Former USA Swimming official says trans swimmer is 'destroying' sport

The transgender movement has reached the point where it mocks actual female athletes.

Trans-surfer-crit.jpg

https://www.foxnews.com/media/riley...ng-bethany-hamilton-library-event-so-tolerant
 
Top NCAA Official Quits Over Transgender Athlete Policy
https://thespun.com/college-football/top-ncaa-official-quits-over-transgender-athlete-policy

A top NCAA official has stepped down from his position, in relation to the transgender athletes policy.

William Bock, a top official for the NCAA, announced his resignation via a letter to president Charlie Baker. Bock, who was part of the NCAA's Committee on Infractions, cited the transgender athlete policy as part of the reason for his decision.

“Although I may not have agreed with the wisdom of every rule in the NCAA rulebook, I believed the intent behind the NCAA’s rules was competitive fairness and protection of equal opportunities for student-athletes,” Bock wrote.

“This conviction has changed as I have watched the NCAA double down on regressive policies which discriminate against female student-athletes.”

Bock said that he began to have concerns back in 2022, when then-Penn swimmer Lia Thomas was succeeding in the women's division. Thomas, a transgender athlete, joined the women's team after previously competing for the men's team.

“There’s a lot of biological development that starts at birth that allows you to maximize testosterone, and those changes that you get through development — they don’t go away,” Bock said.

“And you’re going to reduce performance by a small amount if you reduce testosterone levels, but you’re never going to bridge the gap between men and women. And so it’s a ruse to say that testosterone suppression, it’s a level playing field, so it’s not true.”

Transgender athlete policies have become a bigger and bigger discussion point within sports across the world.
 
An entire group of women don't want naked biological men wandering around the women's locker room with their dicks swinging around.

Former NC State swimmer, 15 others sue NCAA, saying transgender policy made locker room 'uncomfortable'
https://www.wralsportsfan.com/forme...licy-made-locker-room-uncomfortable/21337305/

A former North Carolina State University swimmer is one of 16 athletes suing the NCAA for allowing transgender athletes to compete and share the same locker rooms.

The class-action lawsuit says the NCAA's actions and policies for transgender eligibility caused emotional stress. Much of the lawsuit focuses on the 2022 NCAA swimming and diving championships.

Lia Thomas, a transgender athlete, competed in the championships and on the women's 500-meter freestyle defeating an Olympic silver medalist.

“For most Plaintiffs, the realization that the NCAA was not dedicated to equal opportunity for women came during the 2021-22 women’s swimming season,” the lawsuit says.

Kylee Alons was competing for NC State at the time.

Court documents say she and other female athletes were unaware that their locker room was considered "unisex." That allowed Thomas to change in the same spaces.

“On one of the early days of the NCAA Championship Kylee Alons saw Thomas in the locker room; that was the first moment that Kylee understood that Thomas had access to the women’s locker room,” it reads.

It describes the locker room as an "uncomfortable" place for Alons.

“She was ‘stressed out’ by having a male body in the locker room. She felt that her ‘privacy and sense of safety was violated,’” it reads. “’It was not a private locker room anymore.’”

The lawsuit also ridicules the organization’s transgender eligibility policies, saying that they reduce female competitive opportunities and deprive women of equal opportunities to protect their bodily privacy.

“The NCAA’s Transgender Eligibility Policies allow a man to make the relatively easy (in terms of comparative athletic challenge) shift to a women’s team, depriving women of athletic accomplishments, recognition, awards, scholarships, and roster spots,” it reads.

The lawsuit accuses the NCAA of violating both Title IX and the 14th amendment.

The group of plaintiffs are also suing the University System of Georgia and Georgia Tech, which where the championships were held.

Title IX is tied to federal funding and protects people from discrimination based on sex in education programs.

“The most important issue for the 16 courageous whistleblowers, young women who have come forward as plaintiffs in this lawsuit is, what is the future for women in sports?” said Bill Bock, the lead attorney, said. “They're defending the rights of women standing up for young girls that haven't even had the opportunity to get to college and compete yet, and they hope the world is different for those young women than it has been for them.”

The plaintiffs ultimately want the NCAA to no longer be able to enforce its Transgender Eligibility Policies. They also want the organization to invalidate awards won by transgender athletes.

Additionally, the group is seeking compensation for damages and their attorneys’ fees.
 
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A step forward to protecting all the progress women have made in college sports under Title IX.

College athletics organization bans trans athletes from participating in women's sports
The NAIA made the decision on Monday
https://www.foxnews.com/sports/coll...ns-trans-athletes-participating-womens-sports

The National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) banned transgender athletes from competing in women’s sports on Monday.

The NAIA said it supported "fair and safe competition for all student-athletes" and that "Title IX ensures there are separate and equal opportunities for female athletes." The organization laid out its participation rules with conditions.

"Participation by students in sports designated as male by the NAIA: All eligible NAIA student-athletes may participate in NAIA-sponsored male sports," the organization said.

"Participation by students in sports designated as female by the NAIA: Only NAIA student-athletes whose biological sex* is female may participate in NAIA-sponsored female sports."

The NAIA said a student who has not begun "any masculinizing hormone therapy may participate without limitation."

The organization added that a student who has begun masculinizing hormone therapy may participate in:

"All activities that are internal to the institution (does not include external competition), including workouts, practices, and team activities. Such participation is at the discretion of the NAIA member institution where the student is enrolled; and

"External competition that is not a countable contest as defined by the NAIA. Such participation is at the discretion of the NAIA member institution where the student is enrolled."

The policy goes into effect on Aug. 1.

The NAIA’s Council of Presidents voted in favor of the policy change, 20-0, according to CBS Sports.

"We know there are a lot of different opinions out there," NAIA president Jim Carr told CBS Sports. "For us, we believed our first responsibility was to create fairness and competition in the NAIA.... We also think it aligns with the reasons Title IX was created. You're allowed to have separate but equal opportunities for women to compete."

The NAIA is separated from the NCAA. It governs small schools and universities. There are 241 membership schools in the organization.
 
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