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The ‘demons’ among us aren’t transgender people, but legislators who dehumanize them | Opinion By Fabiola Santiago April...
04/11/2023

The ‘demons’ among us aren’t transgender people, but legislators who dehumanize them | Opinion By Fabiola Santiago April 11, 2023 1:15 PM

They just can’t help themselves. There’s no need to demonize and dehumanize any group of people in a legislative process stacked in Republicans state lawmakers’ favor from the get-go. Those are the spoils of 20 years of gerrymandering, packing courts with partisans and voter suppression. Florida Republicans hold a super-majority and have all the votes in the Legislature necessary to pass whatever bill they and their autocratic agenda-setting leader, Gov. DeSantis, could possibly desire. But they carry the bully gene in their souls.

They’ve now advanced to quash the most vulnerable among us with evil verbal attacks that have no place in society, much less the Florida House. At a committee hearing Monday, Rep. Webster Barnaby, a Deltona Republican, railed against transgender people, calling them “demons and imps” and “mutants from another planet.” Disgusting behavior on many levels, but the lack of decorum and civility is especially galling because he’s targeting vulnerable people — misunderstood transgender people, who have the highest su***de rates in the country. Thoughts of su***de According to the National Institutes of Health, “82% of transgender individuals have considered killing themselves and 40% have attempted su***de, with suicidality highest among transgender youth.”

Trans people are our children, our brothers and sisters, our aunts and uncles, our cousins, our friends and our fellow humans. Let them be who they want to be. They need understanding, not scorn that puts a target on their backs. They need acceptance, not rejection that makes them feel less-than. If Barnaby had any shred of empathy, he would have anticipated that transgender youth would surely read his ugly words, amplified on social media.
“We have people that live among us today on planet Earth that are happy to display themselves as if they were mutants from another planet. This is the planet Earth with God-created men, male, and women, female,” Barnaby said. So proud of himself, he piled on: “That’s right, I called you demons and imps who come and parade before us and pretend that you are part of this world.” And Barnaby calls himself “a conservative Christian,” by the way. Persecuted in ancient times, his type of Christian should know better.

But Barnaby’s diatribe sure sounds like Florida is drawing on the tactics of the 12th century Catholic Inquisition for rhetorical inspiration to push their legislative initiatives. Didn’t Jesus set an example of how we treat others by being kind and of service? Aren’t we all supposed to be God’s children — or is there an exemption in the Bible for transgender, non-binary and gay people? Why are they persecuted by allegedly Christian lawmakers, low dwellers on the human scale? Barnaby should enlighten us, but after boldly hurling insults, he’s remaining mostly mum. Justifying cruelty All the cruelty, in order to justify a needless bill that criminalizes transgender men and women’s use of bathrooms that don’t line up with the gender they were assigned at birth. Florida Republicans have been obsessed with passing it since 2015, when disgraced Rep. Frank Artiles, of Miami, introduced it. People called it “a joke,” and it failed to take off. If the new anti-trans bill becomes law, it may turn out to be somewhat irrelevant, as so more businesses install unis*x bathrooms. But queasy Republicans most likely will come after those, too, to please a base suffering from an incurable case of homophobia.

Because somehow God tells them to be only either boys or girls. And He tells them to be as intrusive as possible in blocking the sacred human journey of figuring out for ourselves who we are. Under political pressure, the Florida Board of Medicine barred minors from starting puberty blockers or hormone therapy, a move doctors and therapists who specialize in transgender healthcare have denounced as dangerous. They banned books in schools that helped trans and gay children not feel so alone, dubbing them po*******hy. They enacted laws prohibiting discussion about s*xual orientation and gender identity in grades K-3, arguing that children were too young for such exposure.

But, as alert people in education knew, their intent all along was to expand “Don’t Say Gay” to all grade levels, as they’re doing this legislative session. Barnaby’s words didn’t come out of his mouth in a vacuum; they were spoken in collusion with widespread anti-gay momentum, made acceptable by the state’s elected GOP officials. His colleagues and the governor emboldened Barnaby’s ire. He felt he was in a safe space in those chambers. But he wasn’t.

His words were captured by the Florida Channel airing the proceedings for the nation to hear, and after widespread backlash, the Volusia County representative, elected in 2020, issued a lame apology. “I would like to apologize to the trans community for referring to you as demons,” he said. Insufficient, to say the least. His voters should recall him, but they won’t, as 56.4% of Volusia County voted for the Republican Party during the last presidential election, marching in unison with the party’s increasingly anti-LGBTQ+ platform. Ultimately, Florida Republicans want to mandate who we should be in this life. It’s not only un-American and unconstitutional — it’s also none of their business.

Some People have no business or right being Leaders and should be purged.
VOTE THEM OUT!

Read more at:

Florida’s Republican lawmakers carry the bully gene in their souls, writes Fabiola Santiago.

White House Backs New Rule Blocking Trans Athlete Bans—With A Major ExceptionStory by Nicholas Reimann, Forbes Staff • Y...
04/11/2023

White House Backs New Rule Blocking Trans Athlete Bans—With A Major Exception

Story by Nicholas Reimann, Forbes Staff • Yesterday 5:38 PM





The Biden Administration proposed new regulations Thursday aimed at curbing blanket bans keeping transgender athletes from participating in school sports, but it included a significant loophole letting school teams develop their own policies in what the Education Department billed as a compromise position on the increasingly volatile culture war issue.





Key Facts

The new rule would add language to Title IX—a law prohibiting gender-based discrimination in school activities—stating individual teams at public schools and universities can ban athletes from competing on teams outside of their s*x assigned at birth if factors like competitive fairness come into question.

However, the proposed rule would not allow schools to impose a “one-size-fits-all policy that categorically bans transgender students from participating on teams consistent with their gender identity”—after more than a dozen states passed sweeping laws restricting transgender school athletes.

The proposed policy appears to leave it solely at teams’ discretion to determine policies on transgender participation, but the Education Department said they should take into account “level of competition, and grade or education level” when coming up with rules.

The Education Department said, ideally, transgender restrictions should only be used for highly competitive sports at the high school or college levels, since elementary and middle school sports are generally more focused on “basic skills in physical fitness, leadership, and teamwork.”

Crucial Quote

“For older students, especially at the high school and college level, the Department expects that s*x-related criteria that limit participation of some transgender students may be permitted, in some cases, when they enable the school to achieve an important educational objective, such as fairness in competition,” the Education Department said in a fact sheet.

What We Don’t Know

It remains unclear when the new guidelines might be enacted or whether there will be any legal challenges.
Key Background

Concerns about transgender athletes—specifically trans women who were assigned male at birth—having an unfair advantage in school sports have significantly intensified in recent years. A major catalyst was University of Pennsylvania swimmer Lia Thomas’ record-shattering victories during the 2021-22 NCAA season, despite Thomas—initially recruited as a swimmer for the men’s team—following the NCAA’s hormone therapy guidelines after coming out as trans in 2019. The NCAA responded last year by creating stricter hormone therapy requirements. The issue all the while has become one of the nation’s most polarizing culture war debates, with Republican-controlled state legislatures rushing over the past few years to enact broad bans, a gambit LGBTQ rights groups have argued is unfairly exclusionary to transgender students and often unnecessary. Top GOP figures like former President Donald Trump and Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis have become some of the most vocal critics of trans women competing in sports—a concept DeSantis called an effort “to destroy women’s athletics” and Trump has labeled “ridiculous.”
Big Number

At least 16. That’s how many states have enacted transgender athlete bans at the high school level or beyond, according to the Associated Press.
Contra

The Supreme Court on Thursday rejected a request from West Virginia to prohibit a 12-year-old transgender girl from competing on her school’s track team—the first ruling the nation’s highest court has made on a transgender athlete issue.

Individual teams will still be able to keep trans athletes from playing, but the Education Department said that should only apply to the highest levels of competition.

Transgender girl can keep racing on her girls track team. The Supreme Court rejected West Virginia’s emergency attempt t...
04/11/2023

Transgender girl can keep racing on her girls track team. The Supreme Court rejected West Virginia’s emergency attempt to remove 12-year-old Becky Pepper-Jackson from her middle school’s girls track team. It was the first time the high court ruled on state-level restrictions on transgender athletes, but more decisions are expected as 19 states have limited transgender students’ participation in athletics in the last three years, according to the ACLU. Also yesterday, the Biden administration proposed barring schools from banning transgender athletes, with certain exceptions.

The US Supreme Court let a 12-year-old transgender girl continue competing on her middle school track team, acting for the first time on a wave of new state restrictions on athletic participation.

Clarence Thomas’s free vacations could be costlyThe Thomases spent nine days on a megayacht in Indonesia, a trip that wo...
04/11/2023

Clarence Thomas’s free vacations could be costly
The Thomases spent nine days on a megayacht in Indonesia, a trip that would have cost them $500,000+ had they paid for it themselves, ProPublica wrote.

When your billionaire friend invites you on their yacht for an island-hopping adventure, you reply, “omw.”

Well, unless you’re a Supreme Court justice—then you might want to think twice.

Clarence Thomas apparently didn’t get the memo because, according to a bombshell ProPublica report published yesterday, the conservative Supreme Court justice has been whisked around on luxury vacations for 20+ years by the Dallas-based real estate mogul and GOP megadonor Harlan Crow. These gifted vacations, which Thomas didn’t disclose, have alarmed ethics watchdogs and spurred calls by senators to create a binding ethics code for Supreme Court justices.

Currently, the SCOTUS justices are the only federal judges who aren’t officially tied to a code of conduct, according to Bloomberg. However, they are required to report when they travel on a private jet (which Thomas did with Crow) and stay at commercial properties like resorts. Since Thomas didn’t disclose these gifts, ethics experts told ProPublica that he appears to have violated the law.
Got my toes in the water…

What were these luxury vacations Thomas took on Crow’s dime? Some include…

Nine days on a megayacht in Indonesia, a trip that would have cost Thomas and his wife $500,000+ had they paid for it themselves, ProPublica wrote.
Summer stays at Crow’s estate in the Adirondacks, Camp Topridge, where Thomas reportedly came into contact with execs at Verizon and PwC, as well as big GOP donors.

In a statement to ProPublica, Crow said that Thomas never asked to be taken on vacations, and his invites were “no different from the hospitality we have extended to our many other dear friends.”

But a SCOTUS justice is not like Crow’s other friends, in that they are expected to avoid any appearance of outside influence in order to maintain public trust in the institution. The revelation that Thomas accepted secret gifts from the ultrawealthy shows that he “seems to have completely disregarded his higher ethical obligations,” former government ethics lawyer Virginia Canter told ProPublica.—NF

The Thomases spent nine days on a megayacht in Indonesia, a trip that would have cost them $500,000+ had they paid for it themselves, ProPublica wrote.

All-trans soccer team radiates joy in history-making matchStory by LGBTQNation • Yesterday 3:00 PMA British soccer team ...
04/06/2023

All-trans soccer team radiates joy in history-making match
Story by LGBTQNation • Yesterday 3:00 PM

A British soccer team made up entirely of transmasculine players made its historic debut last week against an all-cisgender male team. Over 500 fans cheered on TRUK United FC from the sidelines, and it all took place on March 31, the Transgender Day of Visibility.

Trans players across a range of experience and abilities (many of whom had never met until the match) traveled from all over the United Kingdom to take part in the groundbreaking match, player and author Harry Nicholas told Pink News.

“There was such a range of talent, experiences, and nationalities on the pitch, but the one thing that united us all was that we thought there was no place for us in football as trans men, and this event changed that.”

Nicholas also expressed hope “that trans kids see this and know there is a place for them in sport. That it is possible.”

Photos from the match depict the TRUK players drenched in sweat and smiles, emitting radiant joy as they sport uniforms in the colors of the trans flag.

According to the club, one photo reached over 4 million views on Twitter, which it said: “This beats 99% of all premier leagues club views.”

“I’ve never felt a sense of community and joy quite like it before – we were playing a sport we love and owning it,” Nicholas said.

TRUK lost to Dulwich Hamlet FC Supporters with a score of eight to one. But Nicholas emphasized that the point of the night was never the outcome.

“The score didn’t matter at the beginning and it didn’t matter at the end. This was not about winning or proving ourselves against a cis team. The real win was always that we walked out onto the pitch, played, we’re visible, and we’ve reclaimed our place in football.”

The team’s captain, Arthur Webber, tweeted that he is “so proud” of his role on the team. “It was such a special night,” he wrote, “thank you to the boys for being incredible and to all our supporters!”

Webber also noted that he has already heard from dozens of players interested in joining the team and is encouraging anyone who wants to know more to get in touch.

Even the team’s opponents have been celebrating them.

In response to an anti-trans tweet, one Dulwich player wrote, “As a player on the opposition team Friday night I genuinely haven’t ever played against a group so cohesively together and enjoy their football so much as . Best of luck for the future and don’t let these dinosaurs try & stop you from playing the game you love!”

Another TRUK team made up of trans women played its own historic match on last year’s Transgender Day of Visibility. The club was founded in 2021 by Lucy Clark, the world’s first out trans referee for the sport

One player said he has never felt "joy quite like it."

Federal judge gives Texas county 24 hours to return banned LGBTQ+ books to library shelvesStory by LGBTQNation • MondayA...
04/06/2023

Federal judge gives Texas county 24 hours to return banned LGBTQ+ books to library shelves
Story by LGBTQNation • Monday

A federal judge has ordered government officials in Llano County, Texas to return books with LGBTQ+ and anti-racist themes to the county’s public libraries after conservative officials removed them.

Seven Llano County citizens sued county officials when local officials removed 12 titles from county libraries. The books included Being Jazz: My Life as a (Transgender) Teen by Jazz Jennings, In the Night Kitchen by gay children’s book author Maurice Sendak, It’s Perfectly Normal: Changing Bodies, Growing Up, S*x, and S*xual Health by Robie H. Harris, and They Called Themselves the K.K.K.: The Birth of an American Terrorist Group by Susan Campbell Bartoletti.

Additionally, the lawsuit alleged that county officials suspended access to e-books in order to block other titles, dissolved the county’s existing library board, and replaced the board with an “advisory board” containing appointed members who favor book bans. Officials also closed the advisory board’s meetings to the public and staff librarians, CNN reported. The officials’ actions violated county residents’ constitutional rights to free speech and due process, the lawsuit said.

The county had removed the books after community groups complained that they contained “pornographic filth” that promoted “acceptance of LGBTQ views.” Bonnie Wallace, one of the newly appointed advisory board members, even suggested allying with local pastors to “organize a weekly prayer vigil on this specific issue…. May God protect our children from this FILTH.”

The lawsuit stated, “Public libraries are not places of government indoctrination. They are not places where the people in power can dictate what their citizens are permitted to read about and learn. When government actors target public library books because they disagree with and intend to suppress the ideas contained within them, it jeopardizes the freedoms of everyone.”

The lawsuit identified Llano County Judge Ron Cunningham, the county’s commissioners, the library system director, and four library board members as defendants. The defendants said that the books were eliminated as part of the county’s regular “weeding” process.

Last Saturday, federal Judge Robert Pittman ordered the defendants to return the books to the shelves within 24 hours and to update the county libraries’ online cataloging system to show that the books are publicly available. The county is also barred from removing any additional books while the legal case remains open.

In his decision, Pitman said there was no evidence that the removed books were even part of the county’s “weeding” process before the county received complaints about them. Pitman also notes that the 12 books removed contain themes and content that are also contained in numerous books that have nonetheless remained available within the county’s three library branches for years.

“Although libraries are afforded great discretion for their selection and acquisition decisions, the First Amendment prohibits the removal of books from libraries based on either viewpoint or content discrimination,” Pitman said in his decision.

The defendants have already filed an appeal to the ruling. They’re being represented by Jonathan Mitchell, the lawyer who spearheaded the case alleging that employers shouldn’t have to cover contraceptives and PrEP HIV-prevention medication because it violates their religious freedom.

Bans on LGBTQ+-related library books have “escalated dramatically” over the last year, according to the free speech advocacy organization PEN America.

Ellen Leonida, an attorney representing the plaintiffs, said, “The government cannot tell citizens what they can or can’t read. Our nation was founded on the free exchange of ideas, and banning books you disagree with is a direct attack on our most basic liberties.” She called Pitman’s ruling a “ringing victory for democracy.”

One book banning county official wanted pastors to organize a weekly prayer vigil "to protect our children from this FILTH.”

'Trans people go to dances and find joy and are whole': A mom's viral photos of her daughter send a powerful messageStor...
04/06/2023

'Trans people go to dances and find joy and are whole': A mom's viral photos of her daughter send a powerful message
Story by Beth Greenfield • Feb 28

Rebekah Bruesehoff may only be 16 years old, but she's spent almost half her life publicly fighting for her rights as a transgender person.

It's why her supportive, activist mom Jamie took a moment this week to tweet a joyous photo of Rebekah in a green gown and holding white flowers, primped and ready to attend a high school dance — an update to one that went viral in 2017, of Rebekah at a rally holding a sign that read, cheekily, "I'm the scary transgender person the media warned you about." That image appears alongside the new one.

"There's this juxtaposition," Jamie tells Yahoo Life, referring both to the two photos and her daughter's life. "The photo from six years ago popped up in my memories, and I was struck: It feels so long ago and like it was just yesterday." When the photo came up, she says, she was at a nail salon with Rebekah, who was getting a manicure before her sophomore cotillion. Sharing both photos, Jamie explains, felt like an opportunity to show a more well-rounded view of her teen, who plays field hockey and loves musical theater.

"She's spent six years fighting publicly — but she's also just a teen going to a fun dance," she says. "That's so much of what the Twitter thread was about… that trans people go to dances and find joy and are whole people, and that trans people are more than just their fights for rights and for life."

The original photo of Rebekah, then 10, holding the sign inspired by a story she had found online, was snapped just before a protest in Jersey City, N.J., over the Trump administration rescinding federal support for transgender students. The tween was asked to speak in front of the crowd of 200, which she agreed to, and then her mom posted the image to Facebook, where it "went crazy viral."

Looking back now, says Jamie, "It's certainly not what any of us had planned. But what was really powerful was to see her use her voice and say, 'I deserve a safe school.' But even more impactful for her was she heard the voices of the other people… trans kids who were not supported, trans adults… it was the first time, at 10 years old, that she realized how good she had it and how much work we had to do."

That idea, of work left to do, is especially important now, says Jaime on Twitter: "In ways, things are worse than I could have imagined 6 years ago… and yet she continues to resist with advocacy, speaking and education. She resists with her joy, she resists by growing into this beautiful young woman that so many wish she wouldn't have the chance to become."

She's referring to the unprecedented number of anti-trans and anti-gay bills popping up across the country: Just two months into 2023, LGBTQ-rights organization the Human Rights Campaign (HRC) is tracking 340 anti-LGBTQ bills introduced at state levels, 150 of which would specifically restrict the rights of transgender people, 90 of which would prevent trans youth from being able to access gender-affirming medical care; two have become law, in Utah and South Dakota.

Rebekah Bruesehoff may only be 16 years old, but she's spent almost half her life publicly fighting for her rights as a transgender person. It's why her supportive, activist mom Jamie took a moment this week to tweet a joyous photo of Rebekah in a green gown and holding white flowers, primped and re...

[ This guy has to go!  ]Gov. Ron DeSantis proclamation: Florida swimmer who lost to trans athlete is 'rightful winner'Za...
03/24/2022

[ This guy has to go! ]

Gov. Ron DeSantis proclamation: Florida swimmer who lost to trans athlete is 'rightful winner'

Zac Anderson
Sarasota Herald-Tribune

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis signed a proclamation Tuesday declaring Sarasota native Emma Weyant the "rightful winner" after she lost to a transgender opponent in the NCAA 500-yard women's freestyle swimming championship event.

The governor's proclamation adds to the controversy surrounding the women's collegiate swimming championship.

Weyant is an Olympic silver medalist who graduated of Riverview High School and now swims for the University of Virginia. She lost last week to Penn swimmer Lia Thomas, who became the first transgender athlete in any sport to win a NCAA Division I championship.

Thomas's dominance in collegiate women's swimming has amplified a fierce debate about transgender athletes, one that Weyant is now drawn into. Weyant did not respond to a voicemail or text message Tuesday.
Emma Weyant poses with her silver medal on the podium for the women's 400-meter Individual medley at the 2021 Summer Olympics.

The governor's proclamation states that "since she is a native Floridian from Sarasota, I, Ron DeSantis, Governor of the State of Florida, do hereby declare in Florida that Emma Weyant is the rightful winner of the 2022 NCAA Division I Women's 500-yard Freestyle."

DeSantis signed legislation last year prohibiting transgender athletes from participating in women’s sports at the high school and college levels in Florida.

"Florida rejects the NCAA's efforts to destroy women's athletics, disapproves of the NCAA elevating ideology over biology, and takes offense at the NCAA trying to make others complicit in a lie," DeSantis said in Tuesday's proclamation.

DeSantis mentioned the proclamation during a press conference in Pasco County Tuesday, where he also said he will sign legislation "relatively soon" that has been dubbed by critics the "Don't Say Gay" bill.

The legislation states that "Classroom instruction by school personnel or third parties on s*xual orientation or gender identity may not occur in kindergarten through grade 3 or in a manner that is not age appropriate or developmentally appropriate for students in accordance with state standards."

Employees of Disney staged a walkout Tuesday to protest the bill and the company's response to it.

GBTQ rights organizations say the bill could discriminate against gay and transgender individuals, and cause a chilling effect against students even discussing their LGBTQ families.

DeSantis said Tuesday that critics of the bill are supporting s*xual instruction for young kids.

“Understand, if you are out protesting this bill you are by definition putting yourself in favor of injecting s*xual instruction to 5-, 6- and 7-year-old kids," DeSantis said. "I think most people think that’s wrong. I think parents especially think that’s wrong.”

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis declared Emma Weyant the real winner of the NCAA swimming championship after she lost to transgender athlete Lia Thomas.

Florida governor says trans swimmer Lia Thomas was not ‘rightful winner’ of NCAA title    Thomas becomes first trans ath...
03/24/2022

Florida governor says trans swimmer Lia Thomas was not ‘rightful winner’ of NCAA title

Thomas becomes first trans athlete to win NCAA swimming title
Ron DeSantis has long history of anti-LGBTQ+ legislation

Guardian sport
Wed 23 Mar 2022 08.51 EDT
Last modified on Wed 23 Mar 2022 11.33 EDT

Florida governor Ron DeSantis has issued a proclamation that a resident of his state is the “rightful” holder of the NCAA 500m freestyle title won by trans swimmer Lia Thomas last week.

Thomas made history last Thursday as the first known transgender athlete to win a US college swimming championship when she took the title in Atlanta. However, her victory caused a backlash among right-wing politicians as well as groups that oppose transgender athletes taking part in women’s competition.

On Tuesday DeSantis, who many see as a Republican contender in the next US presidential election, declared that Emma Weyant, a Florida resident who competes for the University of Virginia and finished second to Thomas, was the “rightful winner” of the race.
One critic sees ‘a straight line from the flurry of reactionary legislative action to DeSantis’s political ambitions’.
‘Free to do as you are told’: Florida Republicans advance wave of draconian bills
Read more

“It is my determination that men should not be competing against women such as Emma Weyant,” DeSantis wrote in his proclamation. “ … Florida rejects the NCAA’s efforts to destroy women’s athletics, disapproves of the NCAA elevating ideology over biology, and takes offense at the NCAA trying to make others complicit in a lie.”

USA Swimming’s policy states that trans athletes must undergo three years of hormone replacement therapy before being allowed to compete. Thomas is six months short of that target but the NCAA decided not to adopt USA Swimming’s rules and allowed the senior to compete in Atlanta.

DeSantis’s proclamation has no power to change last week’s result and is a continuation of policies in Florida that target the LGBTQ+ community. In June, he signed into law the Fairness in Women’s Sports Act, which bans anyone assigned as male at birth from competing in girls and women’s sports. The state’s ‘don’t say gay’ bill has also caused controversy, and this week the Orlando Pride soccer team apologized after barring a fan banner that contained the word “gay”.

Thomas has received both support and criticism. On Monday, World Athletics president Sebastian Coe said transgender athletes pose a risk to the integrity of women’s sport.

“Gender cannot trump biology. As a federation president, I do not have that luxury. It is a luxury that other organizations not at the practical end of having to deal with these issues have,” Coe told the Daily Telegraph. “But as far as I am concerned, the scientific evidence, the peer-reviewed work we have done, those regulations are the right approach.”

But some of Thomas’s fellow swimmers have shown their support. Texas’ Erica Sullivan, who finished third behind Thomas and Weyant in the 500m freestyle, wrote an essay for Newsweek in which she argued women’s sports has other issues that are far more important to address.

“As a woman in sports, I can tell you that I know what the real threats to women’s sports are: s*xual abuse and harassment, unequal pay and resources and a lack of women in leadership. Transgender girls and women are nowhere on this list,” Sullivan wrote.

Weyant, who won an Olympic silver medal in the 400m individual medley last summer in Tokyo, has yet to comment publicly on DeSantis’s proclamation. Thomas, meanwhile, has chosen to restrict her comments to her swimming.

“I try to focus on my swimming, what I need to do to get ready for my races and just try to block out everything else,” she said after Thursday’s victory.

Florida governor Ron DeSantis has issued a proclamation that a resident of his state is the ‘rightful’ holder of the NCAA title won by trans swimmer Lia Thomas

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