<P> Leading figures of the militant transgender activism on the West Coast were Beth Elliot and Angela Douglas . Elliot was one of the first politically active transsexual lesbians, who at one point served as vice-president of the San Francisco chapter of the Daughters of Bilitis, the lesbian homophile organization, and edited the chapter's newsletter, Sisters . Elliot became a flashpoint for the issue of MTF (male - to - female) transsexual inclusion in the women's community when, after a divisive public debate, she was ejected from the West Coast Women's Conference in 1973 . Douglas had been active in GLF - Los Angeles in 1969 and wrote extensively about sexual liberation issues for Southern California's counter-cultural press . In 1970 she founded TAO (Transsexual / Transvestite Action Organization), which published the Moonshadow and Mirage newsletters . Douglas moved TAO to Miami in 1972, where it came to include several Puerto Rican and Cuban members, and soon grew into the first truly international transgender community organization . </P> <P> The 1970s were marked by slow, incremental gains as well as demoralizing setbacks from the first flushes of success in the late 1960s . In the early 1970s in Philadelphia, the Radical Queens Collective forged effective political links with gay liberation and lesbian feminist activism . In Southern California, activists such as Jude Patton and Joanna Clark spearheaded competent social, psychological, and medical support services for transgender people . </P> <P> Feminist ethicist Janice Raymond in her work Transsexual Empire characterized transgender men as traitors to their sex and to the cause of feminism, and transgender women as rapists engaged in an unwanted penetration of women's space . She suggested that transsexuals be "morally mandated out of existence ." As a result of such views, transgender activists in the 1970s and 1980s tended to wage their struggles for equality and human rights in isolation rather than in alliance with other progressive political movements . </P> <P> Transsexual people lived in oppressive surroundings and were considered wild, unfit or even dangerous, because new political and social agendas, which provoked these negative attitudes, were rising . Those were reasons for pessimism and inactivity in transgender community . </P>

Which of the following was a participant and/or leader in the civil rights movement