
Men Beat Women For Sport in Our Woke New World
by
“I have never been hit so hard in my life.”
Following the 2024 Olympics opening ceremony’s orgy of Christian-bashing and gender-bending, further controversy went viral after a twenty-five-year-old Algerian who appeared to be male battered an Italian female into literal submission in women’s 66-kilogram division boxing.
Olympic hopeful Angela Carini surrendered after a scant 46 seconds in the ring with a physically more imposing Imane Khelif. In that time she had been hit with a couple of punches, the devasting force of which she later said she had never encountered. The referee announced Khelif as the winner, and moments later Carini fell to her knees in tears, broken by the essential unfairness of having her Olympic dream crushed by the juggernaut of gender ideology.
Speaking after the match, Carini told reporters, “I am heartbroken… I went to the ring to honor my father. I was told a lot of times that I was a warrior but I preferred to stop for my health. I have never felt a punch like this.” Khelif, meanwhile, has since defeated another female contestant, Hungary’s Anna Luca Hamori, and advanced to clinch an Olympic medal.
The images of a devastated Carini sparked worldwide outrage and disgust, including from figures as prominent as Elon Musk and Harry Potter author JK Rowling. Misinformation and accusations flew fast and furious as some claimed Imane Khelif had always been female and competed as a woman, while others noted that Khelif had been disqualified from the International Boxing Association (IBA) 2023 World Boxing Championships for failing gender-eligibility tests. Even as of this writing, the debate still rages online, with some calling Khelif “intersex” and some asserting the boxer has DSD (Differences in Sexual Development), referring to a range of rare conditions in which a person’s genitalia do not necessarily match his or her chromosomes or hormone levels.
But as IBA President Umar Kremlev explained about the gender-eligibility testing Khelif and another boxer, Taiwan’s Lin Yu-Ting, previously failed, “Based on DNA tests, we identified a number of athletes who tried to trick their colleagues into posing as women. According to the results of the tests, it was proved that they have XY chromosomes. Such athletes were excluded from competition.”
The International Olympic Committee, however, uses different eligibility criteria and allowed the pair to compete (Lin Yu-Ting won on Friday and again on Sunday). In a press conference, IOC President Thomas Bach defended their participation: “We have two boxers… who were born as women, raised as women, who have passports as women, who have competed for many years as women. And this is a clear definition of a woman.”
Angry about what he called the “hate speech” in this “politically motivated cultural war” over the fighters, Bach added, “What we see now is that some want to own the definition of who is a woman… And there I can only invite them to come up with a scientific-based new definition of who is a woman.”