• Culture
    Culture
    Filipino actors Bridgerton

    Get to know the Filipino actors in ‘Bridgerton’

    pura luka vega chappell roan church

    Matched her freak! Pura Luka Vega performs Chappell Roan’s ‘Good Luck, Babe!’ at ‘Church’

    AI and deepfake porn is a form of sexual assault—and we need to talk about it

    AI and deepfake porn is a form of sexual assault—and we need to talk about it

    • Women
    • Queer
    • Politics
    • Environment
    • Food
  • Style
    Style
    Pond's serums

    These night serums are your new solutions for radiant, glowing skin

    5 original Filipino fragrance brands to check out

    5 original Filipino fragrance brands to check out

    Here’s where you can get unique, one-off accessories—designed by you

    • Fashion
    • Beauty
    • Space
    • Shopping
  • Entertainment
    Entertainment
    Filipino actors Bridgerton

    Get to know the Filipino actors in ‘Bridgerton’

    pura luka vega chappell roan church

    Matched her freak! Pura Luka Vega performs Chappell Roan’s ‘Good Luck, Babe!’ at ‘Church’

    charlie’s angels totally spies!

    Our favorite onscreen spies, from Austin Powers to ‘Totally Spies!’

    • Celebrities
    • TV & Movies
    • Music
  • Life+Money
    Life+Money
    Single woman adopts baby

    Forming a family: When a single woman adopts a baby

    painting of baby

    A mother-to-be’s survival guide

    Navigating a friend breakup that has no bad blood

    It’s no one’s fault: When a friendship naturally runs its course

    • Career & Money
    • Parenting & Relationships
    • Sex & Health
    • Astrology
    • Travel
  • Inquirer.net
  • Lifestyle
Reading
Let’s get one thing straight: Alyssa Milano isn’t trans, POC, or a minority
ShareTweet
In Culture
2 min read

Let’s get one thing straight: Alyssa Milano isn’t trans, POC, or a minority

By Jacqueline Ariason March 11, 2019
Share

Do you ever read a tweet five times to make sure that you’re understanding it right? That’s what I did when I read actress Alyssa Milano’s tweet about being trans, a person of color, an immigrant, a lesbian, a gay man, and a disabled person.

Alyssa tweeted this after someone asked her if she was transgender—a question that was raised when she greeted transwomen on International Women’s Day. (BTW, people are getting offended with including the trans community in IWD greetings, but that’s a story for another day.) Here’s the thing, though: She’s neither of those labels she mentioned, which drew the ire of netizens.

I’m trans. I’m a person of color. I’m an immigrant. I’m a lesbian. I’m a gay man. I’m the disabled.

I’m everything. And so are you, Kirk.

Don’t be afraid of what you don’t know or understand. No one wants to hurt you. We are all just looking for our happily ever after. https://t.co/znkQizV37k

— Alyssa Milano (@Alyssa_Milano) March 9, 2019

After receiving much backlash, Alyssa followed it up with another tweet explaining that she meant it to show empathy. “Nuance is important and literal interpretation is not always intended. And I can identify with and not identify as. Both are powerful.”

I’m glad this tweet invoked conversation. I’m so sorry it offended some. I see you and hear you. But just a reminder, empathy is not a bad thing. Nuance is important and literal interpretation is not always intended. And I can identify with and not identify as. Both are powerful.

— Alyssa Milano (@Alyssa_Milano) March 9, 2019

We understand Alyssa’s intention but… yikes.

Many have pointed out that while she meant to sound empathetic, her tweet can be seen as a privileged white woman putting on all these hats to appear relatable to minorities. Activist George M. Johnson also reminded her, “You are an advocate. Be [okay] with that. This isn’t the way to say you are with us. You can’t just fake an experience you don’t have. You don’t navigate any space like these groups.”

No. You are an advocate. Be ok with that. This isn’t the way to say you are with us.

You can’t just fake an experience you don’t have. You don’t navigate any space like these groups.

This is the “I don’t see color” approach which is oppression and erasure.

— George M Johnson (@IamGMJohnson) March 9, 2019

This situation is also similar to Gov. Imee Marcos claiming that she’s “bakla” (gay) while courting the LGBTQ+ community to vote for her in the senatorial elections. She later tweeted that gay rights shouldn’t just focus on the LGBTQ+, but every human. (Even if you read that aloud, it’s not going to make sense.)

Dapat intindihin natin na ang gay rights ay hindi lamang para sa ating mga LGBT. Gay rights are in every way human rights as well.

— Imee Marcos (@SenImeeMarcos) January 24, 2019

We’re also going to put it out there: Saying “I don’t see color” fall under this category as well. Former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz was criticized for saying this during a town-hall event to prove that he’s not prejudiced and welcomes diversity, both in his personal and in every Starbucks branch. This statement was also in light of the coffee empire’s racism issue after two Black men were arrested for staying inside a Philadelphia branch, and the fact that their “anti-racism training” is reportedly taking a wrong approach.

As Forbes noted on this issue: “How can you possibly fix something that you don’t believe you actually see? … We all see color. To say one doesn’t is just not accurate. We have to first, recognize that each of us, no matter our color, have preconceived notions and expectations about different racial groups. Recognition and acknowledgment are crucial.”

READ MORE: Alessandro Michele regrets the racist Gucci mask and here’s what he’s doing about it

This attempt at being relatable to certain sectors is perceived as another form of oppression and erasure. Here, we see people of privilege who claim they know what it’s like to be a minority—they don’t. It comes off as insensitive because they sound like they’re owning these struggles.

Instead of doing that, one should acknowledge the problems and creating plausible solutions for them. Lead an advocacy and not make it about yourself. Even if you meant that you don’t “identify as” the group of people you mentioned just like what Alyssa did.

 

Art by Marian Hukom

For the latest in culture, fashion, beauty, and celebrities, subscribe to our weekly newsletter here

Follow Preen on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, YouTube, and Viber

Related stories:
Having a “few” trans models in fashion is NOT real representation
Ted Bundy’s advantage wasn’t his looks, it’s his White privilege
Transgender people #WontBeErased and they’ve changed the world
This display of racism and misogyny against a Muslim woman is disgusting

Total
0
Shares
Share 0
Tweet 0
Pin it 0
Share 0

Action Required!

We embed Facebook Comments plugin to allow you to leave comment at our website using your Facebook account. It may collects your IP address, your web browser User Agent, store and retrieve cookies on your browser, embed additional tracking, and monitor your interaction with the commenting interface, including correlating your Facebook account with whatever action you take within the interface (such as “liking” someone’s comment, replying to other comments), if you are logged into Facebook. For more information about how this data may be used, please see Facebook’s data privacy policy: https://www.facebook.com/about/privacy/update.

Accept    Decline

Tags
LGBTTransgenderTwitter

Subscribe to our newsletter

Stay in the loop


By subscribing, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

ShareTweetEmailShare
Jacqueline Arias

Peek This

Pond's serums

These night serums are your new solutions for radiant, glowing skin

Filipino actors Bridgerton

Get to know the Filipino actors in ‘Bridgerton’

pura luka vega chappell roan church

Matched her freak! Pura Luka Vega performs Chappell Roan’s ‘Good Luck, Babe!’ at ‘Church’

AI and deepfake porn is a form of sexual assault—and we need to talk about it

AI and deepfake porn is a form of sexual assault—and we need to talk about it

Preen.ph © 2020. Hinge Inquirer Publications, Inc.
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • HOME
  • ARCHIVES
  • ABOUT US
  • CONTACT US
  • ADVERTISE WITH US
Job Interview Fashion
Previous
Nail your job interview with the right outfit
Next
An exclusive fitness group gets called out for using native Kenyans as workout “props”
  • Culture
    • Women
    • Queer
    • Politics
    • Environment
    • Food
  • Style
    • Fashion
    • Beauty
    • Space
    • Shopping
  • Entertainment
    • Celebrities
    • TV & Movies
    • Music
  • Life+Money
    • Career & Money
    • Parenting & Relationships
    • Sex & Health
    • Astrology
    • Travel
  • Inquirer.net
  • Lifestyle
  • Subscribe
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • YouTube
  • Search
Start typing to see results or hit ESC to close
fashion fashion news music Culture News movies
See all results

Subscribe to our newsletter

Stay in the loop


By subscribing, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.