🐱 Quidditch Cup organizers say they'll no longer consider WV over transgender ban - Wait till they find out who invented the sport

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A West Virginia law banning transgender girls and women from competing on public school sports teams that align with their gender identity will cost the state a tournament that would have brought more than 1,600 visitors to the Kanawha Valley.
US Quidditch, the organizers of the Quidditch Cup, say they will no longer consider bids from the state of West Virginia because of House Bill 3293.
Quidditch is a sport that comes from the mind of author J.K. Rowling in her fantasy series “Harry Potter.” The real-life game blends elements of rugby, basketball and dodgeball.

Shawnee Sports Complex, in Institute, had been chosen for the tournament in 2020, but the event was canceled over concerns about COVID-19.
This year, in response to Shawnee’s bid to host the 2024 event, US Quidditch wrote it would no longer consider bids from West Virginia because House Bill 3293 goes against the organization’s policies regarding gender inclusivity and is damaging to transgender people.
“USQ strongly opposes gender-based discrimination in all forms, including the recently passed legislation in West Virginia,” Mary Kimball, executive director of US Quidditch, wrote in a letter dated May 21.
“USQ expects a host city to be welcoming and safe for people for all backgrounds, including transgender people, gender non-conforming people, and Black, Indigenous, and People of Color, and we are concerned for the safety of our athletes, volunteers, officials, staff, and fans with the passing of this discriminatory legislation in the state.”
In a statement, Kimball wrote that safety, including for transgender and nonbinary athletes and attendees, is the league’s number one priority and the transgender ban conflicts with that priority.
“Until the bill is repealed we cannot award any future events to West Virginia,” she said. “HB 3293 creates an unsafe environment for trans and nonbinary people in sports, perpetuates harmful stereotypes, and promotes misinformation about LGBTQIA+ people. While our local partners have been very supportive of our mission and values, HB 3293 is a barrier that will prevent US Quidditch [USQ] from hosting future events in the state.”


The tournament would have brought in an estimated at least 1,600 out-of-town guests and made an estimated $550,000 direct economic impact, according to Kimball’s letter.
“We had zero issues, and the Legislature came in to try to fix a problem that didn’t exist,” Kanawha County Commissioner Ben Salango said. “Now all of a sudden, we’re having issues. You know, that was the first tournament that I know of that was canceled because of it, and there will be more.”
Charleston Mayor Amy Shuler Goodwin said the loss of the tournament would mean an estimated $1.5 million to $2 million economic loss for local businesses “during a time when they need help the most.”
“We want to build community and empower our young people and adults,” Goodwin said. “While we cannot control what happens in the state Legislature or the Governor’s Office, this administration has prioritized making Charleston a more welcoming and inclusive city for all.”
The bill was passed earlier this year by the Republican-dominated Legislature.
Gov. Jim Justice signed the bill into law in April over concerns from LGBTQ+ advocates who called it illegal under federal law.
The mother of a Harrison County transgender girl who wanted to try out for her middle school cross country and track teams sued the state Board of Education, the Harrison County Board of Education and the Secondary School Activities Commission in May over the ban.
In July, a federal judge issued a preliminary injunction in the case, allowing Becky Pepper-Jackson to participate in girls sports at her school while the case continues. The injunction only says Pepper-Jackson isn’t barred from girls sports; it doesn’t protect other children.
The U.S. Department of Justice in June said the state’s ban “hinders equal athletic opportunities for girls by creating an additional hurdle for participation,” and discriminates against West Virginia student-athletes on the basis of sex and gender identification.
 
The tournament would have brought in an estimated at least 1,600 out-of-town guests and made an estimated $550,000 direct economic

Doing the math they are expecting each of those 1600 people to spend 343 dollars. I find this number dubious for some reason. Like, childless cat ladies in love with Harry Potter, okay, yeah nothing else to spend their money on. God help us all of these people are tailgating at a quidditch tournament.
 
The only reason this is sad is because West Virginia is hardly known for anything besides coal. Maybe they could try and profit off of the Centralia mine fire that's been burning underground for over 50 years?
Sorry to burst your bubble, but Centralia is located in Pennsylvania. No mine money for West Virginia!
 
Organizers of fictional sports event played on magical sports equipment upset over ban on fake boys and girls are supported by illegitimate government functionaries.

Another win for Clown World.
Why don't they just make sports unisex?
 
Running around with a broom between your legs is a great way to smack your own balls when you trip, not Quidditch.

Make the actual game, or stop pretending you're up to anything meaningful.

Also, if you did invent a flying broomstick, nobody would use it to play Quidditch, because scoring points in quidditch is irrelevant and the side who catches the snitch wins. Even the part where Krum catches the snitch and loses is ridiculous. What, he broke his nose? As if he couldn't fly to the side and get five minutes of magic nose fix before going back in? Please. Clearly a sportsball game invented by a woman that wasn't that into sportsball.

I've never read a Harry Potter book and have only seen a few of the movies, why the fuck is this franchise so beloved?
It's a fun franchise. It's just not something to build your entire identity around, and quidditch is silly, even if the brooms actually flew.
 
So, before we can address anything else: Why is this happening when flying broomsticks and intelligent flying balls aren't a thing? If you don't have brooms, snitches, and those balls that fly around hitting people then isn't this just lacrosse, but without the sticks?
I've never read a Harry Potter book and have only seen a few of the movies, why the fuck is this franchise so beloved?
Well, it came it in the 2000s, which was just before pop culture got fragmented and saturated. It's harder to get something into everybody's head now, because people now have the ability to do their own thing thanks to the internet. Also, I think that Harry Potter was the first book to capture a lot of ideas that are just really effective with young adult audiences (house system, power fantasy/escapism, a potential love triangle).
Running around with a broom between your legs is a great way to smack your own balls when you trip, not Quidditch.
Well, I don't think anyone playing this game (literally) has balls.
 
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