Dear white people: Why are you like this?
A white transgender woman from New Orleans has come out to a Tampa Bay TV station to claim that she is ātransracial.ā Ja Du says she now considers herself to be a Filipino.
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Ahhh, right, because thatās what 2017 needed: more shades of white nonsense.
And why is Ja Du a Pinay now?
As she told WTSP-TV, she just really loves Filipino culture.
āWhenever Iām around [Filipino] music, around the food, I feel like Iām in my own skin,ā Ja Du said. āIād watch the History Channel sometimes for hours, you know, whenever it came to that, and, you know, nothing else intrigued me more but things about Filipino culture.ā
OK, first of all, honey, Filipino is not a race; itās an ethnicity or nationality. Letās start there. Second, how in the world does being a fan of History Channel programming give you entry into claiming someoneās identity? Girl, what kind of caucasity are you bathing in that allows you to think that?
But Ja Du isnāt the only one who needs to be cussed out here.
I know someoneās tita or lola out there was encouraging this behavior, and in the name of the Santo NiƱo, I rebuke them. Filipinos are among the most welcoming people on earth: We love it when you come to our parties, we love it when you try our foodāespecially the gross kinds. In fact, Iām pretty sure Ja Du felt pretty gassed when she tried balut (fertilized duck egg) at the Filipino function and was told by someone that she was an āhonorary Pilipino.ā
Ja Du, my dear, speaking from personal experience, thatās a party trick. We make all the white people try balut. You know where you can find me, though? By the gotdamn lechon.
Dr. Stacy Scheckner can also catch these hands. WTSP spoke to this licensed psychologist about being ātransracial.ā Scheckner said that she had no transracial clients but had worked with people who wanted to change their bodies and that that was basically like the same thing.
āIf someone feels that they feel at home with a certain religion, a certain race, a certain culture, I think that if thatās who they really feel inside, life is about finding out who you are. The more knowledge you have of yourself, the happier you can be,ā said the Beckiest doctor on earth.
āAnd, as long as itās not hurting yourself or anyone else, I donāt see a problem with that,ā she added.
Thatšš¼ is šš¼ not šš¼ how šš¼ this šš¼ works. Why are we treating religion, race and gender as though they operate in the same ways? How does a licensed professional even fix her mouth to say something like that?
The differences between transgender and transracial have been unpacked numerous times, most recently when Rachel Dolezal compared herself to Caitlyn Jenner. As Salon noted in a 2015 article, there is a growing body of evidence that trans identity is rooted in biological differences. Recent research has shown that the brains of trans people While people have choices in how they express their gender identity, what their gender identity is is involuntary.
Meanwhile, Ja Du wants to be Filipina because she fucks with the music and the adobo.
Listen, you can (and maybe should) embrace cultures that arenāt your own. And having lived overseas, Iāve witnessed many a person who found a new, arguably more authentic home in another culture and place.
When I lived in Vietnam, I saw white men marry Vietnamese women and have Vietnamese children and decide that they related so much more to Vietnamese culture that they applied for Vietnamese citizenship. I have even heard some of these men (and some women) say they āfeelā more Vietnamese than American or British or Australian.
The last part was always puzzling to me, but fine. They were talking about a place as much as a culture, and Iāve never known any of them to try to pass themselves off as ethnically Vietnamese. Being expats, they understood their privilege and the power imbalance between being a native Vietnamese and being from a Western country.
But filing for citizenship or claiming kinship is altogether different from taking on an ethnic identity: The latter is theft.
Ja Du doesnāt see it this way.
āIf thatās who they are and they want to celebrate it and enjoy it, then you have to think, āWhat harm is it doing?ā All they want to do is throw themselves into that culture and celebrate it,ā Ja Du told the TV station.
āI think before we get offended, we need to take a step back and think about what is the harm,ā she continued.
Thankfully, Ja Du hasnāt gone the way of other ātransracialā assholes and physically altered her features to appear more Filipino, but the concept remains the same. Adopting Filipino identity would theoretically make Ja Du a trans woman of colorāa group who disproportionately faces stigmatization and violenceāyet Ja Du can opt out of that identity in ways those women of color cannot.
There may be no harm to me personally, Ja DuāIāll still be Filipino AF no matter what you do. But thinking that you need to become a person of color just to celebrate a person of color is just about the whitest thing you can do.
Editorās note: Ā Some readers have noted that WTSP-TVās report refers to Ja Du as a man. We confirmed with reporter Garin Flowers that Ja Du is a trans woman and has been undergoing hormone therapy, though Flowers said Ja Du had no preference for what pronoun was used to describe her. While other some outlets refer to Ja Du as a man, The Root refers to her as a woman.
Weāve also edited the article to highlight the distinctions between transgender identity and supposed ātransracialā identity, and to reflect that Ja Du currently lives in New Orleans, Louisiana, not Florida.
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