Chelsea Manning’s Gallery Debut to Showcase DNA Self-Portraits She Made in Prison – Out Magazine

Photography: Glenn Garner

For herA Becoming Resemblance exhibition, the trans activist teamed with artistHeather Dewey-Hagborg.

Mon, 2017-07-31 13:38

Chelsea Manning is a hero, a whistleblower, and a trans activist. Now, we can add artist to her list of accomplishments because, in the final two years of her seven-year prison sentence for her involvement with WikiLeaks, she was working on an art project that involved her own DNA.

Related |Chelsea Manning Rides in New York Pride

The result of this years-long project is a series of DNA portraits that Manning created in collaboration with Brooklyn-based artist Heather Dewey-Hagborg. The exhibition, called A Becoming Resemblance, is set to debut on August 2nd at at the Fridman Gallery in Manhattan and will feature 30 3-D printed portraits of Mannings face.

The entire project was made possible thanks to Mannings idea to send samples of her DNA out of prison in the mail. According to the artist, Manning gave to her lawyer envelopes filled with samples of her hair and cheek swabs.While this may have been a new process for Manning, this isnt Dewey-Hagborgs first DNA rodeo. The artist had already created 3-D portraits of strangers through discarded cigarette butts, pieces of gum, and hair found on the streets of New York.

Radical Love, Chelsea Manning (2016) byHeather Dewey-Hagborg

As she waited out her prison sentence, Manning found a voice in the art project at a time when discrimination against her and her gender transition was at its height. "Prisons try very hard to make us inhuman and unreal by denying our image, and thus our existence, to the rest of the world," Manning said in a statement. "Imagery has become a kind of proof of existence. The use of DNA in art provides a cutting edge and a very postmodernalmost 'post-postmodern'analysis of thought, identity, and expression.

Related |Chelsea Manning Opens Up in First Interview Since Release From Prison

When the exhibition opens on August 2nd, it will be historic not only because of Mannings international reputation, but also because it will be the first time the activist will see the portraits shes been giving her DNA to for two years in person, according to Dewey-Hagborg.

A Becoming Resemblance is on show at New York's Fridman Gallery from August 2 to September 5, 2017.

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Chelsea Manning's Gallery Debut to Showcase DNA Self-Portraits She Made in Prison - Out Magazine

Chelsea Manning’s DNA, Candy-Colored Churches, and More Art … – Bedford + Bowery

(image via Fridman Gallery / Facebook)

A Becoming ResemblanceOpening Wednesday, August 2 at Fridman Gallery, 6 pm to 8 pm. On view through September 5.

Its hard to ignore Chelsea Manning lately. And rightfully so: Against all odds, her newly liberatedpresence, both on Twitter and IRL, remains one of the most fiercely optimistic in a pool of (justifiably) jaded folk. Ironic memes have no match for colorful emojis, it seems. But this Wednesday, Manning can be found in an art gallery, and her presence manifests in more ways than just the literal.

A Becoming Resemblance is a collaborative venture between Manning and interdisciplinary artist Heather Dewey-Hagborg, using and exploring the technology of genomic identity construction. The show consists of 3D-printed portraits constructed in 2015 from pieces of DNA (hair, nail clippings) Chelsea sent her collaborator from prison. This gave the world a chance to once again put a human face to her identity, which had been shrouded by incarceration for years. The show will also include a graphic novel the duo made last year in collaboration with illustrator Shoili Kanungo depicting Chelseas sentence getting commuted by Obama and her being able to see her 3D portraits in person. What was initially drawn as hopeful fiction can now become reality.

(flyer via Erin Davis and Max C Lee)

Ride Collision: Voice-Haptic On-Road Patio For Liaison SessioningOpening Friday, August 4 at Invisible Exports, 6 pm to 10 pm. On view through August 26.

Though theyve been hard at work curating the Re: Art Show, which manifests in a different part of the vast and strange Pfizer Building in Bed-Stuy every month, Erin Davis and Max C Lee are still finding time to make work of their own. Aside from being quite a mouthful of a title, Ride Collision: Voice-Haptic On-Road Patio For Liaison Sessioning is the duos first solo show in New York.

The show is part of a larger series entitled Ride Collision, exploring the ways one can construct environments using discarded or repurposed found materials. These sculptural creations relate to cars and transportation and the culture and norms surrounding them. The show is also described as delving into how car crashes and other hazards can throw into turmoil the very rules and norms put in place to prevent them. Rocks made from painted styrofoam resemble asphalt, pieces of drywall are modified to resemble road barriers that brace for impact, and caution tape abounds.

Karin Ferrari, still from DECODING The Intros of ZiB (THE WHOLE TRUTH), 2016, digital video, 28:58 (via Tiger Strikes Asteroid)

Revealing Reflected RefractionsOpening Friday, August 4 at Tiger Strikes Asteroid New York, 6 pm to 9 pm. On view through September 10.

This week appears to be a week of long and/or sort of convoluted exhibition titles. For example, try saying this one five times fast. If youre in need of a nice vocal warm-up, it could be a useful one to tuck in your back pocket. If youre not interested in such folly, know that Revealing Reflected Refractions is also a group art exhibition.

The exhibition showcases four artists of differing backgrounds and practices. Video by Karin Ferrari combines the Austrian national news and the Illuminati, drawings from Hai-Hsin Huang depict a multicultural humanity, light sculptures by Alison Kudlow are both tangible and intangible, and site-specific by Nooshin Rostami makes the formality of a gallery space a little more uncertain. At Fridays opening reception, Rostami will also be performing.

(image via Knockdown Center)

The Clock Is Taking A NapOpening Sunday, August 6 at Knockdown Center, 5 pm to 7 pm. On view through November 5.

Using a color palette reminiscent of scoops of sherbet and making shapes that recall fruit, body parts, rainbows, and more, Amie Cunats mural for Knockdown Center breathes new life into New York City architecture. The mural takes inspiration from drawings of notable buildings like churches, layering each structure on so it recalls the squished reality of real estate in the city, but with an added dose of sugary surrealism. Every day the cityscape changes a little more, for better or for worse, and here you can see it from yet another perspective.

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Chelsea Manning's DNA, Candy-Colored Churches, and More Art ... - Bedford + Bowery

Chelsea Manning: President Trump, Trans People in the Military Are … – New York Times

What does this mean? Well, for now we dont exactly know, since it is clear that the presidents tweets were not exactly well thought out. But it could mean that trans people will have to pack up and go home for pretty much no reason other than you cant stay here. For no other reason than, we feel like using you as political pawns today, or we dont understand you, or you simply are not welcome here.

Money is the excuse today. It was supposed to be expensive to provide trans people with adequate health care. The reality is that the costs are negligible. Military spending wastes billions of dollars on projects that are canceled or dont work, every day.

Medicine was the old excuse. The old military regulations were laced with medical terms to justify discrimination. They psychopathologized us trans people as having manifestations of paraphilias, and psychosexual conditions, transsexual, gender identity disorder to include major abnormalities or defects of the genitalia such as change of sex or a current attempt to change sex, that would render an individual administratively unfit to serve.

These old regulations could come back. The rhetoric about trans people having mental disorders could come back, too. Its the same thing we see in state houses across the country. Trans people are mentally ill. We are predators. We are the ethereal enemy of the moment. Even though there is a medical consensus, a legal consensus, a military consensus that none of this is true.

This is about bias and prejudice. This is about systemic discrimination. Like the integration of people of color and women in the past, this was a sign of progress that threatens the social order, and the president is reacting against that progress.

But we will move forward. We will make sure that all trans people in the military, and all people outside the military after serving, receive the medical care they need. We will not back down. Our progress will continue. Our organizing and activism will grow stronger.

We are neither disruptive nor expensive. We are human beings, and we will not be erased or ignored.

Chelsea Manning (@xychelsea) is a former United States Army intelligence analyst who was convicted in 2013 by court martial under the Espionage Act. Her sentence was commuted by President Obama in January and she was released in May.

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Chelsea Manning: President Trump, Trans People in the Military Are ... - New York Times

Chelsea Manning Is a Free Woman: Her Heroism Has Expanded …

Ever since Chelsea Manningwas revealed as the whistleblower responsible forone of the most important journalistic archives in history, her heroism has beenmanifest. She was the classic leaker of conscience, someone who went at the age of 20 to fight in the Iraq War believing it was noble, only to discover thedark reality not only of that war but of the U.S. governments actionsin the world generally: war crimes, indiscriminate slaughter, complicity with high-level official corruption, and systematic deceit of the public.

In the face of those discoveries,sheknowingly risked her own liberty to disclose documents to the world that would reveal the truth, with no expectation of benefit to herself. As someone who has spent years touting the nobility of her actions, my defenses of her always early oncentered on the vital nature of the material she revealed and the right of the public to know about it.

It is genuinely hard to overstate the significance of those revelations: Aside from exposing some of the most visceral footage of indiscriminate slaughter by the U.S. military seen in decades, the leaks were credited even by harsh WikiLeaks skeptics such as New York Times Executive Editor Bill Keller with helping to spark the Arab Spring. Even more significantly, revelations about how the U.S. militaryexecuted Iraqi civilians, then called in a bombing raid to cover up what they did, prevented the Iraqi government from granting the Obama administration the troop immunity it was seeking in order to extend the war in Iraq.

Though Mannings case has been somewhat colored by the changing perceptions over time of WikiLeaks, she actually first attempted to contact traditional media outlets such as the New York Times, the Washington Post, and Politico with her revelations, only to be thwarted by a failure to get their attention. In the online chats that she had with a deceitful individual who thereafter became agovernment informant and turned her in, she said her motive in leaking was solely to trigger worldwide discussion, debates, and reforms, adding: I want people to see the truth regardless of who they are because without information, you cannot make informed decisions as a public.

In the wake of these disclosures, the U.S government as it reflexively does claimed that therelease of the documents would endanger lives, and that those responsible for publishing the leaks had blood on their hands. But subsequent investigations by theAP and McClatchy found those accusations utterly unfounded, and ultimately, even Defense Secretary Robert Gates ridiculed the hysteria driving the governments claims about the leaks harms as significantly overwrought.

In sum, though Manning was largely scorned and rejected in most mainstream Washington circles, she did everything one wants a whistleblower to do: tried to ensure that the public learns of concealed corruption and criminality, with the intent of fostering debate and empowering the citizenry with knowledge that should never have been concealed from them. And she did it all knowing that she was risking prison to do so, but followed the dictates of her conscience rather than her self-interest.

But as courageousas that original whistleblowing was, Mannings heroism has only multiplied since then, become more multifaceted and consequential. As a result, she has inspired countless people around the world. At this point, one could almost say that her 2010 leaking to WikiLeaks has faded into the background when assessing her true impact as a human being. Her bravery and sense of convictionwasnt aone-time outburst: It was the sustained basis for her last seven years of imprisonment that she somehow filled with purpose, dignity, and inspiration.

The overarching fact of Mannings imprisonment was its enduring harshness. In 2010, during the first months of her detention in a U.S. Marine brig in Quantico, Virginia, I began hearing reports from herhandful of approved visitors about the vindictive and abusive conditions of her confinement: prolonged solitary confinement, being kept inher cell alone for virtually the entire day, gratuitous, ubiquitous surveillance, and worse. When I called the brig to investigate these claims, I was startled when a brig official confirmed to me, in the most blas tones, their accuracy.

That enabled me to report for the first time that Manning was being imprisoned under conditions that constitute cruel and inhumane treatment and, by the standards of many nations, even torture. That report sparked a major controversy, ultimately culminating in the resignation of President Obamas State Department spokesman, P.J. Crowley, after he denounced the treatment of Manning as ridiculous and counterproductive and stupid on the part of the Department of Defense.

But that turned out to be only the beginning of the abuse she endured. Several months after my report, the New York Times reported that Manning was being subjected to deliberately humiliating rituals in which she was stripped and left naked in hercell for seven hours, and required to stand naked outside her cell during inspection. It was back then, in 2011, that the first report of Mannings suicidal thoughts surfaced. Amnesty International denounced her detention conditions as a breach of the USAs obligations under international standards and treaties, and ultimately called for proteststo demand a cessation of the abuse.

It was nonetheless difficult to generate large amounts of public or journalistic support for Manning: Many on the right long viewed leakers as traitors and thus took gleein her suffering, while many liberals loyal to Obama literally mocked the abuse Manning endured. But ultimately, the U.N. special rapporteur on torture investigated the conditions of Mannings imprisonment and concluded in 2012that the U.S. military was at least culpable of cruel and inhumane treatment, and that imposing seriously punitive conditions of detention on someone who has not been found guilty of any crime is a violation of his right to physical and psychological integrity as well as of his presumption of innocence.

All of the controversy generated by those reports ultimately compelled the Obama administration to transfer her from Quantico to a more professionalized but still harrowing prison, in the middle of Kansas, on a military base at Fort Leavenworth, as she awaited her trial. While her imprisonment then became more normalized, her heroism multiplied to entirely new levels.

In July 2013, Manning was convicted of multiple counts of espionage for her whistleblowing (though she was acquitted of the most serious charge she faced: the treason-equivalent of aiding the enemy). On August 21, she was sentenced to 35 years in prison. On August 22 the very next day she issued her statement identifying herself as Chelsea Manning, a trans woman, and demanded that she receive from military authorities the medical therapy she neededto complete her transition:

Given the way that I feel, and have felt since childhood, I want to begin hormone therapy as soon as possible. I hope that you will support me in this transition. I also request that, starting today, you refer to me by my new name and use the feminine pronoun (except in official mail to the confinement facility).

It is hard to describe the courage and determination that required. Less than 24 hours after she learned that she had been consigned to spend the next 35 years in the custody of a military prison, she publicly identified as the trans woman she is and demanded the medical therapy to which she was legally and ethically entitled.

To truly grasp the bravery that required, its necessary to understand her situation at the time. In 2015, I visited her at Fort Leavenworth. To get there, one must fly to Kansas City, then drive more than an hour into the woods of Kansas, in the proverbial middle of nowhere. One arrives at a sprawling, completely militarized base, Fort Leavenworth, where it wasquitedifficult to gain access. Upon entering, one drives another 15 to 20 minutes deep into the military base to arrive at the military brig, which itself is a labyrinth of cages and security measures that must be navigated in order to finally meet her somewhere in the bowels of that prison.

In sum, its almost impossible to be more isolated, more cut off from society, than Chelsea Manning was. Coming out as a trans person, and embarking on the transition process, is extraordinarily difficult even under the best of conditions. Trans people still face incomparable societal hurdles including an epidemic of violence even when they enjoy networks of support in the middle of progressive cities. But to do that while in a military brig, in the middle of Kansas, where your daily life depends exclusively upon your military jailers, is both incomprehensibly difficult and incomprehensibly courageous.

Mannings strugglesin prison, including her suicide attempts and grotesquely cruel punishments for them, were publicly reported. Although the military prison begrudgingly gave her some of the therapy she sought, authoritiesalso imposed petty restrictions, including a refusal even to let her grow her hair and a failure to provide much of the support that was needed.

As one of the few people on the list of approved visitors, I spent many hours on the phone with her during this period. Her experience both in prison generally and transitioning specifically was filled with completelygratuitous challenges and difficulties caused by malicious or ignorantprison authorities.

But what is ultimately most striking about Chelsea Manning is her unyielding persistence. In the most humble yet determined tones, she insists on following what she knows is the right path regardless of the risks and costs to her. And in doing so, far beyond the initial acts of whistleblowing, she became a heroto LGBTs around the world, and so many other people, by demanding the right to be who she is, and to live freely, even under the most oppressive conditions.

This is nota case where I feign journalistic objectivity or neutrality. I regard Chelsea Manning as one of this generations greatest heroes, as well as a valued friend. While her release today is somewhat bittersweet How can one forget the grave injustice that she spent almost all of her 20s in prison for having done something that merited our collective gratitude, and the abuse she continually endured? I am thrilled that she will finally live as a free woman, and incredibly excited about what she can achieve, how she can inspire people, now that she is finally released.

Ultimately, what makes Chelsea Manning unique is not so much her political heroism but rather the way she has personally navigated her life after that. As I recounted in the letter I wrote in support of her clemency petition, she is the single most empathetic and compassionate person I have ever met. When I would speak to her, it was difficult for me to contain my anger and resentment over the abuse she had suffered and continued to suffer. Yet she never displayed or even seemed to share any of that anger, instead often defending even those who wronged her by empathizing with their own predicaments and mitigating their behavior.

To be sure, her transition back into freedom is not going to be easy. Shes been imprisoned since she was 22 years old. She knows that she is a controversial and polarizing figure and is unsurewhat life outside of Fort Leavenworth has in store for her. It will naturally be a huge adjustment in all sorts of ways.

But Manning is one of the most intelligent, engaging, and inspiring people one could ever hope to meet. There is a massive amount of admiration and support for her all over the world, as evidenced by the incredibly successful fundraising campaign to ease her transitionout of prison. No matter where I have spoken in the world, the mere mention of her name prompts sustained standing ovations for her. All of that her seeing how much love and gratitude there is for her will undoubtedly strengthen her in whatever she chooses to do.

It is rare, especially lately, to find inspiration in any political stories. But the last decade of Chelsea Mannings life, and the potential it now holds for the future, is one of those cases. One shouldnt idealize what happened to her: There is a lot of injustice, harm, and outrage in her story. But the way she has inspired so many, and the fact that today she istruly free, is a cause for real celebration, and a valuable reminder of how human beings, through pure acts of conscience and determination, can singlehandedly change the world for the better.

Top photo: A poster depicting Chelsea Manning at the San Francisco pride parade on June 29, 2014.

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Chelsea Manning Is a Free Woman: Her Heroism Has Expanded ...

The day after Trump announced transgender ban, Chelsea Manning stops by White House – USA TODAY

This file photo taken on May 18, 2017 shows an Instagram account screen capture portrait of transgender former soldier Chelsea Manning which she posted on May 18, 2017 one day after being released from a top-security US military prison.(Photo: AFP/Getty Images)

Chelsea Manning stopped bythe White House on Thursday,the day after President Trump tweeted that transgender people would nolonger be allowed to serve in the military.

Manning, the transgender U.S. Army soldier who spent seven years in prison for leaking classified documents, posted a selfie while standing on the north side of the building.

Her message: "Figured I would show my face at the new ground zero of the war on trans people, #WeGotThis."

Manning, who joined the Army in 2007, had slammed the president over his announcement, saying it "sounds like cowardice."

In 2010, shewas arrested and convicted for leaking more than 700,000 classified documents.Her 35-year sentence was commuted by President Obama in the final days of his administration.

At the time of her arrest, she was known as Pvt. Bradley Manning. Shecame out as transgender during her incarceration.

She remains an active-duty, unpaid soldier, eligible for health care and other benefits while her court-martial conviction remains under appeal.

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Trump seeks to ban transgender people from serving in U.S. military 'in any capacity'

Chelsea Manning, progressive and LGBTQ groups slam President Trump's transgender ban

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The day after Trump announced transgender ban, Chelsea Manning stops by White House - USA TODAY

Twitter ‘Moments’ Section Describes Chelsea Manning as a ‘Whistleblower’ – Washington Free Beacon

Chelsea Manning / Twitter

BY: Conor Beck July 27, 2017 2:01 pm

A featured moment on Twitter's "Moments" section described convicted military leaker Chelsea Manning as a "U.S. Army whistleblower" onThursday.

Twitter describes its "Moments" section as "curated stories showcasing the very best of what's happening on Twitter."The moment was titled, "Chelsea Manning visits ground zero of the war on trans people.'"

One of the featured tweets in the moment read, "You can't be anything other than full of admiration for someone who was put through what she was put through by her Govt yet still shows up!"

Manning tweeted about her appearance from her verified account.

Manning, a transgender woman and former Army intelligence analyst, was found guilty of 17 of 22 charges against her when she was known as Bradley, including violations of the Espionage Act,"wrongfully and wantonly" causing intelligence belonging to the U.S. to be published on the internet, and "having knowledge that intelligence published on the internet is accessible to the enemy," according to the Guardian.

Manning was sentenced to 35 years in prison after leaking hundreds of thousands of classified U.S. government documents that WikiLeaks subsequently published. She only served seven years in prison, however, after former President Barack Obama commuted the bulk of her sentence shortly before he left office.

None of the featured tweets mentioned Manning's crimes.

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Twitter 'Moments' Section Describes Chelsea Manning as a 'Whistleblower' - Washington Free Beacon

Chelsea Manning protests Trump’s transgender military ban at the White House – Washington Examiner

Transgender activist and leaker of national security documents Chelsea Manning showed up to the White House on Thursday morning to protest President Trump's Wednesday announcement of his decision to ban transgender people from serving in the U.S military.

Manning posted a photo to Instagram, and called the White House the "new ground zero of the war on trans people."

President Trump's announcement that transgender people would be barred "in any capacity" from serving in the military drew immediate complaints from Republicans and Democrats, and raised immediate questions about how it would be implemented. The Defense Department indicated it was not prepared to implement the decision, and the White House said it still had to coordinate with the department on questions such as how to handle the thousands of transgender people currently serving.

Manning was an intelligence analyst for the U.S. Army and sentenced to 35 years in prison after being convicted of leaking a trove of documents to WikiLeaks. Manning was pardoned by President Obama in January just before he left office.

The former Intel analyst also used Twitter to argue against Trump's plan.

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Chelsea Manning protests Trump's transgender military ban at the White House - Washington Examiner

MSNBC’s Joy-Ann Reid Went On A Bizarre Transphobic Tirade Against Chelsea Manning Last Night – Mediaite

For all their cagey and self-proclaimed sympathy after decades of neglect, DADT and DOMA, its truly a wonder that liberals have been able to fashion themselves into die-hard friends of the LGBTQ community almost overnight. (Of course, thats not what really happened, liberals only truly went to bat for LGBTQ folks after two things occurred: (1) some well-heeled members of the community turned themselves intogay ATMsfor the Democratic Party and then threatened to pull the plug; (2) PresidentObama was relentlessly mocked by activists for opposing marriage equality.)

Enter: MSNBCs Joy-Ann Reid, Democratic pundit, host ofAM Joyand all-around bloviator on things she probably shouldnt.

Last night, in a string of tweets that for some reason have yet to be deleted Reid decided to use Chelsea Manning as a foil to make some sort of point about President Donald Trumps proposed transgender military ban.

Her first salvo was classic concern trolling. Reid pretended to care about an unnamed CNN guest using Chelsea Manning as an excuse to support the ban. Then it got uglyand howquick.

Lets dissect this without mincing words.

Joy-Ann Reid is using gender dysphoria as a pathology to account for Chelsea Mannings principled and heroic actions.

Reid suggests Manning would have been less volatile and vulnerable if shed had earlier access to reassignment surgery. By this, Reid means maybe Manning would have been okay with the brutality of the U.S. militarys operations in Iraq. Thats gross and insulting. Mannings agency is removed, U.S. crimes are excused, and Mannings desire to live her life as she sees fit is turned into some kind of illness.

Sensing that her horrific point hadnt been made quite clear enough, Reid dug in. Heres another shot:

Of course, no decent person would follow up the above statement with a sentence that begins with the word but, but, wellheres the chaser:

Here, Reid is peddling whole-cloth-created (and non-existent as a matter of record) sympathy for how Manning was treated by the U.S. military. Recall, Mannings treatment while under custody wasformally described by the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture as cruel, inhuman and degrading. That same report asserted Mannings treatment under the Obama administration may have even risen to the level of torture itself. The report was issued in 2012.

Around the same time Manning was being almost-maybe tortured, Reid attacked her. The liberal favorite dead-gendered Manning and first articulated the argumentrehashed last night, describing her as a a guy seeking anarchy as a salve for his own personal, psychological torment because of her gender dysphoria and sexuality. In that sameblog post, Reid characterized Mannings turmoil as TMI.

So, in one sense, none of this is new. Joy-Ann Reid has been an open, Manning-hating transphobic bigot for awhile. Shes just now awkwardly attempting to spin her transphobia into some sort of Twitter win against the Trump administration. So, yeah, go ahead and count longtime observers as entirely not surprised.

But Reids decision to weaponize Chelsea Manninga person she once thoroughly demonizedby turning Mannings desire to transition into some kind of sickness that made her deliver evidence of war crimes and other unseemly behavior by the U.S. government over to Wikileaks is sad and pathetic even by her own standards.

Respect-your-betters liberal paternalism knows no bounds. At long last, chattering class libs will be prying shards of human bones from their teeth as they lecture others on dignity and restraint. Joy-Ann Reid is only symptomatic of this trend generally and liberal transphobia in particular, of course, and shouldnt merely apologize: she should delete her account.

[image via screengrab]

Follow Colin Kalmbacher on Twitter: @colinkalmbacher

This is an opinion piece. The views expressed in this article are those of just the author.

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MSNBC's Joy-Ann Reid Went On A Bizarre Transphobic Tirade Against Chelsea Manning Last Night - Mediaite

Chelsea Manning, progressive and LGBTQ groups slam President Trump’s transgender ban – USA TODAY

President Donald Trump said on Twitter the U.S. will not "allow or accept" any transgender people to serve openly in the military. Video provided by Newsy Newslook

President Trump's announcementWednesday that transgenderpeople would not be allowed to serve in the military in any capacity sparked strong backlash from LGBTQ and progressive groups, and prominent members of the community.

Chelsea Manning,the transgender U.S. Army soldier who spent seven years in prison for leaking classified documents, criticized the move.

"So, biggest, baddest most $$ military on earth cries about a few trans people but funds the F-35? Sounds like cowardice. #WeGotThis," Manning wrote on Twitter.

Olympic gold medalist and transgender activistCaitlyn Jenner, a longtime supporter of Trump, criticized the president on Twitter.

"There are 15,000 patriotic transgender Americans in the US military fighting for all of us," Jenner wrote. "What happened to your promise to fight for them?"

Transgender actor Laverne Cox said in a statement toThe Hollywood Reporterthat she had met with several transgender Americans who had served or currently serve in the military.

"I have heard from them humiliating stories of being misgendered and experiencing various kinds of mistreatment when they are willing to put their lives on the line in ways many of us would never do, including our current president," she said. "This latset reversal of another Obama administration policy continues to send the message to trans Americans that our lives, our safety and service are less valuable and unwanted in this country, the country I love and hold so dear."

Cox also spoke out on Twitter, saying, "Your lives, safety, & service matter."

Comedian and talk show host Ellen Degeneres called the ban "hurtful, baseless and wrong."

"We should be grateful to the people who wish to serve, not turn our backs on them," she wrote on Twitter.

Singer Katy Perry, an LGBTQ advocate, also criticized the ban.

"ALL those who defend our right to live freely should be able to serve freely!" she wrote on Twitter. "There are THOUSANDS currently serving! #ProtectTransTroops"

LGBTQ advocacy organization GLAAD calledthe ban, whichreversedObama administration policy, a "directattack" on the transgender community.

"President Trump today issued a direct attack on transgender Americans, and his administration will stop at nothing to implement its anti-LGBTQ ideology within our government even if it means denying some of our bravest Americans the right to serve and protect our nation," GLAAD president Sarah Kate Ellis said.

"Today further exposed President Trump's overall goal to erase LGBTQ Americans from this nation."

Gregory Angelo, president of the Log Cabin Republicans, a group within the GOP that advocates for LGBT rights, said that Trump's announcement was about politics and did a disservice to transgender military personnel.

"The United States military already includes transgender individuals who protect our freedom day in and day out," he said in a statement. "Excommunicating transgender soldiers only weakens our readiness; it doesn't strengthen it."

Sarah McBride, the national press secretary for the Human Rights Campaign, called Trump's decision "reprehensible, unpatriotic and dangerous."

Jonathan Greenblatt of the Anti-Defamation League called the ban "shameful and discriminatory."

"We stand w/trans & LBGT community," he wrote on on Twitter.

Here is a guide to understanding LGBT terms. Sara Snyder, USA TODAY

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Chelsea Manning, progressive and LGBTQ groups slam President Trump's transgender ban - USA TODAY

Chelsea Manning Slams Trump’s Trans Soldier Ban: ‘Sounds Like Cowardice’ – TPM

Chelsea Manning, a former intelligence analyst in the U.S. Army, on Wednesday pushed back on President Donald Trumps announced plan to ban transgender people from serving in the military.

So, biggest baddest most $$ military on earth cries about a few trans people but funds the F-35? Manning asked in a characteristically emoji-filled tweet. Sounds like cowardice.

The F-35 Lightning II Program, also known as the Joint Strike Fighter Program, develops high-tech fighter jets. Plagued with engineering problems and about seven years behind schedule, the program has been blasted as a trillion-dollar mistake, according to Bloomberg.

Manningresponded to a tweet from conservative commentator Tomi Lahren that said The military is not about the wants of the individual, its about the mission by asking, What mission is that? Wasting money on dysfunctional equipment and greedy contractors?

In 2010, Manning came out as a trans woman the day after she was sentenced to 35 years in prison for sendingthousands of classified records to Wikileaks. She reportedly faced humiliating abuse from the prison workers over her gender identity and attempted to commit suicide several times.

The Army granted Manning gender-affirming surgery in 2016 after herfive-day hunger strike.

After a commutation from President Barack Obama, Manning was released from prison in June after servingseven years of her sentence.

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Chelsea Manning Slams Trump's Trans Soldier Ban: 'Sounds Like Cowardice' - TPM