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Trans NCAA Athletes Battle: Women’s Athletes to testify demanding sexual projects

A group of women university athletes affected by transgender inclusion will testify in a Legal battle between the NCAA and the state of Texas on Tuesday.

After the NCAA changed its gender eligibility policy to prevent biological males From competing in women’s sports to complying with the executive order of February 5 of President Donald Trump who addresses the problem, many pro-women activists spoke with concerns that the new policy does not reach far enough to keep the trans athletes outside.

At the end of February, Texas Attorney Ken Paxton, sued the NCAA for its recent reviewed policy, demanding that the governing body begin the mandatory sex detection.

The first demand hearing is Tuesday and will include the testimony of the former volleyball player of the State University of San José Brooke Slusser and his mother, Kim Slusser, former Kylee Alons of the State University of North Carolina and the former swimmer of the University of Kentucky Kaitlynn Wheeler.

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These athletes are already involved in another demand, directed by Riley Gaines and the Independent Women’s Sports Council (Icons)against the NCAA for its past gender policy that allowed Trans athletes as women, citing their own experiences with trans inclusion.

Slusser is the most recent of the group to enter the battle against trans inclusion in women’s sports after joining Gaines in September for his experience with his transgender teammate Blaire Fleming. Slusser claimed that Sjsu did not reveal Fleming’s birth sex while sharing changing areas and sleeping.

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Alons, 31 times All-American and twice NCAA champion, and Wheeler shared a costume and a pool with the former transgender swimmer of the University of Pennsylvania, Lia Thomas, in the NCAA 2022 championships.

Now, the three athletes will seek to share their experiences in court while trying to bring mandatory gender evidence to NCAA and prevent future women athletes from going through similar experiences.

Paxton’s demand has reflected many of the complaints of critics that current policy is too indulgent and could allow Trans athletes to compete in women’s sports with a amended birth certificate.

PAXTON PRESADOR

Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton speaks at a press conference in Dallas on June 22, 2017. (AP Photo/Tony Gutiérrez, Archive)

In the United States, 44 states allow altering birth certificates to change the birth sex of a person. The only states that do not allow this are Florida, Texas, Kansas, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Montana. There are 14 states that allow changing sex in a birth certificate without required medical documentation, including California, New York, Massachusetts and Michigan.

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“In practice, the lack of sexual selection of NCAA has allowed (and will continue to allow) biological men to participate surreptitiously in sports categories ‘of women’,” says the demand. In addition, Paxton argues that NCAA allows “a wide opportunity for biological men to alter their birth records and participate in women’s sports.”

Paxton filed a lawsuit against the NCAA in December on its previous policy. In that lawsuit, Paxton accused NCAA of “participating in false, misleading and deceptive practices by marketing sporting events such as ‘female’ competitions only to provide consumers mixed sexual contests where biological males compete against biological women.”

“The NCAA is intentionally endangered the safety and well -being of women when they deceptively change women’s competitions in mixed competitions,” Paxton said in a statement. “When people look at a female volleyball game, for example, they hope to see women playing against other women, not biological men who intend to be something they are not. The ‘radical gender theory’ does not take place in university sports.”

The NCAA He provided a statement to FOX News Digital that addresses criticism and insist that amended birth certificates will not be accepted.

“Politics is clear that there are no exemptions available, and athletes assigned to men at birth may not compete in a team of women with amended birth certificates or other forms of identification,” the statement said. “Male players have been a basic element in university sports for decades, particularly in female basketball and the association will continue to explain that in politics.”

These details are not described in the officer NCAA policy pageand does not make specific references to the birth certificate, identification amendments or scholarships of women who go to trans athletes.

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