About The Stardust Project

Why This Work Can’t Wait
The Stardust Project is a multiphase
and collective effort to build a permanent, land-based refuge for queer, trans, neurodivergent, and disabled individuals—especially youth and families—seeking safety, stability, and self-determination outside the confines of capitalism. Rooted in mutual aid, ecological stewardship, and Indigenous land ethics, Stardust envisions a self-sustaining intentional community where care is not a commodity, housing is not a privilege, and no one is left behind.
We are responding to three converging crises:
• The accelerating displacement of trans and queer youth due to anti-LGBTQIA+ laws and healthcare restrictions
• Rising autism diagnoses among trans youth without adequate support or affirming spaces
• Climate migration and land grabs that threaten to leave our most vulnerable communities behind
Our solution is bold but necessary: a nonprofit land trust on Anishinaabewaki land in Mishigami (Southwest Michigan) where we can build queer family-friendly housing, grow food, host healing retreats, and offer communal living rooted in care, joy, and resistance.
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38% of transgender youth report experiencing homelessness or housing insecurity.
23% of cisgender LGBQ youth (non-transgender) reported housing instability—a 15% gap compared to trans peers.
8% of trans adults experienced homelessness in the past year, compared to 3% of cisgender LGB adults a
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Trans and gender-diverse individuals are 3–6× more likely to have an autism diagnosis than cisgender people.
In one survey, 24% of gender-diverse youth were autistic compared to 5% of cisgender youth.
Autistic people—also stastically likely to be trans—have come under attack by short-sighted politicians and inattention to resources, support, and design under capitalism.
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People with financial resources are already buying land in the Great Lakes region—an area projected to grow by tens of millions of people in the next decade.
With rising anti-trans laws, autistic and trans youth (of color, especially) face amplified vulnerabilities at the intersection of healthcare restriction, educational exclusion, and discrimination.
Trans, queer, neurodivergent youth face layered displacement, exclusion, and compounded risk—exacerbated by housing instability, lack of dual-affirming support, and disappearing land access.