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HS Girl Gives Powerful Testimony About Being Replaced By Transgender Athlete

It seems as though anytime legacy media members talk about transgender athletes in women's sports, they only talk about the importance of the trans person (biological male) feeling "included." What they often fail to mention are the girls and women who are excluded by policies that allow males into women's sports and spaces. 

In their never-ending quest to push gender ideology, girls and women are cast aside as necessary pawns in a larger game of chess. "Sorry that you have to suffer, but trans people are more important." That's the message that's being sent. 

But it's important that we highlight the women and girls who suffer from these policy decisions, the ones who are often forgotten. A young woman by the name of Taylor Starling recently spoke at the California State Assembly to share her story. She detailed losing her spot on her school's cross-country team to accommodate a transgender athlete. 

A high school student-athlete by the name of Taylor Starling recently spoke at the California State Assembly to share her story of being displaced by a biological male on her cross-country team.

(Stock Photo - Getty Images)

Starling, a 16-year-old student-athlete at Martin Luther King High School in Riverside, California, stated that she was unfairly cast aside as the biological male received preferential treatment by the school. 

"I was removed from my varsity girls' team and replaced by a newly-eligible male transfer student who received favorable treatment. I worked every day during summer with my team, and into the school year six days a week, waking up at 5 a.m. to attend morning practices and staying at school until 4:45 each day," Starling said. 

"In late October, the male transfer student was given my spot after

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