Some comics make you laugh, some make you think – and then there are the comics that do both while quietly changing the world. Sophie Labelle’s work belongs to that last category. Her series doesn’t just entertain; it speaks. It shares stories that are honest, vulnerable, and deeply human, especially for trans and queer readers who rarely see their experiences reflected so clearly.
Today, we’re sharing some of Sophie’s newest strips – so scroll down and see just how much power, humor and truth a comic can hold.
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I'm going to get flamed for this, but so be it. Beware of potential political exploitation: no one can say for sure whether Margaret Ann Bulkley became James Barry for gender reasons or to be able to fully practice medicine, study it, and become the great surgeon he is. A career that would have been impossible for her as a woman.
This. Make AI do boring shît like accounting and spreadsheets. True creativity is human.
Being bisexual makes it so that you still win either way in this situation lol
There are some people who are so terrified of trans people that they make their entire personality about disputing the fact that trans people even exist, even with the American Psychological Association's statement that it is NOT a mental illness and the testimony and research of the President of the International Genetics Federation telling us that this is not a diseased state. I could name a few people from our own BP community, but you already know who you are and you definitely feel better than the rest of us "uneducated lost souls." Sometimes I feel sorry for people like this, but the great majority of the time I wish they would just go away with their anger and their hatred and their fear.
Thank you, mate, for volunteering to be the gun death that makes your point...
I just read that last statement was retracted by the police and on 17th November 2025, Ceja Alvarez was indicted by a grand jury for the first-degree m****r of Joss.
PSA: If you think you're a feminist but don't support trans women, no the f**k you're not.
But other than all of those things, we are definitely not involved in the strikes against Iran.
I mean it’s true, there’s no way any geriatric person should be running a country!
I’m a cis woman, and I would have loved it if my puberty had been at least a year slower. It happened before I felt ready for it.
So true. “Because you are my friend” is the best reason. Trans people are people, and it’s coming from a non trans person.
It's weird how people seem to think, because they created the kid, that the kid is their property, that they can do whatever they want with them, and parental rights should trump all else
Self-inflicted wound. If you act like an åsshole, people won’t want to hang out with you. Then you’ll be lonely.
Too many superfluous words. (Ik it’s not the point but still)
Made a comment on one of the lower-down posts, which will get hidden, so want to copy it here.. . . . It's not just about legal rights or individual safety. The courage needed to 'out' yourself in front of existing friends, particularly those of us of a slightly older generation, is more than I will ever be able to do.
Agreed; I'm so lucky that I never needed to "out" myself (because my family was so accepting already that I never felt the need to keep me being bi a secret). I know that, if they were bigoted, I'd never be able to come out to them in the traditional fashion
Load More Replies...These are so empowering for me as an LBGTQ youth, and I really needed this to keep going. Thank you.
I've only ever known one trans woman. She moved back to North Carolina to deal with some stuff. I miss hanging out with her. Asheville is very inclusive, but I still worry about her. Hopefully we can hang out when my family gathers at my brother's place in Waynesville for Christmas.
Made a comment on one of the lower-down posts, which will get hidden, so want to copy it here.. . . . It's not just about legal rights or individual safety. The courage needed to 'out' yourself in front of existing friends, particularly those of us of a slightly older generation, is more than I will ever be able to do.
Agreed; I'm so lucky that I never needed to "out" myself (because my family was so accepting already that I never felt the need to keep me being bi a secret). I know that, if they were bigoted, I'd never be able to come out to them in the traditional fashion
Load More Replies...These are so empowering for me as an LBGTQ youth, and I really needed this to keep going. Thank you.
I've only ever known one trans woman. She moved back to North Carolina to deal with some stuff. I miss hanging out with her. Asheville is very inclusive, but I still worry about her. Hopefully we can hang out when my family gathers at my brother's place in Waynesville for Christmas.
