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Taylor Starling still remembers the day Her life has changed.
October 22 was He got down from Varsity team until the Varsity junior team at Martin Luther King High School in Riverside, California.
Her place was taken by a trans -aport.
“I felt angry when I was removed from my team for Varsity because I knew that demands were changed for him because he was transgender. I felt like my victim, hard work and commitment was not important to my school administrators because I was a girl. It was easy for me to push me aside and that was hurt,” said Starling Fox News Digital.
“As far as dealing with this, my family and friends were supportive for you. I also know that everything happens for a reason and God has a plan for me. I always try to find good when things are difficult and move on.”
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California athlete girl Taylor Starling. (Secured Fox News Digital)
Now, only five months and two weeks later, at the age of 16, there is much more on its plate than just exercise and homework.
She spoke at the Capitol Capitol building in Sacramento in support of two state accounts for a ban on transcending athletes from girls from girls who broke into protesters of Pro-Trans who gathered against the law.
Her lawsuit against her school district and California Attorney General Rob Bonta has her first court date on May 15th. It is the central part of the months -long movement at their school and the community where students appear every Wednesday wearing “Save Girls Sports” T -shirts, overpaging administrative efforts to prevent it.
However, this is not all a win for her and her family.
Her testimony could not convince the democratic majority to support two laws on the ban on trans athletes. Her mother, a local public school teacher, faces the uncertainty of her school and other across California, potentially lost funding because the state refuses to adhere to the President Donald Trump Executive order to hold males in girls sports.
In March, Starling had to watch her sister Abby Starling lost the 200 -meter race to the same athlete who took his place in the fall.
In addition, the attention she received for her activism in the last few months has arrived with some heavier moments.
“Social media is pretty bad,” her father Ryan Starling told Fox News Digital. “You have 99 positive comments, and then you get the one comment that called her Bigota, called her the word” c “, called her all kinds of names.”
Her family was prepared for a return reaction when they signed up for the fight because they were warned by their lawyer Robert Tyler.
“When we took this case, we had a real heart,” Tyler told Fox News Digital. “I asked Taylor and Kaitlyn” Are you ready to deal with that? Will you be able to walk the corridors at her school and not love you, call you names and call you? “And they were.”
The family entered the war for Trans Athlete’s culture in November, when they filed a lawsuit against the United Sacred Riversida school district, along with their friend and teammate Kaitlyn Slavin. Later, they expanded a lawsuit on Bont in February, in protest against current laws in California, which enables a trance of involvement.
It is a lawsuit that Tyler and the families included Hope set a new precedent of gender in the country after heading for the trial of May 15, because the state legislative body and government Gavin News refuse to make changes, risking the state’s federal reduction.
In California, a law called AB 1266 It has been in force since 2014, giving students California at the school and collegial level the right to “participate in school programs and activities of segregated sex, including athletic teams and competitions, and use facilities in accordance with its gender identity, regardless of gender listed in students.”
This law and dedication to the state that they carry it have already encouraged the return from Trump’s administration. The Linda McMahon Ministry of Education sent an official warning at the end of March in News and the rest of the state, suggesting that federal funding could be reduced to the state if they still allow for transition to involve girls’ sports.
Starings and other California families testify in real time with a potential model of what might soon happen to them how they play around the country in Maine. This country entered the stage as a “earthly zero” in the conflict of trans athletes, since its reluctance in accordance with Trump has already resulted in freezing financing from the USDA last week and more potential sanctions this week.
“Okay,” Ryan Starling said in response to seeing the situation in Maine, knowing that it could soon be played in his country. “This is the only thing that answers is when their financing is said and when it actually affects their pocket books, this is the only thing that will make it change.

High school students Martin Luther King in Riverside, California, carry T-shirts that read “Save Girls Sports” to protest against athletes at the Cross-Country team. (Kindness Sophia Lorey)
“Unfortunately, they may have a little strenuous path with some teachers, but our teachers are resistant.”
Taylor Starling made her role to avoid it when she lobbied in Sacramento last week, providing her story in support of AB 89 and AB 844 accounts.
Instead, the accounts failed to go through, and a democratic set for Rick Fixed independent format compared them to Nazi German practice. For Taylor Starling, it was a comparison that managed to run more than the others in the room, because, according to her lawsuit, school administrators Martin Luther King High compared their “Save Girls Sports” T-shirts in Swastastas in November.
“He already called me athletic director, so I’m somehow used to it so far. But it was a shock for everyone else, because he called everyone else Nazis. I think it caused a great reaction of everyone and they were more willing to speak against it,” she said.
“It was very sad to see a democratic leadership in California could not be pledged for us girls and the rights we deserve.”
So, Taylor and her father had to leave Sacramento and return home to Riversida without any progress in significant legislative changes.
Now they look forward to their first court date.
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Ryan and Taylor Starling of Riverside, California. (Secured Fox News Digital)
Tyler said that in this case they want the court to review the current California law that allows the trans -interference to the girls’ sports and the potentially rules that the law is violating the title IX.
“We want to challenge it and claim that it is a simple violation of the title IX, that it is illegal and we hope that the court will look at it and throw it out,” Tyler said. “We want this case to counteract the proposal that it is time for our school to return, it is time to bring back the sport of our girls, it is time to take common sense.”
The Starling family, the Slavin and Tyler family will seek a step towards a significant judgment on this issue on May 15th.
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