Most of the "we need to sniff out which people aren't trans enough" sentiment seems to go along with a naive idea that trans people will never hurt you, which, like I see how people get there, they spend years or decades being abused by cis people and unable to find trans community, they spend this time building up an unhealthy rose-tinted idea of what an all-trans space will finally be like. And then once they get there and it's full of people being people and it isn't some kind of frictionless utopia their response to being hurt by another trans person tends to be either 1) this person must be egregiously evil and must be hunted down to the ends of the earth or 2) this person must not be actually trans, and should be kept out of all trans spaces. Understandable trauma response, but if you find yourself carrying it out you should still sit down and shut up before you make everything worse.
Because yeah the "trans people are harmless" mentality tends to also coincide with either "I don't have to worry about hurting other people cause I'm trans" or else constant self-doubt about whether you are virtuous enough to be actually trans. Deeply sad and unserious, and we give this sentiment way too much leeway.
Notably this shit seems way more common among white trans people than trans poc, perhaps because of a lack of experience with what it really means to live and interact with similarly-marginalized people. And like have them be messy and complicated without being ontologically evil or "the oppressor".
the neighborhood i grew up in was mostly white, but it WAS a government housing estate with an extremely low rent cap. and our little island of poverty was a real community, people knew each other, leaned on each other for support, kept each other safe from the cops. but people could also be loud, obnoxious. there was a lot of substance use. sometimes there'd be a stupid asshole who'd break into his neighbours places for cigarette money (come on man, at least walk 20 minutes north to steal from the dickheads in cathedraltown or victoria square).
i never for a second expected getting a bunch of trans people in one place would be any different, really. in fact i sorta expected it to be exceedingly similar. and then, low and behold, it was
it can be really important to learn the lesson that just because someone shares an axis with you that doesn't mean that they're amazing, worth dating, flawless, etc
still deserve to exist openly, but you don't have to like and be friends with everyone on a personal level and should not expect to
Yeah this is also my quibble with a lot of internet pop-leftism. "Workers are good and bosses are evil" is not terribly useful if you want to unionize with coworkers who are constantly misgendering or otherwise mistreating you. I'm grateful to the actual union organizers who were able to teach me that you don't have to personally like people to have a common economic interest with them, and you don't have to like people to engage in collective action with them.
Also a little tip that the union organizers passed on to me: if you want to unionize with transphobic coworkers, find one coworker who treats you decently (hopefully there's at least one) and delegate them to talk to everyone else
