Opinion Every Trans Suicide Is A Murder By Those In Power - News came this week that transgender athlete and student Lia Smith took her life at just 21 years of age.

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Just days ago, Middlebury College in Vermont announced the tragic death of Lia Smith, a transgender student and former athlete at the school. In the days that followed, a clearer picture of her life emerged: she was a passionate advocate for transgender rights, a devoted teammate before leaving athletics in the 2023-2024 season, and someone who, like so many visible trans people today, faced relentless hostility. While we may never know the exact reasons she took her own life, her death came amid a wave of Republican attacks on transgender student athletes and sweeping Trump administration restrictions on transgender people across nearly every aspect of life. To call her death merely a suicide misses the larger truth—no suicide happens in a vacuum. Policies designed to make life unlivable for transgender people bear responsibility too; every trans suicide is a murder by those in power.

To understand Lia’s life before her passing is to see the power of what acceptance can make possible. She was a model student—proof that when transgender people are allowed to live authentically, the benefits ripple outward. Lia double-majored in computer science and statistics, played in the Chess and Japanese clubs, loved music, and competed on the women’s swimming and diving team until she left, citing the pressure and isolation she felt as a transgender athlete who “didn’t feel welcome.” Her departure came amid a growing wave of anti-trans policies on college campuses, as states began banning transgender athletes in 2022—a wave that has only intensified since into national bans. That hostility marked the beginning of what every transgender person now recognizes: a coordinated effort to legislate us out of public life.

“We’re not trying to get into women’s spaces to be perverts. We’re just being ourselves. We don’t mean any harm to anyone,” Smith said during a campus panel she joined that coincided and competed with an anti-trans event featuring Brianna Wu and Leor Sapir—the latter a prominent anti-transgender activist affiliated with the Manhattan Institute. On her panel, Smith spoke candidly about her experiences as a transgender athlete and student, sharing the challenges of navigating both visibility and hostility. She closed with a simple plea to the packed audience: “Know that there are people in your community who are here for you and care about you.”

As a transgender journalist and public speaker who has sat on many similar panels, I could have said the same words as Lia. When I learned of her death, I thought of the countless times transgender people have pleaded for our humanity and our rights, and of how often we’ve continued to push for inclusion while clinging to the belief that a brighter future will come—one where we can share in the same basic dignity that Lia asked for. But I also understand the pain she must have carried. It’s a pain familiar to anyone who advocates for transgender people: those moments when hope slips away, when you watch an administration—all the way up to the presidency itself—target you, and when each new policy reminds you how precarious your place is, leaving you braced for the next blow.

This year, transgender people have faced a relentless wave of policy attacks. Hospitals across the country have shut down gender-affirming care for trans youth, forcing many into medical detransition. The NCAA has moved to block transgender athletes from competition, with numerous national sports organizations following its lead. LGBTQ+ student life centers are being dismantled nationwide. Passports have become a new battleground—those who received documents reflecting their correct gender under the attestation form instituted this year have already been warned in court filings that if the Supreme Court rules for the federal government, their passports could be confiscated and reissued under their former gender markers. Our history is being erased, our books banned, and even our role in the Stonewall uprising—the spark of the modern Pride movement—has been stripped from the national monument’s own website. Meanwhile, social-media platforms amplify anti-trans hate as the billionaires who run them disable what few protections once existed, leaving trolls free to publish personal information that invites harassment and threats.

It was this same kind of anti-trans hate and harassment that Lia faced. Early this year, the hate site “HeCheated” targeted her directly, listing her diving competitions and later celebrating when her name disappeared from the roster. Sites like HeCheated and SheWon are riddled with inaccuracies and strange logic, often ensnaring both trans and cis athletes in their obsessive attempts to police identity. Their real purpose is harassment, driving coordinated online attacks against anyone they mention. We can’t know whether that pressure played a role in Lia’s death, but it’s clear she felt the weight of that hostility. In a February panel, she spoke to that isolation: “It’s really hard putting on the suit every day if you are obviously an outlier. It’s also really hard going in a locker room where you’re not welcome, and there’s really not a clear space that I should be going to.”

The policies that targeted Lia make life harder—and shorter—for transgender people. In a time when we can’t predict what fresh cruelty might come next, as the president signs one anti-trans order after another, as elite universities quietly comply with his demands to discriminate even in blue states, and as the movement against us widens its sights to target transgender people of every age, we have to name what’s happening plainly. These policies carry blood on their hands. Transgender advocates have warned for years that the relentless criminalization and isolation of our community would lead to deaths. Lia deserved better—better than this government, better than these institutions. Every transgender suicide is not just a tragedy, its a murder; it’s the foreseeable consequence of policies designed to make us disappear.

For those wishing to help Lia’s family, you can give to the Middlebury’s Prism center for Queer and Trans life as requested by her family.
 

Every Trans Suicide Is A Murder By Those In Power​

Im exhausted by the emotional blackmail the left keeps using. JD Vance was one of the few people who was able to cut through the bs and strike it in the heart, but more people need to wake up to it and shut it down.
 
Transgender advocates have warned for years that the relentless criminalization and isolation of our community would lead to deaths. Lia deserved better—better than this government, better than these institutions. Every transgender suicide is not just a tragedy, its a murder; it’s the foreseeable consequence of policies designed to make us disappear.
"If you don't do what I say, I'll kill myself" is perhaps the most well known manipulation tactic used by abusers to shut down their victims.

The fact that it's now being used by perverts in miniskirts doesn't change that fact.
 
"If you don't follow my standards and say yes to everything I ask and say, I will kill myself and this will be your fault."

Definitely not a mental illness or a show of narcissistic manipulative behavior.
 
To call her death merely a suicide misses the larger truth—no suicide happens in a vacuum. Policies designed to make life unlivable for transgender people bear responsibility too; every trans suicide is a murder by those in power.
Every fucking mainstream suicide org says explicitly not to play these kinds of games with suicide stories. Blaming anyone or anything specifically is cynical politicking for what is ultimately a complicated, multi faceted tragedy.

And then I click on the link and lol, surprise surprise, it's fucking Tony.

For those unfamiliar with Tony, his wife divorced him. Part of the divorce settlement was that he was forbidden from wearing his ex wives clothes, lol.
 
The policies that targeted Lia make life harder—and shorter—for transgender people.
Next time shut the fuck up and stay out of politics. You already had all the rights you needed before you decided you needed legal authority over children as well.... oops!
 
Every fucking mainstream suicide org says explicitly not to play these kinds of games with suicide stories. Blaming anyone or anything specifically is cynical politicking for what is ultimately a complicated, multi faceted tragedy.

And then I click on the link and lol, surprise surprise, it's fucking Tony.

For those unfamiliar with Tony, his wife divorced him. Part of the divorce settlement was that he was forbidden from wearing his ex wives clothes, lol.
I don't know who this Tony person is but he sounds really gay.
 
Tough shit.

You started off with all the rights you were entitled to and then used companies like Stonewall to further erode everyone else's rights just so you lot could have some more.

This is just resetting the clock, and if you find that distasteful, take it up with Stonewall and the other activist organisations who lied.
 
Men cannot be women and women cannot be men. Anything that says otherwise is misleading and false. Tony and every single troon and their enablers and benefactors should be anally raped while straitjacketed until they expire by Arizona's finest saguaro cactus farms.

I used to have a semblance of empathy for troons. There are many very good reasons why that has all but evaporated over the years spent watching their hijinks and degeneracy.
 
Suicide is the fault of the one who killed themself. Blaming others for your own actions is the selfish frosting a selfish cake. But, perpetual victimhood can apparently exist posthumously, these days.
 
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