With the recent decisions made by the supreme court, is the United states unsafe enough to trans people for us seek asylum elsewhere? I think these decisions are the government officially saying they do not acknowledge us for who we are. Is it time to start looking to seek asylum?

  • dandelion (she/her)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    1 day ago

    as far as I know, no country is granting asylum to trans people fleeing America; and no, the recent Supreme Court decision to allow Trump to enforce his policy while the court case is pending does not change that

    whether other countries grant asylum is not necessarily the same as whether the US is actually unsafe enough for trans people to need to flee, though

  • Armand1@lemmy.world
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    2 days ago

    As an outsider looking in, possibly yes.

    Just don’t come to the UK right now, it’s getting worse and worse at the moment for trans people.

    The rest of western Europe is better for this, with many having self-id laws (I think you can change your gender legally without any procedure or having to wait for a doctor to approve you).

    Whether you’ll get a visa is another question, but a good start is going to study for a degree to get your foot in the door.

    Alternatively, for Americans I hear Canada is a good choice, at one point they accepted LGBTQ people on refugee status from America (what a time we live in). Not sure how easy / hard that is to get.

    • Canada is not accepting American LGBT+ folks’ asylum claims, there was a single case of a non-binary person who was not deported because they were a caretaker and because the US could be unsafe, and there is an American trans woman’s asylum claim that will be heard, but neither case establishes that American asylum claims will be accepted

  • CrackedLinuxISO@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    1 day ago

    Do you have ancestry which can be traced to another country? Look up whether or not those countries have a law which confers citizenship to dependents of émigrés from that country. It still won’t be a quick process, so the time to start is now.

    For context, my husband and I are following up one such road to foreign citizenship. It’s finally time to submit paperwork, and there is a 13 month waitlist just to hand in the documents. Then an estimated 18 months to receive citizenship. This is assuming that the large influx of applicants doesn’t balloon the paperwork processing time even longer. According to one employee at the consulate I spoke to, they are dealing with a 300% increase in applications this year.

  • LadyMeow@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 days ago

    I think the question is one that every minority should consider. I can’t say for sure that for everyone, yes it’s time to leave or anything. However, I do think it’s worth considering. There’s no shame in wanting to get out, this country is definitely hostile to lgbt people, and it’s going to get worse.

    Personally, I’m not quite ready to flee yet, but it is in the back of my mind always.

    Even if you decide to stay for now, I would say it would be prudent to at least have some ideas of where and how you might go about it.

  • wizzor@sopuli.xyz
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    2 days ago

    I am not familiar enough with international law to evaluate that but…

    The US passport and citizenship still counts for something. You don’t need to go through the asylum process to live in most EU countries.

    In my country (Finland) you need a job, study or research position (assuming you don’t have an ETA citizenship or familial link).

    A citizenship here will take minimum 8 years to get regardless of how you arrive. A permanent residence permit takes 4. The only benefit of asylum status for those is that the clock starts when you arrive vs when you get your first residence permit, but you can apply for a residence also from abroad.

    Stay safe.

    Ps. Don’t trust me, I know nothing.

  • mistermodal@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    You’re an american your visa *passport works everywhere already, what do you mean by asylum, them providing you room and board?

    • stray@pawb.social
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      2 days ago

      You can’t just move to any country you want just by having a visa. There are laws regarding duration of stay, employment, etc.

      • mistermodal@lemmy.ml
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        2 days ago

        And it is easier for Americans than anyone else in the world. If you weren’t all obsessed with moving to Europe you’d get it. I mean, China only looks at conviction data, Europe bars you for getting arrested like once lmao

        • this isn’t true, being American does not grant you indefinite legal right to live in other countries - you have to find some way to be sponsored and have a visa that gives you a legal basis

          being able to visit a country for a short period of time as a tourist is not the same as being able to legally stay longer, get a job, secure housing, etc.

          • mistermodal@lemmy.ml
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            1 day ago

            I think you guys may not understand how powerful the U.S. passport is relative to other countries. In my initial comment, I did say visa instead of passport, but that was just a slip of a tongue on dictation. There’s no reason to try for asylum in those cases. You will not have a very hard time finding a visa in another country. Assuming we’re not trying to get into Turkmenistan, which I don’t think you are. I think you’re just projecting a immigration situation you’re used to elsewhere

            • dandelion (she/her)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              1 day ago

              the American passport allows for easy initial entry, but doesn’t guarantee permanent residence, asylum cases are to permit people to stay legally in the country longer than the (short) initial period allowed for tourism …

              • mistermodal@lemmy.ml
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                Most important leverage is in the form of the skills and $$$ you have, yes, the difference is you’re not trying to be retiree expats or anything gross like that, so you need a country that has strong labor protections bc you don’t want any kids you have to suffer, which doesn’t necessarily imply full Estonian “fork over cash for instant citizenship w our irrelevant geopolitical pawn country” treatment lol. Americans have an easier time than anyone else with this, don’t wait for asylum. Shit, a lot of the nerds on here could probably land a Russian gold visa in a snap lol. Though for obvious “family values” reasons it’s outside the scope of this community discussion! I mean the best option is like right there im just gatekeeping it want to see who recommends it of their own volition.

                I mean can we establish, from the basics we agree on here, that easy access to a country & diplomatic relations makes it easier to do student programs or look for work in order to seek long term solutions, so what is the quibble anyways

                • > making false claims that Americans can go anywhere and stay

                  > thinking trans people would be seeking asylum in Russia

                  > account is new

                  you sure you’re not some kind of bot?

        • Kayday@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          China would be an attractive choice if it wasn’t for their disappointing policies regarding trans people

          • mistermodal@lemmy.ml
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            1 day ago

            Somehow you made up a Chinese social issue even faker than the Uyghur genocide. I am impressed. You should research violence against minorities in China. Your own country is more dangerous. The preoccupation that marginalized groups in the west have with promoting the politics of their oppressors is deeply embarrassing. Every trans person online is basically an Uncle Tom for a democratic party that hates them

            • dandelion (she/her)@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              China does not allow or recognize same-sex marriages, are jailing gay women for writing erotica online, trans people have to have bottom surgery before they are permitted to update official documents, trans women are forced to notify their family and prove they have no criminal record before being allowed access to HRT, and in 2022 China passed a law preventing buying estrogen or anti-androgens online even with a prescription.

              This is all much worse than in the US where most states allow you to update your gender marker on official documents without surgery, HRT can be obtained on the basis of informed consent (and without requirements of disclosing to family or having no criminal record), and LGBT+ people are not being jailed for writing erotica …

              The U.S. is indeed dangerous, and you are probably in greater danger of being a victim of stochastic violence in the U.S. than in China, but that is not the only thing that people look at when deciding if a country has better or worse laws, rights, or conditions for LGBT+ people.