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https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...school-attack-caught-camera-says-bullied.html

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A transgender girl accused of assaulting two students at a Texas high school alleges that she was being bullied and was merely fighting back

Shocking video shows a student identified by police as Travez Perry violently punching, kicking and stomping on a girl in the hallway of Tomball High School.

The female student was transported to the hospital along with a male student, whom Perry allegedly kicked in the face and knocked unconscious.

According to the police report, Perry - who goes by 'Millie' - told officers that the victim has been bullying her and had posted a photo of her on social media with a negative comment.

One Tomball High School parent whose daughter knows Perry said that the 18-year-old had been the target of a death threat.

'From what my daughter has said that the girl that was the bully had posted a picture of Millie saying people like this should die,' the mother, who asked not to be identified by name, told DailyMail.com.

When Perry appeared in court on assault charges, her attorney told a judge that the teen has been undergoing a difficult transition from male to female and that: 'There's more to this story than meets the eye.'

Perry is currently out on bond, according to authorities.

The video of the altercation sparked a widespread debate on social media as some claim Perry was justified in standing up to her alleged bullies and others condemn her use of violence.

The mother who spoke with DailyMail.com has been one of Millie's most ardent defenders on Facebook.

'I do not condone violence at all. But situations like this show that people now a days, not just kids, think they can post what they want. Or say what they want without thinking of who they are hurting,' she said.

'Nobody knows what Millie has gone through, and this could have just been a final straw for her. That is all speculation of course because I don't personally know her or her family, but as a parent and someone who is part of the LGBTQ community this girl needs help and support, not grown men online talking about her private parts and shaming and mocking her.'

One Facebook commenter summed up the views of many, writing: 'This was brutal, and severe! I was bullied for years and never attacked anyone!'

Multiple commenters rejected the gender transition defense and classified the attack as a male senselessly beating a female.

One woman wrote on Facebook: 'This person will get off because they're transitioning. This is an animal. She kicked, and stomped, and beat...not okay. Bullying is not acceptable, but kicking someone in the head. Punishment doesn't fit the crime.'


FB https://www.facebook.com/travez.perry http://archive.is/mnEmm

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Another terf victory. Harry Miller has won his appeal about the recording of "non-crime hate incidents" (i.e. hurty words he typed on twitter about troons):

Harry Miller: Legal victory after alleged transphobic tweets​



"Harry Miller has just won a huge victory in the Court of Appeal. Court has ruled that the recording of non-crime hate incidents is an unlawful interference in freedom of expression.
@SpeechUnion
press release here."


 
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The New York Magazine features a mentally ill women who had phalloplasty. Stunning and brave!
https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/gabriel-mac-essay.html

backup: https://archive.md/dykVl

Articles like this will surely encourage more weirdos to mutilate themselves as well. Look forward to new horros in the corresponding thread here:
This is the same person, Mac McClelland/ Gabriel Mac :

Archive

I wonder if the doctors who signed off the phalloplasty knew about it. Their patient witnessed a sex attack and decided to recreate it. She then wrote articles about it. She then got surgeries to remove her tits and create a fake wang. She then wrote articles about it...

Anyone spot a trend?
 
I wonder if the doctors who signed off the phalloplasty knew about it. Their patient witnessed a sex attack and decided to recreate it. She then wrote articles about it. She then got surgeries to remove her tits and create a fake wang. She then wrote articles about it...

Anyone spot a trend?
The sheer disregard of professional standards in Medicine.
 
The New York Magazine features a mentally ill women who had phalloplasty. Stunning and brave!
https://nymag.com/intelligencer/article/gabriel-mac-essay.html

backup: https://archive.md/dykVl

Articles like this will surely encourage more weirdos to mutilate themselves as well. Look forward to new horros in the corresponding thread here:
I had a (trans) friend who said once that his reaction to seeing thigh phalloplasty scars was “That’s a nice penis. But look at your leg.” .... I collapsed into the wall, sobbing.
Some of the best men I know don’t have penises
“There’s a gentleness,” my friend said about me now. “It was always there,” he added, having known me for many years. “It just wasn’t … first.”
No. It wasn’t. But when penis is self, as penis is a gift to self, it’s a gift, too, to others.
One day, lying on my couch in quarantine before surgery, I watched a Ben Stiller–Eddie Murphy movie recommended by HBO Max — until the point when, apropos of absolutely nothing, a character makes a joke about a real-life trans guy who, in real life, was brutally raped and shot to death. Shortly after that, Hulu recommended a Keanu Reeves–Winona Ryder movie from 2018, in which Reeves’s character says trans people are deluded untouchables. While I was recovering, I watched a Jennifer Lopez rom-com from the same year, happily zoned out like a normal person until 29 minutes in, when she does a bit where she tells a guy someone is trans(masculine); the joke is that the guy used to have sex with that trans person, and now that he knows he fucked one, he is disgusted. Months later, this latter scene popped into my head while I was making hummus and made me cry.
I turned on a hotel TV, and within minutes Chandler on Friends was saying he finds his transfeminine parent revolting. This is a recurring feature of this show, which I watched all through my teens.
Days before my penis’s first birthday, the warmth and weight of it lay against my vulva, each supporting the other, holding me.
These NYT articles all read the same and you can tell by the heavy use of imagery and prose that a female wrote it.
 
In Terf Island the Mail Online is really getting stuck in now. First of all, the dog fucker has been sent to a men's prison in Liverpool. Should be handy if Dr Haddock and Josh Prior want to visit.


But on top of that, they've dug up a new Stefonknee in the form of Trandad Janiel Verainer, who identifies as a five year old girl, came to court dressed as an elf, and sat there hugging a doll and sucking his thumb. Needless to say he's being charged with various child sex offences, and is already the subject of a 'keep the fuck away from kids' order.


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In Terf Island the Mail Online is really getting stuck in now. First of all, the dog fucker has been sent to a men's prison in Liverpool. Should be handy if Dr Haddock and Josh Prior want to visit.


But on top of that, they've dug up a new Stefonknee in the form of Trandad Janiel Verainer, who identifies as a five year old girl, came to court dressed as an elf, and sat there hugging a doll and sucking his thumb. Needless to say he's being charged with various child sex offences, and is already the subject of a 'keep the fuck away from kids' order.


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How the hell can one island contain so many fucking pedophiles?
 
Pathetic that this has to happen, kudos to that brave official though.

USA Swimming official quits in protest over transgender swimmer Lia Thomas​

Cynthia Millen: 'Everything fair about swimming is being destroyed'

Cynthia Millen has officiated at USA Swimming events for 30 years, but she hung up her whistle last week in protest over Penn transgender swimmer Lia Thomas, and she hopes others will follow her lead.

Ms. Millen said she notified USA Swimming of her decision in a Dec. 17 letter, saying she realized as she packed for the US Paralympics Swimming National Championships in Greensboro, North Carolina, that “I can’t do this, I can’t support this.” She pulled out of the event.

“I told my fellow officials that I can no longer participate in a sport which allows biological men to compete against women. Everything fair about swimming is being destroyed,” she said in her letter, which she shared with The Washington Times.

The 22-year-old Thomas has smashed records in her first year competing against women after three years on the men’s team, posting this nation’s best times in the 200 and 500 freestyle events and making a run at NCAA marks set by Olympic greats Missy Franklin and Katie Ledecky.

Ms. Millen said that if she officiated at a meet that included Thomas, she would rule the University of Pennsylvania senior ineligible to compete against female swimmers.

“If Lia came on my deck as a referee, I would pull the coach aside and say, ‘Lia can swim, but Lia can swim exhibition or a time trial. Lia cannot compete against those women because that’s not fair,’” Ms. Millen told The Washington Times.

She also called on other volunteer officials to refuse to work meets in which male-born athletes take the block against women.

“This is not right because by doing this, we’re supporting this,” said Ms. Millen. “There are no swim meets if there are no officials.”

So far neither the NCAA nor USA Swimming, the governing body of swimming in the United States, have commented publicly on Thomas’s record-breaking season. Under NCAA rules, transgender athletes may compete on the women’s team after undergoing a year of testosterone-suppression treatment, which Thomas has done.

Even so, outrage over her participation is percolating. Swimming World editor-in-chief John Lohn said in a Dec. 19 editorial that the advantages enjoyed by post-pubescent transgender athletes like Thomas are “akin to doping.”

Some Penn parents vented their frustration in a letter last week to the NCAA and Penn, according to the [U.K.] Daily Mail. while two Penn female swimmers complained anonymously to OutKick, calling Thomas’s participation unfair and demoralizing.

Ms. Millen said the onus should be on the “adults in the room,” referring to the swimming authorities, not the athletes.

“People are saying, ‘Why don’t the swimmers just leave?’ Well, those are 19-, 20-year-old kids,” said Ms. Millen. “It’s up to us. We’re the ones who are supposed to be providing this fair competition. We should be the ones who should be saying, wait a minute.”

Pushing back are LGBTQ advocacy groups and publications such as Outsports, which blamed the uproar on “anti-trans panic.”

“Trans athletes — Lia, in particular — deserve love, support, care, access to be able to swim. And Lia, like any other athlete, should be able to win and lose,” said Athlete Ally director of policy and programs Anne Lieberman in a statement.

Ms. Millen, who appeared Wednesday on Fox’s “The Ingraham Angle,” argued that “bodies compete against bodies. Gender identities don’t swim.”

“I don’t mean to be critical of Lia — whatever’s going on, Lia’s a child of God, a precious person — but bodies swim against bodies,” she said. “That’s a male body swimming against females. And that male body can never change. That male body will always be a male body.”

Critics argue that the NCAA’s testosterone requirement for male-to-female athletes is inadequate, given the advantages adult males enjoy in terms of muscle mass, lung capacity, skeletal structure, and other biological features.

“Boys are built differently than girls. I mean, we know that: Boys have the T-shape, the broad shoulders, the narrow hips,” said Ms. Millen. “Girls have the hips, they’ve got more drag, they’ve got boobs, they’ve got body fat.”

Even Olympic champions like Katie Ledecky cannot match the top men’s times. “Yes, a Katie Ledecky can beat a lot of guys, but in the end, the [best] guys are going to beat Katie Ledecky. Absolutely. The differential is 8-12% faster. Equally trained, they will always win,” said Ms. Millen.

While Thomas competes in NCAA Division I events, she has posted times that would help her qualify for the US Olympic team trials, which are run by USA Swimming.

“USA Swimming is the governing body for Olympic swimming,” said Ms. Millen. “All the officials are through USA Swimming, and your times count. Lia’s time counts not just for Penn and the Ivy League, it counts for USA Swimming, and if Lia would get an Olympic trial cut, Lia could go to Olympic trials.”

U.S. collegiate swimming distances are measured in yards and Olympic distances are measured in meters, but USA Swimming recognizes times converted from yards to meters in its qualifying cuts for the Olympic trials.

Thomas has also positioned herself for a berth at the NCAA Division I championships in March. Her season includes wins in the 100, 200, 500, 1,000 and 1,650 freestyle events, as well as relays, with some of her times setting pool, program and meet records.

Earlier this month, she won the 1,650 at the Zippy Invitational at the University of Akron with a time that was 38 seconds faster than the runner-up.

“That’s a lifetime in swimming,” said Ms. Millen.

Some other swimming officials privately agree with her, she said, but are reluctant to speak out.

“I’ve talked to some other officials, and while they say yeah, this is ridiculous, I think a lot of people feel like they can’t do anything about it,” said Ms. Millen. “But you’ve got to make a stand sometimes. If enough people walk off the deck, or if enough referees say no, it will change. It’s wrong.”

So far USA Swimming has not responded to her letter. The Washington Times has reached out to the organization for comment.

“I haven’t heard anything. I think they are so worried themselves,” said Ms. Millen. “They get a lot of sponsorship money from a lot of big companies, and I think they’re worried. They don’t want to appear that they’re not being inclusive, but this is not being inclusive. This is being deceitful.”



 
Protection of Women’s Sports At the Heart Of Lia Thomas Situation

The word bigot has been hurled. Been accused of transphobia. Said to be heartless. The list goes on, many of the insults or attacks inappropriate for print. It comes with the journalistic territory, especially when a controversial topic is tackled, and in this age of toughness when hiding behind an anonymous social-media account is typical.

There have also been plenty of supportive comments and emails, from individuals appreciative that a contentious topic has been addressed, and a stance has been taken on an issue that could have a serious impact on the sport not just now, but into the future.

Here’s the thing: The Lia Thomas controversy is not going to disappear anytime soon, and Swimming World – and myself as Editor-in-Chief – will not shy away from continuing coverage. We will document the storyline’s impact on the pool and the potential influence it will have on the greater sports world. We will focus on the uneven playing field faced by biological female athletes. And…AND…we will discuss solutions to ensure Thomas is offered some form of inclusivity.

Laziness, ignorance, or agenda-driven positioning – in some cases – have attempted to make the Lia Thomas situation about transgenderism. Since coverage of her situation started earlier this month, that has never been the case. It is terrific that Thomas has found her identity as a woman and as a swimmer, and wants to continue her swimming career. From the get-go, this issue has been about one thing – the protection of fairness for biological female athletes and women’s sports.

By now, the narrative of the Thomas saga is well-known. If a quick rehash is required, here we go. Thomas is a transgender woman who competed for three years as a member of the University of Pennsylvania men’s program. Following hormone-suppressant therapy, which is in line with current NCAA requirements, Thomas has – this year – started to compete as a member of Penn’s women’s program.

Through the early stages of the season, Thomas has produced impressive times that suggest she will challenge the American records of Missy Franklin (200 freestyle) and Katie Ledecky (500 freestyle) at the NCAA Championships. The male-puberty advantage possessed by Thomas has clearly not been mitigated, even after she complied with the NCAA standard, and her presence in a women’s sport is utterly unfair to the biological females against whom she will race.

So, again, we emphasize that the issue at hand is not about transgenderism. It is about providing an opportunity for thousands of female athletes – in the present and the future – to know they will enter competition with an equal chance for success, not already facing a scenario in which they are overmatched, or in which an opponent’s arsenal is far more potent.

I wrote in an earlier column that Thomas’ presence in the water is akin to past women on the global stage (specifically Olympic Games and World Championships) racing against the doping-fueled athletes of East Germany and China. Whether supplied by a syringe or via male puberty, how potent is a testosterone boost? Consider: The world record of 4:36.29 produced by East German Petra Schneider in the 400-meter individual medley at the 1980 Olympic Games in Moscow (which the U.S. boycotted) would have been good for sixth place at this past summer’s Olympics in Tokyo.

Sixth place. Forty-one years later. And in a suit and pool severely deficient compared with today’s equipment and facilities.

No, Thomas is not doping. She is not doing anything illicit, which was not the case in the days of the East German systematic-doping program, or the operation that promoted China from an also-ran nation in the pool to a superpower at the 1994 World Championships. Rather, Thomas is benefiting from the EFFECTS of years of testosterone production, and two years of hormone-suppressant therapy hardly diminishes the edge gained from male puberty.

In a recent detailed op-ed for the Daily Mail, and reprinted by Swimming World with her permission, Olympic champion and women’s sports advocate Nancy Hogshead-Makar discussed the problems with Thomas racing against biological women. On several occasions, Hogshead-Makar noted the fight of women – for years – to gain equal footing with male sports. Her arguments, in part, shed light on the constant, snap-decision approach of dismissing fairness issues within women’s sports with little thought.

The past and present are filled with instances where women’s sports are viewed as nothing more than steerage class. A high school football stadium needs new artificial turf? Ok, just postpone the resodding of the girls’ soccer field. What do you think of the new scoreboard in the boys’ gym? Don’t know. What do you think of the flip-cards tracking the score of the field hockey match? These are examples that hold truth for most female athletes.

Hell, at the bubbles for last year’s NCAA Basketball Tournaments, the inequality in treatment of men’s and women’s sports was on full display. Remember the fully loaded weight-training facility for the guys? It was top-notch. Remember what the women were given? Nothing more than a rack of dumbbells. It was pathetic, and only underscored the uphill battle faced by women and female athletics.

So, in the case of Thomas, why should the NCAA’s decision to grant her participation in a women’s sport be deemed acceptable? Her advantage boosted by years of testosterone production has not been mitigated. But instead of performing due diligence on the science, the NCAA developed a one-year hormone-suppressant requirement for transgender women that falls well short of what is necessary for fairness. Basically, the governing body took a dismissive approach, similar to: “This should be ok. It’s only women’s sports.”

No, it’s not ok. It’s not ok for women. It’s not ok for women’s athletics. It’s not ok for my three daughters. It’s not ok for Emma Nordin and Brooke Forde, Arizona State and Stanford University standouts, respectively, who are leading contenders for the 500 freestyle title at March’s NCAA Championships, and who may have to race Thomas for that crown. It’s not ok for Thomas, who is also in a no-win situation.

As part of her role with the Women’s Sports Policy Working Group, Hogshead-Makar makes a key point: “The WSPWG believes that all transgender girls/women athletes should be welcome within girls/women’s sports but with separate scoring, offsets, or separate events for those who have not sufficiently mitigated their male sex-linked performance advantages.”

Lia Thomas deserves a solution, and while that may not be racing against biological women behind the strength of what her body once produced, an answer must be found. A time trial or exhibition swim? The addition of a new classification? For inclusivity’s sake, and to ensure equitable competition, the answer needs to come soon.

It is critical that transgender athletes find a welcoming environment in our sport, but that cannot happen without guaranteeing a level playing field for biological women. Until then, women’s sports must be protected, and there must be an understanding that the Lia Thomas situation is not about transgenderism. It is about fairness and equal opportunity. Plain and simple.





Here are links to additional Swimming World articles related to the Lia Thomas controversy:

Lia Thomas, Transgender Swimmer from Penn, Swims Fastest Times in Nation; Controversy Raging

In Debate Over Lia Thomas, There Is an Urgent Need For Civil Discourse and Humanity

Allowing Lia Thomas to Compete At NCAA Championships Would Establish Unfair Setting

Penn Swimming Parents Write Letter to NCAA Against Lia Thomas’ Participation in Women’s Events

The Potential Impact of Transgender Swimmers Beyond NCAA Competition

Lia Thomas Debate: Women’s Sports Policy Working Group Focused on Protection of Female Sports

Without NCAA Action, the Effects of Lia Thomas Situation Are Akin to Doping

Penn Parents Express Further Concerns Over Lia Thomas Competing On Women’s Team

USA Swimming Official Resigns in Protest Over Lia Thomas Situation

Olympic Champion, Women’s Sports Advocate Nancy Hogshead-Makar Details Issues With Lia Thomas Situation
 
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