Another MENTALLY ILL MAN crushes WOMEN at College School Swim Meet - breaks record

I guess some people don't know the difference between giving a blood sample and receiving an injection. Figures...

Some people don't understand that both are considered invasive procedures. Figures that, like Libhater, most are low IQ and/or poorly educated.
 
This is what Biden did to Nixon's Title IX.

"In 2021, President Biden directed the Department in both Executive Order 13988 on Preventing and Combating Discrimination on the Basis of Gender Identity or Sexual Orientation and Executive Order 14021 on Guaranteeing an Educational Environment Free from Discrimination on the Basis of Sex, Including Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity to review its current regulations to ensure they fully implement Title IX's protection against sex discrimination."

https://www.ed.gov/news/press-relea...directed,of Sex, Including Sexual Orientation

Socialism is nonhereditary monarchy. Sometimes hereditary like in the Hermit Kingdom of the Atheists and Cuba.

What is YOUR definition of Socialism?
Perhaps you should read your link in total in order to understand title IX?
 
Perhaps you should read your link in total in order to understand title IX?

Review it to make sure it is in compliance with Biden's new Executive Order 13988 and Executive Order 14021

Learn to read, moron. :palm:
 
When will the Power Lesbians speak out and support real women. :palm:

"A transgender swimmer at Ramapo College of New Jersey broke a women's school record over the weekend after competing for the men's team for three years.

Meghan Cortez-Fields won first place and broke a school record in the 100-yard butterfly with a time of 57.22 at the Cougar Splash Invitational, a two-day meet between six schools in Dallas, Pennsylvania. She also came in first place in the 200-yard individual medley and earned second place in the 200-yard butterfly.


https://www.foxnews.com/sports/trans-swimmer-breaks-nj-college-record-switching-mens-team-womens
I used to drive past Ramapo College all the time. A pretty small school with app. 6000 students.

This Texas native is competing against women because he was probably middle of the pack when competing against men.

He's competing under old trans regulations, and will have to meet more stringent requirements if the team advances to championship competition.

Don't lose any sleep over this. It's a tiny college and we'll probably never hear this name again. The other events he participated in didn't yield spectacular results.


https://www.outsports.com/trans/202...mapo-college-penn-new-jersey-trans-athlete-d3
 
Review it to make sure it is in compliance with Biden's new Executive Order 13988 and Executive Order 14021

Learn to read, moron. :palm:
You really are a moron, aren't you? There is nothing to comply with, idiot.

Why do you consistently refuse to read your links before you post?

I even used huge font to make it easier for you
 
You really are a moron, aren't you? There is nothing to comply with, idiot.

Why do you consistently refuse to read your links before you post?

I even used huge font to make it easier for you

What do you think this means ...

" review its current regulations to ensure they fully implement"

???
 
What do you think this means ...

" review its current regulations to ensure they fully implement"

???
Idiot. You really are an idiot.

If you don't understand what he's telling them to implement, then you aren't qualified to discuss title IX.

How can you be so fucking stupid?
 
That doesn't make it any better for the women this man beat. :palm:
I agree, but Division III is comprised of smaller schools. They don't offer scholarships, so the women who compete are probably more interested in an education than excelling in sports.

Misericordia is a small school that puts out quality physical therapists, among other things. Their enrollment is about 2k.

I don't think their swimmers are concerned about losing to a dude.
 
That's a VERY interesting question.

There are several different prevalent motivations for people in competitive sports.

Some people have what's know as fierce competitive extinct.
I never felt the need to measure my penis against the next next man's.
I never gave a enough of a damn about the next man.
I like dogs.

Some people have a deep seated desire for recognition.
They wish to be appreciated for existing. For having their abilities recognized and admired.
That doesn't sound much like me either.
On a really, really bad day, I've been known to curse my parents for my existing.
Only a tiny percentage of the people walking the planet have ever known who I am,
and that works fine for me.

Next item. The remuneration for success in sports can be generous.
That's a motivation for many athletes.
Some see it as their only likely conduit to a comfortable or perhaps even privileged lifestyle.
My purses from small time pro boxing paid for my gasoline card, my dates,
and my horse betting money.
It wouldn't have been enough for books and tuition, I don't think.
If I had to actually live on it,
I'd wash down a bottleful of seconal capsules with a fifth of Scotch.

So now I've crossed off three of the biggest motivators for athletes.

So what was mine?

Well, I hated jock culture in school, so schools sports were out.
I loved watching boxing with my dad, and playing golf with my uncles.
There were my competitive and recreational sports, both of them, right before my eyes.

I participated because I loved doing it it. That's it.
It wasn't the competition with others. It wasn't recognition. It wasn't material reward.
It was the joy of pursuing excellence at something that was fun.

I learned that maximum attainable excellence
can only come from the relentless pursuit of unattainable perfection.
An Italian football coach from Wisconsin said that, and it turned out to be true.
He also should have mentioned that you're more willing to work at something
at which you turn out to be pretty good.

I hated both exercise and dieting more than any other person who's ever lived,
but I enjoyed boxing enough to do both beyond a level
than a non-athlete has to even consider.

I did the roadwork and the gym work,
but sometimes cheated on the dieting
and turned to diuretics and laxatives to make weight for fights.
Then I'd still beat my opponent in that weakened condition.
IDIOT FUCKING NIFTY.

And then came the graduation and the Army
and then came the Gestapo after that
and that became a time when boxing needed to become a spectator sport again.

Recreational golf was still fun until my back gave out a couple of years ago.
That was a bummer.,
but I've got my family, including the Avatar, so I'm good.
I always participated in sports in HS...why practice a 5AM before school if you don't have winning every once in a while in the back of your mind? And I did occasionally... :) I've always taught or coached, even from pretty young age... (coaching and teaching are family things...) I love HS sports... I still do....I wanted them to be fun, but a learning experience for the kids (you can benefit So much from being on teams)...and kids who are active are healthier and generally do better in school (to stay eligible;)) One rule I would never break, however...no boys on my girls teams...there's no rhyme or reason...
(Speaking of dogs...those competitions are pretty extreme sometimes...talk about fierce...lol)
 
I always participated in sports in HS...why practice a 5AM before school if you don't have winning every once in a while in the back of your mind? And I did occasionally... :) I've always taught or coached, even from pretty young age... (coaching and teaching are family things...) I love HS sports... I still do....I wanted them to be fun, but a learning experience for the kids (you can benefit So much from being on teams)...and kids who are active are healthier and generally do better in school (to stay eligible;)) One rule I would never break, however...no boys on my girls teams...there's no rhyme or reason...
(Speaking of dogs...those competitions are pretty extreme sometimes...talk about fierce...lol)

I find it interesting how your experience with high school sports was so radically different from what I saw in them.

Perhaps it's because I went to a private prep school.

I saw kids who thought they were entitled to bully anyone weaker than them,
who thought they were special, even if they had to pretend to be literate,
and who were given preferential treatment by faculty.

I saw kids in locker rooms discuss their female acquaintances in ways that I would not discuss
the little creatures that I've called an exterminator to deal with.

And I saw kids stupid enough to think that they could pull that shit with me.

That resulted in my not being welcome on teams
whose beloved players found themselves physically indisposed
due to taking a disrespectful and belligerent attitude with me.

I lasted one year in private prep school,
and when I got back to where I belonged,
people knew me as well as I knew them.

Then I found somewhere better to enjoy sports, not on teams,
with better athletes who were also better people.
And where your skin in the game was,
make a stupid mistake and get punched in the face with complete legitimacy.

Private university [at least in Boston] was so incredibly different than private prep school.
Do your own thing.
Everything is cool.
Different strokes for different folks.

The people in process--what I call kids--were now pretty close to being fully assembled people.

Then again, people have different sensibilities.

You probably saw things that you considered normal
and that I considered deplorable.

Kids will be kids never flew with me, even when I was one myself.
You had to strive to have class.

I grew up in the North End where among business people,
we were taught to be exquisitely polite and formal
without being even the slightest bit deferential.
Polite was NOT kowtowing. It was not having grown up NEAR a barn.

Respect had to be forfeited, not earned.
It was an entitlement, and one both offered it and expected it on that basis.

If it was forfeited, however, we didn't believe response had to be proportional.
 
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I find it interesting how your experience with high school sports was so radically different from what I saw in them.

Perhaps it's because I went to a private prep school.

I saw kids who thought they were entitled to bully anyone weaker than them,
who thought they were special, even if they had to pretend to be literate,
and who were given preferential treatment by faculty.

I saw kids in locker rooms discuss their female acquaintances in ways that I would not discuss
the little creatures that I've called an exterminator to deal with.

And I saw kids stupid enough to think that they could pull that shit with me.

That resulted in my not being welcome on teams
whose beloved players found themselves physically indisposed
due to taking a disrespectful and belligerent attitude with me.

I lasted one year in private prep school,
and when I got back to where I belonged,
people knew me as well as I knew them.

Then I found somewhere better to enjoy sports, not on teams,
with better athletes who were also better people.
And where your skin in the game was,
make a stupid mistake and get punched in the face with complete legitimacy.

Private university [at least in Boston] was so incredibly different than private prep school.
Do your own thing.
Everything is cool.
Different strokes for different folks.

The people in process--what I call kids--were now pretty close to being fully assembled people.

Then again, people have different sensibilities.

You probably saw things that you considered normal
and that I considered deplorable.

Kids will be kids never flew with me, even when I was one myself.
You had to strive to have class.

I grew up in the North End where among business people,
we were taught to be exquisitely polite and formal
without being even the slightest bit differential.
Polite was NOT kowtowing. It was not having grown up NEAR a barn.

Respect had to be forfeited, not earned.
It was an entitlement, and one both offered it and expected it on that basis.

If it was forfeited, however, we didn't believe response had to be proportional.
I'm absolutely sure our experiences were radically different...pretty much the opposite....Sports and coaching were just a part of our family (my dad taught HS...and coached) No prep school experiences until I started teaching and coaching...and then I did see some of what you mention...I could talk about that...and schools and sports in general for hours...and obviously that's not possible....lol...But that was my life...and still is on occasion...
You'd have to live it to understand it...that's why I just accept what you say for what it's worth...that was your life...there's nothing for me to question....
I've always asked that you do the same with me...you would have Hated what I did for a living...and I'm guessing, would have labeled much of it deplorable...(and wouldn't have lasted in my schools for more than a day, if that...lol...I wouldn't have lasted in your union meetings for an hour...)
I loved what I did, however...and wouldn't do a thing differently...
(I'm still pretty formal and polite, btw...you won't see me curse here, for example...How is it that we were both brought up to be respectful...and then...;))
 
.How is it that we were both brought up to be respectful...and then...;))

It's not what you say but how you say it, TOP.

Profanity and even the most vile obscenity,
expressed with sincerity and good grammar,
is more respectful
than inflicting upon someone any manner of sentiment
while sounding like an insufferable idiot.

I'm not good with kids.
I know it.

I could feel the veins popping out of my head when I coached Little League.

My son would look back at me from the on deck circle,
trying to suppress an open laugh,
because he understood the effect
that his teammates on the bench were having on me.

He could be a ball-breaking little prick that way,
but at least we both understood what was going on.
He was brought up by Nifty and the Gestapo.

I should have opened a parenting school.

The Gestapo and I were both blessed
to have extremely loving and supportive parents.

Yet we're both sure that we were even better at it than were our parents.
We're not suppose to emulate our parents.
We're supposed to improve on what they accomplished with us.

If Boston kids were making me break out in a rash,
kids brought up by Middle American parents
may have been the death blow to what remains of my sanity.
I just got a chill thinking about it.:whoa:
 
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It's not what you say but how you say it, TOP.

Profanity and even the most vile obscenity,
expressed with sincerity and good grammar,
is more respectful
than inflicting upon someone any manner of sentiment
while sounding like an insufferable idiot.

I'm not good with kids.
I know it.

I could feel the veins popping out of my head when I coached Little League.

My son would look back at me from the on deck circle,
trying to suppress an open laugh,
because he understood the effect
that his teammates on the bench were having on me.

He could be a ball-breaking little prick that way,
but at least we both understood what was going on.
He was brought up by Nifty and the Gestapo.

I should have opened a parenting school.

The Gestapo and I were both blessed
to have extremely loving and supportive parents.

Yet we're both sure that we were even better at it than were our parents.
We're not suppose to emulate our parents.
We're supposed to improve on what they accomplished with us.

If Boston kids were making me break out in a rash,
kids brought up by Middle American parents
may have been the death blow to what remains of my sanity.
I just got a chill thinking about it.:whoa:

You would have hated my school... and everything that I've done my entire life pretty much...lol... let me know if I've disrespected you by "how I'm saying things"... it is certainly not my intent... have I ever not been sincere... and respectful? Or dishonest... To anyone here?
 
You would have hated my school... and everything that I've done my entire life pretty much...lol... let me know if I've disrespected you by "how I'm saying things"... it is certainly not my intent... have I ever not been sincere... and respectful? Or dishonest... To anyone here?
You've repeatedly proved you were never a teacher, TOP. That leaves you being either a "maintenance" worker or a student for "special" kids. Is that where you met the father of your child?
 
I do. I think women's sports should not allow men (even if dickless) to compete with them (although a cunt like you wouldn't be any competition, anyway).

Ask this woman what she thinks

Anonymously, competitors and even teammates of Thomas’s have expressed frustration with the situation. One competitor told the Daily Mail that competing against Thomas was “intimidating” and said she “knew there was no way I would physically be able to beat her in the race or even catch up to her.”

https://news.yahoo.com/transgender-swimmer-lia-thomas-wins-001206560.html?

Yeah, dickhead, it matters. It matters to women.

Yeah, when I run against people much younger than me, I know there’s no way physically that I’ll be able to beat them. I just go out and give it my best. You see, that’s what it’s SUPPOSED to be about, isn’t it?

In the scheme of things, this is a trivial matter. The transgender issue, as well as the drag queen bullshit, is merely the latest iteration of your hate du jour. It used to be primarily gays, but they’ve taken a back seat to this new target of yours.
 
Yeah, when I run against people much younger than me, I know there’s no way physically that I’ll be able to beat them. I just go out and give it my best. You see, that’s what it’s SUPPOSED to be about, isn’t it?

In the scheme of things, this is a trivial matter. The transgender issue, as well as the drag queen bullshit, is merely the latest iteration of your hate du jour. It used to be primarily gays, but they’ve taken a back seat to this new target of yours.

It's not a trivial issue to the girls who are having records taken away... who lose out on being able to participate in a final heat, etc... these girls work hard their entire lives to get to this level in the sport...
 
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