It's XX, Real Women's Day, and here's how you can celebrate
Former NCAA swimmer Riley Gaines reacts to the recent ruling to allow trans athletes on women’s sports teams on ‘Fox & Friends Weekend.’
Happy Real Women’s Day!
What does this mean? Let’s go back to March 2023. If you didn't know, March is traditionally labeled Women's History Month, an annual observance to recognize and celebrate the unique contributions of women throughout history.
Growing up in a family of athletes, ESPN was always on in our house. One day last March, while barely paying attention to the TV, I heard one of my favorite female ESPN commentators discussing swimming – a rare topic on the network. It was part of their Women's History Month special. My interest piqued. Which swimmer were they going to highlight? Katie Ledecky? One of the Walsh Sisters? Kate Douglas?
Demonstrators cheer during the speaking program at the "Our Bodies, Our Sports" rally for the 50th anniversary of Title IX at Freedom Plaza on June 23, 2022, in Washington, DC. The rally called on President Biden to put restrictions on transgender females and "advocate to keep women's sports female." (Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images)
No. The network began to tout off about what they called a "woman" who has overcome immense persecution to achieve the seemingly impossible by winning a national title. Of course, they were honoring Lia Thomas, a man who was average at best in his rightful category where he swam three years prior, in this special.
ERASING WOMEN: OLYMPIC WOMEN’S BOXING, US PASSPORTS AND BIDEN-HARRIS’ TITLE IX CHANGES
But it wasn’t just ESPN that had become ideologically captured.
Hershey’s featured Fae Johnstone, a man, as the face of their International Women's Day campaign, Her for She.
The White House, specifically........
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