
Well, this won’t help.
Lately, having lost with the attempted banning of Transgendered Americans from serving in the military and the collapse of the fictitious threat that allowingTransgender people to exercise their Creator endowed rights would result in ladies’ room invasions, a prediction that not only failed to come true, but which was based on ignoring that there had been no reported cases of Transgender people attacking their prey in restrooms, the tool of choice has been that if a Transgender girl wanted to play sports, regardless that she is female, she must play on the boys’ team, and the opposite if the person is male.
States started proposing laws to deny participation in sports based on their understanding of gender identity which, going by the statements made in supporting such bills, is obviously lacking in facts.
The latest, biggest threat ever is a Transgender girl playing on a girls’ sports team because she has up to a point conformed with being the good little boy everyone but she, knowing it was a false persona, expected her to be.
Although I would prefer that, instead of girls’ and boys’ sports with limitations placed on one category and not the other forcing early physical development to follow and artificial development, it should just be sports and the kids, girl or boy, can play whatever sport attracts them and they can develop their skills which are presently too often limited by the dictates of others accustomed to how it “has always been.”
Well, these scare mongers may have lost their latest rear-tool.
Toward the end of this past February, North Carolina crowned the state teen wrestling champion.
Heaven Fitch competes against teen boys in the 106-pound weight class in wrestling and is now the first female to win an Individual Wrestling State Championship.
To be clear, Ms. Fitch is a cis-gender female which means she is a person whose gender identity corresponds with the sex she was assigned at birth.
After watching her older brothers wrestle and sometimes being their wrestling
sparring partner, she decided at age six to get involved as a wrestler.
Because she was a girl, her parents, and others, though she should give it another thought because as a member of the weaker sex, she would get hurt, but further thought had her sign up to chalk up a stellar career.
The girl beat all the boys.
Imagine if now with a law change, she would have to wrestle solely on the girls’ team.
The objections should be interesting.
