Transgender people treated ‘inhumanely’ online

Trans Pride March in LondonImage copyright
Reuters

A study into online slurs used against trans people has identified the most commonly used terms of abuse.

Anti-bullying charity Ditch The Label and its analytics partner Brandwatch described the harassment as being “inhumane”.

Researchers analysed 10 million posts on the topic of transgender identity, shared from the UK and the US over a period of three-and-a-half years.

They said more than one-and-a-half-million of them were anti-trans.

The two most frequent insults were “tranny” and “shemale”.

Other common transphobic themes of online posts included misgendering people – purposefully labelling somebody as a gender that they do not identify as.

Video-streaming sites and message boards were found to host the most transphobic abuse and the “least constructive conversation” about trans lives.

Kenny Ethan Jones is a transgender male model and activist.

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Kenny Ethan Jones

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Mr Jones said it was sad to see the scale of the problem confirmed, but he was not shocked by the findings

“Transphobia is something I witness every single day,” he told the BBC.

“I’m often intentionally misgendered and I’m always on the receiving end of comments like, ‘You’re not a real man’, ‘You’re confused and you need God’, ‘You don’t deserve to live’.

“I wonder if people understand the effect that these abusive comments have on my mental health. Some days I feel hurt and hopeless.”

Politics and race

The transphobic insult “tranny” featured more than 1.2 million times between 2015 and 2019, accounting for 80% of the insults studied.

“Shemale” had 150,000 mentions.

The researchers also found examples of dead-naming: purposefully using a transgender person’s previous name from before they transitioned.

In the UK, politics appeared to be a key theme associated with the abuse, with the topic appearing in 27% of all the transphobic posts.

Race came a close second. It was raised in 24% of the transphobic messages, and was especially common when the abused person was black.

In the US, race was found to be the main driver, appearing in 34% of the abusive comments, followed by politics, which was raised in 33%.

Parenting topics were also seen to be used as triggers for transphobia, with people using their parental status – “as a mother of two kids…” – to justify their views. This type of abuse tended to centre around the parents’ fears, for example not wanting their children to be around trans people.

In addition, transphobic slurs were used by some sports fans alongside racist, sexist and homophobic abuse, even when the intended victim did not identify as transgender. For example, Serena Williams had transphobic insults directed at her because she was not deemed to look feminine enough.

“Transgender people are targeted, harassed, and abused online every day,” commented Ditch the Label’s chief Liam Hackett.

“It is my hope that this report will… encourage an urgent review of hate speech guidelines online and within the law”.

‘Why is transphobia a free-for-all?’

Jay Hulme is a 22-year-old children’s poet from Leicester. He’s a transgender man and he says he constantly receives harassment on social media because of his identity.

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Jay Hulme

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Mr Hulme said online hatred would not stop him from fighting for trans rights

“It can be a full-scale hate storm with thousands of people attacking me relentlessly for days, or individual accounts sending general hate. I’ve been called an abuser, a sexual harasser, a sexist. I think the worst ones would have to be the times people call me a paedophile, just because I’m trans and write books for children.

“About four or five months ago I started an instant block policy when it comes to anyone who sends me harassment on Twitter. As of today, I’ve blocked almost 5,000 accounts who reached out and sent me transphobic messages.”

He thinks social media companies should do more to prevent their platforms being used for hate speech.

“Online harassment of trans people is a really prevalent problem, and often goes a lot further than the things people say in real life.

“Social media companies should do more, but I think there’s a lack of understanding of transphobia within their teams so they struggle to counter it. Also, they should do more for all kinds of hate – their moderation tactics have been proven ineffective time and again.”

For more stories like this, follow the BBC LGBT correspondent Ben Hunte on Twitter and Instagram.

Transgender people treated ‘inhumanely’ online