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A group of athletes of women affected by transgender inclusion will testify to the UA legal battle between NCAA and Texas State on Tuesday.
After NCAA has changed its policy of eligibility for gender service to prevent biological males From the competition in women’s sports to respect for the executive order of President Donald Trump, February 5, who deals with this issue, many activists for women talked with concern that the new policy is not going far enough to stay out.
At the end of February, the Texas State Attorney Ken Paxton sued NCAA for a recent revised policy, demanding that the management body began a mandatory pierce of sex.
The first hearing of the lawsuit is Tuesday and will include the testimony of former Volleyball University of San Jose State University Brooke cases And her mother, Kim, Kim, a former state -owned University of North Carolina Kylee Alons and former swimmer of the University of Kentucky Kaitlynn Wheeler.
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These athletes are already involved in another lawsuit, led by Riley Gaines and the Independent Council for Women’s Sports (Icons)Against NCAA, because of her past gender policy that has enabled trances to compete as women, citing their own experience with Trans inclusion.
The case is the latest group that has entered the battle against the transition in women’s sports after joining Gaines’s lawsuit in September for her experience with a transgender teammate Blaire Fleming. The case said Sisa did not reveal Fleming’s sex of birth as they shared areas to change and sleep.
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Alons, 31-puta-all-American and double NCAA champion, and wheeler shared a locker room and a pool with a former swimmer of transgender swimmers of the University of Pennsylvania Lia Thomas at the 2022 NCAA Championship.
Now three athletes will strive to share their experiences in court as they try to enter a must -have testing of NCAA sexes and prevent future athletes to go through similar experiences.
Paxton’s lawsuit reflects many critics complaints that the current policy is too milder and could enable trances to compete in women’s sports with a modified leaf.

Texas State Attorney Ken Paxton speaks at a press conference in Dallas on June 22, 2017. (AP Photo/Tony Gutierrez, file)
In the United States, 44 countries allow their natives to change their native gender. The only states that do not allow this are Florida, Texas, Kansas, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Montana. There are 14 countries that allow gender to change the native list without the necessary medical records, including California, New York, Massachusetts and Michigan.
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“In practice, NCAA’s lack of sex screen has allowed (and will continue to allow) biological men to overpower in” women’s “sports categories,” the lawsuit said. In addition, Paxton claims that NCAAs allows “abundant possibilities for biological men to change their birth records and participate in women’s sports.”
In December, Paxton filed a lawsuit against NCAA for his previous policy. Paxton accused NCAA in this suit of “joining fake, deceptive and misleading practice of marketing sports events as” women’s “competitions only to provide consumers with mixed sexual competitions in which biological males compete against biological women.”
“NCAA intentionally and consciously threatens the safety and well -being of women deceptively changing women’s competitions to joint competitions,” Paxton said in a statement. “When people look at, for example, women’s volleyball expects women who play against other women, not biological males who pretend to be something they are not. The radical” gender theory “has no place in sports from college.”
Ncaa He made a statement to Fox News Digital, which addresses criticism and insisting that the changed gender leaves will not be accepted.
“The politics is clear that there is no renunciation at the disposal, and students-athletes assigned to men at birth may not compete in the women’s team with modified birth sheets or other forms of ID,” the statement said. “The players of men’s practices have been in college sports for decades, especially in women’s basketball, and the association will continue to calculate it in politics.”
These specificities are not listed on the official NCAA policy pageand does not give special references to the birth certificate, amendments or female scholarships that will transfer athletes.
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