A group of women athletes from colleges affected by transgender inclusion will testify in a legal battle between the NCAA and the State of Texas on Tuesday.
After the NCAA has changed its eligibility policy between the sexes to prevent organic men from participating in female sports to comply with President Donald Trump’s executive decree, the question of the issue, many pro-women militants have spoken with concerns that the new policy does not go far enough to prevent trans athletes.
At the end of February, the Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton continued the NCAA for his recent revised policy, demanding that the Director Body begins compulsory sexual screening.
The first hearing of the trial is on Tuesday and will include the testimony of the former volleyball player at the State University of San Jose, Brooke Slusser, and his mother, Kim Slusser, the former Caroline State University Kylee Alons and the former swimmer of the University of Kentucky Kaitlyn Wheeler.
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These athletes are already involved in another trial, led by Riley Gaines and the Independent Council on Female Sports (icons), against the NCAA for its previous gender policy which allowed the Trans athletes to compete as women, citing their own experiences with trans inclusion.
Slusser is the most recent of the group to enter the battle against the inclusion trans into female sports after joining the duct trial in September for his experience with his Balaire Fleming Transgender teammate. Slusser allegedly alleged that SJSU did not reveal the birth of Fleming’s birth when they shared changing and sleeping areas.
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Alons, 31 times All-American champion and double NCAA champion, and Wheeler shared a cloakroom and a swimming pool with the former transgender swimmer of the University of Pennsylvania Lia Thomas at the NCAA 2022 championships.
Now, the three athletes will seek to share their experiences before the courts while they are trying to provide compulsory gender tests to the NCAA and to prevent future female athletes from having similar experiences.
The Paxton’s trial has reflected many of the complaints of criticisms according to which current policy is too indulgent and could allow trans athletes to participate in female sports with a modified birth certificate.
The Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is expressed during a press conference in Dallas on June 22, 2017. (AP photo / Tony Gutierrez, file)
In the United States, 44 states authorize birth certificates to modify a person’s birthday. The only states that do not allow this are Florida, Texas, Kansas, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Montana. There are 14 states that allow sexual relations to be changed on a birth certificate without any required medical documentation, including California, New York, Massachusetts and Michigan.
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“In practice, the lack of sexual procedure of the NCAA has made it possible (and will continue to allow) of biological men to participate surreptitiously in the sports categories of” women “, indicates the trial. In addition, Paxton maintains that NCAA allows” many opportunities for biological men to modify their birth archives and participate in female sports “.
Paxton filed a complaint against the NCAA in December during its previous policy. In this trial, Paxton accused the NCAA of “engaging in false, misleading and misleading practices by marketing sporting events as competitions of women ” only to provide consumers with mixed sexual competitions where biological men compete with biological women.”
“The NCAA intentionally and knowingly endangers the security and well-being of women by deceiving trumper women’s competitions in mixed competitions,” PAXTON said in a statement. “When people watch a women’s volleyball match, for example, they expect to see women playing against other women, not biological men who claim to be something they are not. Radical” gender theory “has no place in university sports.”
NCAA has provided a declaration to PK Press Club Digital on criticism and insisting that the modified birth certificates will not be accepted.
“Policy is clear that there is no available derogation, and students-assholes assigned to birth may not compete in a female team with modified birth certificates or other forms of identity,” the press release said. “Players of male practice have been a must for university sports for decades, especially in women’s basketball and the association will continue to take this into politics.”
These details are not described on the official page of the NCAA policy, and it does not make any specific reference to the birth certificate, identity changes or women’s scholarships that go to trans athletes.




