
Sports
Safety and fairness are compromised by males in female sports.
Sports are divided into male and female categories. Men and boys are taller, faster and stronger than female athletes. They have bigger bones, longer limbs, wider hand spans, wider shoulders, and a narrower pelvis than women. This is all a result of being born with a male body and going through male puberty.
Even from a very young age, boys perform better on athletic tests. Each year, thousands of boys and men outperform elite females.
Female excellence, participation and safety in sports depend on sex segregation. Female athletes at every level will lose if they have to compete with and against males.
Tell the NCAA: Stop Discriminating Against Female Athletes.
In the world of college sports, it is impossible to provide equal opportunities for both sexes without single-sex teams. Allowing biological males on women’s teams discriminates against female athletes. The NCAA is not above the law. We demand that the NCAA stop discriminating against women and establish rules to keep women’s sports female.
Make your voice heard.
A Picture Is Worth a Thousand Words
22-year-old, 6’4” Will “Lia” Thomas was allowed to compete against women after 3 years on the men’s swim team. After years of mediocrity, he became a “women’s” champion swimmer.
Laurel Hubbard, a male in his 40’s, competed in the women’s weightlifting category at the Tokyo Olympic Games. Including Hubbard in the women’s category, displaced a young woman of color, Kuinini Manumua. She was 21 and it would have been her first Olympics. (Pictured below.)
Males retain a physical advantage even after the administration of cross-sex hormones and testosterone suppressors.
Resources and Further Reading
The man above is allowed to play soccer against young women.