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Ant Lexa, who plays the role of Abbi Montgomery in the Netflix Series Series Series, joined, and Charlie Karajz, an activist and author of the book “To my Sisters Via”.
Krishnan Guru-Wallathi: Ant, first and foremost, how did he leave this feeling tonight?
Ant Lexa: I would like to describe it as a sorrow. I feel sad. Like, taking myself out of the bed this morning was difficult after receiving this news this morning. The only thing that kept me on his feet is that I received a lot of support and solidarity messages from people inside and outside my community.
Krishnan Guru-Wallathi: And sadness, why? I mean, is it about your place in society?
Ant Lexa: I, first and foremost, a woman. This does not feel like a political position. It seems like. I always felt what I am. Therefore, it is not recognized in the law, especially the law designed to protect us, which is why there was, he was terrified. Not even today, but precedent it determines not only the UK, but all over the world. I was left with an unbearable feeling.
“Not recognizing the law, especially the law designed to protect us, which is why there was, he was terrified.”
Ant Lexa
Krishnan Guru-Wallathi: Charlie, I mean, you are doing a lot of things, but you are more active, assume, from Ant. So where do you put this historically in terms of your struggle?
Charlie Karajaz: I mean, historically, we have passed a lot. So you are not worried about everything our society will be able to reach this. I am more worried about the women’s community who are carrying out the campaigns of this law, and what they will do now, because many of their time have spent this campaigns, for this victory for them. But what did they really win?
Krishnan Guru-Wallathi: So you do not feel a retreat?
Charlie Karajaz: Frankly, no, I feel bored more than anything. I think they have been carrying out a campaign over the past five years or so under a curtain, as JK always says, it is not a transcript, but it is only related to protecting women from predatory men, as you can see in this video that he played now, everything related to how to lie to the predator about the dress and go to the bathroom. So they really said, this is not transfobic. It is not a matter of transit women. It comes to predators, but in our prohibition of women’s spaces, and forcing us to use men’s spaces with these predatory men, I do not see how this victory is for anyone, and I do not see how these people can sleep with a conscience knowing that they are sending transient women to bathrooms with a predatory man who will annoy them.
“I don’t see how this victory is for anyone.”
Charlie Karajz
Krishnan Guru-Wallathi: Will this change your daily life at all?
Charlie Karajaz: I think it will not change my daily life at all because I mean, what will you do? Put me in prison. Mother, well. Put me in a man, please. But I think it will affect many people more than just people’s lives. This is actually what I aspire to, because I think that when people realize that it will be from the lusters who are asked about the reason for their presence in the women’s baths, because this really happens, I have many friends who stopped in the bathrooms that are born only from the newly born lesbians, and women … There was a recent viral function that was going around a woman who passed through the chemistry that was transcending in a bath that was in a state of issue. We see women from different cultures, built differently to this type of western idealism for femininity, and they are constantly happy with their genus.
We see it in the Olympic Games. Every time there is an Olympics, there are mathematics to be held. Are they really a woman? This is .. will hurt, lesbians, it harms women who are going through things like chemotherapy. It harms women from different cultures. It will harm much more than transit people. And if there is anything, then I look forward to that because after that we all can gather together and prove that this was just an absolute nonsense and no one.
Krishnan Guru-Wallathi: ANT, will this change your life at all, on a daily basis?
Ant Lexa: I am the second Charlie because it does not necessarily change my life in terms of protection that I was already receiving, because transfobia exists for a very long time. But you are supposed to wake up every day, believing that when I grew up in Devon countryside and I did not see strange people, surrounding me in adults and in society, I felt isolated. The only thing that I have been associated with the transition is fear and danger and … like that our identities that I have constantly responded make me feel completely concerned by young people who already feel lonely in countries.
“The constant presence of our continuous identities makes me feel completely concerned about the youth of transient people who are already lonely in countries.”
Ant Lexa
Krishnan Guru-Wallathi: Do you think this makes it easy to question your existence, because there is legal legitimacy for it now?
Ant Lexa: Yes, and when it is a title and you see these women who announce feminists, they celebrate that we are not protected by law, how will that make this a mutant young woman who feels terrifying and confused?
Krishnan Guru-Wallathi: So just in short, for both of you, what is the goal for you now in terms of the movement of transit rights? Should it be legal confession, or have you hit a brick wall on it and went on this?
Ant Lexa: I think recognition as a woman is really important.
Krishnan Guru-Wallathi: Do you still want that?
Ant Lexa: I still want this because I think this means that we can start looking at things that intersect with how we are affected as a passing woman and women, because there is a difference.
Krishnan Guru-Wallathi: And see me?
Charlie Karajaz: I don’t care much about admitting a woman because I do not want to admit it or I just want to leave me alone and I think this is what we all want after this war against our small society. We are less than 1 % of the population and it was a continuous attack against us and we just want to leave alone.
See more:
The Supreme Court defines a “woman” law – what now for the transit movement?
Discussion: Will sex be governed by biological sex in the corruption of Transforbia?
What does the ruling of the Supreme Court of Cross Rights mean?