Dallas is friendly. It's a little oasis of (semi) tolerance. We've had laws that protect us for 13 years here. The forces of uptightness are trying to roll it back. I pass, I've had GRS, and I have documents. Basically every place is friendly for me. Many of us are not so lucky, and the laws that are on the books don't actually protect you from much. They just discourage, slightly, people who would harass us. The fines for discrimination in most city ordinances are not sufficient to stop a business from discrimination. How safe Dallas is, is another matter. Three months ago, a guy was convicted of killing his trans girlfriend here in Dallas. He got 10 years probation. No jail time. Yep. So rolling back these laws, and ratcheting up the rhetoric, encourages certain kinds of people to attack us.
The way to gain acceptance is to come out, and have people understand you. This is a strategy that is being pursued by trans people, and (hopefully) supported by our often feckless gay allies. Ideally, we'd do what gays did to gain acceptance over the past 20-30 years before the next presidential election. I'm not optimistic that we'll succeed at that.
I don't believe they can win in the long run, by the way. However, things here could become exceedingly unpleasant for quite some time. Hopefully nothing too unpleasant happens, like a major terrorist strike, that makes some of the more dangerous candidates seem sensible to voters.
Talking about things like this on this forum make me really sad. One of the things I worry about is the rest of us in the trans community throwing y'all (and the drag queens) under the bus in exchange for a modicum of survivability from a hostile administration. Believe me, there are some of us (not me), who would do this in a New York minute. If the religious extremists start to jack with our access to medical transition, or otherwise put transsexuals at risk, using crossdressers as a pretense, we won't honestly have much choice but to try to distance ourselves from you. It'll be nasty, really nasty. And it'll probably kill some people - which is why I would never support it. But I'm only one woman, and I've heard others in the community who'd throw CDs to the wolves on a good day. And what I worry about are days that are far from good.
Look, I'll drop this because I know two things:
1. Not everyone is cut out to be an activist, or even up to coming out. I get that. I'm not trying to shame anyone, I promise.
2. I don't think that most of you who aren't out really have a sense of what can happen if people who are actively hostile to us all gain the white house and the congress.
Well, let's hope really awful things don't come to pass.