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

Do you really even need the story? The picture says it all.
Not strictly speaking. It certainly is a great example of "a picture is worth a thousand words".

That being said, there's certainly some batshit details in the article proper. For example:
'After lengthy consideration and consultation, the RDFNL has ruled that the two transgender participants be excluded from the RDFNL Netball Competitions for the remainder of the 2025 season on the premise that both participants exhibit superior, stamina and physique over their competitors deeming Section 42 of the Sex Discrimination Act relevant,' the statement said.

That section of the act allows competitions to exclude gender-diverse players due to concerns about their 'strength, stamina or physique'.
What an insane standard.

It's worse than no standards at all.

It really seems just like they're saying "meh, eyeball it".

(And really we know they actually mean "we've got an out if anything controversial hits the news")
 
Some shady shit going on here
You don’t know the half of it.
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EDIT: But honestly, what fucking parent posts a photo of their child posed like this? It’s not like they are doing this to preserve anonymity, and even if they were there are more tasteful ways to do so. I don’t think that pictures of people with their faces obscured are inherently objectifying, however, seeing a mother display their child this way is.

My desktop broke so I have to be a phonefag until my next pay check, sorry for the formatting and lack of archiving. Looking at what this basket case posts has filled me with an unshakable sense of dread. I needed to unburden myself a little. I apologize sincerely for both.
 
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And just because it's hilarious, here's that photo for those of you who can't be bothered reading the whole story.
The video is actually really funny because he doesn’t really even slam her. She slams into him and falls over because he’s an unmovable unit.

The pic of the nonbinary man next to the female is also amusing, because he says there is no difference in gender in physical ability, yet his calves and quads are twice the size of hers.

Yeah, men twice the size of women totally belong in women’s sports.
 
It's as retarded as "I know it when I see it." No you don't Potter Stewart, blow me.
But when it comes to trannies, I *DO* know it when I see it. And so do you and everyone everyone else.

I'm crafting memes of trannies in women's sports recently. Name of meme is always the name of the "transfeminine" athlete.
LMK if you have any favorite horrible images of these guys smug on the podium or felting a girl on the field that I could use. Co-contributors welcome if you're gonna make OC.
 
Troons always resort to violence.

CLOVIS, Calif. (KSEE/KGPE) – A person was arrested following an altercation near Buchanan High School in Clovis, the city’s police department said.

Officers say they received reports of a disturbance just before 4 p.m. Friday between two adults in the intersection of Nees and Minnewawa avenues in Clovis, outside of the Veteran’s Memorial Stadium.

The disturbance took place amidst the CIF State Championship at Buchanan High School, where a transgender student is competing. Investigators say the argument was over the controversy the competition has generated.

Officers report that 19-year-old Ethan Kroll was on the sidewalk with a transgender flag and assaulted a man inside a vehicle using the flag’s pole. During the disturbance, the driver pepper-sprayed Kroll.

EMS was called to the scene, and investigators say Kroll was arrested and booked into Fresno County Jail for felony assault with a deadly weapon (not a firearm), vandalism, and obstructing/delaying an officer.

Pro-LGBTQ+ protester arrested after altercation near Buchanan High in Clovis, police say
 
Is this seriously even a fucking debate or a thread???? Ive never met someone who agrees with this decision. MtF In womans sports is like putting mike tyson against a newborn baby
Unfortunately, yes, because there are in fact MtFs who will try to dominate women's sports leagues at numerous levels of competition... it is wild.
Almost like some of the gay rejects from the men's team were trying to level the playing field so to speak...
 
Is this seriously even a fucking debate or a thread???? Ive never met someone who agrees with this decision. MtF In womans sports is like putting mike tyson against a newborn baby
Most everyone agrees that mtf troons don't belong in female sports at all. There are enablers, and the troons themselves who disagree and wish to shove themselves in there. Unfortunately, some of these enablers are in politics desperately trying to protect troons.
 
The disturbance took place amidst the CIF State Championship at Buchanan High School, where a transgender student is competing. Investigators say the argument was over the controversy the competition has generated.
The people they interviewed are retarded. Be for fucking real.

Here are the quotes, when referring to how, if a transgender athlete places first, the second place biological female will also be allowed to advance:

I think it's just a political distraction, because the reality is it's really not an issue
I don't think it should be necessary to do that, but I am okay with them allowing that

How delusional can you be?
 
Trans people should have their own leagues, in that way it would be fair for everyone.
Welcome to the Farms. I see you are new here.

When World Aquatics made a separate World Cup division for trans athletes, no one signed up.

Trans athletes don't give a shit about competitions being fair for everyone. If they did, MTFs wouldn't be entering women's sports in the first place.
 
MTF troon takes the gold medal medal in the women's track and field championship. TRA's and their enablers still deny there is an issue.

"CLOVIS, Calif. -- A transgender athlete bested the competition Saturday at the California high school track and field championship to take home her first gold in the girls high jump at a meet that has stirred controversy and drawn national attention.

AB Hernandez - a trans student who on Friday finished ahead in the girls high jump, long jump and triple jump qualifying events - competed under a new rule change that may be the first of its kind nationally by a high school sports governing body.

On Saturday, she finished the high jump with a mark of 5 feet, 7 inches, with no failed attempts. The co-winner, Jillene Wetteland, also cleared the bar at that height after a failed attempt. The two shared the first-place win and the podium because of a new policy in California.

Hernandez placed second in the girls long jump and was a top contender in the girls triple jump.

Olympians Marion Jones and Tara Davis-Woodhall previously set state championship records in the long jump in 1993 and 2017, respectively, both surpassing 22 feet. This year's winner, Loren Webster, topped 21 feet, with Hernandez trailing by a few inches."

Transgender athlete wins girls high jump event at California track and field finals
 
Troons would argue it creates a curio league, kinda like disabled league.
I don't disagree, but they don't belong in women's competition.
Their concern is really that a seperate trans league doesn’t validate them as being real women. Of course everyone (including themselves) knows they will never be biological women, but they want to be accepted and treated as if they are. There’s also going to be issue of sharing locker rooms with others as equally mentally deranged as themselves.

Given so many men seem to believe that women congregate in public toilets for a good old gossip, you’d think they’d see being able to get fashion and beauty tips and complements from fellow troons an advantage. Unfortunately though if enough congregate in one place, they lose their minority victimhood…can’t have acceptance and spaces for their own kind and still claim victimhood.
 

Our world in tranny sports round-up:​

A trans girl was banned from her track team. Now she’s competing with the boys.

Eliza Munshi was a boy trooned out by his parents at age eight. He was in an article crying about how he had to compete in a boy's track team because Trump signed executive order banning boys from girl's sports. Mysteriously, he only gained an interest in competing in sports after the executive order was passed and he could file a lawsuit. 🤔
At Falls Church High School, she waited for a practice throw in the discus event, taking her place in a line of boys. Runners passed by on the track. Coaches hovered nearby. Eliza was nervous, but in the way that any teen might be before their first competition in a new sport.

This wasn’t how Eliza imagined it would go when she tried out for track in February.

But that month, President Donald Trump signed an executive order banning transgender girls like Eliza from competing on girls’ and women’s sports teams. Days later, the organization that regulates high school sports in Virginia, where Eliza lives and goes to school, followed suit.

She could no longer compete with the girls.

Until recently, being transgender had posed few challenges for Eliza. She has supportive parents and friends, and she receives gender-affirming care. But in recent years, transgender rights, particularly for young people, have become a political target for conservative leaders. Trump leaned into anti-transgender messaging in the final weeks of his campaign. It has left families such as Eliza’s feeling the effects of one of the country’s most contentious debates, even here in liberal-leaning Fairfax County.

Public sentiment on the topic is changing, and nuanced. Polling has shown a majority of Americans support laws prohibiting discrimination against trans people, including in K-12 schools. But it also has shown most Americans believe transgender girls shouldn’t be allowed to play on girls’ teams.
At first, the rising policies against trans youth didn’t seem to affect Eliza. Despite efforts from Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) to restrict transgender rights in schools, the Fairfax County district has maintained its policy allowing students to use the pronouns and facilities that match their identity. In a statement, the school district said it follows state and federal laws to allow student-athletes to participate in athletics as they choose.

Eliza says everyone at the school — from teachers to coaches — has made her feel welcome, even through the policy changes.

“Sometimes I forget I’m transgender,” Eliza wrote in her college admissions essay this fall. “People around me forget too.”

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Eliza on March 18. (Allison Robbert/For The Washington Post)

Sports was always an exception to that. At one point, Eliza wanted to join the volleyball team, but she worried about the process of proving she should play with the girls. At the time, the Virginia High School League policy would have required her to submit records from her doctors and letters from family and friends. She’d have to get approval from her school’s principal, then it would all go before a board to determine whether she could join a girls’ team.

Eliza, like many other transgender kids, largely avoided sports for that reason.

But recently, Eliza had seen the headlines about the increasing number of states banning trans girls from girls’ sports. Most recently, she’d seen Trump’s executive order titled “Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports.”

She also saw that the Virginia High School League had initially said it would maintain its policy allowing transgender students to use the appeals process to play.

She decided to give sports a shot. Sitting around the lunch table, her friends convinced Eliza she could quickly learn how to throw shot put and discus. They promised to help her along the way.
It was a chance to try something new, she said, spend time with her friends and squeeze some exercise into her week.

It was also a chance, she thought, to prove that it wasn’t as easy as everyone seemed to think it was for transgender girls in Virginia to compete in sports.

So, Eliza marched into the athletics office in February.

“I’m transgender,” she said. “Can I start an appeal?”

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Eliza puts on her competition shoes ahead of her event at the meet March 19. (Allison Robbert/For The Washington Post)

In February, Eliza joined the girls’ track team. During her fourth practice, when she was just beginning to get the hang of the discus and shot put, her phone rang.

Her mom explained that Eliza’s paperwork had been flagged after her doctor filled in “male” with “assigned at birth” scribbled next to the checked box. Eliza knew this would happen. She had no intention of hiding that she was transgender and was prepared for the lengthy appeals process.

But her mom explained that things had changed. The league, to comply with the executive order, revoked the option for trans girls to play on girls’ teams.

It was no longer merely difficult for Eliza to prove that she should compete with the girls. It was impossible.

Most high school athletes don’t go on to play competitively in college or professional sports. They play for the benefits of learning teamwork, discipline and community.

Yet, trans athletes are rare. In Virginia, only 31 athletes have petitioned to play since 2020. Twenty-eight were approved. But those supporting bans believe transgender girls have an unfair advantage over cisgender girls. And public support for that sentiment is growing. A 2022 Washington Post-KFF poll found that two-thirds of Americans agreed that trans girls should not be allowed to play girls’ high school sports.
The article tries to make him look more feminine by showing with his teammates and his father:
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But then they screw up by showing front-on shots:
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His parents are Shyam Munshi and Alison Munshi:
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He's a programmer with the Space Force, and she's a teacher/advocate. In 2018, they petitioned the school board to change the curriculum to tell kids that women can have penises and men can get pregnant, and how to use PREP to not get AIDS.
“Tonight I ask you to vote to use the language ‘sex assigned at birth,’” she said. “And I will end on a reminder from history: It was white people who decided black people could be free. It was men who decided women could vote. It was straight people who decided that gays could marry and it will be cis people who decide the fate of trans people in America.” (cisgender is a term for people whose gender identity matches the sex that they were assigned at birth).

Others who spoke in support of the language changes included Rev. David Miller; Rev. Dr. Debra Haffner; Shyam and Ali Munshi, who have a transgender daughter; Risa May; David Aponte; Gordon Baer and William Elledge.

The board voted down an amendment introduced by member Elizabeth Schultz to delay the vote until October, when there could be more discussion, and nixed another amendment by Thomas Wilson to require parents to give permission rather than opt their children out of FLE. With Schultz and Wilson away from the table, the board’s vote to include the language changes was unanimous.
School Board votes to make sex ed more LGBTQ inclusive

Eliza Munshi Instagram (Archive)
Eliza Munshi Tiktok (Archive)
He filters the hell out of his pictures, but sometimes he screws up and posts a real photo:
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NBC News: Supreme Court backs Republican lawmaker in Maine who was punished for transgender athlete remarks

This article is more about the fallout surrounding a Republican State Representative named Laurel Libby getting her ban from speaking in the Maine House of Representatives lifted by the Supreme Court.
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court said Tuesday that the Democratic-controlled Maine House of Representatives cannot bar a Republican lawmaker from speaking in the chamber or voting as a result of comments she made about a transgender student-athlete.

In a brief order, the high court granted an emergency request from state Rep. Laurel Libby, who faced considerable blowback from a social media post in February after a transgender girl won a pole vault event at this year's state championship.

"This is a win for free speech — and for the Constitution," Libby said Tuesday on X, adding that she had been "silenced for speaking up for Maine girls."

House Speaker Ryan Fecteau, a Democrat, said in a statement that as a result of the decision, "Representative Libby’s ability to vote on the floor of the House has been restored until the current appeal process runs its course."

The Trump administration has offered Libby its support, with the Justice Department filing a brief in a federal appeals court. Litigation will now continue in that court.

Two of the court's liberal justices, Sonia Sotomayor and Ketanji Brown Jackson, disagreed with the outcome. The court has a 6-3 conservative majority.

Libby, a critic of the state's policy to allow transgender athletes to compete in high school sports, posted a photo of the child athlete alongside a photo of the same student competing in the boys' event in a previous year.

The House subsequently censured her.

The issue before the Supreme Court was not the censure but a separate punishment that barred Libby from speaking or voting in the House until she apologized.

As a result, Libby was unable to properly represent her constituents, leaving them without a voice in the Legislature, her lawyers argued. A group of voters joined Libby in filing suit.

They asked the Supreme Court to immediately allow her to participate in the current legislative session, which ends in June, arguing that the punishment violates her constituents' voting rights under the Constitution's 14th Amendment.
What did she do that was so terrible? Posting this:
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Here’s the post Rep Libby made:
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Caption:
“UPDATE: We've learned that just *ONE* year ago John was competing in boy's pole vault... that's when he had his 5th place finish. So all of this transpired in the last year, with the full blessing of the Maine Principals' Association. Two years ago, John tied for 5th place in boy's pole vault. Tonight, "Katie" won 1st place in the girls’ Maine State Class B Championship.”

The athlete’s name is John Rydzewski, he is currently going by “Katie Spencer”.
Male athlete pole vaults girls’ track team to state championship (Archive)
State athletic officials ignore Trump’s executive order against men competing in women’s sports

A male athlete helped his girls’ track and field team secure a state championship earlier this week.

On Monday, John Rydzewski took first place in Maine’s Class B state championship for indoor track and field.

His vault, reaching 10 feet and 6 inches, was a full 6 inches higher than any of his female competitors. By contrast, he would have tied for 10th place had he competed against his own sex.

Rydzewski, now known as “Katie Spencer,” also helped his school defy President Donald Trump’s executive order forbidding schools that receive taxpayer funding from allowing men to compete against girls.

As Outkick reported:

"Greely is a public school, which means it relies on government funding. According to Trump’s order, Greely would lose federal funds for allowing a male to compete in girls’ sports. However, the school also relies on state funding and Maine is one of the states that changed its discrimination definition to protect “gender identity” over biological reality."

Republican State Rep. Laurel Libby has criticized the victory.

“The decision by the Maine Principals’ Association to continue allowing male athletes to compete against female athletes in school athletic competitions is outrageous,” she told Outkick.

“Not only does their decision violate President Trump’s February 5 Executive Order, but it jeopardizes the safety and privacy of female athletes, all while allowing male athletes to take medals, trophies, and podium spots away from women, effectively erasing them,” Libby said.
Maine female athlete 'grateful' for Trump's focus on trans competitors after local leaders 'failed' girls
Zoe, who competed in shot put at Maine's Class B state indoor championship meet on Monday, said she is "grateful" for the president's announcement that he will be cutting federal funding to Maine over its defiance of Trump's order to keep men out of women's sports, adding that leaders in the state "have failed our female athletes."

"State leaders have failed our female athletes and there needs to be repercussions for their neglect," Zoe said. "We feel seen and heard because of this announcement and hope that steps will continue to be made to protect women's sports in Maine."

During the state championship meet, Katie Spencer, who competed as a male named John Rydzewski in pole-vaulting as recently as June 2024, out-jumped every other female by half a foot. Spencer's winning pole vault was pivotal in helping Spencer's track and field team at Greely High School in Cumberland, Maine, win the Class B state championship meet by just a single point.

Following news of what happened, Trump announced that Maine would lose public funding until "they clean that up."
John Rydzewski competed in boy's track events until some time last year when he decided he was actually a girl named Katie Spencer.
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He 'transitioned' by not cutting his hair for a few months.
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In other Maine news, remember Soren Stark?
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.
Maine: Soren-Stark Chessa wins third place at a state championship ski competition. Here is what our girl looks like:
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He's still at it:
Boy wins girls HS track events in Maine; parents are both college professors
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That thing that “never happens” happened yet again last week: A biological male competing against females won first place in two track events.

It happened in (surprise!) Maine, which so far has held firm against President Trump’s executive order banning biological men from competing against women in interscholastic athletics.

In what appears to have been a tri-meet, North Yarmouth Academy junior Soren Stark-Chessa won the girls 800 meter and 1600 meter (mile) runs, the latter by almost 20 seconds.

As noted by Outkick, the 800 event was a closer race with Yarmouth High’s Lilah Connor finishing second by one-and-a-half seconds. In a video (below) you can see Connor shaking her head in dismay after crossing the finish line.

The hilarious thing about Stark-Chessa’s victories is that his winning times suck. He won his events with a 2:43.31 and a 5:57.27 respectively.

Given that the meet appeared to have been a local one between three schools, I had a sneaky suspicion he did “just enough” to win … without making it look too lopsided.

Lo and behold it appears I was right: Last year as a sophomore, Stark-Chessa won the state “Class C” girls 800 championship with a time of 2:19.72 (ten seconds ahead of the second place girl, which is rather substantial for that distance), and finished 3rd in the 1600 with a 5:10.08, both substantially faster.

Stark-Chessa (pictured) apparently began identifying as female sometime between his freshman and sophomore year as he competed on the boys’ track team in 9th grade, according to Outkick.

Stark-Chessa also has been an all-state “girls” cross country runner and an all-conference “girls” Nordic skier. In the fall of 2023, a parent of two girls who raced against Stark-Chessa in cross country said her kids were in a “lose-lose situation.”

“They don’t want to pretend Stark-Chessa is a girl and congratulate him on beating females,” the parent said according to The Lion. “But they fear they will be seen as ‘hateful’ or bad sports otherwise.”

Oddly enough Stark-Chessa’s parents are both college professors. Soren’s dad, Frank Chessa, is a professor of medicine and associate course director of ethics and professionalism at Tufts University School of Medicine.

He also serves as director of clinical ethics at Maine Medical Center the Gender Care Clinic of which provides “treatment to patients of all ages with both pediatric and adult services.”

The Lion reported the Gender Care Clinic offered “surgical consultations to both children and adults”; however, the clinic’s website currently states such is offered only to those over age 18 (and with a “mental health letter of referral”).

Soren’s mom, Susan Stark (pictured), teaches philosophy at Bates College where she’s at work on a pair of projects, according to her faculty page.

The first is “a defense of the moral and social imperative of making reparations, not only for institutionalized slavery, colonialism, and genocide, but also for ongoing racist policies and white supremacy.”

In a 2022 paper, Stark notes one reparative approach is returning “stolen” land to descendants of original indigenous inhabitants (“historical injustices must be acknowledged, addressed, and repaired—that their significance overrides any harm caused by returning the stolen land”).
His father, Dr. Frank Chessa, is a doctor and a professor of ethics and professionalism in medicine. Yes, he works at a clinic that gives puberty blockers and hormones to kids, why do you ask?
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His mother, Professor Susan Stark, teaches moral psychology and social philosophy which is apparently just yelling about racism.
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Bullying, basketball and an online firestorm: How B.C. college star Harriette Mackenzie stood up to anti-trans hate — and won

Declan Cunningham called 'Harriette MacKenzie' was trooned out in kindergarten.
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He's always been used as a political prop by activists, him and another trooned out boy called Tracey Wilson petitioned to get their birth certificate gender changed without surgery in 2013, paving the way for Jonathan Yaniv and Morgan Ogre: 10-year-old transgender child fights to have gender removed from birth certificate
When Harriette was a child in Comox, B.C., on the east side of Vancouver Island, she knew herself the way any child does: what they like, what they want, how they feel. She saw herself in her mother Megan, not her father Colin. In school she saw how boys and girls dressed and acted, and knew where she belonged.
But she didn’t belong. Assigned male at birth, she knew that wasn’t who she was.
“I think I realized that before everyone else did,” Harriette said in a lengthy interview. “And it started off with me refusing to cut my hair, and wanting to pick out my own clothes.”

As a child Harriette didn’t know what a trans person was, and neither did anybody around her. Her mother scrambled to do research, and accepted this new reality quickly; her father took more time to understand, but he got there. Her grandparents were supportive, and her grandmother Cathie was especially strong.
But even as it took a few years to transition, Harriette’s life became hard. In Grade 1, Harriette’s principal pulled her aside and said, “You know why you can’t use the girls’ washroom, right?” Harriette, who had been using that washroom, said no. She was offered the staff washroom, and said no. For a year or two Harriette simply refused to pee at school; she would hold it until she got home.
As Harriette identified more strongly as a girl, bullying became constant: physical bullying, talk of genitals, and slurs, outing of her past. Her school had no SOGI 123 policy — sexual orientation and gender identity, in place since 2016, which the B.C. Conservatives have pledged to remove from schools — and Harriette describes very little support. Once she was called a “f—-ing he-she” on a playground, and the supervising teacher told her, “Well, what do you expect?”
The article is seething that people pointed out that he shouldn't be on a girl's team. "There aren't that many dudes pretending to be women to get on girl's teams, so it's no big deal!"
In some ways, Harriette is the rarest kind of athlete: a trans woman who was assigned male gender at birth who is genuinely good at sports at any significant level. The anti-trans lobby has been waiting for one since Lia Thomas, the swimmer at Penn who won an NCAA title in 2022 after transitioning post-puberty.
Harriette is the best player in the Pac West, or near enough: This season she averaged a conference-leading 17.9 points, 10.4 rebounds (third), 49.0 per cent shooting (second), 1.0 steals and 1.5 blocks (first), in just 22.9 minutes per game. At six-foot-two, she is one of the tallest players in the league, though not nearly the strongest. Like her six-foot-five father, she can jump.
And in October of last year, Harriette’s Vancouver Island University Mariners and the Columbia Bible College Bearcats played back-to-back games on the VIU campus in Nanaimo. VIU won Game 1. In the second game, VIU was ahead 46-31 early in the second half, but Harriette wasn’t the engine; her teammates were especially sharp. Nothing was evidently brewing.
Except Friday night, after VIU’s win, Claggett cornered a VIU staffer and complained Harriette shouldn’t be allowed to play, and Claggett’s brother Kyle, who is also a partner in the Claggett family basketball academy in Abbotsford, B.C., wrote on Instagram, “You have girls that have dreams to play post-secondary basketball and when they end up making it they have to play against a MALE! Unreal. Make it make sense.” He tagged the conference and the national governing body and added, “why do you think Alberta added that rule.”
He played against a Christian college whose coach Taylor Claggett complained about her team playing against a boy. During the game, one of the opposing players grabbed the back of his jersey, causing him to fall down.


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Now this is a layman's analysis, but it looks like an accident. The girl isn't looking at where her hands are, and she ends up knocking him into her teammate, almost causing her teammate to fall, which doesn't seem like something you would do on purpose.

Regardless, Cunningham accused Claggett of deliberately orchestrating it and got her suspended.
Harriette had met Claggett two summers ago at the Dolphin Basketball Classic outdoor 4-on-4 tournament in Richmond, B.C. Claggett had already been hired as the CBC’s head coach but was playing for a team with jerseys from her basketball academy, and Harriette says Claggett was uncomfortably aggressive, and verbally abusive, in the game. Harriette considered it a vendetta against her.
Claggett, in a statement, said “any suggestion that I was verbally or physically abusive ... are wholly untrue.”

Harriette felt the second CBC game could be unsafe, but decided to play.
“I mean, I wasn’t scared,” Harriette says. “I think when you’re used to stuff like this, and having to exist and be in situations and places where you’re not safe, and there are people out to get you, and you just have to be there, you get pretty good at just compartmentalizing and hardening up so that you can just get through it.
“And I didn’t let the sadness and anger come until after because ... like, I wasn’t gonna let them win.”
VIU was stellar, and in the third quarter Harriette chased an offensive rebound, but third-year Bearcats forward Madeline Beerwald grabbed her by the left shoulder and left arm and yanked, stretching Harriette’s jersey. Beerwald twisted, and hurled Mackenzie to the floor. Whatever it was, it wasn’t a basketball play. Beerwald was not ejected; Harriette shot the free throws
Trans athlete Harriette Mackenzie hurled to floor during game
Four days after the CBC game in October, Harriette posted an Instagram video outing herself and accusing the Bible College players and coach of intentionally targeting her because she was trans. At VIU’s next home game local queer groups, and some of the parents of kids she coaches, arranged a show of support: a Love In. It was the first time in her life this many people had stood behind her because she was trans, versus fans who were clearly hostile. The support made Harriette feel safer.
Then nothing happened officially until January, when her teammates unanimously decided they wouldn’t play the return matches at Columbia Bible College and demanded the playoffs — which were going to be held at CBC — be relocated.
It was like a shock to the system. VIU belatedly offered a statement of support. Pac West belatedly undertook an investigation, and in February suspended Claggett for the season, and moved the playoffs. CBC players printed, wore, and sold T-shirts that read STAND UP on the front and PLAY FOR TAYLOR on the back until their school allegedly asked them to stop.
And at each stop — the Instagram video in October, the boycott in January, the T-shirts in February — the right-wing hate-farming machine whirred online: The Rebel, LibsofTikTok, The Western Standard, The Blaze, Outkick, various anti-trans organizations and individuals, and more. Online hatred bloomed, and bloomed. Bryce got threats and angry emails, and was genuinely worried about the safety of his family; he worried about speaking for this story. Several figures involved refused comment.
Harriette spoke, though. She didn’t have to.
"Being 6' 2" has nothing to do with being male! Harriette is actually dainty and weak!"
Genetics are complex, but this case almost seems simple. Harriette’s dad is tall. Her mom’s not short. And basketball was a rare attachment point when it felt like the whole world was against her, populated by people who cared: her dad, her mom, Bud, Cathie, Bryce, and more. Harriette coaches now, and refs. She is also a cook, a care worker, an artistic young woman. But she was raised in basketball.

And her size and skills add up to a star player, at this level. The Rebel cut a clumsy video trying to make Harriette out to be a brute, when anyone who knows women’s basketball saw flopping, and typical contact. The Bible College, in a statement, claimed the issue involved “legitimate safety concerns for the safety of our student athletes.” Which was, clearly, culture-war bunk. Asked for comment, a spokesperson for the college said the statement “is accurate and stands.”

“Harriette is not stronger than other people in the league,” says Bryce. “That’s a false narrative. I see the test results. She’s not even close to the strongest on our team. Like, apologies to Haz, but she can barely do a push-up. And that’s what people don’t want to know.”
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This is the Rebel News video that they dismiss as "flopping":
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He's clearly slamming into those girls like a freight train. I don't care if it's on accident, it's only a matter of time before he seriously hurts a female player.
Eventually he ended up assaulting another player. "But she only did it because those mean transphobes made her!"
All weekend, Harriette was mauled in the post, and toward the end of VIU’s final game, she finally snapped. After a big first half, the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology started doubling her before she caught the ball, and getting even more physical. Several fouls went uncalled and SAIT hit a string of threes to open up a lead. With 4:14 left, Harriette and SAIT’s Anegor Wol were wrestling over a ball when Harriette reared back and threw the SAIT forward to the ground.
It wasn’t nearly as violent, or defined by the same context, as the Bible College attack. The only thing that made it unusual was that Harriette was involved. But it was a sad bookend to this most difficult season.

And remember Diego "Lazuli" Clark from Massachusetts?
https://quillette.com/2024/04/02/the-damage-wrought-by-trans-inclusion-in-female-sports/ / Archive.
https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/ar...nder-athlete-rowing-harassment-suspended.html / Archive.

Quilette did a wonderful and huge article on the male basketball cheater who threw a female player to the ground hard. Named Lazuli Clark, he participates in 5 different female sports. He is black belt Tae Kwon Do. He was kicked out of a women's rowing team because he was acting like a creep.


This motherfucker is one of the most privileged scrotes I've ever seen. His entire life is just fun hobbies. He sings in a classical choir and wants to be an opera singer, he's going to to be valedictorian, he participates in all the sports and wins because he competes against girls. Mom and dad seem to pay for everything and arrange everything for him and make sexual harassment claims go away. I usually have no problem with rich kids, since kids don't choose their parents or circumstances, but damn this irks me. Mediocre male who has been told he is the bestest of everything his entire life.

The school photoshopped him to look smaller than the female athletes. He is a massive ogre and sports a literal neckbeard. Fuck this asshole.
As a reminder:
00t.webp

Bearded MA ‘Trans’ HS Athlete Injures Multiple Girls; Now Story Part of NH Debate

The number of incidents involving biological males injuring female athletes during sports competitions continues to grow ahead of Friday’s New Hampshire Senate vote on a proposal to protect girls-only sports.

One recent injury was caught on camera during a girls’ basketball game in Massachusetts between Lowell Collegiate Charter School and KIPP Academy of Lynn. The video shows a bearded 6-foot-tall male KIPP Academy player, who reportedly identifies as female, ragdolling a female LCCS player as both competed for a rebound.

That was only one of three girls the player managed to injure before LCCS forfeited the game.

The game itself did not even reach the second half.

KIPP’s executive director, Rhonda “Nikki” Barnes, told The Boston Globe the athlete identifies as transgender and is also on the girls’ volleyball and track teams.

“The vision of KIPP Massachusetts is that every child grows up free to create the future they want for themselves and their communities,” Barnes previously told Fox News.

And now there’s a new development involving the same KIPP Academy player regarding locker room access — and what can happen to girls when biological males are allowed to use the same athletic changing facilities. And it ensures the story will be part of the New Hampshire State House debate over banning biological males from girls’ sports.

An Australian-based news magazine reports the athlete, LCCS senior Lazuli Clark, was accused by members of a female rowing club of making lewd comments as a female teammate undressed.

The allegation surfaced in an Oct. 12, 2022, complaint to the United States Rowing Association submitted by 15 parents of top Massachusetts female rowers. The news magazine Quillette recently obtained a copy of the letter.

“In one documented 2022 incident, it is alleged, Clark walked into the girls’ changing room, spotted a female rower who was topless, and made a lewd comment about her breasts (“Oooh, t*tties”),” Quillette reported. “As a result, documents reviewed by Quillette indicate, Clark was reported by team officials to the U.S. Center for SafeSport, a congressionally mandated body dedicated to ‘ending sexual, physical, and emotional abuse on behalf of athletes everywhere.’”

SafeSport reportedly took action later that year. Clark did not row for the club again.

Additionally, another parent reported Clark joined the female club team after performing poorly for the club’s male team. The same report claims Clark never bothered to shave or “otherwise maintain the outward aesthetic pretenses of female gender identification.”

In 2023, Clark expressed frustration in an interview with a nonprofit education news outlet over others’ inability to be inclusive.

“Going to school is the least of people’s concerns at this point for a lot of people,” Clark is quoted saying. “There are days where I’m like, ‘Oh yeah, I have to worry about my AP U.S. history project, and yesterday another state basically made it so that I can never exist in that state.’

“And it’s like, how’s anyone supposed to think about anything at all when there’s all of that going on? Even if you’re not directly impacted by it. Most people in my generation know somebody who’s impacted in one way or the other.”
00u.webp
No, he didn't bother to shave.

Anyways, he got his wish:
You think you hate them, and then you find even more reasons to hate them. This Troon, who broke records and leered at girls who were changing, decided to go back to being a man and study music.
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He's studying opera at the Cincinnati Conservatory of Music.
00v.webp
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Mysteriously, he only gained an interest in competing in sports after the executive order was passed and he could file a lawsuit.
Yeah "Eliza" seems like a plant. But in the 4th pic he looks like man.

The Harirette one is also interesting. He got his balls and maybe dick cut off at a young age, so I felt a little bad for him, since his parents clearly allowed this to happen. He got slammed by the other female basketball player. Kind of amusing but also pathetic considering he is 6'2". Imagine having the height for basketball, but you get your balls cut off as a kid so you don't have the testosterone to make in the boy's league, but then to also get your ass kicked in the female league. That's funny as hell.

I don't get why trans people have to participate in sports. It's not required to participate in sports in high school. They must either want the attention, are just doing it for easy medals and scholarships, or are trying to prey on women in locker rooms.

And remember Diego "Lazuli" Clark from Massachusetts?
This one isn't even trying. I hope someone beats this faggots ass.
 
What did she do that was so terrible? Posting this:
The Maine situation was worse than simply exposing a tranny because the Maine state legislature used what Laurel Libby posted as an excuse to deny her constituents due political representation. They basically rendered an entire district null and void for electing someone that the Maine Democrats didn't like. We are now at the point that certain US states will deny political representation to you if you don't like trannies.
 
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