traaaaaaannnnnnnnnns
Welcome to /c/traaaaaaannnnnnnnnns, an anti-capitalist meme community for transgender and gender diverse people.
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Please follow the Hexbear Code of Conduct
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Selfies are not permitted for the personal safety of users.
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No personal identifying information may be posted or commented.
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Stay on topic (trans/gender stuff).
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Bring a trans friend!
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Any image post that gets 200 upvotes with "banner" or "rule 6" in the title becomes the new banner.
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Posts about dysphoria/trauma/transphobia should be NSFW tagged for community health purposes.
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When made outside of NSFW tagged posts, comments about dysphoria/traumatic/transphobic material should be spoiler tagged.
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Arguing in favor of transmedicalism is unacceptable. This is an inclusive and intersectional community.
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While this is mostly a meme community, we allow most trans related posts as we grow the trans community on the fediverse.
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Remember to report rulebreaking posts, don't assume someone else has already done it!
Matrix Group Chat:
Suggested Matrix Client: Cinny
https://rentry.co/tracha (Includes rules and invite link)
WEBRINGS:
🏳️⚧️ Transmasculine Pride Ring 🏳️⚧️

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Bringing this back to my own first comment in this thread: This is precisely why out of all the forms of independent animation out there, I love fanime specifically so much. A work like Tokyo Crystal Mew is particularly illustrative and interesting to look at from this perspective: the way it was never finished, but later videos by the creator indicate that a lot more of the series was planned/made than was released; the way that the first two episodes were remade as the artist honed her skills; the way the visuals go from storyboards to very rough MS Paint drawings to very well-done black and white line animation to very well-done full-color animation, often in the same episode; and the knowledge in the back of your mind that the creator started the series I believe as a preteen and posted the last episode in her late teens, and you can see this in how the quality of the whole show tends to improve as it goes on. Something like Tokyo Crystal Mew is basically a celebration of imperfection and incompleteness, of creativity for creativity's sake; and it basically challenges anyone who sees it to try making their own animation, even if it looks rough, or the writing isn't all there, or you never finish it, making something is still better than nothing. You know?
I dunno if this makes sense, but it's like fanime is Kamina telling you the viewer/Simon to believe in the Kamina that believes in you, to do the impossible see the invisible, row row fight the power. And that's what I like about it: the unbridled human creativity, the unabashed reflections of pedestrian subjectivities.