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A California High School women’s volleyball team has lost a match against a team that includes a Trans Trans athlete. Friday evening.
Riverside Poly High School in the county of Riverside, California, announced its confiscation against the Jurupa Valley High School in a press release.
“The Riverside Poly High School women’s volleyball team will not take the field for this evening’s planned match against Jurupa Valley High School,” the statement said.
“This match will be recorded as a packages of the non-bite ranking. We understand that this is disappointing for our athletes, our families and our supporters, and we appreciate the understanding of the community. We remain determined to provide a safe and positive environment for all student-athletes throughout the season.”
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No reason for the confiscation was provided in the press release.
Amanda Vickers, a member of the Board of Directors of the Unified School District of Riverside, told PK Press Club Digital that she thought that the packages is in response to Jurupa Valley, including the Trans and Hernandez athlete on his list. Hernandez was registered on Jurupa Valley’s list last season and would be on the list again this year.
“I think it is because they play Ab Hernandez, and that a decision was made that the students did not want,” said Vickers. “I received a message yesterday that there [were] parents [of players] who wore shirts “save sports of girls”. They were therefore somehow prepared for a demonstration today. “”
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Vickers added that she thought that the package was important for the safety of female athletes, referring to the former volleyball player at Lycée Payton McNabb, who suffered permanent brain damage when she was struck with a peak of a trans athlete in 2022.
“What is is that there is a difference between organic girls and organic boys. And, tonight, the girls of the Riverside Polly high school, they will not end like Payton McNabb,” said Vickers.
Jurupa Unified School District provided a declaration to PK Press Club Digital sending confiscation.
“We have been informed that the Poly High School riverside canceled the volleyball volleyball match from Lycée Jurupa Valley. They have not disclosed the reason. We have no additional comments at the moment,” the statement said.
PK Press Club Digital contacted the Jurupa Valley High School-Chef the volleyball coach Liana Manu and Hernandez for an answer.
Riverside became a controversial center involving Trans athletes in female sports last year during the highly publicized season of Hernandez and after a trial by two daughters of the Martin Luther King high school who allegedly alleged that a Trans athlete took one of the female university places in the cross team. The students of the school then began to wear “Save Girls Sports” t-shirts each week in response after school administrators compared the shirts with swastikas, according to the trial.
Hernandez was at the center of a national media storm in May during the athlete race to an athletics championship of California’s girls. The post-season meetings in which Hernandez participated in demonstrations by female athletes and their families who often wore “Save Girls Sports” shirts.
Hernandez’s race apparently attracted a response from President Donald Trump, who published a social message of truth this week leading to the state final suggesting that the state did not allow the Trans athlete to compete. Hernandez won the championship in the height of girls ‘height and a triple jump during a competition that saw an LGBTQ protester arrested for allegedly assaulted a conservative activist and a flying plane over her head with a banner who said “no boys in girls’ sports”.
The United States Ministry of Justice then filed a complaint against California Department of Education (CDE) and California Interscholastic Federation (CIF) for its policies which allowed biological men to compete in girls sports through the state despite the signing of an executive decree in February to prohibit it.
A Bipartite survey By the public Policy Institute of California has found that the majority of California residents oppose the organic athletes of males participating in female sports.
This figure included more than 70% of Parents of the State School.
“Most Californians argue forced transgender athletes to compete in the teams corresponding to the sex attributed to them at birth,” said the survey.
“The solid majority of adults (65%) and probable voters (64%) argue that transgender athletes compete on teams that correspond to the sexual relations allocated to them, and not on the sex with which they identify. An overwhelming majority of public schools (71%) support such a requirement.”