They have to destroy girls sports in order to save them for the mentally ill

Yesterday, Wisconsin’s Democrat governor just vetoed a bill that would have kept transgenders off of girls high school sports teams.

Meanwhile, the Biden administration is poised to do the same thing nationwide with its new rule that places transgenders within the anti-discrimination protection if Title IX.

They’re calling for more of this:

Bearded 6ft-tall trans athlete who knocked down rival during school basketball game 'was suspended from female rowing team for leering at topless girl in changing room'

A transgender school athlete who was filmed knocking down a rival player played five other female sports and was allegedly suspended from a rowing team for leering at a girl's bare breasts in the changing rooms. 

The 6-foot tall student at KIPP Academy in Lynn, Massachusetts, injured three opponents during a girls' basketball game on February 8. Video from the incident quickly went viral. 

Collegiate Charter School of Lowell forfeited the game to avoid losing any more players ahead of the playoffs, and KIPP withdrew from its next game after backlash.

The same transgender student, who is aged 17 or 18, not only competed in girls' basketball, but in rowing, volleyball, hurdles, shot put and tae kwon do, according to a report from Australian magazine Quillette

The transgender student at KIPP was named a Commonwealth Atlantic Conference All-Star in Volleyball after a season in which “she” led the charter school team in most major statistics.  

She had more 'kills' (unreturnable shots) than the rest of the team combined, and the most aces and blocks, according to school statistics.

The team went 13-9 that season, in which she played in 68 sets - equal most on the team.

The same student also set records in the 400m hurdles and shot put, both as a female competitor, at the Lynn All-City Track Championship on May 30 last year.

“Her” 41-foot 2-inch shot put was six feet longer than the best throw in the senior event of the Massachusetts state championships that year.

The same athlete is a longtime tae kwon do student at the Tiger Institute in Saugus, Massachusetts, where she is a black belt

… “She” won second place in 16-17 year old Black Belt Sparring at the Cervizzi's Spring Invitational Tournament in March 2023, then won the Fall tournament in October.

And then ….

… The student competed for a private rowing club in Massachusetts in 2021-22, before an alleged 'direct case of harassment' in his team's changing rooms.

'The male athlete was caught staring openly at one of the female athletes while she changed her clothes in the women’s locker room and remarked, "oooh t*tties!"'.

'When a female athlete nearby asked if it was the first time he had seen female breasts, the male responded, "uhh yeah" with a laugh. The male athlete was suspended for this incident.'

The report also claimed he 'caused many issues for the female athletes' on the team and they avoided using the locker room because of him.

The US Center for SafeSport intervened after the incident and the transgender athlete never rowed for the male or female teams again.

A letter to USRowing from 15 parents of the club's 40 female competitors in further claimed the girls were 'intimidated' into silence.

'Our daughters have stayed quiet because they are afraid. We tried to speak up for them, and we were shut down,' the letter read.

'We tried to speak to leadership at all levels. [But] name-calling and the threat of mental health is being used as emotional blackmail to keep us all quiet while women are harmed and devalued.'

Parents said one girl on every trip had to 'take one for the team' and share a room with their transgender teammate.

'The rowing team also required the male athlete to room with them on trips. The girls spoke to us about quitting rowing because of the intimidation of being forced to be in a hotel room alone with a male,' it read.

The chairwoman of the US Rowing medical committee is endocrinologist Kathryn Ackerman, a former US national team rower.

She is also medical director of the Female Athlete Program in the Division of Sports Medicine at Boston Children’s Hospital. 

Ackerman in 2022 co-authored a paper in the British Journal of Sports Medicine titled Improving inclusion and well-being of trans and gender nonconforming collegiate student-athletes.

She also presented an online lecture in October on The Care of Transgender Athletes that laid out the advantages male athletes have over female ones.

Ackerman wrote that female athletes had '30 percent lower max cardiac output' and 25 to 50 percent lower VO2 max, along with less blood and therefore less oxygen capacity.

Females had 'about 45 percent less lean body mass. So that would suggest that women are 40 to 60 percent weaker in their upper-body strength, and 25 percent weaker in their lower-body strength.'

Read more: