Preston Scott

Preston Scott

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Why Men Don't Belong In Women's Sports

If I had a daughter interested in sports I would be outraged and endlessly writing or emaling my school coaches, district officials, state athletic association, state lawmakers, and members of Congress. I would be wearing them out. I would be gathering like-minded parents and questioning anyone who thinks differently. This is an issue with a right and wrong answer. Opinions don't really count. They really don't.

Males cannot be allowed to compete against females in athletics. Sports are about fairness and it is not fair.

Look at this team photo of the Ivy League Championship competitors in a relay race. There is ONE man among them. Can you pick out Lia "Dude" Thomas?

Being tall, though, is not the issue. Lots of girls are tall, it's that Lia is male. He, regardless of injections and future surgeries, will always be male.

Thomas was a modestly successful men's swimmer at the same school. His narcissim required higher levels of accomplishment. Now, after becoming an Ivy League champion in multiple events, he stands ready to compete in the NCAA championships and he is being allowed to compete against women. He may be allowed to compete in the Olympics - as a female.

#SMH!

I have long wished very female competitor would simply leave the facility and let him triumph by himself. Imagine the scene if at each meet there were no females willing to compete against him. Since most athletic governing bodies are too concerned with being politically correct as opposed to providing a fair competition, it is what will be required to likely end the madness until a case reaches the U.S. Supreme Court.

What does a policy look like? It is one sentence: "Athletic gender for athletic competition purposes is determined by DNA."

Done.

In this video, commentator, author, and writer Matt Walsh, addresses college students on the issue and offers some great research which should be memorized by anyone who cares about the future of women's athletics. He also touches on the pronoun issue.

The audio is a little spotty early, but hang in there. It's worth it.


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