close
close

Women’s sport is not the only victim of gender confusion

Women’s sport is not the only victim of gender confusion

women's-sports-are-not-the-only-victims-of-

Like everyone else, I am revolted by the images of large men in women’s sports that compromise the safety and integrity of female athletes. However, we must avoid the trap set by certain insidious elements of the “right” who want to focus the entire fight solely on saving women’s sports. This focus is only a logistical absurdity in a larger campaign of gender confusion and social contagion that we must eliminate from our society – a contagion that is more prevalent among women than among men.

As a kid, I never could have imagined that one day a famous Bruce Wayne would stand in front of the camera and call himself “Caitlyn” without batting an eyelid. But what’s even more unimaginable is that in the 90s, I never would have thought that if such a moment did come, the only opposition from the right would be focused on the logistical and fairness arguments regarding women’s and girls’ sports. Today, we see Bruce appearing in ostensibly right-wing media as an advocate for women’s sports while grooming a generation of young people to think it’s okay to dress up as a woman, as long as it’s not in sports.

A society cannot survive an entire generation of women who don’t even know what it means to be a woman.

Let’s be clear: When a famous 6’3″ man steals the essence of femininity by disguising himself and pretending to be a woman, it poses a much larger problem for civilization than simply the dilution of elite women’s professional sport. It harms all women and contributes to the confusion in our society, where femininity is increasingly becoming a lost trait among a generation of girls.

The idea of ​​allowing men to participate in women’s sports is so indefensible, especially because of safety concerns, that I can foresee the demonic forces eventually giving in on this issue. However, this alone will not solve the problem of gender ideology, which affects women more than men, the opposite dynamic to sports parody.

People like Jenner want to label us “outcasts” for not believing in transgender ideology while forcing all of civilization to fight to protect women’s sports, but the data we have shows that this is a much broader social contagion, rooted more in the attack on femininity than in the entry of attention-seeking men into women’s sports.

Take a look at this shocking Gallup survey released earlier this spring:

A few uncomfortable observations are in order.

First, transgenderism has emerged undeniably in recent generations, with other sexual identities exploding from a tiny base, particularly among Gen Z. Anyone who believes that God created a genetic glitch around 2000-2005 is beyond gullible. The reality is that social contagion, normalized by the very behavior Jenner seeks to portray to a conservative audience, is fueling these trends. It doesn’t take a genius to figure out that without social media, such numbers wouldn’t exist.

Second, social contagion appears to be exponentially more pronounced among women. Currently, 28.5% of Gen Z women identify with non-procreative sexual cosplay, nearly three times the rate of men. Clearly, people who identify as “bisexual” are driving much of this trend, indicating that a generation of girls is being raised with greater confusion about their femininity than boys are about their masculinity. Furthermore, contrary to the sports-centric discourse on transgenderism, the prevalence of people identifying as transgender among Gen Z women is more than twice that of men.

Throughout history, far more men than women have had same-sex relationships, but today the dynamic has completely reversed. Among the small cohort of the “Silent Generation” attracted to people of the same sex, gay men outnumbered lesbians three to one. Moving to Generation Z, 2.8% of men identify as gay, while 5.4% of women identify as lesbian.

Again, young women are much more likely to think they are men than the other way around. This confusion is the legacy of feminism and its war on femininity.

Third, sexual confusion was much more pronounced among men in previous generations, but it is now much more prevalent among women. There is nothing mysterious about this change. Before the rise of feminist sexual discrimination, sexual confusion affected mostly men. It does not take a genius to figure out why men have a higher prevalence of certain sexual behaviors. It is also worth noting that after the initial surge following World War II, the prevalence of self-described “gay men” has remained relatively stable.

The confusion is clearly on the women’s side, the result of years of instilling masculine energy in women and convincing them that they are essentially men with only superficial physical differences. Feminism has given rise to a whole generation of people who define themselves as bisexual, with the most extreme elements rejecting even the few obvious differences between the sexes and calling themselves transgender.

The battle we face goes far beyond excluding men from women’s sports. We need to address the entire phenomenon of transgenderism, whether it’s pronouns, drag shows, extreme co-ed culture, or other disruptions to societal norms. However, the Republican Party has seemingly removed all of that from its platform, focusing the entire transgender issue solely on women’s sports.

It is truly evil, unfair and dangerous for men to ruin years of training for female athletes. But a society can survive without women’s sports – or even men’s sports. A society can’t survive without an entire generation of women who don’t even know what it means to be a woman.

The grotesque and graphic images of men beating women in combat sports should inspire us to ban men from stealing femininity entirely. To do this, we must restore greatness to femininity and femininity to women, by reclaiming these divinely ordained virtues from the clutches of feminists.