American Principles Project President: Girls’ sports, private spaces ‘should be protected from cradle to the grave’

Terry Schilling, left, and University of Pennsylvania male swimmer Will "Lia" Thomas - American Principles Project / Penn Athletics
Terry Schilling, left, and University of Pennsylvania male swimmer Will "Lia" Thomas - American Principles Project / Penn Athletics
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Terry Schilling, president of the American Principles Project said states like Nevada need to to protect girls’ sports teams and access to private spaces at every level of education, not just college.

“While I commend legislators for protecting girls’ sports at the college level, every opportunity for girls should be protected from cradle to the grave,” Schilling told Silver State Times. “That means that states like Nevada that are only protecting college girls, need to come back and finish the job and protect girls at all levels — and not just sports but also their private spaces and make sure that they feel safe and protected.”

“Anything less is falling short of America’s long-standing promise to protect the vulnerable,” Schilling said. 

As President Biden revealed new rules regarding Title IX protections in April of 2024 which redefined “sex” to include “gender-identity,” and would require U.S. schools and colleges to include males who identify as females in female specific spaces like locker rooms and bathrooms, an analysis by the Silver State Times shows that Nevada is one of 25 states that allow boys to play in girls’ high school sports.

Former Gov. Steve Sisolak said Nevada headed in the opposite way to help transgender students as other states advance legislation that forbids training on sexual orientation and prohibits transgender girls from participating on school sports teams that correspond to their gender identity, according to the Nevada Independent.

As of publication time, there are 25 states that allow boys to participate in girls’ high school sports: California, Colorado, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nebraska, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Oregon, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia, Washington, and Wisconsin.

In April of 2023, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to overturn a lower court ruling that had blocked West Virginia’s enforcement of its law, signed into law in April 2021, that banned boys from participation in girls’ high school sports. Those court rulings are expected to be challenged.

In December 2022, a federal appeals court rejected a challenge to Connecticut’s policy of allowing boys to participate in girls’ sports. A lawsuit was filed in 2022 by three high school girls against the state’s policy, saying it was unfair. Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF), the non-profit providing legal representation to the three girls, said it’s considering a challenge to the ruling.

“Girls deserve to compete on a level playing field,” ADF Legal Counsel Christiana Holcomb said. “Forcing them to compete against boys isn’t fair, shatters their dreams and destroys their athletic opportunities.”

There has been rapid growth in diagnoses of “gender dysphoria” in recent years, with a Reuters analysis of Medicaid findings that 42,000 children and teens in the U.S. received a diagnosis in 2021 – nearly triple the amount from 2017.

“Overall, the analysis found that at least 121,882 children ages 6 to 17 were diagnosed with gender dysphoria from 2017 through 2021,” Reuters said.

A 2016 review in the Journal of Adolescent Health called children with gender dysphoria “singularly vulnerable” due to high rates of depression, self-harm and even suicide. The American Psychiatric Association’s “Diagnosfic and Stafisfical Manual of Mental Disorders” says children are not fully capable of understanding what it means to be a man or a woman, adding that most questioning their biological sex eventually come to accept it and stop “identifying” as the opposite one.

The issue of gender dysphoria and school sports hasn’t been limited to high school. In March 2022, University of Pennsylvania male swimmer Will “Lia” Thomas won the women’s NCAA swimming championship in the 500-yard freestyle.

University of Kentucky swimmer Riley Gaines, who tied with Thomas in the 200-meter freestyle event at those NCAA championships, called Thomas a “cheat.”

“Lia Thomas is not a brave, courageous woman who EARNED a national title,” Gaines tweeted. “He is an arrogant, cheat who STOLE a national title from a hardworking, deserving woman. The NCAA is responsible.”

Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis, who in April 2021 signed legislation banning boys from participating in girls’ sports, slammed Thomas’ participation in women’s events as an effort to “destroy women’s athletics.”

“The NCAA’s actions serve to erode opportunities for women athletes and perpetuate a fraud against women athletes as well as the public at large,” the proclamation read. “Florida rejects the NCAA’s efforts to destroy women’s athletics, disapproves of the NCAA elevating ideology over biology and takes offense at the NCAA trying to make others complicit in a lie.”

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Does Your State Ban Boys From Girls’ Sports?
State Boys Banned From Girls’ Teams?
Alabama Yes
Alaska Yes
Arizona Yes
Arkansas Yes
California No
Colorado No
Connecticut No
Delaware No
Florida Yes
Georgia No
Hawaii No
Idaho Yes
Illinois No
Indiana Yes
Iowa Yes
Kansas Yes
Kentucky Yes
Louisiana Yes
Maine No
Maryland No
Massachusetts No
Michigan No
Minnesota No
Mississippi Yes
Missouri Yes
Montana Yes
Nebraska No
Nevada No
New Hampshire No
New Jersey No
New Mexico No
New York No
North Carolina Yes
North Dakota Yes
Ohio Yes
Oklahoma Yes
Oregon No
Pennsylvania No
Rhode Island No
South Carolina Yes
South Dakota Yes
Tennessee Yes
Texas Yes
Utah Yes
Vermont No
Virginia No
Washington No
West Virginia Yes
Wisconsin No
Wyoming Yes



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