The Biden nominee for Attorney General has been dodging questions all day during his testimony before the Senate. When Senator John Kennedy asked the question about biological men competing in female sports, it was more of the same evasive answers. To say that Garland is unprepared or just evasive is an understatement. The question asked below is a hot-button topic right now and should be something that Judge Garland could answer. It’s essential for all female athletes competing against and with biological men to know Garland’s answer.

Watch below where Senator John Kennedy asked Judge Merrick Garland if he believes biological men should compete in female sports:

GARLAND: “This is a tough societal question.”

KENNEDY: “I know, but you’re going to be Attorney General.”

Our previous report on high school track athlete Selina Soule fighting the policy:

Selina Soule and Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) attorney Christiana Holcomb joined Fox News’ Tucker Carlson to discuss Soule’s effort to fight back against two transgender athletes who totally dominated the track events causing Soule to lose out on recognition as a star athlete. Attorney Christiana Holcomb said that the ADF is filing a Title IX complaint on behalf of Soule and other athletes suffering from similar circumstances.

Two biological male students competed in high school track events as transgender women shattering all records that had been made over the years. Soule missed out on participating in the New England Regionals because the two transgender athletes took the two top spots.

OUR PREVIOUS REPORT ON SELINA SOULE AND THE TWO TRANSGENDER ATHLETES:

The video below is one example of a high school track athlete’s life after transgender females joined their sport.

Selina speaks about how two places were taken by transgender athletes where female athletes would have been included.

Selina came in 8th instead of 6th because of the two athletes killing her dream.

She points out that the recruiters only see the times of races and recruit the transgender athletes over the female athletes.

“It’s frustrating when you know you’ve done your best and no matter what your best is not enough.”

This example happened in Connecticut at the State Track & Field Championships and has effected track and field in their state because of the advantage of the transgender females competing with the biological females.

ABC News reported on the two athletes:

The female athletes are pressured to just accept this arrangement.

Our previous report on an Olympic athlete who is taking full advantage of the policy of letting biological men compete with women:

Should there be a medical test to prove the sex of an Olympic athlete, or should the athlete be able to decide where they are more comfortable competing? 

South Africa’s “female” athlete, Caster Semenya, will compete against the world’s top female athletes as the overwhelming favorite for the gold tonight at 8 pm.

Semenya is apparently under armed guard protection after sending out this taunting threat to anyone who questions his/her gender:

UPDATE– International reports suggest that security has been beefed up for the athlete ahead of her race. Several news outlets report that Olympic officials are concerned about Semenya’s welfare and are fearful of unrest from the fans of rival runners spilling over into physical violence.

The reports state that journalists have been barred from approaching the athlete, and she won’t be allowed to conduct any media interviews. The Rio Olympics security staff will also accompany her at all times.

The International Olympic Committee and Rio organizers have refused to talk about the runner.

Last night, the Department of Sport and Recreation would not be drawn into speculation that Semenya had been put under armed guard.

There is, in reality, only a silver medal up for grabs in the women’s 800m on Saturday.

It is likely that on the night of Saturday, Aug. 20, in the Olympic Stadium in Rio de Janeiro, a 25-year-old South African woman named Caster Semenya will win a gold medal. Her victory will come in the 800 meters, a race in which her times have been approaching a decades-old world record thought by many in the sport to be unapproachable. Her performance will be stunning: She is 5’10” and weighs 161 pounds, with muscular arms, broad shoulders, and narrow hips. She has a severe jawline, hard and strong, and a competitor’s unflinching eyes. In a 2009 article, Ariel Levy of The New Yorker described Semenya as “breathtakingly butch.”

This is not Semenya’s first appearance globally; she has been a world-class runner for eight years and won a silver medal in the 800 in London. But now she is dominant, and the alleged—but unverified—the source of that dominance has made her one of the most significant and potentially transformative athletes in Olympic history. Her races in Rio will trigger an emotional debate on gender and sports, which is far more challenging than the comparatively simple issue of doping.

“She looks the way she looks, and then she runs away from the field,” says Joanna Harper, a medical physicist in Portland and the first transgender woman to consult with the International Olympic Committee on gender and sports. “And then, yeah, all hell breaks loose.” –SI.

Semenya has the condition hyperandrogenism, which naturally increases levels of testosterone. It is argued by some this gives her an unfair advantage over her rivals, who have lower levels and therefore have less musculature and strength.

An IAAF ruling that capped tester one levels for female athletes — and saw Semenya’s performances dip — was overruled by CAS last year, and her times have returned to unbeatable.

The issue is hotly debated, with some saying Semenya’s right to compete is paramount and others saying her competitors’ right to a fair playing field is equally as important.

Semenya is focused purely on running, and everyone else is focused on whether she will break the world record of 1:53.28 in the final. – Daily Telegraph

Watch Caster Semenya speak to a reporter here:

In 2009, tests conducted during the world athletics championships, where Semenya’s gender became the subject of heated debate following her victory in the 800m, revealed evidence she is a hermaphrodite, someone with both male and female sexual characteristics.

Semenya, 18, has three times the amount of testosterone that a “normal” female would have. According to a source closely involved with the Semenya examinations, IAAF testing, which included various scans, has revealed she has internal testes – the male sexual organs which produce testosterone.

Only the certainty of an even more savage backlash from South Africa has made the IAAF hesitant about slapping a ban on Semenya and revoking her gold medal.

South Africa embraced Semenya after the storm of controversy from Berlin, declaring her “our girl”. From the day news broke on August 19 that the IAAF had initiated gender verification tests on Semenya, various factions within South African society and politics have attacked the Monte Carlo-based IAAF.

The African National Congress MP and National Assembly sports committee chairman Butana Komphela have complained with the United Nations High Commission on Human Rights, accusing the IAAF of racism and sexism.

“There are all sorts of scans you do. This is why it isn’t straightforward. In the past, you used to do a gynecological exam, blood test, chromosome test, whatever. That’s why they (the findings) were challenged because it’s not quite so simple.

“So what they do know is they do everything, and then they can say look, not only has she got this, she’s got that and the other. The problem for us is to avoid it being an issue now, which is very personal: of the organs being a hermaphrodite, not being a ‘real’ woman. It’s very dramatic.” –Daily Telegraph.

 

Join The Conversation. Leave a Comment.


We have no tolerance for comments containing violence, racism, profanity, vulgarity, doxing, or discourteous behavior. If a comment is spam, instead of replying to it please click the ∨ icon below and to the right of that comment. Thank you for partnering with us to maintain fruitful conversation.