></p>Working with Kimmy and Jerome (who played the boy who in the play’s interpretation, comically, a manly transgender woman) was particularly satisfying while the always moody Fairuz Tauhid did share some of his brilliant traditional dance choreography on our short dance. Angel Chang was roped in as our stage manager, and we all have a good working relationship. It was tiring and taxing especially for me, having to stretch my hours of activity and reduce my hours of sleep, however I could not afford to compromise my 9-6 bread and butter job, yet I do not wish to neglect my responsibilities to the play. <br /><p></p><br /><p></p><strong>Shocks</strong> <br /><p></p>The complexity during the two months of rehearsals was compounded by the news of the passing of me and Jerome’s close friend, <a href="http://www.arterimalaysia.com/2010/07/21/benjamin-mckay-1964-2010/">Benjamin McKay</a>. I was just having dinner with him the night before with our friends, so it came as such a shock to me. Then on my way home one night, I was hit by a white Toyota Caldina WQE 8077 owned by a fella named Othman; and to add salt to my misery, even though photos and proof clearly saw my car side badly dented and his bumper fell to indicate he banged my car, due to racial profiling, disturbingly, he got the benefit of doubt and favour from the traffic police, and I got summoned for being crashed at. Apparently, <a href="http://potongqueue.fotopages.com/?entry=950428&back=http://potongqueue.fotopages.com/?page=0#CommentsTop">WQE 8077 has a history of dangerous driving</a>. <br /><p></p><em><span style="font-size:78%;">[sapa tau ...keter ni...toyota caldina putih. WQE8077. kurang ajar punya driver. kluar masuk kluar masuk lane laju..semata mata utk kluar ke naik ke flyover nun di belah kiri jalan. lepas kena hon, siap kejar..pastu benti tgh jalan..tayang torchlight ...bodoh nya orang. pastu siap main kejar kejar..benti lagi..pastu siap nak turun keter tengah jalan..nak ajak gaduh guna torchlight coleman..bodoh la lu mamat.semoga lu cepat mati..cepat kena tanam..cepat kena makan cacing. WQE 8077 toyota caldina putih....WQE 8077 TOYOTA CALDINA PUTIH. Tue 18-Sep-2007 00:21 Posted by:orang tengah marah] </span></em><em><span style="font-size:78%;"></span></em><br /><p></p><br /><p><img style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 400px; DISPLAY: block; HEIGHT: 300px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5593495017424298850" border="0" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiXSXP1N8nJ49h5eXdDQB8oAS_wZEf9scjc6MnueCrf4RLbP0N580M1w2xvA18sLJ6KPhWylIvSFuMjzl8T59mYYd_1hKagxUmGDpbNF4V6B514Nqzxdp2F0LZu6CWZTs1FjD98KlNCpNA/s400/Damaged+car+side.jpg" /> <img style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 400px; DISPLAY: block; HEIGHT: 300px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5593495409135501906" border="0" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgMsKbYxOQYBmzzOATTqc3qdku4QNbJUqnufnFwX6fKFdq_6oGfDIHxzuT41mlysGmr0S0ZuwSuU8mryTTbNONI2BCBJ473MmwWjVI6Tv2uiM6jlBgc4QFHRr1gnywr8a55hecghADYep4/s400/Car+towed+away.jpg" /> <br /><p></p><br /><p></p><strong>Rising Above</strong> <br /><p></p>I successfully caused some trouble for Othman’s brother for misusing the name of one of the heads of police to threaten me, and absorbed the “bapuk” calls from the ultimately shallow and uneducated Othman who probably would not go far in his life in making so many enemies with his white Toyota Caldina WQE 8077. I also decided to give Benjamin McKay’s funeral and wake a miss, because I know I would not be able to hold myself if I go. So I continued to our rehearsals, without a car, and missing my friend. I did not know how I managed to get to rehearsals, let alone to go to work. But thanks to the efforts of my friends, work colleagues and theatre partners, I was able to go all the way across the long journey. <br /><p></p>It was ironic that this owner of WQE 8077 is a Muslim and committing his sin during Ramadan. What goes around comes around and he will pay for his sins. As for me, more adventures lie ahead in my life.<em> </em><br /><p></p><br /><p></p>(Continued from <a href="http://yukishock.blogspot.com/2010/11/five-months-part-one-work-advocacy-and.html"><strong>"Five Months - Part 1"</strong></a>.) <br /><p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-66386114773355092202011-01-03T15:31:00.006+08:002016-06-08T13:14:53.767+08:00One Hard Malaysia.2010 had totally been anti-1Malaysia, and our government failed to do anything about their promises of a unified nation. It had been a year that promised so much, and yet it produced more of the usual shit that we can expect from our country. There is no one left to trust, as even the opposition voices cannot be believed anymore too, as we find ourselves asking that same question – when is it going to change?!<br /><br />The Home Ministry under Hishamuddin Hussein is commited to make sure they fire more tear gasses and water cannons as they yet again face dangerous threats to the nation such as – candlelight vigils and peaceful rallies. And police brutality went on for another year unchecked as more and more cases on abuse of power by the police force flood the headlines of internet news portals while as usual, the mainstream media continued to keep silent. Selvachandran was lucky it was only a couple of teeth he lost; three teenagers were shot dead Aminulrasyid style as police violence and corruption rage on.<br /><br />PERKASA is still waging war against non-muslims to the extent, no matter now they word it, the meaning is still the same. They demand non-muslims be confined to second-class citizenship which in irony, we excelled while those who expected government handouts and “special” rights continue to fail in sociality and business. Their racism went unchecked, and Ibrahim Ali seemed to be invulnerable from ISA or Sedition Act as many others were threatened with it in the name of “national security” from hypocrites.<br /><br />Of course, religion again was big shit news everywhere, as the year ended with the Prime Minister’s aides asking the removal of crosses, the banning of hymns with other ridiculous requests during his visit to a Christmas party. I wonder if Obama were to come, will Putrajaya then remove all Islamic religious symbols as a token of respect? After all, the incident showed a guest gets to call religious shots on the host.<br /><br />There are of course many other anti-1Malaysia tales, most of it caused by government bodies themselves, but no anti-1Malaysia tale is as sickening as the case of Azwan Ismail, the editor and engineer who appeared in a video where he talks to LGBT youth to affirm them and encourage them to not to give up on life. And what did he get in return? Death threats and verbal abuse, including condemning him to hell, the very things you do not tell your LGBT youth unless you wish them to feel worthless enough to kill themselves. Again LGBTs are persecuted and misrepresented by media liars.<br /><br />Whether you like it or not, LGBTs are a population of Malaysia. The citizens of this country are one with Malaysia as they are born there. Malays, Chinese, Indians and whatever skin colour should not get in the way of unity because unless we are really sick or we are aliens, our blood colours are all red. Keep religious believes to yourselves, because honestly if my lucky stone were to tell me to kill infidels and homosexuals, then I have to reflect whether it is really the lucky stone, or is it my own bias interpretation of it.<br /><br />I wonder why we are not able to make things simple and just do the fundamentals of all humanity, the golden rule: do unto others what you want others to do unto you. This line transcends the many teachings of faith and religion. Unfortunately, people prefer to borrow power to fulfill their insecurities, whether it is a gun-trotting policemen or a Muslim seeking self-righteousness from God while smoking. The politics of democracy has failed to unite our nation, and the misuse and abuse of religion continues to divide us all.<br /><br />Can 1Malaysia still happen? Surprisingly, a week ago it did. On the 26th of December 2010, the Malaysian national football team took on Indonesia. For two hours, 1Malaysia happened. We were one. There was no race, religion, colour, nationality, heck some of my LGBT friends were present. No one cared who the person sitting next to them was. It was the first gathering of yellow shirts that does not have RELA and police officers bombarding and tormenting the thousands. We were all together supporting our national team.<br /><br />We want justice and an equal Malaysia. If the end justifies the means, then let football be our religion or party.<br /><p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com3tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-1193340168314383372010-11-08T12:58:00.033+08:002016-06-08T13:17:15.458+08:00Five Months - Part One: Work, Advocacy and Sisters.Life is full of different corners to turn into, and however we move about, we would always remember the roads we ventured through, and as we come back to familiar pathways, we would know what to do and perhaps even manage to make a better use of the road. The months starting from June have brought for me an amazing journey. I was still recovering from a broken heart when suddenly I was asked to pull out of Seksualiti Merdeka due to my inability to function as an advocate after that moment of hurt and pain caused by a recent failed love. <br /><p></p><br /><p></p><strong>This is a job for… </strong><br /><p></p>In terms of my full time job, the month had a high and a low. I managed to get more licensees in within the space of two months than I ever did in a year. On the other hand, the event management team, one that I highly recommended, that was supposed to handle one of the biggest highlights of the year for Malaysia, pulled the plug on us at the very last minute, jeopardizing our campaign. Fortunately, we were able to recover a portion of it later, and there will still be a celebration in the end for the no.1 cartoon brand in Asia, for his 40th Birthday. <br /><p></p><br /><p></p><strong>Footie Madness </strong><br /><p></p>It was also the month of the World Cup, which ended with mixed emotions for me as I walked out on England with 20 minutes to go during the game in which they trail 2-4 to Germany. I get the feeling I am never going to see England win the World Cup in my lifetime. However, Holland nearly did. I really hope to see the day either teams lift the trophy. I nearly missed the entire World Cup season because I could not afford to watch the matches outside and I did not have “Astro” at home. Luckily, the owner of Darter’s Home Pub at Damansara allowed me to bring and drink only water (literally) throughout the matches and the food at Kelana Jaya’s <a href="http://www.facebook.com/yukichoe#!/lailas.kelana">Laila’s</a> was quite affordable for a posh place. So I was able to capture the full excitement right until the end. <br /><p></p><br /><p></p><strong>That Transsexual Forum</strong> <br /><p></p>In early July, I attended the Sexual & Reproductive Health & Rights (SRHR) for Transgender (TG) community in Penang. One problem I have with the forum is the title, not all trans people’s rights were discussed; the transgender population’s existence has barely anything to do with sex except Sex Reassignment Surgery (SRS) and sexual orientation, and the whole forum is about transsexuals, not about transgender people. The brief inclusion of trans men did nothing to the fact that for a public forum, issues that plague the gender variant community, such as school safety, insurance, trans phobia was not highlighted, and in its place were the tiresome rants on sex change, HIV/AIDS and medical care. I have disagreements with one doctor on panel for implying that the SRS is the holy grail for all transsexuals, putting all non-ops under the bus. Perhaps my biggest disappointment is that you have three panelists with the sign “Dr” attached to their names, but <a href="http://jcem.endojournals.org/cgi/content/full/85/5/2034">backdated science</a> of transsexualism were used, and all were unaware with the <a href="http://yukishock.blogspot.com/2008/12/what-makes-transsexual-transsexual.html">recent late 2008’s discovery of two transsexual genes</a>. However, considering the circumstances in Malaysia, at least, it is a good start for us.<p></p><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEghTmaoouzVSvLpfIcvi1ozSZM7OXCz7fr6eIKljdpXjSUb4ynEo4-WENVA1LAAqFt3DcznjxyTHFjeF8Mg82a_gqOcDxW57tIklnGzfWOWmOxL66rz3CpI42QrfeTSePpzAEHAuEp0-vk/s1600/TGF2.bmp"><img style="MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 400px; FLOAT: left; HEIGHT: 266px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5537040710105167026" border="0" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEghTmaoouzVSvLpfIcvi1ozSZM7OXCz7fr6eIKljdpXjSUb4ynEo4-WENVA1LAAqFt3DcznjxyTHFjeF8Mg82a_gqOcDxW57tIklnGzfWOWmOxL66rz3CpI42QrfeTSePpzAEHAuEp0-vk/s400/TGF2.bmp" /></a> <br /><p></p><a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhK0bxbrLBQnn45-r2OujE5C_u23rwigFFj-YZGOxssgBT2do-lY7hmqm7IzXI586cVj2Yj6ae0CM0n5JRd-5taAYHvdzYRQSpcWf9P0gcSgD1QB3rnaNoNfgua2PelsFq9RJTLeMZEvGQ/s1600/TGF1.bmp"><img style="MARGIN: 0px 10px 10px 0px; WIDTH: 400px; FLOAT: left; HEIGHT: 266px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5537040129000800610" border="0" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhK0bxbrLBQnn45-r2OujE5C_u23rwigFFj-YZGOxssgBT2do-lY7hmqm7IzXI586cVj2Yj6ae0CM0n5JRd-5taAYHvdzYRQSpcWf9P0gcSgD1QB3rnaNoNfgua2PelsFq9RJTLeMZEvGQ/s400/TGF1.bmp" /></a> <br /><p></p><br /><p></p><br /><p></p><br /><p></p><br /><p></p><br /><p></p><br /><p></p><br /><p></p><br /><p></p><br /><p></p><br /><p></p><br /><p></p><br /><strong>Oh, My Sisters... </strong><p></p>Mixing with the trans people from PT Mak Nyah there was also an experience for me. Except for a few among the leaders whom I respect, some of them still practise the mak ayam, anak ayam behaviour from a standpoint of having superiority complex. And there are some who are flirtatious and speak like they were having an orgasm, probably in an attempt to seek attention. Such is the overcompensating and insecure attitude of many mak nyahs, one even tried to put me down by saying I am just a “pondan” just like anyone else. Correction, I do not use outlandish terms. The science says I am female, and so are they. And by how I live my life, I am not like anyone of them. We should be proud of our diversity. To try to pull everyone down to their league is at best disappointing. After the forum, I made a choice to not follow PT Mak Nyah back to KL, and instead spent time with friends to visit an NGO at Penang and have a taste of the food life there at Padang Kota Lama before heading home. <br /><p></p><img style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 400px; DISPLAY: block; HEIGHT: 266px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5537041181645199618" border="0" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEihALz8mkoh5Ick5FprT4n6HaSdmdm9Jtw0lq1mMEg4MtkmzcN8Jdh2P7H2gorheLsACzfBDb3lNDbOOkZAt4U3KTLeRvr60uQav8IQVfFpElxjbqPiN1k_BRg2j51bdq6c-cA91_j5ujQ/s400/Visit+1.jpg" /> <a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEirw3S1_YzAkEJHUilIAu3uxRMRuKSVppIRG0E97QS0W0ptANbnjmJtK1i55IGYb7_NnLpnUj3lT_A1LMNyuV3ZWQw7RZj8wklhvwqfvdkeFkObX2Y8rUNLOIbGQj0EHp2I9dItTN4H8RA/s1600/Visit+2.jpg"><img style="TEXT-ALIGN: center; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 400px; DISPLAY: block; HEIGHT: 266px; CURSOR: hand" id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5537041257564827122" border="0" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEirw3S1_YzAkEJHUilIAu3uxRMRuKSVppIRG0E97QS0W0ptANbnjmJtK1i55IGYb7_NnLpnUj3lT_A1LMNyuV3ZWQw7RZj8wklhvwqfvdkeFkObX2Y8rUNLOIbGQj0EHp2I9dItTN4H8RA/s400/Visit+2.jpg" /></a><p></p><p></p><p></p><strong>The Call</strong><p></p>Perhaps, better than the experience of being at the forum, eating the famous and marvelous foods of Penang, and enjoying the company of Dayalan and Shieko in their car on the drive back to KL (all of us counting numbers off car plates for fun to stay awake), was the result of an audition I attended weeks before at KLPAC. While brooding over the forum and the sisters at the hotel room alone, I received a wonderful call from KLPAC resident director Kimmy Kiew. My heart skipped a beat. It is about “Waiting For Godot”. <br /><p></p><br /><p></p>Next: <strong><a href="http://yukishock.blogspot.com/2011/04/five-months-part-two-one-year-wait-for.html">"Five Months - Part 2"</a>.</strong> <br /><p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-84918904812569002392010-05-17T10:07:00.004+08:002016-06-08T13:17:15.585+08:00Discovering Sexuality.Just after midnight crossing into Saturday the 10th of April 2010, something happened that changed my life by many degrees, and also challenged my perception of myself sexually. It was then I noticed how emotionally immature I am in handling relationships, and realize who I would like to spend my life with. I have never been comfortable with my own skin but that couple of hours of passion opened my eyes to see my comfort zone.<br /><br />That one night stand left me into such emotional wreck, longing for something more when the other party specifically just wanted someone for the night. I never felt such tingling sensation in my heart looking at the person walking away to the car after that event. It made my bed smell of roses in love. It made me special. It also made me feel like a virgin woman. I still do not like sex but I finally am hooked to being with someone.<br /><br />That someone identifies as a butch. And that made me check on my history. My first girlfriend when I was boy-acting, is a boy to me. Then my ex-fiancee is a tomboy. My ex-husband is a trans man. That night, I realized that if anything made me a lesbian, it was that pleasure, that insane passion that chewed my heart into bits. It was not the sex. It was the warm feeling of being comfortably naked, and with someone I really love. And everything about it is right, the moment, the timing, the kiss, and of course, the person.<br /><br />It was made to last for one night. She does not want anything more than that. And I do not blame her. She knew I wanted more. So she goes back to her life with her girls and partying along with her career, and I am stuck with myself after giving her the last piece of me that I can ever give to anyone. I cannot handle the emptiness and the loneliness, the kind that I have never experienced. I have so many friends around me, yet I feel so void.<br /><br />Many other thoughts came across during the past one-month plus. More regrets of my teenage years when I forced myself to conform to the expectations of church, friends and family of me to be a boy, based on their transphobic whims that affected my growth. As a Christian I grieved my soul, as a daughter my suffering to be a son was less important as my filial duties, as a friend no one truly understands the pain of living against who I am.<br /><br />I conclude that I am emotionally stunted and only recently started to work on myself in that area. Almost a decade of suppressing my female identity led to no growth at all spiritually and emotionally. I was literally a zombie living life at another dimension. It was only when my soul returned home after I started transitioning that I am growing again emotionally. I cannot take the fast love and fast break up with her. My brain is clear but my soul responds childishly. She broke a 24-year-old heart in a 34-year-old woman.<br /><br />I always assumed I am asexual who is bisexual by attraction, but I never had people of any sexual orientation haunt my mind like strong lesbians do. I never knew such feeling of misery now that we are staying away from each other. It is the sum of all the scars I have ever experienced when loving women like her. And this loss is still an open flesh wound that is poured salt and iodine over and over again, and it still would not let me go.<br /><br />Commitment is no longer something I frame myself into since the best woman in my life is now officially gone and ignoring me away. There are no signs that she will ever be strong and mature enough to handle a commitment anyway. Even if she does, the damage between us is done though I already dedicated a space in me for her for the rest of my life. Or she may be with another girl. Watching her grow and spending life with her is now a dream. I may probably be the only idiot who would still love her once she hits 50 plus and all wrinkled. But I will always love her, and hope she gets the life she wants.<br /><br />I now crave for the other component part of the night that I got. I no longer want any emotional attachments. I want to be caressed again. I want someone to be on top of me once more. I want to feel the pleasure, the touch, the strength and the kiss. That hard but sweet smooth kiss that I never got when I kissed a man. The gentle heartbeat my body feels when we were close. The warmth from her hot blooded body holding me so tight.<br /><br />Yes, I like being with a butch lesbian. That soft skinned cream pie with strong arms to keep me entertained. Now I have another strong reason to get my Gender Reassignment Surgery done as soon as possible, to really slim down and take care of me. Perhaps when a butch digs into me later, I will no longer be an asexual and may even like the sex. I crave the sensation of having a bold, authoritative, strong woman on my side of the bed. In my soul, I know I can never love anyone again, so all I will do is just close my eyes.<br /><p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-21954424200704505792010-04-27T16:20:00.010+08:002016-06-08T13:16:48.344+08:00What's On Yuki's Mind: Patience Is A Virtue.I am easily annoyed these days. Every day, the bathroom is never clear for me to head straight into it to start my day and the alarm never rings enough for me to wake up and go for a jog when I seriously need a few rounds very badly. Then, I have to endure the pressure of getting potential clients into our programmes daily. These days, I am without a laptop and have to resort to using my colleague’s PCs and I am unable to get any updates about current work. It is raining everyday these days despite warnings of a dry season. Every time I go back I can expect a horrendous jam which I have the choice to evade, with the condition I agree to pay a RM2.00 toll and still get stuck on the other highway after the link, unless I am lucky enough to leave work exactly at 6pm which seldom happens. Add to that, my constant travelling for sales often fates me to meet the worst of typical Malaysian drivers. These are all real deep pains in the neck.<br /><br />But, reflecting on all of these and many more irritating moments in my life, I realize that the frustrations happen for one simple reason. I am impatient. This is an obvious weakness in my life and it is reflected on how I think and feel. So this can be my training ground, to have a little PATIENCE. <p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-3096343428953038252010-04-23T17:15:00.007+08:002016-06-08T13:16:17.764+08:00I Am Who I Am, In Case You Think What You Think.I am born a trans woman, in case you think I just suddenly decided to be another sex.<br /><br />I am in a family with one older brother, in case you think I have a lot of sisters running about.<br /><br />I am in a boy’s school, in case you think I am in a co-ed institution.<br /><br />I am into football, in case you think I am into play houses.<br /><br />I am aware of your sexual insecurity, in case you think I must be ashamed of my sexual identity.<br /><br />I am a fine example of gender variances, in case you think people like me should not exist.<br /><br />I am with a valid medical condition by WHO, in case you think you can cherry pick holy verses.<br /><br />I am very much and mostly a female, in case you think your sex is as small as your sex organ.<br /><br />I am constantly challenging your perception of gender, in case you think you know what that is.<br /><br />I am not sexually abused, in case you think some indecent person “caused” me to be this way.<br /><br />I am loved by both my mom and dad, in case you think either is too distant or too overbearing.<br /><br />I am blessed with Transformers Headmasters as my first toys, in case you think I like Barbie.<br /><br />I am a believer in Christ, in case you think I have no reconciliation with a God.<br /><br />I am asexual, in case you think I am homosexual.<br /><br />I am lucky to have B-cup breasts, in case you think they are fake implants.<br /><br />I am not a self-loather, in case you think I am struggling with myself.<br /><br />I am not dressed to kill, in case you think you saw me in some street somewhere.<br /><br />I am not a prostitute, in case you think my body is a sex toy.<br /><br />I am at awe with my influence on God to rain fire, in case you think I caused recent earthquakes.<br /><br />I am a person who does not discriminate, in case you think I deserve discrimination.<br /><br />I am a person who is just normal, in case you think you know some other person like me.<br /><br />I am in pubs for Karaoke drinks and Manchester United, in case you think I pick up men there.<br /><br />I am training my mutant powers, in case you think I have ability to destroy the entire society.<br /><br />I am tomboyish, in case you think I am effeminate.<br /><br />I am not what you think I am, in case you think too much.<br /><p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-8384590369821548372010-04-16T10:23:00.006+08:002016-06-08T13:16:04.898+08:00Malaysia: The Only Country In The Civilized World Where Some States Make A Crime Out Of What You Dress.My, my, my. When they cannot catch criminals that actually harms people, this is what some states are doing to innocent bystanders. The so-called “crime” to punish? Dressing to their real gender identity. <a href="http://news.asiaone.com/News/AsiaOne%2BNews/Crime/Story/A1Story20100415-210516.html">These five ladies are ignorantly called “males” by this news piece</a>, and Chief Inspector Azman Ariffin was mentioned as the one prosecuting them. Remember, all they were doing is wearing clothes in the gender they are comfortable with? There are no charges brought against them for prostitution, so therefore it is safe to assume they were just chilling out. So what is this Chief Inspector trying to do? Intimidate the five to become the men they are not? These "police" should know better than to make a fuss out of nothing, and catch real criminals.<br /><br />Alas, this is not the first time such incidences happen. Last July, <a href="http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/7/14/nation/20090714161724&sec=nation">a trans woman was fined RM 25 for dressing up as who she is in Johor Bahru</a>. There, <a href="http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/2/11/nation/20100211150912&sec=nation">another two trans woman were fined a total of RM 225 for simply clothing themselves as the females they are</a>. Heavens, do these "public safety enforcers" really believe gender destiny lies in the marker on an IC or what parts some have between their thighs? Luckily, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transsexualism">medical health professionals and peer-previewed sciences says otherwise</a>. Unluckily, those staying in environments such as Kuantan, Pahang and Johor Baru, Johor has to face harassment and disturbances from people who do not have much education and information about gender, and they still choose to live back in the dark ages.<br /><br />I suggest LGBTs boycott Pahang and Johor as destinations for holidays. I would. I shall not waste money and time, or endanger myself and risk being surrounded by a climate of prejudice against trans people. <p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-87393221031205555032010-04-15T15:26:00.007+08:002016-06-08T13:16:04.901+08:00"The Star" Gives Professional Reporting Lesson — HM, Learn Something.Yesterday, I featured <a href="http://yukishock.blogspot.com/2010/04/penulis-harian-metro-kejam.html">a post on the biased and childish reporting from <em>Harian Metro</em>, which includes name-calling trans woman, “pondan”, 9 times, and tried to brush trans people with negative stereotypes</a>. It is universally understood by everyone in the civilized world that morality and character has nothing to do with a person’s gender identity, yet <em>Harian Metro</em> attempted to correlate trans woman-hood, with cognitive sinister motives. Such blatant act of demonization deserves nothing but scorn. However, <em>The Star</em> shows how to do a proper report: <a href="http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2010/4/15/nation/6056857&sec=nation">just explain the situation without insulting people with derogatory words, and report on the news without attempting to single out and demonize any groups of people</a>:<br /><br /><br /><blockquote><br /><p>KUALA LUMPUR: A college student’s indecent act in front of a webcam has come back to haunt him three years later.</p><br /><p>The 22-year-old from Sarawak, identified only as Chong, said he befriended a man, in his 30s, in an online chat room during his first year in a college here.</p><br /><p>“He wanted me to teach him how to masturbate and show him how to do it,” he said. Chong masturbated in front of a webcam so that the man, known as Melvin, could see how it was done.</p><br /><p>“But I did not know he recorded it and on March 14, he sent me a message asking me to have sex with him.</p><br /><p>“He threatened to upload the recording on the Internet and asked for RM200 after I rejected his request for sex,” he told a press conference organised by the MCA Public Services and Complaints Bureau here yesterday.</p><br /><p>Chong said Melvin came to his house to collect the money. “He showed up again after two weeks and asked for more money,” he said, adding that he banked RM250 into Melvin’s account.</p><br /><p>Chong said he did not lodge a police report or tell anyone about the recording and extortion as he was not sure what to do.</p><br /><p>He decided to seek the help of bureau head Datuk Michael Chong because he was afraid that Melvin will continue asking for money.</p><br /><p>When asked why he did what Melvin asked, Chong said he was naive and trusted people easily.</p><br /><p>He said he stopped communicating with Melvin and did not reply to his messages after the masturbating incident because he felt something was not right.</p><br /><p>Michael said last year, his bureau received five reports relating to online sex video clips and extortion.</p><br /><p>He said five victims lost a total of RM570,000 to extortionists.</p><br /><p>Early this year, a man was forced to pay RM4,600 to a woman who had his naked photos, he added.<br /></p></blockquote><br /><p></p><br /><p>Both men’s sexual orientation were never objectified and not sensationalized. The words “gay” and “homosexual” were never used. The same situation between a man and a woman was mentioned, showing the reality of the situation, and the truth that immoral behaviour or criminal activities are not exclusive to any sexual orientation or gender identity. This is the journalistic integrity that separates tabloids like <em>Harian Metro</em> with newspapers like <em>The Star</em>. Now, what we hope to see from <em>The Star</em> is consistency, as <a href="http://yukishock.blogspot.com/2009/10/star-acknowledges-transwomen-then.html">they resorted to tabloid style reporting before</a>, or <a href="http://yukishock.blogspot.com/2009/11/story-on-group-of-transsexual-sex.html">allow junk news to creep into its papers</a>.</p><br /><p>On <em>Harian Metro</em>, the character assassination on trans people as done by them can be honestly called what they are:<em> hate speech that will explode into societal genocide</em> if not checked. And <em>Harian Metro</em>’s often published discriminatory rants against trans people, places them as the leaders in creating an environment of potential hate crimes against human beings whose only disturbance in society, is to be born in a gender different from their sex. Something needs to be done to counter the utter disrespect <em>Harian Metro </em>shows to the trans community in Malaysia. <a href="http://www.bernama.com/bernama/v5/newsgeneral.php?id=465620">Violent</a> <a href="http://yukishock.blogspot.com/2009/02/transgender-woman-found-dead-with-neck.html">reported</a> <a href="http://yukishock.blogspot.com/2009/08/star-newspaper-dishonours-murdered.html">deaths</a> <a href="http://yukishock.blogspot.com/2009/10/two-months-ago-another-transgender.html">of</a> <a href="http://www.transgenderdor.org/?page_id=1194">trans</a> <a href="http://www.transgenderdor.org/?page_id=555">woman</a> <a href="http://www.transgenderdor.org/?page_id=58">every</a> <a href="http://www.transgenderdor.org/?page_id=119">year</a>, <a href="http://www.tgeu.org/sites/default/files/TGEU-TMM-Map-TDOR09-en.pdf">worldwide</a>, and the many more that are not reported, gives us a sad reminder of what such hatred can do.</p><br /><p>Some are your friends. Some are your families. Wise up, <em>Harian Metro</em>. Is this what you want?</p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-36099727890794675502010-04-14T12:13:00.006+08:002016-06-08T13:16:17.769+08:00Penulis Harian Metro Kejam.Try not to press <a href="http://www.hmetro.com.my/articles/Pondankejam/Article">here</a>. Tabloid news. Do not give them more hits than they deserve. But I will bring to your attention this article that does nothing but attempt to again demonize an entire transsexual community and brushing them with stereotypes. I shall substitute every mention of “pondan” with <em>penulis Harian Metro</em> and “mak nyah” with <em>penulis tabloid</em> to make a point them.<br /><blockquote><p>BATU PAHAT: Dari luar dia nampak lembut dan bersopan-santun. Namun, perwatakan itu langsung tidak menggambarkan kezaliman seorang <em>penulis Harian Metro</em> berusia 29 tahun terhadap seorang gadis lembam yang dikurung dan 'diperdagangkan' kepada lelaki hidung belang selama sebulan.</p><p>Malah, <em>penulis tabloid</em> terbabit sering mengancam dan memukul remaja berusia 19 tahun itu jika enggan melayan nafsu pelanggan yang bertandang ke rumahnya di Taman Soga di sini dengan bayaran RM100.<br /><br />Hasil perbuatan tidak berperikemanusiaan terhadap remaja itu, <em>penulis tabloid </em>berkenaan yang juga seorang <em>pak andam</em> menggelarkan dirinya <em>Abang Mustapha</em> meraih pendapatan lebih RM2,000 sebulan.<br /><br />Bagaimanapun, kegiatan jahat <em>penulis Harian Metro</em> itu dapat dihidu keluarga gadis berkenaan yang mencarinya di sekitar bandar ini sejak sebulan lalu.<br /><br />Ketua Polis Daerah, Asisten Komisioner Ibrahim Mohd Aris, berkata pengalaman hitam mangsa bermula apabila <em>pak andam</em> terbabit bertemu remaja berkenaan di Dataran Penggaram di sini, pada malam 3 Mac lalu.<br /><br />Dalam pertemuan itu, <em>penulis tabloid</em> terbabit memancing mangsa dengan perwatakan baiknya sebelum mempelawa remaja itu tinggal bersamanya. Dia turut mengambil hati gadis OKU itu dengan membelikan pakaian baru.</p><p>Menurutnya, sebaik mangsa tinggal di rumah itu, dia tidak dibenarkan keluar rumah dan diancam akan dipukul jika cuba melarikan diri.<br /><br />“Sejak itu, mangsa dipaksa melayan nafsu lelaki yang datang ke rumah berkenaan dan jika enggan dia akan dibelasah,” katanya.<br /><br />Menurut Ibrahim, kegiatan tidak berperikemanusiaan menjadikan gadis OKU sebagai hamba seks oleh <em>penulis Harian Metro</em> berkenaan akhirnya terbongkar apabila sepupu mangsa yang menyamar sebagai pelanggan menemuinya.</p><p>Katanya, sepupu gadis OKU itu memaklumkan perbuatan kejam <em>penulis tabloid</em> terbabit kepada keluarga mangsa sebelum melaporkan kepada polis.<br /><br />Ibrahim berkata, <em>penulis Harian Metro</em> terbabit yang panik selepas menyedari kegiatannya dihidu pihak berkuasa cuba membuat laporan di Balai Polis Senggarang kononnya dia dipukul abang mangsa namun diberkas memberkas <em>penulis Harian Metro</em> terbabit ketika dia mahu membuat laporan polis.<br /><br />Katanya, siasatan awal polis mendapati <em>penulis tabloid</em> berkenaan mempunyai beberapa rekod jenayah lampau termasuk mengikut Seksyen 292 Kanun Keseksaan kerana menjual bahan lucah serta Seksyen 325 iaitu menyebabkan kecederaan parah.<br /><br />“Polis menyerbu rumah suspek dan hasil pemeriksaan menjumpai beberapa kondom sudah diguna di beberapa tempat, selain wang tunai RM2,247 dalam laci milik <em>penulis Harian Metro</em> terbabit yang dipercayai hasil melacurkan OKU berkenaan.</p><p>“Selain berdepan tindakan mengikut Seksyen 324 Kanun Keseksaan kerana kesalahan mencederakan seseorang menggunakan senjata, <em>penulis Harian Metro</em> itu juga berdepan dakwaan terbabit dalam aktiviti persundalan mengikut Seksyen 372A kanun sama.<br /><br />“Malah, dia juga berdepan dakwaan mengikut Seksyen 377b Kanun Keseksaan (seks luar tabii), Seksyen 347 Kanun Keseksaan kerana melakukan pengurungan salah dan Seksyen 292A Kanun Keseksaan kerana memiliki 20 klip video lucah.<br /><br />“Kejadian itu mendorong polis untuk mengambil tindakan tegas terhadap <em>penulis Harian Metro</em> di bandar ini selepas mendapati ada antara mereka bertindak melampaui batas,” katanya.</p><p>(changes made and emphasis added; translation may be needed for foreign readers)</p></blockquote><p></p><p>That amounts, to nine mention of pondans, and six mention of mak nyahs. And bear in mind, pondan is a derogatory word, and this story uses it <strong>9</strong> times. Can we see their sexist mentality?</p><p>Usually in such reporting, professionalism requires the writer to simply mark the person as just that, <em>the person</em> or <em>the suspect</em> or "orang" to avoid targetting any specific group of people. Just imagine how bad things would be if we replace "pondan" with Kristian, and "mak nyah" with penganut; or worse, both with m*****. But of course, Harian Metro is the tabloid for sperm brains who love sensational news and their target market is people with third world mentality. We of course would not expect any professionalism from them. However, such purposeful demonization of transsexuals should be scrutinized to the bone, especially when dealing with an already misunderstood community. Looking at the size of their hypothalamus, I would not be surprised that their avid readers are filmakers Raja Azmi Raja Sulaiman and "Dr" Rozmey (see <a href="http://yukishock.blogspot.com/2010/03/filmakers-draw-first-blood-on-trans.html">previous post</a>). Only ignorant minds would resort to such parroting of all trash ideas and news.</p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-21693458894186380152010-03-30T18:11:00.006+08:002016-06-08T13:16:17.755+08:00Ignorant Filmakers Sanctioned To Draw First Blood On Trans People.I do apologize for not writing much these days, as I have quite a number of things on my mind. However, something propped up last week in my-email that I feel needs to be addressed. Slightly reversing the decision by the Information, Communications and Culture Ministry last year that bans depictions of rempits and trans people (I still do not get the connection between violent motorcyclists and decent human beings with a medical condition), <a href="http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/articles/2sore/Article/index_html">local filmmakers can now depict homosexuality and trans people IF the film ends with sad or tragic consequences to homosexual persons or trans people</a>.<br /><br />I am very thrilled that my acts of going to work, singing Karaoke with my friends, sleeping, watching movies and enjoying music are considered “immoral activities” by some quarters that I need to repent from. I am also sure that some of my friends would be excited that their loving relationships with their partners is considered nothing but a “culture” that may damage moral values of other people, and people need protection from some insane influence to turn heterosexuals to homosexuals (as if it is ever possible).<br /><br />Not.<br /><br />I absolutely do not get any relevance from movies that are based on nothing by idle speculation and lazy guessing into the life of a trans woman, like “…(Anu) dalam botol” for example. I would not even say poorly researched; it is pure fictional fantasy (I can imagine no research was done for “2Alam” either). I do not magically wish to “transform” into a woman to please anyone. If my partner is homosexual, he would find that gross because he wants a man, not a woman. I would not even regret getting the operation done if I have the chance, and if I do stumble upon a loving girl, then we would have a decent lesbian relationship, a kind of partnership that is recognized as the most low risk group for HIV/AIDS infection. By the way I do not even like sex. And I am not a “transvestite”.<br /><br />So, this is plain misinformation, miscommunication and a counter-culture move to allow demonization of people like me. I have totally no regrets being who I am and am proud to be finally be living, not as who Raja Azmi Raja Sulaiman’s thinks I am or I should be. I shall die in pride that though my life is difficult thanks to ignorant and deceitful people like these so-called filmmakers, at least I live as the woman I truly am. These hate-mongering, rumour spreading and lie parroting heterosexists like “Dr” Rozmey may be getting the hype they want. But if any in the trans community of Malaysia commits suicide or are murdered due to the climate of prejudice, misunderstanding, intolerance and discrimination these “filmmakers” create, my sisters’ blood is surely on their hands.<p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-55359630770668433872010-01-14T17:31:00.008+08:002016-06-08T13:14:53.761+08:00Between "Human Rights" And "Religious Freedom".<em>This was my FaceBook status yesterday. A lot of people liked it, I thought I would share it:</em><br /><br /><blockquote>If "Human Rights" and "Religious Freedom" are 2 boyfriends and I am allowed to marry only one, I will surely marry "Human Rights". "Religious Freedom" does not guarantee me having "Human Rights" again. But if I marry "Human Rights" I will always have "Religious Freedom". "Religious Freedom is at times selfish to tie me down like a slave. "Human Rights" will always let me be free to see freedom for human kind. :o )</blockquote><p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com2tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-75560531413008579242010-01-04T14:27:00.006+08:002016-06-08T13:16:31.649+08:00Sass Rogando Sasot Speaks At The United Nations.<em>Erm. I think I will let Ms. Sass Rogando Sasot speak for all of us trans women of the earth. :o)</em><br /><p><span style="font-size:85%;">Opposing Grave Human Rights Violations On The Basis Of Sexual Orientation And Gender Identity</span></p><p><span style="font-size:85%;">(United Nations, New York, 10th December 2009)</span></p><br /><object height="344" width="425"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/JrOc6CIQjtc&hl=en_US&fs=1&"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/JrOc6CIQjtc&hl=en_US&fs=1&" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object><br /><p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-32591202624261410312009-12-28T14:32:00.006+08:002016-06-08T13:13:54.463+08:00Ten Reasons Why Motorcycles Should Be Banned In Malaysia.1) Some motorcyclists think they are driving cars and end up taking the middle of the lane instead of the side. They become instant contributors among major causes of the infamous traffic congestion in Malaysia!<br /><br />2) Certain motorcyclists still think they own cars and love to park their little vehicle on the car parking area itself, especially around places with high car volume. And there already is not enough parking around KL!<br /><br />3) The only time some of them do realize they are not driving cars, is when they weave in and out of every minutest space available between cars at ridiculous speed, and is dangerous to other people too!<br /><br />4) The motorcycle remains the easiest motor vehicle to steal. Think of all the time policemen can save to work on real crimes, and also save insurance people trouble. Motorcyclists can even save for bus and beer.<br /><br />5) People do not service motorbikes anymore do they? For a small machine, it is amazing they can emit smoke enough to rival the worst of Rapid KL busses. They are a major cause of pollution in the city!<br /><br />6) It is great for Malaysian economy! More cars will be sold, more people pump petrol, toll plazas will get money from more cars instead of letting motorbike people through for free! For current car owners, erm...<br /><br />7) All OPS SIKAP will definitely see a huge drop in road fatalities during festive seasons. We know by fact most these deaths are overwhelmingly motorcyclists. Why still let them on those potential killer toys?<br /><br />8) We always complain about snatch thieves, why not take away the major equipment from the criminal’s modus operandi? Instead of asking ladies to stop flaunting handbags, how about halting motorcycling?<br /><br />9) Mat Rempits will finally lose their star vehicle! They can only Rempit with a broom in their room all they want if motorbikes are banned. Hurrah! No more bike gangsters! The menace will be gone for good!<br /><br />10) They are small and fast for goodness sake! Motorbikes should be banned for the owners own bloody safety. We care for them, but their majority do not even care about themselves. Away with motorbikes!<br /><p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-14172513290410819152009-12-20T19:17:00.006+08:002016-06-08T13:16:17.748+08:00Transgender People And The New Straits Times Factor.There was this <a href="http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/articles/20edit20/Article/index_html">disgusting editorial opinion on the NST today</a>, with the writer presumably being either the Group Managing Editor Zainul Arifin Mohammed Isa, and/or Syed Nadzri Syed Harun, who is the Group Editor. This letter was published on the same newspaper that <a href="http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/articles/20seual-2-2-2/Article/index_html">a two-page special on transgender people was featured</a>. The letter offered ridiculous suggestions that probably confirm New Straits Times as a confused third world newspaper with little authority.<br /><br /><blockquote><p>EDITORIAL: Sex and the Fatine factor<br />2009/12/20<br /><br />BUT for a few sexily-dressed individuals who flaunt their dubious assets in certain streets of the city to earn a precarious living, by and large these controversial members of our society keep very much to themselves.<br /><br />Until someone like Mohammed Fazdil Min Bahari, or Fatine Young as he calls himself now following his same-sex marriage to a doting Briton after they were issued a certificate to marry by the British Home Office, comes along and triggers the nation into a polemic over the issue of transgender. It may not have been Fazdil's wish to be in the limelight but for the very fact that he is a transsexual and that another arm of the British government, the UK Border Agency, is not allowing him to stay in the country because immigration procedures were not followed. Fazdil is now awaiting deportation pending his third application to remain in Britain.<br /><br />Meanwhile, Malaysian Immigration director-general Datuk Abdul Rahman Othman has declared that Fazdil has "brought shame on the country" by his same-sex marriage and for overstaying in Britain. "The penalties may be more severe than the two-year passport issuance deferment as she (he) has brought great shame to us," declared Rahman. Several non-governmental organisations and concerned individuals have rallied around "Fatine". While society in Britain and the laws of that country, and the West, generally, may accept Fazdil, whose predicament has been described as a "woman trapped in a man's body" and who has yet to go under the surgeon's knife to make him a female, it is not the case in Malaysia.<br /><br />The laws and regulations of the land are quite clear where issues of transsexuality, homosexuality and cross-dressing are concerned and it has seen the authorities -- police, religious and others -- acting decisively against them. Homosexuality and other "unorthodox" sexual practices are frowned upon by the Quran and Bible. Islam recognises four genders -- males, females, khunsa (males who are hermaphrodites) and mukhannis (effeminate males). While a khunsa may undergo a sex-change operation and be reclassified as female and accepted, the mukhanni is forbidden to change his sex, and cannot enlarge his breasts with hormones, cross dress or enhance his "female" looks with make-up.</p><p>While we can sympathise with their predicament, there are no two ways about interpreting the law of the land. Until and unless Parliament and the religious authorities see it fit to decide otherwise, Malaysians in the "grey sexual areas" have to abide by the laws and keep their sexuality to themselves.</p></blockquote><br />If it is not annoying enough that either writer continuously called a transsexual Fatine, by male pronouns, they even called transsexuals “controversial members of our society”. This is a <strong>blatant act of discrimination, by attempting to segregate and stigmatize transsexuals</strong>. If that is not enough, the writer placed “scare quotes” around Fatine’s name.<br /><br />Not contented of being a bigot, either writer then suggested by both religion and the “law of the land” to keep (our) sexuality to ourselves. Now this is where complete idiocy of either writer strikes me. Firstly, the law of the land does not criminalize homosexuality as per se, but <strong>“carnal intercourse against nature”. Penal Section Code 377, also applies fully to heterosexuals; <a href="http://www.malaysianbar.org.my/index2.php?option=com_content&do_pdf=1&id=24812">sadly only people in same sex relationships are persecuted</a> using it. This is called heterosexism and bias. But</strong> <a href="http://womenshealth.about.com/b/2003/10/03/men-say-women-want-anal-sex.htm">Sodomy, is also a heterosexual activity</a>.<br /><br />Secondly, there is no law against transsexuality, and <strong><a href="http://wpath.org/documents/Med%20Nec%20on%202008%20Letterhead.pdf">transsexuality is a medical condition</a>; it has its own researches and medical professionals, and recognized by the World Health Association</strong>. To outlaw people on the basis of a medical condition is stupid, if not mentally unsound in today’s age. I wonder just how can either of them miss that.<br /><br />Thirdly, the talk of religion is already out. Homosexuality, as oversimplified as a form of lust in the Abrahamic Holy Books, is not even related to the homosexuality as per known today. The word defining “homosexual” does not even appear in the Quran, and “homosexual” in the Bible has been placed into it by political meddling, reinterpretation only since 1949. <strong>To <a href="http://islamworld.net/resources/cache/501">argue religion is to misuse</a> it especially when other religious laws are not observed</strong>.<br /><br />Homosexuality is a word to signify attraction, as with heterosexuality, bisexuality and asexuality. To <em>scrutinize homosexual oral sex and ignore heterosexual oral sex is plain selective discrimination</em>, influenced by the wave of heteronormality Malaysia is being bombarded with. No one complains of <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cpDrYx7Zj40&feature=related">Britney Spears’ sex-with-2-guys-song, did we</a>?<br /><br />For either editor to lay claim that we should closet our sexuality is the show of their oximoronism. This is about <strong><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gender_identity">gender identity</a></strong>. How do you closet gender? Can we then ask them to <em>keep their malay identity face</em>? Or <em>keep their religious identity to themselves</em>? I am not sure what kind of editors they are to fail to see this simple point.<br /><br />In the end, it is obvious either writer is not stupid. They are just blatantly choosing to show their intolerant, ignorant and prejudicial ego. It is impossible for someone to lay claims to being "group editors" of a "national newspaper" to write such illogical and unknowledgeable claptrap. Or perhaps it is yet another example for selective presentation of information?<br /><br />Even if either editor is biased, with an estimated ratio of 1 out of 500 people being born <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transsexualism">transsexual</a>, and 1 out of 60 people being born with sexual ambiguities ranging from <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Klinefelter">Klinefelter Syndrome</a> to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/5-alpha-reductase_deficiency">5ARD</a> to <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Androgen_insensitivity_syndrome">Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome</a>; they stand a good chance of tasting a burden of a lifetime; having a classic <a href="http://www.apa.org/pi/lgbc/policy/transgender.pdf">transgender</a> child. Perhaps only then they will learn.<br /><p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-34038342382773196082009-12-16T11:54:00.007+08:002016-06-08T13:16:48.353+08:00What's On Yuki's Mind: Overkill.<p align="center"><object height="344" width="425"><param name="movie" value="http://www.youtube.com/v/Lcu7OCIqlqE&hl=en_US&fs=1&"><param name="allowFullScreen" value="true"><param name="allowscriptaccess" value="always"><embed src="http://www.youtube.com/v/Lcu7OCIqlqE&hl=en_US&fs=1&" type="application/x-shockwave-flash" allowscriptaccess="always" allowfullscreen="true" width="425" height="344"></embed></object><br /><br />I can't get to sleep<br />I think about the implications<br />Of diving in too deep<br />And possibly the complications<br />Especially at night<br />I worry over situations<br />I know will be alright<br />Perhaps its just my imagination<br />Day after day it reappears<br />Night after night my heartbeat, shows the fear<br />Ghosts appear and fade away<br />Alone between the sheets<br />Only brings exasperation<br />It's time to walk the streets<br />Smell the desperation<br />At least there's pretty lights<br />And though there's little variation<br />It nullifies the night<br />From overkill<br />Day after day it reappears<br />Night after night my heartbeat, shows the fear<br />Ghosts appear and fade away<br />Come back another day<br />I can't get to sleep<br />I think about the implications<br />Of diving in too deep<br />And possibly the complications<br />Especially at night<br />I worry over situations<br />That I know will be alright<br />It's just overkill<br />Day after day it reappears<br />Night after night, my heartbeat, shows the fear<br />Ghosts appear and fade away<br />Ghosts appear and fade away<br />Ghosts appear and fade away<br /></p><p align="center"></p><p align="center">Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-37076668066060680842009-12-15T12:25:00.007+08:002016-06-08T13:15:47.140+08:00The Best From The Archives Of "The Journey Of Yuki" - Breaking News: More Evidence On Biological Causes Of Homosexuality Found.<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgWH0Fakkyw5w35mbl8EqcsK3t6XjxfpbooDI8giBgb1EzRDdv47Yglh6E86EWk3TUxArDHPIlDBJcrY4o6DmJOwmgOb-Bm5AnBjRqZDrQlW71N02tf3Pz1TvhBxbgdTV_4-GVwA7EseJ0/s1600-h/en20080617_2_1_pic1.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5213144192823747378" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; CURSOR: hand; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEgWH0Fakkyw5w35mbl8EqcsK3t6XjxfpbooDI8giBgb1EzRDdv47Yglh6E86EWk3TUxArDHPIlDBJcrY4o6DmJOwmgOb-Bm5AnBjRqZDrQlW71N02tf3Pz1TvhBxbgdTV_4-GVwA7EseJ0/s400/en20080617_2_1_pic1.jpg" border="0" /></a><br /><div>As all the ex-gay ministries parade their scientifically discredited causation theories on homosexuality, more scientific evidence on the innateness of homosexuality have been discovered. So with more truth on homosexuality coming out, perhaps it is high time ex-gay ministries admit the obvious before <em>more people realise about the ex-gay myth</em>: <strong><em>It is all lies.</em></strong><br /><br />Source: <a href="http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn14146-gay-brains-structured-like-those-of-the-opposite-sex.html?DCMP=ILC-hmts&nsref=news10_head_dn14146">NewScientist</a><br /></div><div><blockquote>Brain scans have provided <strong>the most compelling evidence</strong> yet that <strong>being gay or straight is a <em>biologically fixed trait</em></strong>. <em>(emphasis added)<br /></em><br />The scans reveal that in gay people, key structures of the brain governing emotion, mood, anxiety and aggressiveness resemble those in straight people of the opposite sex.<br /><br />The differences are likely to have been forged in the womb or in early infancy, says Ivanka Savic, who conducted the study at the Karolinska Institute in Stockholm, Sweden.<br /><br />"This is the most robust measure so far of cerebral differences between homosexual and heterosexual subjects," she says.<br /><br />Previous studies have also shown differences in brain architecture and activity between gay and straight people, but most relied on people's responses to sexuality driven cues that could have been learned, such as rating the attractiveness of male or female faces.<br /><br /><strong>Brain symmetry</strong><br />To get round this, Savic and her colleague, Per Lindström, chose to measure brain parameters likely to have been fixed at birth.<br /><br />"That was the whole point of the study, to show parameters that differ, but which couldn't be altered by learning or cognitive processes," says Savic.<br /><br />First they used MRI scans to find out the overall volume and shapes of brains in a group of 90 volunteers consisting of 25 heterosexuals and 20 homosexuals of each gender.<br /><br />The results showed that straight men had asymmetric brains, with the right hemisphere slightly larger – and the gay women also had this asymmetry. Gay men, meanwhile, had symmetrical brains like those of straight women.<br /><br />The team next used PET scans to measure blood flow to the amygdala, part of the brain that governs fear and aggression. The images revealed how the amygdala connected to other parts of the brain, giving clues to how this might influence behaviour.<br /><br /><strong>Depression link</strong><br />They found that the patterns of connectivity in gay men matched those of straight women, and vice versa (see image, above right). In straight women and gay men, the connections were mainly into regions of the brain that manifest fear as intense anxiety.<br /><br />"The regions involved in phobia, anxiety and depression overlap with the pattern we see from the amygdala," says Savic.<br /><br />This is significant, she says, and fits with data showing that women are three times as likely as men to suffer from mood disorders or depression. Gay men have higher rates of depression too, she says, but it's difficult to know whether this is down to biology, homophobia or simply feelings of being "different".<br /><br />In straight men and lesbians, the amygdala fed its signals mainly into the sensorimotor cortex and the striatum, regions of the brain that trigger the "fight or flight" response. "It's a more action-related response than in women," says Savic.<br /><br />'<strong>Striking differences</strong>'<br />"This study demonstrates that homosexuals of both sexes show strong cross-sex shifts in brain symmetry," says Qazi Rahman, a leading researcher on sexual orientation at Queen Mary college, University of London, UK.<br /><br />"The connectivity differences reported in the amygdala are striking."<br /><br />"Paradoxically, it's more informative to look at things that have no direct connection with sexual orientation, and that's where this study scores," says Simon LeVay, a prominent US author who in 1991 reported finding differences (pdf) in a part of the brain called the hypothalamus between straight and gay men.<br /><br />But as Savic herself acknowledges, the study can't say whether the brain differences are inherited, or result from abnormally high or low exposure in the womb to sex hormones such as testosterone.<br /><br />Journal reference: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0801566105)<br /></blockquote></div><div></div><div><strong></strong></div><div><strong></strong></div><div><p></p><strong>Yuki's Thoughts:</strong></div><div><strong></strong></div><div><strong>I guess even when the dusk is settled, with more and more truths about homosexuality coming up, we would still hear more wacky ideas from ex-gays (and anti-gays). But instead of simply admitting the ridiculous theories of distant fathers and overbearing mothers (and crossdressed by mother ala Edmund Smith); we would instead face up to more imposement of personal evaluation of values upon us, as stupid as their 'traditional values' sound. (With this discovery) They would probably ask questions such as - <em>can this be prevented during pregnancy</em>? Ignorance AND Intolerance is bliss.</strong></div><br /><div></div><br /><div><strong>Yuki's Choice Reading:</strong></div><div><strong></strong></div><br /><div><strong>Coverage and comments on this groundbreaking story also available on:</strong></div><div><strong></strong></div><div><strong>America's </strong><a href="http://www.boxturtlebulletin.com/2008/06/16/2215#comments"><strong>Box Turtle Bulletin</strong></a> <strong>and</strong> <strong>Asia's </strong><a href="http://www.fridae.com/newsfeatures/article.php?articleid=2247&viewarticle=1"><strong>Fridae</strong></a></div><div></div><div><strong></strong></div><div><p></p><strong>Published in "The Journey Of Yuki" on Saturday, June 18, 2008</strong> </div><p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com0tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-67273775349025415312009-12-11T12:57:00.007+08:002016-06-08T13:16:17.815+08:00Reflecting On Fatine.I am starting to feel disillusioned about the campaign to get Fatine (born Mohammed Fazdil Min Bahari) residing in the United Kingdom with her husband. There are several reasons to me feeling a mix of emotions. As much as I want her to be able to stay there and never come back to this largely anti-trans country, I cannot help but wonder about the damage it has caused to the transgender community in Malaysia.<br /><br /><br />Whether she likes it or not, her decision to open up to the British media has reignited a long standing debate on transgender issues in Malaysia. Although the opponent's arguments fail to stand against the light of the facts and science about transsexualism; however, it is the religious arguments that I am concerned about. These emotive beliefs seem to have created a climate even more less favourable for trans people. And while she is still safe in the United Kingdom, some of us are starting to feel the brunt.<br /><br /><br />Her outing has also instigated several parties to petition in defense of her marriage to Ian Young. As the third class style media continue to sensationalize her issue (and still using the wrong pronouns), we are fanning the flames of fire to fight for one single person’s right to be with her husband. But who is she? She is virtually an unknown until the news came out in Malaysia. She has never spoken up for the trans community in Malaysia. She has never done any benefit to the LGBT community or for human rights.<br /><br /><br />So why are we supporting someone that we hardly know, so strongly? Why are we putting her in the pedestal as some kind of trans female heroine for Malaysia? We can argue that she has been discriminated by the Immigration DG, but how many more others have been discriminated by one government official to another? What validation are we looking for in our quest to get her to be safe?<br /><br /><br />And as a person who was once married to a caucassion staying overseas, I must say I do examine her intentions. I must admit there is a part of me that is desperate to get out of country because of its confused and prejudicial state against trans people. Does she have the same feeling? Is she just using Ian Young? Is it really love that brought them together or is it something else? Is she just an opportunist?<br /><br /><br />There are a few scenarios now that can happen now. She can stay with Ian Young in the United Kingdom and drop under the radar, and her story will be mentioned once in a while. She will then fade into obscurity. At that time, we would not even know whether she is still married, divorced, or anything. Or she can come back to Malaysia, gets charged and sent to prison where she will be a bigger martyr, something she would never think of. Then within a few months, she would disappear from all the limelight.<br /><br /><br />Right at this moment, she is taking all the support, love and attention from everyone; but not one instance did she speak up on anything in support back to the other tens of thousands of us that are stranded in Malaysia, that have to face increased transphobia ever since she got herself that 15 minutes of fame. And one can seriously doubt if she will ever speak up for her sisters here in Malaysia. One day, after she leaves the spotlight, we may even wonder what had she done for the LGBT to get our support.<br /><br /><br />The rest of us that are back here may face the aftermath of all this. No one will know her better than she knows herself, but we know we may be facing difficult times ahead. Currently in Malaysia, trans people are bullied in schools and some are driven to the brink of suicide. Most trans people are not able to get proper jobs, and end up on the streets because they are turned away when they wish to rent a room.<br /><br /><br />Some would even be turned away when they seek medical help. Many of trans people continue to face biased prosecution from the civil and syariah laws, and persecution from almost all the religions institutions in Malaysia. Most will continue to live with stigmatization and discrimination. More names of trans people who are murdered will be added to the Transgender Day Of Remembrance for next year.<br /><br /><br />All while Fatine is miles and miles away, enjoying her new home, new life, and close to her new freedom.<br /><br /><br /><em>Previous story <a href="http://yukishock.blogspot.com/2009/12/hearty-love-story-turned-into-farce-by.html">below</a>.</em> <p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com1tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-43223831666250720352009-12-02T11:50:00.017+08:002016-06-08T13:16:04.872+08:00Hearty Love Story Turned Into A Farce By News Media And Immigration Official.<a href="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiN6ebH002O6e9CPqN5cDzeUpKDQUgbbTbDU-5_FHg1roEm7WzT4dX3y54-NFAZzSin2IY_E4eE7i1stDUG6r-uGq7Y4kyzUtya6QtP3H46wCJc9hKSmT2LXjsq4rvn1FTa8_2L8rYtSMA/s1600-h/du_05_1.jpg"><img id="BLOGGER_PHOTO_ID_5410485504282739410" style="DISPLAY: block; MARGIN: 0px auto 10px; WIDTH: 375px; CURSOR: hand; HEIGHT: 296px; TEXT-ALIGN: center" alt="" src="https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEiN6ebH002O6e9CPqN5cDzeUpKDQUgbbTbDU-5_FHg1roEm7WzT4dX3y54-NFAZzSin2IY_E4eE7i1stDUG6r-uGq7Y4kyzUtya6QtP3H46wCJc9hKSmT2LXjsq4rvn1FTa8_2L8rYtSMA/s400/du_05_1.jpg" border="0" /></a><br /><div></div><div></div><div><a href="http://www.thesun.co.uk/sol/homepage/woman/real_life/2747998/I-married-woman-of-my-dreams-even-when-I-found-out-she-was-a-man.html">What began as an obstacle across the beautiful relationship between Fatine (Mohammed Fazdil Min Bahari) and Ian Young</a> has been turned by our so-called “the people’s paper” into a confused mesh of tomatoes ready to be thrown back on the faces of the writers, editors and the paper “The Star”. The first mention was reasonable actually, professional; except for the mis-gendering. <a href="http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/11/29/nation/5204141&sec=nation">The usual usage of male pronouns to describe Fatine shows incredible disrespect to a woman Ian Young has called his wife</a>.<br /><br />Then came for some reason, two news articles on the same subject two days in a row, on the repercussions should Fatine be forced to return home. <a href="http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/12/1/nation/20091201144934&sec=nation">Datuk Abdul Rahman Othman, the Immigration Deparment director-general, also joined in the nastiness</a>. The first news piece contained a quote which confirmed full bias.<br /></div><blockquote><p>He said the department would have to look at Mohammed Fazdil’s travel documents to ascertain if he had committed any offence and would not speculate on whether an offence had been committed until it had the chance to investigate the case.<br /><br />“We view problems like overstaying very seriously because committing an offence overseas also affects the image of the country but we have to look at all aspects on the case before deciding if action will be taken.<br /><em><span style="font-size:85%;"></span></em></p><p><em><span style="font-size:85%;">(In other sources such as the </span></em><a href="http://www.nst.com.my/Current_News/NST/articles/06yua/Article/index_html"><em><span style="font-size:85%;">NST</span></em></a><em><span style="font-size:85%;">, the words "disgraced" and "shame" were also noted. Sigh.)</span></em></p></blockquote><div></div><div>The strange thing is the offence has yet to be committed. But yet they wish to check her documents, as if to find any irregularity to prosecute her with. And with all the talk about “the image of the country”, Abdul Rahman Othman totally ignored the fact that Malaysia is in the spotlight here, not the trans woman. Malaysia, unlike countries such as Singapore, has stringent rules that discriminate against transgender people. In most parts of Malaysia, trans women are not allowed to have female looking photos on their passports, let alone identification cards and vice versa. And the gender marker on these documents places Malaysian transgender people at risk of detention and interrogation every time they go overseas. It is also placing them in danger of harassment and ridicule from some immigration officers across the seas. So the true “image of the country” here is being represented by Malaysia themselves. Which is probably what the couple is hoping to capitalize on, and bring awareness to this issue about this country.<br /><br /><a href="http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/12/2/nation/5216622&sec=nation">Then came “journalist” Dharmender “Singh” to misrepresent us totally</a>. “He” and "The Star" seem to have confusion in addressing us, but then settled for <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transvestism">transvestite</a> for the title and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Transsexualism">transsexual</a> for the body, even though these two words mean two totally different groups of people! And just as the previous two "news articles", "they" continuously mis-gender Fatine with male pronouns. And by publishing the same "story" two days in a row, "they" seem to have an obsession with this couple. And it sickens me that the nice couple only wants to grow in love together, but our super shallow "immigration officials" and "media", are not helping the situation. Instead, "they" used this opportunity to sensationalize the "issue". When you start to mind other people’s personal relationships and make a mockery out of it, it means you have downgraded your own self respect.<br /><br />Oh, in case you are wondering what is with the quotation marks, Dharmender “Singh” wrote this:<br /></div><blockquote>It was reported on Sunday that Mohammed Fazdil or Fatine, 36, who recently "<strong>married</strong>” property maintenance company owner Ian Young in a civil partnership, was denied his visa in September on grounds that his passport contained an incorrect photograph. (bold emphasis mine)</blockquote><div></div><div></div><div><p></p>And on the caption for the photograph, this “journalist” wrote:<br /><blockquote>In trouble: Mohammed Fazdil or Fatine was told to return to Malaysia after his visa had expired. This picture is courtesy of Ian Young, whom he ‘<strong>married</strong>’ in Britain. (bold emphasis mine)</blockquote></div><div></div><div></div><div><p></p>It was insulting enough for this “Singh” to “write” using <em>“quotations marks”</em> to express his “opinion” to “invalidate” a situation. But when “he” totally went out of his “way” to use “it” to “invalidate” their <strong>wonderful marriage</strong>, I need to seriously doubt that “he” is a “writer” after all. Maybe “he” is just a jerk. And "The Star" is "the paper" with no integrity. <p></p></div><div><br /><strong></strong></div><div><strong><em>Yuki's thoughts:</em></strong><br /><br /><a href="http://mbrm.blogspot.com/2009/11/pondan-malaysia-disunting-warga-britain.html">The pick of the most stupid, freakish and atrocious blog commentary on this matter must come from this extremist fundie</a>. He seems so intoxicated and drunk into his own world, he thinks all transgender people are homosexuals and went out of his mind to rant about it. He also thinks transgender people are more powerful to bring the end of the world than global warming and war. With the sprouting of myths about homosexuality to making himself totally devoid of brain cells to understand anything about sexual orientation and gender identity, he proved his evil heart by hatemongering against LGBT people. And adding to that, he uses Islam as a base to his claims, even though the word homosexual never appeared in their Quran, and idiots like him likes to distort other people’s love and relationship, into just lust and sex. And <em>transsexuality, the medical condition</em>, was never in their Quran either. Amazing how sotongs like him, loves to make force connections to religion when they just simply hate people they love to discriminate.<br /><br />And personally, I find it very amusing when people claim I am homosexual, when I am a closeted asexual.<br /><br />Well, at least all of us trans women get some 'pahala' each for the nonsense by this idiot, especially for calling us "pondan". </div><p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com4tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-36729495248427182752009-11-30T14:43:00.006+08:002016-06-08T13:16:04.865+08:00Islamophobia: The Reason.You may need to translate this from Malay to English. <a href="http://keretamayat.blogspot.com/2009/05/ingat-senang-ke-jadi-perempuan.html">This is an example as to why I have a phobia towards Islam, and most Islamic people</a>. For some reason they take such extreme views on a simple medical condition, feels it is fitting to insult people and loves to rant away on subjects they know nothing about. Facts and science are ignored. Prejudice and bigotry stands for them.<p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com6tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-6948901252330435860.post-61824368587644540072009-11-24T10:31:00.013+08:002016-06-08T13:16:17.807+08:00A Story On A Group Of Transsexual Sex Workers And Some Guy.Harian Metro really have too much time in their hands. They really have nothing valid to report, so they have to fabricate sensationalizing news to sell their sorry piece of tabloid. Reading this piece in <a href="http://www.thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2009/11/24/nation/5166612&sec=nation">The Star’s English version of the Harian Metro article</a>, any intelligent person would ask: So what is the point of the article, except to make transsexuals look like dastardly criminals?<br /><br /><br /><blockquote><p>A GROUP of transsexual sex workers in Chow Kit are using pornographic films to distract clients before robbing them, reported Harian Metro.<br /><br />Members of the group would seduce the victim while another sex worker would try to steal belongings like wallets and handphones.<br /><br />In a recent incident, a client known as Ping said he was asked to lie on the bed before choosing a free DVD pornographic movie to watch as a “warm-up”.<br /><br />“The sex worker told me to take off my pants. It was then placed on a chair nearby,” said the 33-year-old chef.<br /><br />Ping declined to elaborate on what happened next, but said he reached for his pants only to find that his handphone was missing from the pocket when he heard loud noises that sounded like a fight outside the room.<br /><br />“I was even more surprised to find that my wallet, which was originally in my pocket, was moved to the top of the television set. Some RM400 was also gone,” he said.<br /><br />After Ping repeatedly demanded the sex worker to return his valuables, she finally agreed to give them back, claiming that her friend had stolen them.<br /></p></blockquote><p> </p><p>There are so many things wrong with this news piece I do not know where to start. For someone who can carry RM 400 in his wallet, it seems ridiculous that this “Ping”, would choose a transsexual female for companionship, rather than a Chinese female social escort or a female prostitute, which is all over Chow Kit. It is hard to believe.<br /><br />And it mentioned that this is a group operation. So a person would book all the “members of the group” to be “seduced” by them all? This sounds like another piece of illogical crappy lie.<br /><br />And of all the story on a transsexual “gang” that Harian Metro loves to report, one harmless sex worker was left all alone for this “Ping” to demand for his valuables back from her. Excuse me, where are the “GROUP of transsexual sex workers in Chow Kit”?<br /><br />All this do not make sense, and seems like another blatant attempt to yet again demonize and misrepresent transsexuals. Nice piece of shit they reported.<br /><br />Well, at least I must commend "The Star" that for once in this report, they called us "transsexuals" instead, and with the right pronouns.<br /><br />Unfortunately, at the <a href="http://www.hmetro.com.my/Current_News/myMetro/Monday/Setempat/20091123084013/Article/index_html">original source article at Harian Metro</a>, these sotongs still love to call trans folk with deragatory labels like "pondan". The ignorance also breeds the stupidity of <a href="http://www.asiaone.com/News/AsiaOne%2BNews/Crime/Story/A1Story20091124-181799.html">AsiaOne</a>, who continues to call transgender people "transvestites". People often mentioned that the standard of news reporting in this region is not up to the mark. Well, we can thank these ignorant and prejudicial news sources for it. They have nothing to report but how "<em>bad"</em> we are. </p><p></p>Vivienne "Yuki" Choehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01435916996788970837noreply@blogger.com0