Gender Outlaw

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January 2026 Magazine

The killing of Renee Good by an ICE agent is the equivalent of the canary singing in the coal mine. Numerous eyewitness accounts, along with disturbing video footage, explain how Renee Good was killed. Yet the President and other top administration officials would have us believe that her murder was justified. They are lying to the American people—that’s called Gaslighting.  In her article Rx for an Ailing Nation, Barbara Lloyd McMichael writes about the public health concerns coming out of the federal government. She interviews Dr. Stephen Bezruchka, whose new book Inequality Kills Us All: COVID-19’s Health Lessons for the World examines the ever-expanding gap in healthcare between the haves and the have-nots in America. Rosemary Curran writes about the roots of resentment amid the explosive growth of economic inequality. The second part of her three-part series asks: Can a Capitalist Society be Equitable?  On a lighter note, my essay Krystal and the Deep Blue Sea is a profile of a young San Diego woman who is a self-styled acolyte of Elon Musk. At PR for People, we think the killing of Renee Good has coalesced our American values and propelled us to take action to Standup #ForGood.  –Patricia Vaccarino

 


Book Review: Gender Outlaw

The first edition of Gender Outlaw, by author and performance artist Kate Bornstein, was published in 1994. A later edition of Gender Outlaw (the one I read) was published in 2016. I have no doubt that another edition might one day emerge. Gender Outlaw is a timeless classic that fills a much needed void. Kate Bornstein has said she wrote the book she had once wished someone had written for her.