The photo is a 1974 photo of Leslie Feinberg, from the FBI file on hir. I've written a piece on my interpretation of Transgender Warriors and Trans Liberation, but I don't think it's quite polished enough, so I'll post it later. Instead, I'll go over hir FBI file: https://s3.amazonaws.com/NARAprodstorage/lz/dc-metro/rg-065/6282555/Batch0010/6282555_100-HQ-480756.PDF.
The FBI thought Feinberg could be violating the Communist Control Act, advocating the overthrow of the government, and engaging in rebellion. Needless to say, a hero to all of us. Feinberg was a member of the Workers World Party (the party still exists, but more notably PSL split from it), which apparently wasn't openly advocating for the overthrow of the U.S, they just think it's inevitable.
My favorite line? "captioned subject is believed to be a white female, who became male through some kind of sex change operation, and is possibly homosexual". Some interesting language choice, and it's an interesting snapshot into the evolution of Leslie's identity.
The FBI found Leslie's place of birth and birthdate from public school records. It's a bit of an interesting look into all of the many places the FBI can get their information, along with how information like that was so much more patchwork before the digital age.
"Interview of subject is not being recommended because of the questionable nature of his sexuality". Hmm, interesting.
It's interesting how their investigation spanned multiple cities, from Kansas City to NYC to Bufffalo to Boston. It probably involved quite a few officers, though I'm sure it wasn't the main focus for all of them.
There's some interesting mention about changes in Leslie's gender identity. Born a girl, for a time wearing a beard and mustache, then going back to "she". I'm sure we all know, Feinberg's gender didn't stop evolving there.
"Subject reportedly contributes all extra money to WWP", Leslie definitely was dedicated to the cause. Leslie doesn't attend NYC WWP meetings, but the FBI doesn't mention why.
The FBI isn't immune to typoes, Leslie did some "criminal terspass" that garnered some attention.They wasted some time checking if Leslie was in Boston, but verified where Leslie in NYC lived by pretending to be a part of the Voter Registration Commission.
There's a whole 43 pages of documents, all just from 1974-75. There's plenty of interesting tidbits in there, so maybe check it out.
Join our public Matrix server! https://matrix.to/#/#tracha:chapo.chat
As a reminder, be sure to properly give content warnings and put sensitive subjects behind proper spoiler tags. It's for the mental health of not just your comrades, but yourself as well.
Here is a screenshot of where to find the spoiler button.
AT LAST MY NEVADA RE-READ POST
This was intended to be a simple post about my re-read of Orange Book. Since I knew I was going to be talking about the book right after, I was taking notes while I was reading. By the end, I had nearly 10 pages of notes and quotes. Clearly my brain wanted to get some stuff out and I decided to let her cook. And wow did she run with it, writing a whole thing that clocks in at over 4000 words of psuedo-psycho-babble and navel-gazing. And there’s a part of me that feels like I didn’t even say everything I wanted to say while also acknowledging I’ve already said way too much.
On the plus side, it's a megapost for the megathread.
I hope everything makes sense and this flows okay. I wrote this in bits over the course of multiple days (like 9 or so?) and what I was trying to say evolved as the days passed and my mood shifted sooooo if it comes off disjointed that’s probably why. I tried to go back and edit it a little but to be honest? My brain wouldn't let me do much else until it is done and now that it is I’m tired of looking at it and want to do anything else.
All 3 parts are below in the sub-comments.
CW for all parts: Nevada spoilers, transphobia and dysphoria, mentions of sex
Thank you for sharing. I obviously am not very far into transition at all, but this post really spoke to me, a lot of part 1 was very relatable.
Absolutely. That stigma is the only thing that is holding me back.
James sounds relatable too
I'm glad it resonated with you
Here's the passage that inspired that, I think you'd find it interesting:
I'm sure someone told you this before but you should read Nevada. It's a good book for babytrans imo. I found out recently that the author went into therapy as a day job to support her writing and even if she wasn't a therapist when she wrote Nevada, her interest in it is reflected in the story. Maria and James are archetypes of trans women compiled from commonly shared life experience. Maria and James are different people in the story but they're also the same person at different points in their life. So like, all the trans women you admire probably start off close to James, and the book really helps in showing that you can be a Maria, or even something more.