First trans NFL cheerleader compares role to becoming doctor, says no one will stop 'this show'
FOX Business' Hillary Vaughn questions White House Press Secretary Karine Jean-Pierre over Biden's position on biological men playing women's sports.
Justine Lindsay, the NFL’s first cheerleader to identity as transgender, wants to influence the next generation and compared becoming a member of the Carolina Panthers TopCats cheerleading squad to other accomplishments like becoming a doctor or nurse.
"I want to change the narrative for my trans sisters and brothers, just to [let them] know that if you have a goal, go for it," the cheerleader said. "Turn that dream into a reality. Be an NFL cheerleader, or a doctor or a nurse or whatever you set your mind to."
Lindsay is starting a second season as a TopCats cheerleader.
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Transgender Carolina Panthers cheerleader Justine Lindsay compared being a cheerleader to being a "doctor" or a "nurse." (Ric Tapia/Icon Sportswire/Eakin Howard/Getty Images)
"Everything that I’m going through now, it’s bigger than me," Lindsay told Elle magazine in an interview from Monday headlined "Loud and Proud."
"I’m setting things up for the younger generation," Lindsay added. "No one is going to stop this show."
The athlete, who was born in North Carolina, also responded directly to the North Carolina Fairness in Women's Sports Act.
"I will fight this until I can’t fight anymore," Lindsay told Elle, in an interview flagged by The Blaze. "It saddens me to see it."
The North Carolina State Legislature recently overrided Democratic Gov. Roy Cooper’s veto of the act, which bans transgender girls and women in middle school, high school and college from joining women’s sports.
Lindsay is


