ADVERTISEMENT

Will one of y'all libs explain this to the rest of us. Is she a he or is he a she? LMAO

WhatWouldObamaDo

HB MVP
Gold Member
Sep 3, 2015
1,101
278
83
If Obozo had a son! lol lol lol
LIBERALISM IS A MENTAL DISORDER!

Transgender boy wins controversial girls state title


KRISTIE RIEKEN
Associated PressFebruary 25, 2017
  • b3110a615e46496ab415bbcbf281ce44.jpg.cf.webp
  • dcca4b939d564e99a1708023c0278633.jpg.cf.webp
  • a87c60c6a6af455fbd70f2355c924668.jpg.cf.webp
1 / 3
Mack Beggs, left, a transgender wrestler from Euless Trinity High School, stands with his coach Travis Clark during a quarterfinal match against Mya Engert, of Amarillo Tascosa, during the State Wrestling Tournament, Friday, Feb. 24, 2017, in Cypress, Texas. Beggs was born a girl and is transitioning to male but wrestles in the girls division. ( Melissa Phillip/Houston Chronicle via AP)



CYPRESS, Texas (AP) — A 17-year-old transgender boy completed an undefeated season Saturday by winning a controversial Texas state girls wrestling title in an event clouded by criticism from those who believe the testosterone he's taking as he transitions from female to male created an unfair advantage.

The family of Mack Beggs has said he would rather be wrestling boys, but state policy calls for students to wrestle against the gender listed on their birth certificates. So the junior from Euless Trinity beat Chelsea Sanchez 12-2 in the 110-pound weight class to improve to 56-0 and earn the championship.



Flanked by his teammates after the team won second place in Class 6A, the largest division in Texas, Beggs broke his silence.

"I wouldn't be here today if it weren't for my teammates," he said. "That's honestly what the spotlight should have been on is my teammates. The hard work that I put in in the practice room with them, beside me — we trained hard every, single day. Every, single day and that's where the spotlight should have been on. Not me. All of these guys. Because I would not be here without them."

He then lifted the gold medal hanging on his neck to the assembled cameras and shared a parting thought after all that he'd been through this weekend.

"Hard work ethic pays off," he said. "Just saying."

Beggs fell to his knees for a moment after the win as a mixture of cheers and boos rained down on him. He then hugged his coach and left the mat.

He had a bit of fun with his fellow wrestlers at the medal ceremony when he counted down from three and all six of the top finishers posed by doing a dab on the medal stand.

Beggs, who reached the state tournament after two opponents forfeited, was dogged throughout the event by questions about whether his testosterone treatments made him too strong to wrestle fairly against girls.


The University Interscholastic League, which oversees athletics in Texas public schools, enacted the birth certificate policy Aug. 1. And while Beggs' family has said he wanted to compete against boys, UIL deputy director Jamey Harrison, who refused to address Beggs directly, said they had not received a request to change divisions from any athlete at this competition.

Harrison believes that the outcome of the tournament was fair, despite concerns about Beggs.

"Nothing that has happened at this year's wrestling championships has the UIL reconsidering its rules because quite frankly we don't believe that any issues being reported on are really a product of UIL rules," he said.

Beggs pinned Kailyn Clay earlier Saturday to reach the final. That was after he beat Taylor Latham and Mya Engert handily on Friday to reach the semifinals.

In the semifinals, the match was halted for a couple of minutes because Beggs had a bloody nose. Trainers finally managed to stop the bleeding and the fight resumed. Not long after, Beggs slammed Clay on the mat and pinned her.

He and Clay shared a long hug before an official raised Beggs' arm to signal victory, and the wrestler scurried off the mat. Clay's coached shouted to reporters that she "did not have permission" to talk to them after her loss and both of her parents declined comment.

Beggs' participation comes at a crucial moment, with the public and politicians debating the growing belief that gender is fluid. This week, the Trump administration announced an end to federal protections that allowed transgender students to use facilities based on their gender identity, leaving states and school districts to determine their own policies.

And in Texas, lawmakers are considering a bill similar to HB2, the North Carolina law that prompted the NBA to move this year's All-Star Game out of that state. If passed, the Texas version, called SB6, would require transgender people to use the bathroom of their "biological sex."
 
The sad thing for her is that she asked to be allowed to wrestle boys as that is what she sees herself as, a boy. But this is Texas. And Texas being Texas held firm in believing the conservative dogma and would not allow it based on nothing but ignorance. This is the purest example of fear yet in America...and the saddest part about the whiole thing is its the kid that will suffer most.
 
Allow her to play boys then they have to allow boys to play girls. It's really not that difficult to figure out what could go wrong.
 
Allow her to play boys then they have to allow boys to play girls. It's really not that difficult to figure out what could go wrong.
I disagree, I'm having trouble seeing what could go wrong. Especially now that I know we've been doing this in Iowa for some time.
 
Allow her to play boys then they have to allow boys to play girls. It's really not that difficult to figure out what could go wrong.

Agree, if there was no girl division then she should be allowed to wrestle boys. When her transition is complete then he should compete against boys. Is it ok for a girl to play on a boys basketball team when there is a girls team? No, I don't think so.
 
Agree, if there was no girl division then she should be allowed to wrestle boys. When her transition is complete then he should compete against boys. Is it ok for a girl to play on a boys basketball team when there is a girls team? No, I don't think so.
So the problem is basically school resource utilization? If you think it's fine for him to wrestle with the boys absent any alternative, you clearly don't think wrestling with boys is much of a problem inherently.
 
Allow her to play boys then they have to allow boys to play girls. It's really not that difficult to figure out what could go wrong.
I disagree, I'm having trouble seeing what could go wrong. Especially now that I know we've been doing this in Iowa for some time.
For starters, men would dominate women's sports. Mediocre men's players would dominate the WNBA, LPGA, women's tennis, women's soccer, women's volleyball, etc.
 
  • Like
Reactions: BrianNole09
This transgender issue is so confusing to me.

Was a "transgender boy" born as a girl or boy? Was she born a boy and is wrestling against the girls?
 
This is what the GOP has become. Though I didn't always agree with their politics, you could have reasonable conversations with them. Now it's just God and guns and genetalia.
 
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest posts

ADVERTISEMENT