Brutal, unfair Olympic beating tragic result of letting biological men compete in women’s sports
Former NFL sideline reporter Michele Tafoya joins Fox Across America to give her take on Algerian boxer Imane Khelif forcing Italy's Angela Carini to quit after just 46 seconds during a match at the 2024 Paris Olympics.
Do you enjoy watching men beating up women? I don’t. Any exceptions? Not that I can think of.
But the International Olympics Committee have decided otherwise. Watching men beating up women is fine so long as it’s in a huge stadium and televised for all the world to see. Got it?
I am referring, of course, to the boxing-ring bout in Paris Thursday, where the female Italian athlete Angela Carini was pitted against an opponent named Imane Khelif.
ITALIAN BOXER BREAKS SILENCE AFTER ABANDONING OLYMPIC BOUT AGAINST FIGHTER IN GENDER CONTROVERSY
In the past, Khelif has been deemed to be "biologically male." That is as a bloke, a dude, a man, a fella. All those terms that we used to know how to use, but which seem to have become so complicated suddenly.
Last year, Khelif was disqualified from the world championships after failing testosterone tests. It seems he was found to have higher levels of testosterone than is quite normal for a woman.
But that doesn’t seem to have been a problem for the IOC. Which perhaps isn’t surprising at an Olympics which started with an opening ceremony focused on a bizarre veneration of bearded ladies and balls-out drag-queens.
For years, campaigners and female athletes have warned about the presence of biological men in women’s sports. In recent years, this has covered almost every known field.
A side-by-side of Angela Carini of Team Italy and Imane Khelif of Team Algeria at the Olympic Games on August 01, 2024, in Paris, France. (Getty Images)
Some of these cases have made