The female athlete said that a male who was not bound by the same standards as the younger women was replaced by a girl's track and field team.
Taylor Sterling of Martin Luther King High School in California made the headlines when she revealed in November 2024 that her athletic director claimed that Proumen's T-shirts resemble wearing swastikas around Jewish students. The shirt said on the front, “Save girls' sports” and “That's common sense. xx≠xy” on the back.
Sterling spoke at a California Legislature meeting recently, telling state legislators that she was “replaced” by a female team by male transfer students who didn't need to attend practice.
“I was taken away from the Varsity Girls' team and replaced by a newly qualified male transfer student who received favorable treatment,” said the 16-year-old. I insisted.
“In late October, male transfer students were given my spot after not being bound by the same strict team requirements as me and the other girls,” continued Sterling. “He didn't have to attend practice while my team and I ran seven miles a day together. After robbing my spot from me that I had acquired, I missed a run with my varsity team in one of the top cross-country invitations of the season.”
The teenager remembered being told he was dressed like a Nazi, and stated the obvious fact that saying “boys and girls are different” is “not hatred or unkind.”
Sterling is filing a lawsuit against the school district, which will be hearing court on May 15th, and California Attorney General Rob Bonta. However, a Democrat majority at the Capitol recently rejected two bills that support the removal of men from women's track and field.
Sterling spoke with his father, Ryan. Fox News About the battles she and her classmates are taking on.
“I asked Taylor and Caitlyn, “Are you ready to deal with this? Can you walk the hallways of her school?” [have people] Do you hate you, call you by name, and call you? “And they were,” his father said.
The female athlete continued to inform the outlet that the requirements for male competitors had changed due to him being “transgender,” but her sacrifice and dedication didn't seem to matter to the manager.
“I don't think it's a safe environment.”
At a Riverside Unified School District board meeting in November, the third student spoke about issues with school administrators regarding men being treated as women.
“These girls feel silent. They feel silent. And when they finally spoke and did something to speak out against it, they were completely stabbed in the back by someone who was told we could support us and help us through this,” the unknown girl said.
After quoting that she felt that the other two girls were one of the nicest people they've “he's ever met,” the 16-year-old peers revealed that she doesn't feel like she's in a safe environment at school.
“It's not ok to have to be in a position where I have to practice and see men in booty shorts. I have to see it around me. As a 16-year-old girl, I don't think it's a safe environment. I don't have anything.”
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