Off-Topic MtFs in Women's Sports / Title IX Demolition


Wyoming tennis president resigns in protest over transgender player (Archive)

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If she's got an apple, then she also has a banana.
 
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Even ignoring the obvious fact that sexual dimorphism exists and gives men an unfair advantage over women there's the fact that female athletes in mixed spaces have to deal with constant harassment from men, harassment which is often sexual in nature. That alone is enough reason for women to be allowed to have their own spaces, because no one should be forced to deal with that. How in the fuck is "the concept of women's sport is bigoted" a mainstream liberal position in Current Year? You could say it's because liberals are pro troon, but I honestly think most of them just hate women, but are too cowardly to be direct about it so they use troons as a way to punish women whilst maintaining plausible deniability.
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Would it shock you to learn that this person constantly reblogs tranny porn?
 
Men subjugating US Women's Cycling, March to June 2023.
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The number of women's sport wins lost to men in 2023 is extensive and growing. The site SheWon.org keeps adding to the list.
I love this documentation but I don't love the wording. I wish it just said, "men," or, "males."

Ultimately it doesn't really matter how they identify, and that's the point in opposing this nonsense.

The moment we use their lingo (like identify), they know they've won on some level.
 

USA: Trans-Identified Male Cycling Duo Takes First Place In Women’s Category At TWO Cycling Championships In Illinois (Archive)

Two trans-identified males took first place at two separate championships in Illinois last week while competing in the women’s categories. During one of the competitions, Evelyn Williamson and Tessa Johnson competed under the team name “TS-ESTRODOLLS.”

Johnson and Williamson celebrated their initial first place win on August 27 after their victory at the xXx Racing-Athletic Relay Cross in Chicago. During the race, they competed under the team name “TS-ESTRODOLLS,” an apparent nod to the female hormone estrogen. The two men surpassed nine other pairs of women for first place.

Just days later on August 31, Johnson and Williamson beat out two other teams of women at the Ed Rudolph Velodrome during the State Championship in Madison. The race was held by the Northbrook Cycle Committee, a tax-exempt charitable group and member of the American Track Racing Association.

Evelyn Williamson, 29, has been racing in women’s categories for several years, taking 18 first place titles in races across the country since 2017.

In March 2020, however, Williamson appears to have competed in both women’s and men’s categories at the Sky Express Winter Criterium. In the Women’s Pro category, he placed first out of 13 racers. In the Men’s category, he did not place at all in a race comprised of 40 men.

His teammate, Tessa Johnson, formerly Michael Johnson, also has previous first place wins in women’s categories.

Williamson and Johnson’s victory was first reported by X (formerly Twitter) user @i_heart_bikes, a female bike racer who frequently posts updates on the trans-identified males participation in women’s sport. She guided followers to use Johnson’s male name, Michael, to access his results for the 2022 season.

While competing as a male, Johnson is logged as having competed for Clemson University since 2017 in Open and Men’s categories. He won three first place races in Men’s categories before beginning to compete in Women’s categories in 2022. He won eight first place titles in 2022 in his first year competing amongst women cyclers, sometimes part of Clemson University’s team and others for Comrade Cycles Racing.

Since changing his gender identity, Johnson has a new profile on CrossResults under his “female” name which only lists his recent win with Williamson in the Women’s Open race in Illinois last week.

In February of last year, Bicycling.com reported that Pratt Racing had previously put together a team for Pennsylvania’s Elite Track Cycling Nationals, which featured both Evelyn Williamson and another trans-identified male cyclist, Austin Killips.

Williamson and Killips were reportedly romantically involved, along with a third person, in a “polyamorous” relationship as they celebrated their silver medal in the event.

The two began communicating on social media in March 2020 when Williamson still lived in Oakland, California. Williamson told Bicycling, “So I came to Chicago and was just very happy—I got along with everyone, and it just kind of worked out… There was no expectation that we would all date together. But it just so happened that that worked out really well for all of us.”

They “shared a loved for cycling” and bonded over “how to navigate a career in the sport as transgender athletes.”

In July, WowAlly, a reading platform that purports to host real-life stories on “research-oriented facts,” also reported on the two’s relationship, an apparently popular love story in the cycling world.

WowAlly noted that Killips and Williamson “were the only two transgender racers on their team at the women’s elite national track championship,” and “to everyone’s suprise,” won the Elite Track Cycling Nationals at the Valley Preferred Cycling Center in Pennsylvania.

Killips has similarly taken several first place wins in female categories and has forced at least one woman out of the sport after targeted physical aggression.

As previously reported by Reduxx, Killips was accused of attempting to push female cyclist Hannah Arensman off the racing course at the UCI Cyclocross National Championships in December of 2022.

Arensman, who was a 35-time winner in cyclocross racing, retired from the sport shortly after the controversy surrounding Killips appearing to push her off of the track during a women’s competition. Arensman shared that she felt as though racing directly against male cyclists in women’s events had become so discouraging that she decided to end her cycling career.

In June, Killips was subject to international backlash after taking first place in the women’s category of the Belgian Waffle Ride in North Carolina. When nearing the finish line, Killips had a 5-minute lead on his female competitors.

In the month following his victory, the Belgian Waffle Ride banned male athletes from competing in the women’s category, and created a third open category for athletes of any sex or gender identity.

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Reel fury! Members of England ladies' angling team refuse to compete in world championships after team picks trans woman who used to be a rugby player


Women fishermen refuse to compete with a troon, even though troon is on their side. Although they did let him play five years ago and were shunned by the rest of the world "It wasn't a nice situation, mainly because all the other countries wouldn't speak to us. The managers wouldn't speak to our manager. They were all against us. When we went up to collect our medal, nobody clapped and people walked out."

Nobody wanted to share a room with him either. The woman who spoke to the Mail was very polite and claimed "When the team travels abroad, they usually share hotel rooms. However, Ms Hodges cannot share with the other women because her wife, whom she married before she transitioned, would get jealous" but we all know that they don't want to come back and find him wearing their underwear.
 
A troon named Audrey Yun has been competing in women's strongman competitions in British Columbia, Canada.

Video of him doing the bag toss. Note that the women's competition uses bags that weigh half of what the men's do.


He started in the sport this January and already qualified to compete in the Strongman Canadian Nationals this October (as a woman). The Strongman Corporation of Canada was staring down the barrel of having "Canada's Strongest Woman" be a man, so they changed the rules last minute.

The troon was not happy at not being relegated to a third "Open" category. He sperged out on the GoFundMe he was using to raise money for his trip to compete.

Many might already be aware there is a growing hate campaign rallying bigots against trans people and myself specifically. Sadly, the hate includes those within this sport's community and there's nothing I can really do about it but go on knowing they wish me ill will, whilst they believe they are the real victims. They can spout all the vile things they wish at me, but the moment I tell them to fuck off that means I am actually the bully in their eyes.

Whether they put me in a trans category or push me out of the sport altogether, while it would suck, isn't nearly as important as what it would set a precedence for: segregating trans athletes in other sports, especially team sports.

If the conservative inclined people get their way not only will it make that worse than it already is, it will mean there are no sports or physical activity outlets left for trans, queer, intersex, etc individuals. Some casual levels of play and recreational leagues would still be available (though not all), but any kind of higher level play or even very low level competitive play would not be possible. What's next, sport leagues for people with appendixes and those without? Sport leagues for coloureds and whites? Sport leagues for lactose tolerant and intolerant? Sports for brown eyed individuals, and for blue eyed individuals?... They want to kill sports dead by dividing us, rationalized by pseudo-science and emotional outrage. What's more they lost sight of what it means to be alive, be part of society, the human relationship to one another and the environment and the world, and what sports actually is in the grander scheme of things.

They've also shamed me for using public transit, and for needing to crowdfund here. Conservatives also want poor people to be screwed out of luck, and for cars to thrive over people having accessible public transit connecting the city. This, too, harms sports for all (among many other things).

Aside from that, they want to ban books, they want to NOT educate children, deny healthcare for children, and more under the pretense that they are protecting the children from big evil predatory men (apparently I am one of those). They don't want future generations to learn about or know anything about themselves, be completely ignorant of anything not cisgender heteronormative, and prevent people from being who they really are.

That's one of the reasons why I'm still going to Winnipeg despite wanting to say fuck it and leave it all. Who gives a shit about me? But I don't want the world to suffer and trans kids to suffer because of what they're doing starting with the likes of myself. I don't want that shit to pick up steam and steamroll over us all.

We as a queer community are suffering enough already. I've been told employers pass up queer or trans candidates to "avoid potential future headaches". We are at risk of depression and suicide at disproportionate rates, not to mention we just get shot and murdered at disproportionate rates anyway. I've been followed and screamed at just for existing. I've been stalked and threatened more than once. We live in constant risk and fear. Cisgender people simply do not.

I really hope the world takes a turn for the better I really do. I really hope I can make genuine friends and be part of a community lifting each other up and supporting each other, in the strength world. I hope that the bigots will not be successful in erasing us and killing us into nonexistence. Forget sports, this is our lives. Have your silly little trophies (you were already winning them anyway I've only ever placed 1st in the novice category, never in open). I just want the world to become more educated and a little more kind.

An older version of his GoFundMe is archived here which tells the story of his rapid success as a male strongwoman.

Hey there hello! My name is Audrey and I'm an amateur strongwoman in her rookie year of the sport. I've been training the sport of strongman since January 2023 and started competing with little to no expectations but here I am at the end of my first season in the sport, qualified and invited to compete in nationals in Winnipeg on October 21!!

That's part of the problem though. Since the contest is coming up in such a short amount of time I'm struggling to make the trip out to Manitoba financially viable in my current situation. I wasn't even sure if I would attend this year because of the short notice and costs involved, and was originally planning on taking some time off... but after speaking with a few trusted friends I've been convinced to set up this gofundme and sign myself up for the competition!

Rough cost breakdown:
  • Flights - 250 round trip
  • Accommodations - 150 airbnb
  • Uber to and from venue, transit to and from airport, etc. - 40
  • Food - 120 ish (includes coffee, drinks, gatorade, energy drinks, competition snacks, out of contest meals, etc.)
  • Registration fee - 150

I used the 150 I won in provincials to pay for registration, so it's whatever y'all generous folk can donate plus out of pocket expenses to make up for the rest. Whatever you can spare to help me continue chasing my dreams would be very very much appreciated!!

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TLDR Personal backstory on me as an athlete if you are interested:

Athletics has always been a big part of my life. My first love was soccer and I was a professional soccer freestyler for 8 years, but I made the decision to step away from it after I came out as transgender, due to the macho immature culture surrounding the sport, and various individuals being terribly racist, homophobic, transphobic, misogynistic, and more.

My other big sporting love was martial arts, which I never really pursued competitively because of concern for my long term health, and the fact that my relationship to martial arts was more holistic and philosophical than competitive.

I came out in 2014 and started HRT (hormone replacement therapy), then got my bottom surgery in 2017. My bottom surgery was a particularly difficult ordeal as a few extra steps had to be taken in order to complete the procedure properly and my recovery was relatively smooth, but extra painful.

I remember taking my first steps in the hospital, dragging the IV drip and catheter and what have you's behind me thinking... my motivation to push on through the pain was so I could be a transgender athlete... to push forward to give visibility and representation so that maybe one day a young trans kid will look up to me and believe the world isn't as unwelcoming and scary as they may think, that things are possible for them if they want it to be. Being an athlete as well as a sports fan I know that the first is always the most difficult, and once people see what's possible it magically gets easier when we realize our potentials. Also, representation really does matter - like seeing a Korean player, Park Ji-Sung, play at the highest levels in europe made a generation of Korean kids believe it was possible for them to become a footballer just like him.

I thought I would do this in soccer and had started to play in some low level competitive women's soccer, wanting to move up and see where I could take it. But that came to a screeching halt with a perfect storm of my aging body as I entered my 30s, being comfortable in low level competition as my competitive drive diminished... the cost of time, travel, lack of opportunities, lack of high level competition in Canada, lack of any bit of prestige or money even if you become world-class, etc. started to dawn on me and discourage me further, then the COVID pandemic happened... and the irresponsible attitude the world of soccer took toward the pandemic was the final straw which made me quit the pursuit of athletics.

Over the next couple years, not being involved in any athletic pursuits, I became a version of myself I did not like. I was sedentary, unfit, unhealthy, lazy, unmotivated, and a certain spark had gone. I realized that if I don't give myself a reason, a specific purpose to stay active, to train, to compete, that is what I turned into.

Now well into my 30s knowing that high level soccer was past me, and that I wasn't interested in pursuing competitive combat sports, I turned to the last of my favourite sports - strength sports! I went back to the gym in March of 2022 (I had been in and out of the gym before for soccer, and lifted seriously for a year in 2013-14, but quit because I wanted to conform to gender norms as I came out as a trans woman). I remember hurting myself as I struggled to squat 155lbs. Even as late as Jan '23, I wasn't overhead pressing much over 100lbs, and push pressing 120 for 5 hard reps. Even in february, I was simply unable to budge a 160lbs atlas stone.

Now, I can squat 375lbs, press 185lbs overhead, and load a 260lbs stone with a 280 stone coming so close! I came first in my first competition as a novice, then I went into the open category to become Vancouver's 2nd strongest woman (I could have been 1st if I just didn't slip and fall in one event!), then I became BC's 2nd strongest woman (and strongest amateur)! I know I can only get better and better. There are struggles, there are bigots, there are some toxic things I have to try and avoid and rise above. I almost even quit this sport because of the current political climate and the rising hatred and attack toward trans people and our rights. But there are also wonderful supportive people, and some great moments and highs, and a feeling I get, a spark that had gone from me before. I know that with continued help and support from others (nobody is an island) I can finally FULLY pursue strength sports and chase my dreams.

I was never able to fully commit and give my ALL for any of my favourite sports, but I'm in a place in my life physically and mentally where I'm able to give it my ALL for this sport now. I want to see just how strong I am capable of being, and fulfill my honest potential as a human being. I don't want any more regrets in life, and when I have the opportunity I want to take it and see where I can take it. And just maybe I can also give some positive representation and visibility for trans kids in the future.
 
Athletics has always been a big part of my life. My first love was soccer and I was a professional soccer freestyler for 8 years, but I made the decision to step away from it after I came out as transgender, due to the macho immature culture surrounding the sport, and various individuals being terribly racist, homophobic, transphobic, misogynistic, and more.
It's peculiar how male athletes "being terribly racist, homophobic, transphobic, misogynistic, and more" makes him want to leave their league, but when the female league outright bans him for being a tranny that just makes him want to stay in their spaces even more.
 
Fury as Maine high school sophomore transgender runner, 16, dominates girls' races and rises to 4th in rankings - after coming 172nd while racing as a boy (archive)

Cross-country runner Soren Stark-Chessa is mediocre against other men, but amazingly rises in the ranks against women.

  • Soren Stark-Chessa, a high school sophomore at the private Maine Coast Waldorf School in Freeport, competed in the 5k last season as a freshman male
  • Stark-Chessa ranked 172nd, but has since transitioned, and is now competing as a sophomore in the female class
  • On Saturday, she raced in the Festival of Champions in Belfast, Maine, and came 5th, to the anger of some parents
By Harriet Alexander For Dailymail.com

Published: 10:45 AEDT, 3 October 2023 | Updated: 11:13 AEDT, 3 October 2023


A trans high school sophomore in Maine has faced criticism for competing in the girls' 5k cross-country competition, despite running last year as a boy.

Soren Stark-Chessa, a pupil at the private Maine Coast Waldorf School in Freeport, was ranked 172nd in the district as a freshman in the boy's competition.

Over the course of the last year, Stark-Chessa transitioned, and now, as a sophomore, races in the girls' competitions - where she is ranked fourth.

On Saturday, Stark-Chessa competed in the Maine XC Festival of Champions, in Belfast, and finished fifth.

As Stark-Chessa sprinted to the finish, in a time of 5:51:3, one person can he heard yelling: 'Way to cheat, bro!'

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One young female runner told journalist Shawn McBreairty: 'It is not fair to a female who has trained hard.

'Males are biologically faster than females, with testosterone. They need to run under their biological gender.'

A mother, Katherine Collins from Winterport, Maine, whose children compete in track events, told McBreairty with Your News that she felt it was unfair.

'Men are simply larger, faster, and stronger than their female counterparts,' she said.

'To compare, the top ranked female high school runner in all of New England would only be ranked 47th among high school boys in Maine.'

One father, a physician, whose two children compete in Maine's high school cross country competitions, said it was profoundly unfair.

'If a boy, competing in a sporting event, were found to be using performance enhancing drugs, he would be disqualified due to the presumption of unfair competitive advantage,' the father said.

'If instead, that same boy chose to compete as a girl, he would not only not be disqualified due to his enormous presumptive competitive advantage, he would be lauded, feted and applauded.

'For the boys, it would be tragic, for it teaches them things that simply do not apply outside of the very narrow time and place in which we currently reside.

'For the girls, it is the grossest of injustices in every conceivable way, because it forces them to participate in, and to some extent accept, something which is manifestly false. They must, like it or not, participate in the lie.'

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Stark-Chessa's school athletics director hit back, and said they were 'proud' of all their students.

'We support all our students at Maine Coast Waldorf School, and are proud that our students are given the opportunity to participate in all of our school programs,' said Susan Sonntag.

Sonntag said that the school adheres to the Maine law prohibiting 'Unlawful educational discrimination'.

The controversy echoes that surrounding trans swimmer Lia Thomas, who competed for Penn - to the anger of many fellow swimmers.

Riley Gaines, a University of Kentucky swimmer who lost to Thomas, has now dedicated herself to campaigning to end the practice of allowing trans athletes in competitive school sports.
 
Transgender cyclists take gold AND silver medals at Chicago women's race, as critics insist pair had considerable biological advantage over female rivals
(archive)

Tranny cyclists Tessa Johnson and Evelyn Williamson (shown below centre) took the top spots at the Chicago CycloCross Cup, leaving only one biological female on the podium.

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Some choice quotes:
Williamson appeared to compete in both men's and women's categories at the Sky Express Winter Criterium in March 2020, where she won first place racing against women but didn't place in the men's race comprised of 40 cyclists.

Users on X, formerly known as Twitter, have claimed the pair enjoy a biological advantage over their competition.

On user said: 'What impressive men who can beat women with their testosterone.'

'And different muscle, bone, and ligament composition, greater lung capacity...etc,' said another.

'How bad are these men that they have to compete against women?' wrote another.

Nationwide, college and professional athletes are debating how to include transgender competitors in their sports.

Critics argue that trans women who've gone through male puberty likely retain a significant biological advantage over biological women, even if they've had surgery and are on hormone therapy.
 
EXCLUSIVE: Women Abandon Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Tournament After Being Forced To Fight Males

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Female martial artists have come forward to reveal that male athletes claiming to be transgender have completely overtaken the women’s categories of a major grappling association, leaving them fearing for their safety in many instances. One of the men, Corissa Griffith, took home four gold medals in the women’s category during a tournament in Georgia on October 21.

The North American Grappling Association (NAGA) is the largest submission grappling association in the world, and facilitates standards and tournaments in various martial arts, including Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu. But while NAGA has provided competition categories for males and females since its inception in 1995, it has recently become the subject of controversy after a number of female athletes were found to have been matched up against trans-identified males.

The issue first received widespread attention in September after it was learned that a female Brazilian jiu-jitsu athlete had not been informed she would be competing against a male. Taelor Moore posted a clip of her fight against James “Alice” McPike on her Instagram, noting that there was a 65lbs weight difference between them.

Following the clip going viral, NAGA was prompted to issue a statement clarifying its policies on the inclusion of trans-identified males in the women’s category.

“NAGA does not require biological women to compete against transgender women. Instead, we give the choice to the biological women and if they decline, they compete in a division only with other biological women.”

NAGA also provided a link to their official policy, which reads: “For those who chose not to compete with the transgender female, we will inquire if they have an interest in entering a separate division which includes the transgender female. This additional division will be offered at no cost to those competitors. However, if individuals decline this opportunity, the transgender female will be directed to compete with the males in their respective weight and skill level category.”

But despite claiming to have had a policy in place that required female athletes to be informed, many are coming forward to reveal that NAGA has continued to pair women against trans-identified males without their knowledge and depriving them of the opportunity to opt out in many instances.

Speaking to Reduxx, professional martial artists Jayden Alexander and Ansleigh Wilk said that they were made to fight against a male with no prior warning from NAGA until stepping onto the mat.

“I honestly never thought this would actually happen in a contact sport, especially not MY contact sport,” Alexander, who is a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu blue belt, said. “When I saw him, I was so shocked I didn’t know how to respond.”

Both Alexander and Wilk fought against Cordelia Gregory of Temporal Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu Academy, who is one of many trans-identified males currently participating in NAGA women’s tournaments. Both women describe that they were not informed they would be competing against a male until the it was too late during their July tournaments.

“I hadn’t been notified. The only thing that brought it to my attention was my teammates. They kept asking me ‘are you fighting a man’ and I was honestly too focused on coaching the rest of the crew to really pay attention to my opponent,” Wilk said.

“I realized very quickly I couldn’t muscle them like most girls,” Wilk, who is a Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu brown belt and coach, added. “Well obviously, because it wasn’t a girl! Then not long after, I had to do a second match of which Cordelia threw a tantrum saying [he] ‘didn’t tap [out].’ I was sincerely scared [he] was going to punch me when I stuck my hand out to shake [his].”

Both women also note that the experience of fighting Gregory was distinctly different than fighting a woman.

“The fact of the matter is that he had a man’s strength. I train with men and women and the difference is massive,” Alexander explains. “After my match with Cordelia, I sat mat-side and cried as my teammates massaged out my cramping forearms.”

But despite NAGA’s claims that its policy was to inform female athletes if their competitor was a biological man, watchdogs have noted that no enforcement of the policy appears to be taking place, even since their September announcement.

“A rule is only effective if a federation will follow it and, most importantly, enforce it,” says Marshi Smith, the co-founder of Independent Council on Women’s Sports (ICONS). She noted that on October 21, a female grappler was “blindsided” into fighting not one, but two trans-identified males during a tournament.

Danielle Lenane, one of the only females involved in the competition, was made to fight Cordelia Gregory and Corissa Griffith, the latter representing Odyssey Jiu-Jitsu. Following the fight, Lenane asked for her record to be wiped clean of any indication she had fought either one of the men.

Smith said that during the October 21 tournament, there were more males participating than women in some of the women’s divisions.

In the Women’s No-Gi fight for the 160-169lbs weight class, only Griffith and Gregory participated and took home medals. On his Instagram, Griffith joked about the match, posting a scene from a Japanese “softcore” pornography series and suggesting the two women depicted represented him and Gregory.

Jayden Alexander says that she and other females were set to compete in the October 21 tournament, but dropped out after seeing how many males were involved.

“There was not just one, but two trans-identified males who were signed up in a bracket that me and several other women should have been able to sign up for but couldn’t because we didn’t want to go against the men,” Alexander explains. “And for a man to be able to come in and sign up in the women’s bracket and discourage us from even being able to compete at all is absolutely heartbreaking and honestly scary.”

Ansleigh Wilk affirmed Alexander’s sentiment, and added that most female participants feel unable to vocally protest the gender self-identification policies.

“The majority of the women feel scared to even speak out about this matter. They don’t want to be labeled a bigot or transphobic,” Wilk said. “There’s so many girls just not signing up now because they are allowing this. Women’s sports will cease to exist if this keeps up. Medals, belts, records, and money are going to be stripped right away from women.”

Marshi Smith similarly notes that women have been self-excluding from the competitions, but that attempts to formally lodge complaints about being paired up against males have fallen on deaf ears.

“I have now spoken to four women who have all fought male fighters in the combat sport of Jiu Jitsu. They are extremely upset. They are self-excluding. They are emailing federation leadership and being dismissed. These organizations and teams that are encouraging this dangerous display of violence against women need to be publicly shamed into doing what is right for women or reap the outrage that comes with cowardice.”

EDIT: The policy has been changed, and troons will no longer compete in women's divisions.
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Troon knocks a girl's teeth out during a hockey game: -



The screaming is horrible. Poor girl.

Here's the troon in question. His name is Sawyer Groothius: -

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Interestingly, local reporting on the game where Groothius knocked the girl's teeth out only paints him in a positive light for scoring 2 goals, leading to his team winning 2-0, and makes no mention of him severely injuring anyone: -

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The principal of the school he attends even trooned out: -

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Troon knocks a girl's teeth out during a hockey game: -

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The screaming is horrible. Poor girl.

Here's the troon in question. His name is Sawyer Groothius: -

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Interestingly, local reporting on the game where Groothius knocked the girl's teeth out only paints him in a positive light for scoring 2 goals, leading to his team winning 2-0, and makes no mention of him severely injuring anyone: -

LINK

ARCHIVE

The principal of the school he attends even trooned out: -

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The HS troon isn’t even trying to pretend to be female. Leg hair, long hair, not even pretending to have boobs. This guy couldn’t play any contact sports with other males, just look at his little twig body. Seems like he’s a fetishist who just wants to creep on women and get in the locker room with them than actually suffering from gender dysphoria.
 

Canadian Powerlifting Union is set to suspend female bodybuilder April Hutchinson for two years, after she slammed transgender rival who's smashed records and bragged about it

Archive
  • Hutchinson is set to be banned from powerlifting for two years after criticizing a record-breaking transgender rival
  • She was punished for an appearance on Piers Morgan Uncensored in August where she remarked on the 'physical advantages that a male has over a female'
  • Hutchinson has spoken out about rival Anne Andres, a transgender powerlifter who is now Canadian national champion
A Canadian female powerlifter is set to be suspended from the sport for two years after slamming a transgender record-breaking rival as a 'trans identifying male.'

April Hutchinson is facing a lengthy ban from powerlifting for her remarks on competitor Anne Andres, a transgender woman who sparked backlash after destroying the Canadian women's national record in August.

Following Andres' dominant display, where she beat her nearest challenger by over 200 kilograms in total, Hutchinson appeared on TalkTV's Piers Morgan Uncensored to condemn the victory as unfair.

'It's been very disheartening, that national record that he broke athletes have been chasing that for years,' she said. 'It just goes to show the physical advantages that a male has over a female.'

In response, the Canadian Powerlifting Union says it has recommended that Hutchinson be suspended for two years, which she said was for 'speaking publicly about the unfairness of biological males being allowed to taunt female competitors and loot their winnings.'

Hutchinson began powerlifting four years ago, and says she started her campaigning against transgender athletes' inclusion in biological female categories around a year ago.

Despite being warned almost immediately she would be banned for her stance, she said she continued speaking out for the past year because, essentially, 'we have no policy at all to protect women and girls in sports.'

'Canada is very lenient with policies,' she explained. 'You do not need any proof, my boyfriend could basically walk in tomorrow, identify as a female and compete, and the next day go back to being a man again.'

Hutchinson noted the example of Avi Silverberg, a male powerlifting coach who protested Canada's lenient self-ID rules by entering a competition as a woman before smashing a bench press record in April.

'I will keep speaking out about fairness, because women deserve that. It's completely unfair, it's bodies that play sports not identities,' she continued, adding that many biological women she knows who regularly compete in powerlifting will withdraw when they see Andres' name against them.

After slating the transgender athlete on TV, Hutchinson became the focus of an ethics investigation by the governing body, which she tweeted the results of on Tuesday.

'I now face a two-year ban by the CPU for speaking publicly about the unfairness of biological males being allowed to taunt female competitors and loot their winnings,' Hutchinson said.

'Apparently, I have failed in my gender-role duties as “supporting actress” in the horror show that is my #sport right now.

'This... Even though a 13-page letter was sent to the CPU in October thoroughly debunking all accusations. Obviously, someone had to pay the price for the IPF forcing CPU to be more female-friendly.

'Let this be a lesson to all female athletes to shut-up and put-up with #SexDiscrimination. In truth, my fight does not stop here.'

Alongside her habit of breaking records, Andres previously faced backlash in the powerlifting community for appearing to mock female competitors and asking why they are 'so bad' at bench pressing in comparison.

In a viral social media video, Andres began: 'Why is women's bench press so bad?

'I mean not compared to me, we all know that I'm a tranny freak so that doesn't count... I mean standard bench for women in competition, I literally don't understand why it's so bad.'

She noted that her young son was able to almost lift as much as her competitors as proof of why they should be doing better, adding 'I just don't understand.'

Andres even characterized a female rival as having 'little T-Rex arms'.

Hutchinson wrote in DailyMail.com in August that she was 'taking to social media to mock females, to belittle us as weak, to rub it in our faces.'

She said that when Andres won another contest, watching her put a stuffed toy T-Rex on the podium appeared particularly pointed - especially as she noted that the only two others on the podium were only there as every other competitor had dropped out.

Hutchinson said she was threatened with a suspension when she complained too, but said she won't stop her campaigning.

'Andres has been allowed to compete, take the podium in place of a biological woman and set national records that may never be broken,' she concluded.

'Everyone knows this is unethical. But the federation has been too cowardly to do anything because the Canadian government protects 'gender identity' from discrimination, alongside race, gender and sexual orientation.

'As a result, the rights of biological women are trampled.

'Women must demand fairness, but even that is not enough.

'If and, hopefully, when the CPU comes to its senses, the records of biological men must be wiped away.

'Only women are entitled to these honors.'

Andres has been competing in female competition for over four years, however the issue of transgender inclusion in sports was thrust into the spotlight when trans swimmer Lia Thomas became an NCAA champion in March 2022.

Debate has raged ever since, but it was initially raised as a point of contention after the emergence of Cece Telfer - who became the first openly trans woman to win an NCAA title when she placed first in the 400m hurdles at the Division II National Championships in 2019.

The following year, Laurel Hubbard, from New Zealand, became the first openly transgender woman to compete at the Olympics when she took part in weightlifting at the Tokyo games.

In April, champion cyclist Hannah Arensman heartbreakingly announced the end of her dream of competing in the Olympics after losing to a biological male, saying their inclusion meant she would 'lose no matter how hard I train.'

Tommy Lundberg, a lecturer in physiology at Sweden's Karolinska Institute and leading researcher on the subject, told DailyMail.com in March: 'The most important thing is whether or not you have benefited from male development and male puberty and if you've done that, you're going to have advantages you cannot undo later.'

This view was also shared by Nancy Hogshead, a former pro swimmer who won three gold medals and one silver at the 1984 Olympics, who told DailyMail.com: 'Trans women have an undeniable physical advantage.

'Their bodies do what male bodies do when they go through puberty and is the reason why we segregate sports ubiquitously around the world.

'Unless we're talking about just playing, just recreational sports. All competitive sports is sex-segregated.'

Notably, trans figurehead Caitlyn Jenner, who won gold in the male decathlon at the 1976 Olympics before becoming one of the world's best-known trans women, has also called Thomas's success 'anathema to what sports represents and the spirit of competition'.
 
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