Gaines for Girls with Riley Gaines - November 21, 2023


This Week in Crazy Transgender Sports Stories


Episode Stats

Length

16 minutes

Words per Minute

157.52563

Word Count

2,673

Sentence Count

127

Misogynist Sentences

14

Hate Speech Sentences

4


Summary

Transgender Awareness Week is here, which means it's time to remember the transgenders who lost their lives at the hands of the gender ideology movement. This week's episode focuses on the stories of two women who were recently banned from competing in women's sports because of their gender identity.


Transcript

00:00:00.540 Okay, only 10 more presents to wrap. You're almost at the finish line, but first...
00:00:10.980 There, the last one. Enjoy a Coca-Cola for a pause that refreshes.
00:00:18.040 Welcome back to the Games for Girls podcast. I'm not at home this week, clearly. I am on the road, finishing up the college campus tour that I have been on, traveling to different colleges, speaking to the next generation, people who are in these indoctrination camps, which is really important to me.
00:00:47.100 And that's been a big push of mine because I think it's important that my generation understands what's at stake.
00:00:52.920 They understand the severity of these issues and ultimately the war on women that we're seeing. And again, a lot broader than just women's sports.
00:01:02.200 So I am at Texas A&M, Princeton, and Radford University in Virginia this week. So lots of really good things there.
00:01:09.940 But this week is special because it is Transgender Awareness Week. Leading up to Transgender Day of Remembrance, of course, no one forgot.
00:01:20.760 What are we remembering? Of course, we are all well aware that the transgender community is here because we are catering every single policy, guideline, really restructuring society for this community.
00:01:31.260 So no one forgot. I count it. There's about 31 transgender holidays, including the entire month of June celebrating Pride, the entire month of October being LGBT History Month, and the entire month of November being Trans Awareness Month.
00:01:47.980 Some of these holidays include, you know, Aromantic Spectrum Awareness Week.
00:01:53.640 We have Agender Pride Day, Lesbian Visibility Day, International Pronoun Day.
00:01:58.980 The list goes on of what these holidays look like.
00:02:01.920 So I wanted to take the time this episode to talk about some of the transgender stories, issues pertaining to the gender ideology movement that have been relevant just this week alone to, again, highlight how prevalent these issues are and highlight how they're predominantly affecting and harming women.
00:02:24.060 Let's start with April Hutchinson. She has been on the podcast before. Some of you might remember her.
00:02:29.000 She came on a few months back to talk about her struggle with her federation in powerlifting, the Canadian Powerlifting Union, who has allowed men to compete in the women's category, which, if there's one sport where it matters, you would imagine that would be powerlifting.
00:02:46.200 April, she's a Canadian national team member. Of course, she's one of the best females in Canada.
00:02:52.020 But the CPU has now banned her from competing for two years, two full years in her crime, you might be asking.
00:03:01.720 Oh, well, that's calling a male powerlifting opponent competing on the women's team a biological man when she went on the Piers Morgan show while advocating for fair sports for women and girls.
00:03:13.520 The policy, actually, the letter she received from her union, it's in plain words said to her, upon discussing the current case, the panel had determined that there was sufficient evidence to support sanctions as a result of multiple violations of both the code of conduct and the social media policy.
00:03:31.760 It has been determined that there is sufficient evidence for major infraction as a result of repeating offenses, including prior warning.
00:03:40.040 April had sent private letters to the Federation speaking to how allowing men into her category affected her and others, not just physically and losing out on tangible objects like trophies, but mentally this affected April.
00:03:57.140 Again, which she came on and talked about after receiving this letter where she was alerted that she was banned for two full years from her Federation, she took to Twitter.
00:04:06.960 And I think this is just brilliant what she said, because she says, apparently I have failed in my gender role duties as supporting actress in the horror show that is my sport right now.
00:04:17.340 Um, it's not just the CPU, the Canadian power lifting union who thinks women are supporting actresses.
00:04:25.500 Uh, that's what the IOC thinks, the international Olympic committee.
00:04:28.260 That's what the NCAA thinks.
00:04:29.500 That's what the Biden administration thinks we are supporting actresses.
00:04:33.160 And I think how she worded that, um, it perfectly put in into words.
00:04:38.100 Um, speaking of the Biden administration, uh, Biden, he met with student athletes this week about the challenges that college athletes face.
00:04:47.180 Um, he took to Twitter and he tweeted, I met with advocates who shared the importance of health and safety for student athletes, not just for the biggest names, but for everyone.
00:04:59.480 That's what president Biden tweeted.
00:05:01.620 Uh, okay.
00:05:02.320 I'll challenge that.
00:05:03.660 What about Peyton McNabb, uh, the volleyball player from North Carolina, who was, uh, received a spike to the face by a male opponent on the women's team they were playing to which she's still partially paralyzed on her right side.
00:05:16.700 Uh, she still has vision impairment.
00:05:19.160 Uh, now she's not playing college sports like she thought she was going to, or what about the field hockey player in Massachusetts just a week or so ago, uh, who had her teeth knocked out by a male player.
00:05:30.800 Um, she had to undergo surgery, uh, to reconstruct her jaw.
00:05:35.780 Uh, what about the safety of those athletes, President Biden?
00:05:39.640 Um, or do those, those ones not matter?
00:05:42.480 Uh, no, those athletes, you know, the female athletes, uh, their safety is irrelevant.
00:05:48.100 What matters to Biden and the Biden administration clearly as they're rewriting title nine is the safety, the health, the fairness, the feelings, the identity of a male.
00:05:59.580 Um, even if it means, uh, that females, female athletes become collateral damage in the process.
00:06:06.260 Um, another sporting story here, uh, which is, this one's actually good news to a degree.
00:06:14.140 There was a pool tournament, uh, billiards this week.
00:06:17.960 Uh, it was the women's champions of champions final in Wales, actually.
00:06:22.620 Um, the final, the final game, uh, and an all women's tournament and Lynn pinches was matched with a male.
00:06:31.740 Uh, Chris now goes by Harriet Haynes.
00:06:34.920 Uh, but I think what she did is phenomenal.
00:06:36.840 And I know a lot of people will agree, uh, Lynn upon, uh, making it to the final, the final game, she stepped down.
00:06:44.720 She said, I'm not competing when she found out she would be competing against a man.
00:06:49.060 And in an interview, she said, when I heard the announcement last week, I spent most of my days in tears, especially because it came after the announcement eight weeks earlier that I was finally going to be a Fairfield.
00:07:00.740 Uh, she continues on to say, you know, I'm worried now about the future for the game of women.
00:07:05.180 If next year we had eight trans players, they would probably be in the top eight.
00:07:09.340 Uh, she even went as far to say that she's played 30 years and she's never so much conceded a frame, nevermind a match.
00:07:17.840 Uh, this was only her fourth final ever.
00:07:21.080 Uh, but she said the trophy and the money meant nothing to her without fairness.
00:07:25.500 Um, and that's what she said to the tournament director afterwards, which that is so admirable, right?
00:07:31.980 To only make it to that, that stage, it was her fourth final ever, but to say none of it mattered, um, if it wasn't done in fairness, that's what we need more of.
00:07:41.320 And so upon walking out, she received a ovation applause.
00:07:46.300 Um, people, you know, they were, they were clapping, cheering because I think they were probably, they were using those actions because they probably couldn't use their words, um, to express how they, how they really felt.
00:07:58.280 Um, so, so that was absolutely incredible.
00:08:02.300 Um, that's what we need more of.
00:08:04.700 We will follow along and see if, um, the pool association, I don't know what the governing body is called, but if they changed the rules like jujitsu did, um, after they had a couple of female athletes boycott.
00:08:17.780 So, so good news there.
00:08:18.920 And I could not be more impressed and inspired by Lynn pinches.
00:08:23.220 Um, another sporting story where it's not as, uh, hopeful or, or gleeful, um, motorsport has now created a new transgender guidelines policy.
00:08:36.280 Uh, their policy says they allow for self-identification of an individual's gender.
00:08:42.120 Uh, and what this means, compete where you want, compete where you feel happy.
00:08:46.740 If you're a man wanting to compete with the women, do it.
00:08:48.960 If you're a woman identifying as a man, yet still wanting to compete with the women, by all means, um, inclusion is just a polite word for discrimination.
00:08:57.500 Um, of course, this governing body who created these guidelines, they released no clear statement on how this impacts, um, female sex-based category or any consideration to physical or science or biological aspects of the sport.
00:09:12.840 Uh, which I think it's important to mention, uh, there are already few female opportunities in motorsport, uh, and now those opportunities are being diminished.
00:09:23.580 Uh, I, there's been a lot of people go on to comment, okay, well, you know, there's no fairness aspect in motorsport.
00:09:30.060 You know, it doesn't matter the physical differences, the premise of this argument and why this matters.
00:09:35.780 Um, female opportunities are for females, um, and male opportunities are for males, um, of course, too, upon calling this governing body out on Twitter for their new policy, uh, they quickly turned off their replies or, or had the hidden reply feature, removing the ones that were even remotely questioning the ruling, um, which again, I think is incredibly telling.
00:10:02.600 Um, another story this week, uh, the, there's a new endometriosis charity that has, uh, elected a new CEO and in the most stratospheric gaslighting of ways, the endometriosis charity appointed a man who identifies as a woman
00:10:23.660 and campaigned against women and campaigned against women's rights, um, um, as their new CEO, uh, his name is Steph Pompey, um, so you might be thinking, you know, what is endometriosis?
00:10:35.660 And if you're a man, that's a very understandable question to be thinking because, uh, it's not something you've ever been diagnosed with before, um, because it's a condition that affects the womb and the uterus, uh, something that men don't have, something that Steph, the new CEO of this charity, doesn't have.
00:10:52.480 Um, it's long-term, uh, and often agonizing condition where tissue similar to the lining of the womb grows in other places such as the ovaries or fallopian tubes, uh, and like I said, it can cause severe pain and infertility even, um, but this, this charity now, not only have they elected as a male as their CEO, um, they've now dropped all female language.
00:11:17.860 Uh, if you go to their website, it lists who the charity helps, which I was curious, you know, what does this look like?
00:11:24.520 Because there are men, OBGYNs, there are men who, who, um, work on women, you know, in some capacity, uh, that on issues that only affect women, that's not the problem here.
00:11:35.980 Um, like I said, it was the gaslighting way of which they did this.
00:11:39.260 So I went to their website to look what other, you know, is there anything else sketchy about this?
00:11:44.960 Uh, it says who the charity helps.
00:11:48.880 They don't list women.
00:11:50.240 Uh, they say children and young people, people with disabilities, other defined groups and the general public slash mankind.
00:11:57.680 Uh, so nowhere on their website do they even use female language when talking about an issue that quite literally only affects females.
00:12:07.160 Um, Jeanette Towie, who is 66, um, she's someone who has suffered with endometriosis since she was 15 and she's had five miscarriages due to it.
00:12:18.540 Um, she said she was sickened by the appointment.
00:12:21.640 And truthfully, I think that's how a lot of women who saw this felt, um, the last issue here to talk about, uh, is the sorority case.
00:12:35.080 Um, a lot of you might remember, uh, there's a lawsuit at University of Wyoming, uh, that ensued after Artemis Langford, a man, uh, joined the KKG sorority, Kappa Kappa Gamma.
00:12:47.500 Um, after filing the lawsuit, I believe there were six witnesses, six plaintiffs, these girls who were part of the sorority, uh, signed onto this lawsuit.
00:12:55.840 Um, ultimately a month or so back, the judge came back and said that he didn't want to be the one to decide what a woman is, uh, kind of like our sitting Supreme Court justice, um, who, which hilariously enough, when Marsha Blackburn, Senator Blackburn asked her, you know, uh, well, what is a woman essentially?
00:13:14.640 She couldn't answer because she said she's not a biologist.
00:13:19.020 Uh, well, guess what, Ketanji Brown Jackson, I'm not a veterinarian, but I know what a dog is.
00:13:27.140 Uh, that's the silliest thing I've ever heard for, for someone to not be able to answer that question.
00:13:31.800 But anyways, that's what the judge in regard to this lawsuit said.
00:13:34.900 Um, so these girls, they decided they were going to re-strategize and continue litigation in a different capacity, which is what they're doing.
00:13:43.340 Um, two long-time sorority alumni, um, women who have donated to the sorority, to Kappa Kappa Gamma, um, for many years were part of the sorority themselves.
00:13:54.620 Um, they have now been removed, expelled from the organization after advocating that membership be restricted to biological women only.
00:14:03.360 Um, they were expelled on the grounds of supporting and fundraising for the lawsuit.
00:14:08.820 This is quite literally retaliation against women, uh, and it's supposed to be an organization meant for women.
00:14:16.200 Uh, if a sorority won't even defend women's faces and women's rights, then who will?
00:14:23.300 Well, like, uh, that, that is mind-boggling to me.
00:14:27.260 Kind of like now, uh, the National Organization of Women, uh, who have totally abandoned women.
00:14:34.060 Uh, notice there's a common theme here.
00:14:36.300 I would say it's a sad day, uh, when women are expelled from, again, a women's organization simply because they express their displeasure for having, or a male, um, allowed membership, allowed to live in their house, allowed to shower in the same room.
00:14:53.300 Um, with these girls, tyranny has come of age, is what this is.
00:14:59.200 Um, people are no longer allowed to speak their minds, um, to think for themselves, to, to, they have to apologize for feeling how they feel.
00:15:07.700 And they're ostracized if they should even stand behind common sense.
00:15:13.640 Um, but kudos to those girls, the plaintiffs, the witnesses, the alumni, fighting to preserve sisterhood, um, their sorority, which, sisterhood, I say that.
00:15:24.740 These girls were promised sisterhood.
00:15:26.240 Uh, and unfortunately, they got the brother that they never wanted.
00:15:30.800 Um, I think it would be a good idea to kind of do these, these weekly episodes, maybe a couple months, once, twice a month or so, um, highlighting different issues going on.
00:15:42.860 Because, again, uh, a lot of people don't know that these things are happening, uh, and I believe it's due time that the public, uh, both men and women, uh, coaches, female athletes, medical professionals, just concerned common sense Americans, um, they need to know about these things.
00:16:01.260 Uh, because that's how we find our voice, uh, is when we're fed up, uh, when we say enough is enough, we roll up our sleeves and say no.
00:16:09.340 Um, so it's important to stay up to date on the different things going on, um, so you can expect some more of these videos.
00:16:18.060 Um, super excited to continue the college tour the rest of this week again, um, finishing up today at Texas A&M.
00:16:25.000 And tomorrow at Radford University spoke at Princeton yesterday, which for an Ivy League, uh, actually went surprisingly, surprisingly well.
00:16:33.100 Um, lots of their athletes were there, um, who compete, uh, for University of Princeton.
00:16:38.140 So super cool stuff going on.
00:16:40.500 Um, I thank you all for tuning in, um, make sure you download, uh, subscribe anywhere where you get your podcasts, um, Apple, Spotify, make sure you go to outkick.com to check out the podcast.
00:16:55.000 Thank you guys very much for tuning in and I will see you next week.