Brazil Tgirls

Brazil Tgirls




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Brazil Tgirls
Why are there so many trans women in Brazil?
Which country has the largest transgender population?
Is it normal to date a transsexual in Brazil?
Why is Brazil so famous for transgender women?
Which country has the largest trans women population?
Why are Brazilian transexuals so beautiful?
Author has 681 answers and 1.3M answer views · Updated 3 y ·
Originally Answered: Why are there so many shemales in Brazil?
Which country has the largest transgender population?
Is it normal to date a transsexual in Brazil?
Why is Brazil so famous for transgender women?
Which country has the largest trans women population?
Why are Brazilian transexuals so beautiful?
Brazil has 89% of "shemale" searches in RedTube. Brazil is the most violent country against trans women. Could there be a connection between these?
Which country has the largest transgender population in Asia?
Why is Transgenderism so popular in South America?
How accepted is transsexuality in Brazil?
Why does Brazil have the highest murder rate of transgender people?
Who are the most beautiful trans women?
People say Brazil is the best country for transgender people. Is it true?
Why does Thailand seem to have a disproportionately high number of transgender people?
Where is the biggest percentage of transgender people per capita in the world?
Transgender: What are the most Transgender friendly cities in the United States?
Which country has the largest transgender population?
Is it normal to date a transsexual in Brazil?
Why is Brazil so famous for transgender women?
Which country has the largest trans women population?
Why are Brazilian transexuals so beautiful?
Brazil has 89% of "shemale" searches in RedTube. Brazil is the most violent country against trans women. Could there be a connection between these?
Which country has the largest transgender population in Asia?
Why is Transgenderism so popular in South America?
How accepted is transsexuality in Brazil?
Why does Brazil have the highest murder rate of transgender people?
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Because the State pays for it, you can change your sex for free if you’re 18. We have excellent and affordable plastic surgeons. In resume change sex in Brazil is safer and cheaper than in most countries. Pretty sure we also have a high number of drags and trans men because is somewhat acceptable in a underground world that isn’t small.
Go check youtube, drags and trans are doing pretty well in music and many of them are making a lot of money with music and concerts.
Things to take under consideration before answering your question:
Things to take under consideration before answering your question:
After this brief summary I do not think it is really necessary for me to make a long answer since the basics is already there. Brazil is a beautiful country to visit so for years foreigners have come here to know the country, coming here they will notice that we, Brazilians, deal with sex with less pudor than his fellow countrymen and they are interested to know how it is to have sex here so they would pay for it, starting to generate an economy around sex. People have their deep secret sexual desires that sometimes they have to look elsewhere to fulfill them, some like anal sex, others footjob and some like transgenders.
Let it be clear that I do not say that all Brazilian transgenders are prostitutes, of course not, but since we have an informal economy around sex tourism and people would do anything to have a job, and that job in specific do not pay badly, people would do it.
There is also the thing about “cheap surgery”, I might be a little off here because I do not have expertise on the subject, but I think that before going under a procedure, the transgender would have by them dressed as a woman before, not necessarily as a drag queen, but tried out women’s clothes to see how it suits them. What makes you think that there aren’t people that don’t do that in the rest of the world? The difference lies on the next step, the surgery, which is cheap in Brazil, and not only that, the person does not have to pay upfront, they can pay in instalments, and if there is something that Brazilians love is instalments, whereas in other countries it can be really expensive and not everybody can pay for such a procedure.
One thing that is worth mentioning is that, even though Brazil might be known as a country with a great transgender population, that does not reflect that all Brazilians accept them. Brazil is also known as the country that most kill LGBTs, if you are interested in reading about that I would recommend another answer of mine here: Luiz Felipe's answer to What is it like to be gay in a big city in Brazil?
P.S.: If you are interested, and know how to read Portuguese, I would recommend to you reading this: http://www.ccr.org.br/uploads/ciclodedebates/volume_3_transexualidade_travestilidade_e_direito_a_saude.pdf Especially Carla Machado’s part.

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Brazilian pageant for transsexuals where winner gets sex change
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Published: 16:20 BST, 23 October 2013 | Updated: 10:16 BST, 24 October 2013
As the Brazilian contestants sashayed onto the stage in pink bikinis for a beauty pageant held in Rio de Janeiro’s João Caetano Theatre, their incredible figures drew a loud applause and cheers from a hyped up, excited audience. 
The wolf-whistles and shouts of appreciation were not just for the models’ feminine curves; they are also for the breathtaking courage of the leggy, high cheeked sirens, who in flaunting their bodies made an unequivocal statement that they are proud to be transvestites and transsexuals. All were born as men.
But that wasn't the most controversial aspect of Monday night's Miss Trans Brazil 2013 contest. 
Glamour: Contestants line up for the Miss Trans Brazil 2013 contest in Rio de Janeiro on Monday night
For the first time, the organisers, the Transgender Association for the State of Rio de Janeiro (RIO ASTRA), offered the winner a transsexual operation from male to female in Thailand. 
The prize ran into controversy because a sex change operation is against the law in Brazil.
Instead of withdrawing the prize as they were instructed to do, the organisers dodged the problem. 
'We did not directly offer transgender surgery as a prize. We presented the award as a gift voucher with the option for the winner to do what they want with the money in Thailand.
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Leggy: For the first time, the organisers of the event are offering the winner a transsexual operation from male to female in Thailand
'It will be entirely up to them,' says the President of ASTRA, Marjorie Marchi, carefully choosing her words speaking to the Mail Online. 
It means, the victor can either undergo a sex change or have the best cosmetic facial and plastic surgery in the Far East country. 
The prize was worth £4,000 with a year of counseling if they choose the sex operation.
At Monday night’s event, there were even representatives from the hospital in Thailand who will provide the surgery of choice.
This is the second Miss Trans contest to be held in Rio and the winner of this year's national competition will also go on to compete in the Miss Universe Transgender 2014 contest.
Stunning: A contestant sashays onto the stage at the beauty pageant held in Rio de Janeiro's João Caetano Theatre
As the contestants made their way out onto the stage, their incredible figures resulted in a loud applause and cheers from the excited audience
Proud to be transsexuals: The high cheeked sirens flaunted their feminine curves at the Miss Trans Brazil 2013 contest on Monday
The show has grown from fielding 19 candidates last year to one with 28 competitors representing 11 of Brazil’s states.  
The show is sponsored by the government’s Social Assistance and Human Rights Department as part of the campaign to combat homophobic violence in the country. 
Marchi, a 38-year-old, transvestite, is one of the driving forces in the country fighting to change society’s negative attitudes towards those who wish to live their lives as cross-dressers or as transgender women. 
'The beauty constant is essentially a political tool for us to draw attention to a section of the population that faces prejudice and is marginalised in Brazilian society on a daily basis,' explains Marchi.
The victor can either undergo a sex change or have the best cosmetic facial and plastic surgery in the Far East country
'There are still a lot of transvestites and transsexuals who suffer discrimination by being refused for a job, by not being able to use the name they choose for themselves, and by being the subject of homophobic violence and abuse,' said Marchi with a hint of anger in her voice. 
Behind the Miss Tran's glamorous celebration is a dark underbelly of homophobic violence in Brazil with the alarming statistic of 1,341 homosexuals murdered (LGBT – Lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender) in the country between 2007 and December 2012, according to records held by Groupo Gay da Bahia (GGB), the oldest organisation of its kind in the country. 
'We need to bring in affirmative and inclusive public policies and to open the doors and eyes of society for the sake of transsexuals.  
'In the meantime we are making ourselves very visible and hard to ignore,' Marchi adds resolutely.
Flaunting it: The show is sponsored by the government's Social Assistance and Human Rights Department as part of the campaign to combat homophobic violence in the country
Most of the candidates have jobs working in the beauty industry, as models and make-up artists. 
But it would be wrong to conclude the competitors are only restricted to this area of employment. Sharing the catwalk are saleswomen, video editors, a psychologist and students. 
The crown of Miss Trans Brazil 2013 was won by Raiica Ferraz, a stunning 21-year-old hairdresser from São Paulo who tells the Mail Online that from an early age she only ever played with dolls and at 17 she challenged the taboos in her school by dressing as a woman.
'Everyone was shocked. They just stopped and starred. But I decided that this was what I wanted to do and no one was going to change my mind.
'There was a bit of teasing, but because I was very confident, it didn’t affect me and they soon gave up out of boredom,' said the 5ft 8in tall transvestite.
Most of the candidates have got jobs working in the beauty industry, as models and make-up artists
At Monday night's event, there were representatives from the hospital in Thailand who would provide the surgery of choice
As she accepted her prize to shouts of 'gostosa, linda, maravilhosa’ (hot, beautiful, wonderful) Ferraz revealed she doesn’t want to do the transgender surgery but will opt for cosmetic procedures to make her face even more feminine.
'I don’t need this operation, I already feel like a woman. I have been taking hormone tablets for more than four years now to create my curves and increase my bust size and I am really happy with the results,' Ferraz says confidently. 
'I respect myself and because of that the people in my community and my family respect me. They are going to be so proud that I won,' she adds.
Ferraz and the other contestants also have home-grown international trans-models to look up to. Brazil has recently seen a surge in the numbers of transgender models gracing the catwalk. 
Six-foot-tall Felipa Tavares, who is signed to the 40 degrees international model agency that discovered top super model Gisele Bunchen, is paving the way as laws in Brazil, in recent years, become more favourable to tackling gay rights.
Wow I never knew that the procedure was illegal in...
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“The life expectancy of a trans woman or transvestite in Brazil is 35 years old.” — Camila Falcão
The following photos are from the series “Abaixa que é tiro” by Brazilian photographer Camila Falcão. 
“I used to think I would be a painter because I started painting when I was 10, but in college (I have a Bachelor Degree in fine arts) teachers from video art and photography departments started paying more attention to my work, it was then that I realized that I have the ability to express myself in these medias and I started to dedicate myself more to photography.” — Camila Falcão
Read more from Camila on the following pages. Learn more about her work on her web site and Instagram .
“I used to be a volunteer at CRD (Center for Reference in Defense of Diversity), in São Paulo, and thanks to this job I was in constant and direct contact with many transgender women and transvestites. After some time I realized the enormous diversity between them, all those possibilities of expressing the feminine enchanted me and I saw there an opportunity to do a relevant work by bringing this plurality to the surface, contributing to the deconstruction of stereotypes and, above all, to the construction of new and more realistic perception of these women.”
“I live in the most transphobic society in the planet, there were 163 transphobia murders in Brazil only in 2018 . Brazil is also the country that consumes most pornography with this population, so as you can figure, we live in a pretty sick society when it comes to gender and sexuality. The life expectancy of a trans woman or transvestite in Brazil is 35 years old. The majority of these people broke up with the family and failed to complete their studies because they had to work and fight for survival, so unfortunately 90% of them work as prostitutes. The degree of social invisibility of trans people in Brazil is so great that there are no official studies or data that can map this segment across the country in order to promote human rights policies, in the fight against violence, and in the creation of State Public Policies to meet the due demands, which are many.”
“So, when I started thinking about making this project viable, I thought it was important to get them out of the context of the streets, put them in a domestic environment and photograph them with natural light, I felt they needed to be humanized and that was my way of making that happen. Another conscious choice was to only photograph bodies without surgical intervention, precisely to show their natural beauty and prove that it is not necessary to have any type of surgery to be a woman. Bodies that have been transitioning for some time, bodies that are not going to change but are still bodies of women, women with penises, with or without breasts — many possible women. I invite people to ask themselves: Does simply passing as a woman define being one?”
“Being a transvestite in Brazil is above all resistance, especially now that we have just elected an extremely prejudiced president, but there’s a whole new generation of Brazilian trans women and transvestites fighting for rights, visibility, and dignity, and I’m very proud to be an ally.”

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