Itβs one thing to separate art from artist. Itβs another to ignore the harm an artist continues to inflict while profiting from that artβand to help them do it.

Tom Felton, best known for his role as Draco Malfoy in the original Harry Potter movies and is reprising his role in the Broadway production of "Harry Potter and the Cursed Child", was recently asked about the controversy surrounding J.K. Rowling and her ongoing campaign against trans rights.
βNo, I canβt say it does [impact me],β he told Variety. βIβm not really that attuned to it.β
He went on to say that Rowling brought the world together through her books, and that heβs βincredibly grateful.β
Gratitude doesnβt excuse complicity.
The trans community, especially trans youth, are under attack globally. In the U.S. alone, hundreds of anti-trans bills have been introduced, many of which mirror the language and ideology Rowling has amplified. She is not a passive figure. Her wealth and influence actively support organizations and movements that aim to legislate trans people out of public life.
Actors like Felton, as well as John Lithgowβwho will be playing Albus Dumbledore in HBO's upcoming Harry Potter seriesβarenβt just ignoring that harm. Theyβre reinforcing Rowlingβs cultural capital, allowing her brand to thrive even as it becomes more hostile to the very people who once found refuge in her stories. Their participation is not neutral. It is a quiet endorsement under the guise of βjust creating art.β But that art now supports the erasure and degradation of a vulnerable community.
Is that what your art stands for?
Do we all just shrug and accept the, βIβm just grateful for the opportunityβ remarks? Or should we ask why gratitude is being weaponized to excuse bigotry? The answer tells us who weβre still willing to sacrificeβand who we arenβt brave enough to stand beside. We have to be better then that!
How harmful does Rowling have to become before people recognize what she is championing? Does she need to build camps? Fund violence directly? Where is the line?
I like to believe weβd recognize the machinery of oppression when it starts turning, but history shows us otherwise. We donβt have to go back very far. In the very early days of the AIDS crisis, how many artists, actors, politicians, and institutions stayed silent because they werenβt βattuned to itβ? Because it was easier to look away than to speak up for a stigmatized, marginalized group? That silence equaled death.
This moment is no different.
Rowling is not just βsomeone with opinions.β She is funding and platforming ideologies that lead directly to policy, and that policy leads to the sufferingβand in some cases, the death of trans people, particularly youth. To shrug and say youβre not paying attention is not neutrality. It is willful ignorance. It is the privilege of being unaffected.
We are living in an era of convenient empathyβwhere compassion is extended only when it doesnβt challenge your career, your comfort, or your paycheck. When someone like Tom Felton says heβs βnot attuned to it,β what heβs really saying is that he hasnβt had to be. And that is exactly the problem.
And none of this excuses HBO.
By green-lighting a Harry Potter reboot with Rowling attached as executive producer, HBO isnβt just betting on nostalgiaβtheyβre aligning themselves with an active campaign against trans lives. This isnβt just a bad PR move. Itβs a conscious choice to ignore the pleas of trans people, LGBTQ+ allies, and even fans of the franchise who understand that representation means nothing if it comes with a side of hate.
To say youβre βnot attunedβ to the issue in 2025 isnβt neutrality. Itβs indifference. And indifference, in the face of violence and erasure, is not passiveβitβs deadly.
I donβt expect actors or networks to lead social justice movements. But if Iβm going to asked to spend my time and money on their work, I do expect moral clarity in the choices they makeβespecially when those choices directly impact vulnerable communities.
Iβm not trans. But I am a trans ally.
And I believe that means more than just waving a flag in June or posting a hashtag during a moment of outrage. It means standing upβloudly, consistently, even when itβs uncomfortableβwhen I see harm being done.
To keep working with Rowling, promoting her work, or celebrating her legacy without acknowledging the harm she causes is to say that trans lives are expendable in the name of entertainment and profit.
Is that really how you want your legacy to be written?
I didn't grow up with the Harry Potter books. I was already an adult when I first opened themβbut I read them to my son, we watched the movies, and we both fell in love with the world. The magic. The friendship. The idea that bravery often looks like standing up for whatβs right, even when itβs hard. My son was Harry Potter for Halloween.
Rowling created a world that seemed to celebrate inclusivityβwhere outcasts found belonging, the overlooked became heroes, and transformation wasnβt just possible, it was essential to the magic. Even Draco Malfoy was given space to grow. She wrote characters who could shapeshift, become animals, and defy the limitations others placed on them.
But now, sheβs made it painfully clear: her vision of inclusivity has limits. And it stops at trans people.
And thatβs the heartbreak. Because the world she built was full of flawed characters who grew, who changed, who discovered deeper truths about themselves and others. Thatβs what made it magical. Thatβs what made it matter.
Now, sheβs using her power not to uplift, but to diminishβand to exclude. Not to protect the vulnerable, but to target them.
Itβs not just hypocrisy. Itβs betrayal.
And thatβs what makes this so painful.
The Harry Potter universe meant so much to cis, queer, and trans readers. We all saw ourselves in the magic, the rebellion, the found family. But now we see clearly: the authorβand the institutions backing herβare pushing trans people back beneath a cloak of invisibility. Not for protection, but to erase themβfor their comfort.
Fuck that. Trans people deserve to be seen. Trans people deserve to be safe.
Actors canβt claim neutrality. Studios canβt feign ignorance. Every time a curtain rises or a reboot airs, Rowlingβs platform growsβand so does the harm.
Silence is not neutral. Participation is not harmless. Legacy is a choice.
Choose wisely.
The magic originally gave us hope. Now the machinery behind it is erasing the very people who once found refuge in its pages.
If you choose to celebrate Rowling while ignoring the damage she does, youβre not just honoring her harmful legacyβyouβre perpetuating it.
And thatβs not just disappointing.
Itβs shameful.
LGBTQ+ people, raise your wands.
Lumos!
Let there be light, truth, and a future where we all belong.
What You Can Do.
π‘ 1.
Redirect Your Dollars
Instead of buying Harry Potter merchandise or supporting Rowling-linked projects (like the HBO reboot), donate that money to trans-led organizations. A few to consider:
Every dollar not spent on her brand is a vote against her platform.
π 2.
Uplift Trans Creators and Authors
Support trans storytellers in literature, film, and art. Recommend their work. Share their platforms. Buy their books. Let trans voices define their own magic.
Read works by authors like Akwaeke Emezi, Kai Cheng Thom, and Andrea Jenkins
Follow and promote trans creators here on SubStack, or TikTok, YouTube, and Instagram
Follow: Erin In the Morning, Trans United Fund
π’ 3.
Speak UpβPublicly and Often
Post. Comment. Correct people. Silence is interpreted as acceptance. Use your voice, especially in spaces where trans people may not feel safe doing so. Whether you have 10 followers or 10,000, your words matter.
π³οΈββ§οΈ 4.
Show Up for Trans Lives Politically
Contact legislators and oppose anti-trans bills in your state or country.
Vote for candidates who protect LGBTQ+ rights.
Stay informed through organizations like ACLU or Trans Formations Project, which track anti-trans legislation.
π€ 5.
Be an Everyday Ally
Use correct pronouns and normalize sharing yours.
Challenge transphobia in conversationsβonline or in person.
Support trans coworkers, classmates, family, and friends. Not just during Pride. Always.
π Support Hotlines for Trans Youth (U.S. & International)
πΊπΈ U.S.
1. Trans Lifeline
π 877-565-8860 (U.S.)
π translifeline.org
Peer support run by and for trans people
Confidential and free, no police involvement unless requested
Open daily; hours vary but often 24/7 coverage
2. The Trevor Project
π 1-866-488-7386
π¬ Text βSTARTβ to 678-678
π thetrevorproject.org
Crisis support for LGBTQ+ youth under 25
Also offers online chat and resources for identity, mental health, and safety
π International
1. Switchboard (UK)
π 0300 330 0630
π switchboard.lgbt
Confidential support for LGBTQ+ people
Also available via web chat and email
2. Kids Help Phone (Canada)
π 1-800-668-6868
π¬ Text βCONNECTβ to 686868
π kidshelpphone.ca
24/7 support for youth in Canada, including LGBTQ+ youth
3. QLife (Australia)
π 1800 184 527
π qlife.org.au
Anonymous, LGBTQ+ peer support and referrals
If you or someone you know needs immediate help and is in danger, always call emergency services.
