NCAA Trans athlete Battle: Women athletes to demand sex screening


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

NCAA changed its sexual eligibility policy by NCAA to prevent President Donald Trump from competing in women’s game to follow the working order of February 5, addressing the issue, many supporting women activists spoke with new policy concerns to exclude trans athletes.

In late February, Texas’s Attorney General Kane Pasteton sued the NCAA for his recently revised policy, demanding that the governing body began mandatory sex screening.

The first hearing of the case is on Tuesday and will include testimony from former San Jose State University Volleyball player Brooke Slassar and his mother, Kim Slassar, former North Carolina State University Kyle Alons and former Kentki swimmer Cateline Wheeler’s former university.

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They are already involved in another lawsuit, led by the Women’s Sports (Icon) on the relay Gains and the Independent Council, for their previous gender policy against the NCAA, which allowed trans athletes to compete as women, cited their own experiences with trans inclusion.

The sloser group has the most recent slices group to enter the fight against Trans Inclosure in the game of women after being involved in the Gains case in September on their experience with transgender team partner Blair Flaming. Slusser alleged that SJSU did not reveal the birth of Fleming, while he shared the changing and gold areas.

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Alons, a 31-time all-a-American and twice the NCAA Champion, and the wheeler shared a locker room and pool with a former university in Pennsylvania transgender swimmer at the 2022 NCAA Championship.

Now, three athletes will look at the court to share their experiences as they try to bring mandatory gender tests in NCAA and prevent future female athletes from going through similar experiences.

Pasteon’s trial reflected several complaints by critics that the current policy is very generous and can allow trans athletes to compete in women’s game with a modified birth certificate.

Paxon presser

Texas Attorney General Kane Pasteton speaks at a news conference in Dallas on 22 June 2017. (AP Photo/Tony Gutrez, File)

In the US, 44 states allow a person to change birth certificate to change birth of a person. The only states that do not allow it are Florida, Texas, Kansas, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Montana. There are 14 states that allow to change sex on a birth certificate without any medical documents including California, New York, Massachusetts and Michigan.

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“In practice, the lack of sex-screening of NCAA has allowed biological men to participate in women’s sports categories (and allow),” the case has been said. Additionally, Paxon argues that NCAA gives enough opportunities for biological men to change their birth records and participate in women’s game. “

Paxton filed a case against the NCAA in December on its previous policy. In that suit, Paxton accused NCAA “by marketing sports events in false, misleading and misleading practices to provide consumers with only mixed sex competitions, where organic men compete against biological women.”

Pasteon said in a statement, “NCAA is intentionally and deliberately changing women’s competitions in women’s co-ed competitions and endangering women’s safety and goodness.” “When people watch a female volleyball game, for example, they hope that women are seen playing against other women, pretending to be biological men to happen.

NCAA gave a statement to Fox News Digital, addressing criticisms and stressed that the revised birth certificates would not be accepted.

The statement said, “The policy is clear that no exemption is available, and the student-athlete assigned to a man at birth cannot compete with a revised birth certificate or other forms of ID in a female team.” “Male practice players have been a head in college game for decades, especially in women’s basketball and the association policy will continue to take care of it.”

These nuances have not been outlined on the official NCAA policy page, and it does not give any specific reference to the scholarship of women going to birth certificate, ID modifications or trans athletes.,

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