The ace community is also notoriously white & racist. It completely ignores the nonconsensual sexualization of non-white bodies. The role that colonisation has played in creating a completely separate sexual history for its victims, including forced asexuality and forced sexuality. How non-white ppl are viewed as inherently sexual from even a young age—barred from being seen as innocent, pure, and nonsexual in a way that white people can without repercussion. Locked into hypersexualised standards, fetishisation, and even desexualisation that erases their ace experiences.
White aces ignore their privilege in this discourse, and even listening to one group of non-white aces is different from another—there is no homogenous experience. It’s different for native aces, black aces, (non-white) Latinx aces, Asian aces, etc. There is a way to be ace besides being white & ace. There is a way to be ace besides being white & ace.
Tag: asexuality
Asexuality as a white supremacist dream
Here’s the thing: perhaps be glad you don’t understand how “asexuality” as a concept has been a part of white supremacy. To a lot of us, it’s not just some abstract concept. It’s a brutal reality.
In my family history, for example, marriage was a form of survival and sex was an act of violence. British colonialism in the Caribbean ensured that female indentured servants – and before them, slaves – were useless property:
labelled as “the harlots of empire” by the british, this is an epithet that came to haunt their existence throughout indenture & long after to the extent that in the west indies, amongst indians, the word randi/रण्डी became a commonly used synonym in bhojpuri for ‘woman.’ there is a hell of a lot to say about what kind of jobs women were expected to perform and the specific dangers that came with them…
indentured labourers were housed throughout the indenture period in the same shacks that black slaves had had to live in, not long before these being long sheds made of corrugated metal, partitioned into small cubicles, in which a person or family was expected to live. when the sun shone on them, you can imagine how gruellingly hot they would’ve become, and most importantly for women, the partitions between the cubicles did not reach the roof. it was possible to stand on a stool etc. and look over the top of the partition at your neighbours. this was deadly for women, particularly single women, whose only option was to marry themselves at the earliest opportunity in order to protect themselves from harassment and r*pe. this was the theory, at least, and the one indian women were coerced into following.
in practice, with the partitions not meeting the ceiling, once a woman’s husband had gone to work, she was left to defend herself to the point where it was difficult to bathe or change clothes or any action without being watched by a stranger whose intentions were clear. what it meant for indian women was that marriage didn’t offer the security it was supposed to provide, and many women were forced to take up multiple partners just to protect themselves from harassment and threats, leading to generalised accusations of infidelity and sex work which turned out to be deadly. so many women were murdered by their boyfriends/husbands that it has its own name, “coolie wife murders”…
…a woman who fled to the colonial authorities was unflinchingly dragged back to her partner, with the implicit knowledge she would be killed. a woman who begged for help from one of her partners against the other could just as easily be murdered by him tomorrow. “i kill my wife, why not? i kill no other man’s wife” being said by a young indian man, and have seen quotes by white visitors to the colony who, on the subject of the murders said “we can hardly help admiring this trait in his character.”
“such murders occurred at a rate ninety times greater in Guiana than in India in the previous decade [this report from 1871]…"In the heartland district where most migrants were from, the picture was even darker: Indian men killed their romantic partners at a rate 142 times greater in Guiana than in India’s Northwestern Provinces and Oudh.”
laws over time became more and more lenient towards wife murdering. where initially it was met with the death penalty, the plantocracy & indian men appealed to the judiciary, in light of the expenses paid to bring them to the caribbean & the value of their labour to remit the sentences given, to the point where murdering a woman eventually, at best, caused you to be relocated to another plantation as sufficient punishment. and it is worth noting also that the numbers of women recorded dead reflect only those cases where prosecution was successfully brought against a man. undoubtedly there were many murders where there was no prosecution. the rate was higher than recorded.
marriage was not a safe-haven for women either. the scanty rights protecting women were swept away once she got married. becoming her husband’s property, she had no right to leave him, and if he died before her and they had children, unless she could find another husband quickly, she was liable to be sent back to india as a nuisance an her children taken from her and put into orphanages where they were [forcibly] converted to christianity & put into work houses until they were ready to be married.
(source)
So how does this reflect personally? In the generations since “liberation” from the system of indenture servitude, marriage still has the connotation of survival, or at least has for my parents’ generation. It is a mode of protection from government, poverty, and colonialism, turned into a mark of piety and respect for the family.
This is a coerced and compulsory sexuality, and one sourced from white supremacy. The social status of indentured servants and furthermore indentured women allowed for the Empire to denigrate our people to animals, where rape was seen as deserved (a pattern we see in the US with how the justice system deems Black women as deserving of sexual assault or else unfeeling). South Asian women were useless in labor and thus had to deserve murder and sexual crimes.
Sexual abuse is extremely pervasive in my and other family narratives and often silenced because of the nature of marriage as a form of survival. Later colonization – the political strife in the 50s-70s with the institution of multiple tyrants by the British and Americans – just exacerbated this system.
What’s this have to do with asexuality, then? Sexuality is a way to colonize a people. It is a way to divide the people you are enslaving (say, by gender) and thus weaken them (via justification of murder). And these traumas persist in cultures.
When I say it’s difficult for me to say I’m asexual, I really do mean, it is viscerally horrible to consider myself asexual. It is violent. It makes me think of my mother and all the women in my family put into arranged marriages and the regret the men face as they emplace their daughters in these marriages purely out of fear for them. It makes me think of the conviction my grandfather has when he tells us young girls that we need to be financially independent and educate ourselves, because we finally can be safe outside of marriage. It makes me think of the stories of soldiers roaming neighborhoods and grabbing women from inside their homes.
Asexuality is what they want. It is what the soldiers, and the masters, and the foreign governments want. They want us to lack something they deem human so they don’t have to empathize. They want us to not desire because it gives them sick satisfaction. They want us not to feel because then they can justify crimes against us in our own courts. How could it not pain me to call myself asexual?
I literally feel all of this weight every time I have to confront my sexuality, when I have to confront my family and my family history, which I’m trying to uncover because the British literally wiped our records.
So maybe be glad that you cannot personalize the ways in which white supremacy operates via sexuality. But don’t think it’s some theoretical abstraction that has no place in discussions of asexuality.
Asexual Awareness Week as an organization is clearly still running.
But you know what? That wasn’t the issue. I KNEW it was running. Because someone READ my email and REMOVED THE IMAGE.
So not only have y’all been creating distractions from the real issue at hand, that is, that this organization was told to remove the Aryan Brotherhood symbol from its website and did so without a single apology or mark of accountability, but y’all have also been wrong about AAW being “defunct.”
Collect, white aces. Collect. Because I’ve been saying this from the beginning. The email is up and the website was updated in order to remove both my intern bio and the symbol in question (although N.B.the bio was removed probably two weeks before I sent any email, no correlation, just that AAW as a site has been running this summer).
All of this chatter about AAW not responding to emails is well and good on your own time and posts but here I am trying to make this organization and the community as a WHOLE collect on its blatant racism, and somehow, it needs to be diverted. Clearly y’all don’t see that you are the problem I’m trying to address.
Asexual Awareness Week Linkspam: Day 1
Each day of Asexual Awareness Week, I am tweeting links about asexuality. These posts provide an archive of the links. Feel free to share any that you find useful.
Asexuality: A Mixed-Methods Approach [scientific study] (pdf)
Asexuality in the 1970s (pptx)
Timeline of events in the asexual movement
Ace Pride photos [asexuals marching in LGBTQ Pride parades]
The Invisible Orientation: An Introduction to Asexuality [book]
Understanding Asexuality [book]
Asexualities: Feminist and Queer Perspectives [book]
Asexuality and Sexual Normativity: An Anthology [book]
What Asexuality Contributes to the Same-Sex Marriage Discussion
What Does Asexuality Have to Do with Polyamory? (pdf)
Asexuality in Japan: a conversation with harris-hijiri
A Conversation About the Israeli Ace Community with Limor
A conversation with Robin on Asexuality in Taiwan
hey guys. i like that i’m seeing more people talking about asexuality with it being asexual awareness week and all, but i would like it even more if everyone would give a little extra attention to
- sex repulsed asexuals
- asexuals with low or no sex drive
- people who are asexual due to trauma or abuse
because i feel like there’s a disproportionately small amount of posts about these forms of asexuality to posts saying things like “not all asexuals hate sex!!!!” or “asexuals can still have a sex drive!!!” or “asexuality doesnt have to be a result of abuse!!!!”
like, i’m not saying that those aren’t valid points, but sometimes it feels like we’re getting thrown under the bus because we “fit the stereotype”
Reasons I am sick of asexuality and aromanticism being smushed together:
- Sexual attraction and romantic attraction are entirely different things
- You can be sexual but not romantic
- You can be romantic but not sexual
- Sexual attraction and romantic attraction are not the same thing
- Treating everything as an aroace problem ignores allosexual aromantics but also ignores alloromantic asexuals
- It often throws aromantics under the bus for not feeling love
- Allosexual aromantics are extremely under-representated
- Sexual attraction and romantic attraction are not the same thing
- It creates a lot of confusion around the differences between sexual and romantic attraction and how they can differ
- SEXUAL ATTRACTION AND ROMANTIC ATTRACTION ARE NOT THE SAME THING SO THE PROBLEMS ONE IDENTITY FACES CANNOT BE GENERALISED TO THE OTHER
hey guys so i know asexual awareness week is next week and as an asexual, that’s super important to me
but let’s not forget that aromantic awareness week is also next week, and that’s just as important as asexual awareness
please don’t forget about our aromantic friends! they deserve just as much love as the asexuals
nnnnooooo let’s not celebrate these two things together okay it’s harmful and hurtful for aromantic people
alloro ace people often throw aro ace people under the bus by explaining that asexuals can experience romantic love, don’t worry!!!
And putting the two together is alienating for allosexual aromantic people
aro people will only be overshadowed by ace people in this and I want nothing to do with it. give ace people their own week. aromantic asexuals can celebrate that part of their identity during it
let’s please please not put the two together aro people deserve our own separate recognition from asexual and people need to learn these two do not go hand in hand

It…kind of is, when it comes to the community (edited 4/17/14 at 6pm; 4/29/14 at 1am).
For now, I’m using the term PoC (people of color) as a shorthand, understanding that it refers to people in white-majority cultures and can’t describe white-minority cultures, for ease of writing, but also because I will largely discuss diaspora.
First, let’s discuss the issue of terminology and identity. “Asexual” is a difficult term for PoC to use. We are made hypersexual (e.g. stereotypes of Black women as very sexual) and asexual (e.g. Asian men being treated as alien, sexually dysfunctional; the Mammy trope). The term “asexual” is often actually used in these contexts. Even when it isn’t, to attach “asexual” to our identity means navigating a really complex, terrible issue where PoC bodies are regulated and controlled because of racist views of our “asexuality.” Sterilization programs that target minority women are realities in the US and other nations with racial minorities, while the simultaneous “aging up” of Black children and assumed asexuality means they are treated as sexually passive, and so often are targeted in sexual crimes. This sort of “de-sexing” has been a form to control PoC/especially Black women’s agency since slavery.
Siggy writes (1):
“Stereotypically, Asian women are hypersexualized and Asian men are desexualized. Each of these come with their own set of issues for asexuals. Asian asexual women might be disbelieved because they conflict with the stereotype. Asian asexual men might be assumed to conform to the stereotype completely, even if the stereotype is actually very different from asexuality in real life. Also, sometimes people say Asian men are stereotypically asexual, which is bad because it’s using the word "asexual” as a pejorative.“
With regards to the challenges Black women face, voltafiish writes (2):
"While asexuality has not had such a long history, the majority of its representation in the media has been overwhelmingly white. Asexuality is seen as a “white thing” too! For asexuality in black people (especially black women) from the outside looking in can be broken down into a few categories:
A) Asexuality functions as a white supremacist stereotype. This means asexual black person is not actually asexual, but simply a desexualized black person (like the mammy, for example) or they are simply suppressing their “true sexuality” in light of other racial stereotypes (like the jezebel). Of course, these are dependent on an inaccurate definition on what asexuality is but contrary to a lot of activism, a lot of people are still fixed on using this definition. Because people do not know what asexuality is, their first assumption is one that equates behaviour and attraction.
B) Asexuality cannot possibly BE a thing because black people MUST be sexual by “nature.” This is due to the myth and stereotyping and labeling of black people as hypersexual. If we operate on the definition on asexuality being about not having sex/being sexual and operate within the realms of white supremacy, black asexual people cannot exist. I remember looking up research concerning blackness and asexuality and came across someone make the very same statement: “Black people cannot be asexual because they are hypersexual.”
C) Asexuality (and any other sexuality for that fact) is not possible for black people because all black people are heterosexual. Cue compulsory heterosexuality.”
As you can see, not only does the concept raise issues for PoC self-identifying, but for those who identify as asexual but must, again, navigate larger issues.
GradientLair writes (3):
"If I tell anyone that I am 34 years old and I’ve been celibate for a little more than 8 years now, they look at my Black skin and female body and the judgment starts. Because I am a Black woman, I am automatically typed as heterosexual but “deviant” (as “normal” heterosexuality is reserved for Whites in a White supremacist society) and “hypersexual” (based on the long history of specifically anti-Black misogyny used to justify the rape, exploitation, lynching and dehumanization of Black women’s bodies and lives). Any sexuality that I ascribe to that is not heterosexual and hypersexual is deemed as me sidestepping the “norm.” However, this White supremacist lie is not the norm or even remotely explains the complexity of sexuality for any people, especially Black people because of our history.”
I recommend if you are unfamiliar with some of the issues she discusses, to click through and then explore her embedded hyperlinks. Meanwhile, queerlibido/Alok Vaid-Menon discusses issues of intersection with respect to the South Asian male identity (4):
“As a queer South Asian I don’t feel comfortable ascribing the identity of ‘asexual’ to my body. Part of the ways in which brown men have been oppressed in the Western world is by de-emasculating them and de-sexualizing them (check out David Eng’s book Racial Castration). What then would it mean for me to identify as an ‘asexual?’ What would this agency look like in a climate of white supremacy? Can I ever authentically express ‘my’ (a)sexuality or am I always rehearsing colonial logics? The dilemma of this brown queer body is its inability to see itself through its own eyes. The mirror becomes a site it which we view what white people have always told us about ourselves. Regardless or not of the status of my libido, I’m not sure I will ever feel comfortable identifying as asexual because it seems like I am betraying my people.
I am invested in South Asians and all other Asian Americans being able to reclaim, re-affirm, and be recognized for their sexual selves. I am invested in brown boys and brown gurlz being able to get what they desire. I am invested in the radical potential of brown (queer) love in a society where so many of us grow up hating our bodies and bending our knees for white men. I want to be part of this struggle. Sometimes I get angry at myself for not being able to eliminate the distance, not being able to join in solidarity. To fuck and be fucked, to publically claim and own my sexuality. I understand that there is something (as Celine Shimizu reminds us in her book Straightjacket Sexualities) radical about Asian American masculinities being displaced from patriarchal masculinities rooted in hyper-sexuality and hyper-masculinity and the reclamation of ‘effeminate’ and ‘asexual’ representations of our bodies as a political refusal of the very logics which have rendered those bodies numb.
…
So when I read this piece about how folks involved with the asexuality community feel as if they are post-race I’m pretty well, flabbergasted. Asexuality has always been a carefully crafted strategy to subjugate Asian masculinities. Asexuality has everything to do with race. Which goes to say that what if the very act of articulating a public asexual identity is rooted in white privilege? Essential understandings of being ‘born’ ‘asexual’ and loving my ‘asexual’ self will never make sense to me. In a world that continually erases Asian (male assigned) sexualities I was coerced into asexuality. It is something I have and will continue to struggle with. My asexuality is a site of racial trauma. I want that sadness, that loss, that anxiety to be a part of asexuality politics. I don’t want to be proud or affirmed – I want to have a serious conversation about how all of our desires are mediated by racism and how violent that is. My pleasures – or lack thereof – are not transcendental and celebratory, they are contradictory, confused, and hurt.”
They cite an interview on AsexualAgenda (5), excerpted here:
"Often, white asexuals and those who do not identify themselves use these threads to make statements that, 1) AVEN is a safe, diverse environment, 2) AVEN is a race neutral place and asexuals are color-blind, or 3) race is anarchronistic, un-important or itself “racist.” All three of these tendencies work to minimize the significance of race, to obscure “white” as a race by claiming neutrality, and to dismiss user interests or lived/digital experiences.”
So now we arrive at issues within the community and how it treats PoC and the diversity of the ability for aces to identify as such. A good place to start is the “crux” of the community – AVEN – where we can see, in often popular threads, blatant racism.
A thread discussing World Pride 2013 and whether PoC aces should have a separate space:
AVEN forum search for keyword “racism” (6):
The AVEN thread “AVEN has traumatized me” (TW for sexual assault/rape/victim blaming) also brings up how often AVEN members come across racism in the forums and are unable to report it (7). The AVEN thread “Asexual People of Color” has many a post on the grievances aces of color face with their identities and on AVEN (8).
As we can see, there is an issue with racism, talking over PoC, and treating racism as a nonexistent issue, or else race itself as a nonfactor in asexuality and sexuality in general. But these issues are not limited to AVEN, which many identify as a generally problematic space and have thus abandoned for spaces like Tumblr. Here, and in similar spaces, the racism has been more subtle, and it is where I see the sweeping issue of racism in our representation, dialogues, and activism.
The faces of the asexual movement – and by “asexual movement,” I use a term and definition as employed by David Jay and his followers – have been exceedingly white. A simple example:
How popular was this image? Has it changed at all? Siggy writes again, two years ago (10):
“And yet, the publicly visible asexuals are disproportionately white. An asexual who was Asian asked me the other day if there were any non-white asexuals I knew of, and was clearly disappointed when I could only think of a few. This is both indicative of, and a contributor to greater asexual invisibility within API and other non-white groups.
And here I am, contributing to the problem even further. I decided it was less worthwhile to present asexuality to an API audience than to a “general” (but probably predominantly White) audience. I was further tipping the already imbalanced scales. If all asexual activists did the same, it would become a major problem a decade down the road.”
Because, really, let’s look at who goes on talk shows, interviews with newspapers and magazines, and gets photographed. Who do we see associated with articles on asexuality, like HuffPost’s series?:
Some must wonder now if it’s that whiteness and white culture allows for greater visibility when it comes to queer identities. But is this true? What about the history of queer Black artists (musicians, visual artists, dancers, writers) and their precedence of very public activism? Because I say that the lack of brown and black faces in the public, representing us, cannot be completely chalked up to cultural differences. When I look at canonically asexual characters (or…attempted asexual characters), I see white faces – in fiction, where writers look at our community and try to create fictional characters, or else ace writers create these fictional characters. Sirens, House, Huge, Ignition Zero, Girls with Slingshots, Quicksilver all have canonically (or attempted) asexual characters that are white, and even articles/essays that seek to analyze the media where we find these characters will not bring up the race question a single time (11). These data can only reflect the community and the visible, un-erased members of the community – because not all of these authors are outsiders.
I also want to talk about how aces of color are cordoned off when it comes to dialogue. This is an especially subtle aspect of the community that I have noticed for a few years – where writers who discuss the intersection of race and asexuality are largely written off by the community as irrelevant to net community politics. For example, GradientLair’s posts almost never make the rounds of the tags or forums, except for black aces, as if white aces and non-Black aces of color have nothing to learn from an asexual Black woman’s important perspective on sexual politics.
There are two effects I observe from this habit. First, aces of color feel pushed out because their voices are not heard, or else they face racism as evidenced above in AVEN. Second, what is established is whiteness as the norm – PoC voices are, even if not actively, made an “other,” or a “niche,” and if these posts do make the rounds, they are not discussed, but tagged lazily with “intersectionality” or “boost” to be passed along for followers of color. PoC are made to feel like we are a separate cause and the nuances of our identities have no effect on the asexual community, where “asexual community” is thus equated with “white asexual voices.”
An example of this harm is the recent backlash against sex positivity rhetoric among the ace community. There is no harm in such dialogue, but what I find especially interesting is how aces, including prominent asexual activists who often represent the community publicly, have taken credit for spear-heading the critique of the sex-positive movement. As I’ve cited above, Black women in the West have traditionally been targeted sexually because of their race and as an effect of slavery – Womanism, therefore, has traditionally involved critical analysis of compulsory heterosexuality for decades. I recently began to compile a list of sources by mostly Womanists because of this strange trend among white aces (12). This type of irresponsibility and co-opting is exceptionally harmful to Black women and Black aces, who already face massive erasure, and furthermore it is distressing that leaders in the community propagate these attitudes in a largely white community.
In sum:
- the community ignores or dismisses race as a factor in sexuality
- blatant racism occurs in the community
- aces of color do not get any visibility in the media
- the issues aces of color face at the intersection of many identities are deemed irrelevant to the “broader” community, and so the community is equated with whiteness, and co-opting of QWoC dialogue occurs on a large scale
I want to wrap this response up here, because I think this information is sufficient enough to convince those willing to learn that racism is very much rampant in the asexual community, and that aces of color find it difficult to find a space in it as it exists currently. This post is not for those who refuse to teach themselves. You are the problem, not just those who merely don’t know what’s happening around them because of their privilege. I urge those of you in this latter group to recognize your privilege, end this Othering of PoC, challenge the presumed “normality” of the whiteness in our spaces, and magnify the voices of people of color around you. It is not tokenizing to stop erasing, and it’s not an attack on you to notice, let alone speak up.
Remember: being an ally is not about posting a political alignment on Facebook or any social equivalent. It means knowing that you will not be attacked for speaking up about a certain issue (ergo, you have privilege), and employing that power to protect and defend those of us who are vulnerable. Because we are vulnerable. I have personally received hate/abuse for even mentioning race in this space and offline spaces, and have been building up the courage for four years to discuss these issues on such a public blog, so please understand that I am not exaggerating.
70% of anti-LGBTQ murder victims are PoC (13). 87% of hate murder victims in 2011 were QPoC (14). TPoC statistics reveal even more – and make sure to go through this whole study (15):
This isn’t fun and games, or petty complaints on a website. This is survival.
Sources:
- http://skepticsplay.blogspot.com/2011/05/forecasting-issues-of-race.html
- http://ace-muslim.tumblr.com/post/66431409049/im-supposed-to-be-working-on-an-art-history-paper-rn
- This is a great essay on being Black and asexual that I personally learned a lot from: http://thingsthatmakeyouacey.tumblr.com/post/66431633676/im-supposed-to-be-working-on-an-art-history-paper-rn
- http://www.gradientlair.com/post/61224262021/heterosexuality-compulsory-uniform-black-women
- http://queerlibido.tumblr.com/post/74181237292/whats-r-ace-got-to-do-with-it-white-privilege ; http://www.thestate.ae/whats-race-got-to-do-with-it-white-privilege-asexuality/
- http://asexualagenda.wordpress.com/2013/03/10/interview-with-ianna-hawkins-owen/
- http://www.asexuality.org/en/index.php?app=core&module=search&do=search&andor_type=&sid=01af01fc2a34562772e26f8092174d5c&search_app_filters[forums][sortKey]=date&search_app_filters[forums][sortKey]=date&search_term=racism&search_app=forums&st=0
- http://www.asexuality.org/en/topic/95406-aven-has-traumatized-me/
- http://www.asexuality.org/en/topic/78085-asexual-people-of-color/
- http://skepticsplay.blogspot.com/2012/04/dilemma-on-asexuality-and-race.html
- http://asexualagenda.wordpress.com/2013/07/19/confirmed-asexual-characters-in-fiction/
- My masterpost of sex-critical writings by WoC/Black women, many of which discuss the issue of being simultaneously made hypersexual and “asexual”: http://thingsthatmakeyouacey.tumblr.com/post/82269213656/if-you-dont-believe-me
- http://colorlines.com/archives/2011/07/70_percent_of_anti-lgbt_murder_victims_are_people_of_color.html
- http://www.queerty.com/study-lgbt-murder-rate-at-all-time-high-but-hate-violence-on-wane-20120531/
- http://www.thetaskforce.org/downloads/reports/reports/ntds_full.pdf
Some test materials – a poster and some sort of web badge – for asexual awareness week ‘14 to centralize aces/QT people of color this year in light of ten years of white supremacy in asexual spaces.
If you need a catch up:
- White supremacy in and of the asexual community
- “What’s R(ace) Got to Do with It?”
- Owens: On The Racialization of Asexuality
- Being Asexual and Asian
- Black Womanhood, Asexuality, and Agency
- a general collection of resources
And, regarding my targeting of asexual awareness week – this went down with the AAW “official” organization.
Feel free to make more + message me with links so I can share, too! And if you need higher res, also message me. I have PDFs.
So what’s going on with AAW?: an update + masterpost
It has been over two months and I have yet to hear back from asexualawarenessweek about the extremely problematic resource they had listed on their site that was basically an Aryan Brotherhood symbol and that was taken down without any word or public apology/statement of accountability (and, as a far lesser priority, the mysterious loss of my position with them as an intern).
- The original post that includes the emails I sent. Update: it has been 61 days since I sent that first email.
- Why you should care about this issue/the implications
- Upset at AAW? Recommended action
- Media for Asexual Awareness Week ‘14 to bring to light issues of dire importance and relevance to the asexual community – the violence against and murder of trans and queer people of color
- NCAVP’s 2013 report on LGBTQ and HIV-Affected Hate Violence
I also wanted to say thanks to everyone for spreading this around – this silencing of Black and brown aces needs to end. It is violent. I’ve been sort of everywhere in my write-ups, leaving out links, and often not discussing the original issue which was the blatant anti-Blackness of the material on the site and how pervasive that anti-Blackness is in the entire structure of the ace community, especially ace organizations that represent us to the media and are accessed by vulnerable youth.
Please remember to center that, and center the violence that Black LGBTQ people face as the most targeted of the most targeted LGBTQ group when it comes to hate crime and police brutality.
White supremacy is so prevalent in the LGBTQ and ace communities. This is violence. This affects the safety of Q/TPoC. Our lives matter.












