Read the mind-boggling feminist demand for men in women’s locker rooms

The National Women’s Law Center follows the bizarre path of feminism from fighting for women in sports with Title IX to using those same regulations to fight against them.

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Tennessee Attorney General Jonathan Skrmetti joined 'America's Newsroom' to discuss the debate surrounding transgender health care for kids and what it could mean for other states with similar bans moving forward. Are the 1970s feminists okay? In 1972, two women founded what would eventually be named the National Women’s Law Center (NWLC) to fight "for the passage and full implementation of Title IX." In particular, they cared about opportunities for women in sports, where inequalities between women and men were "most obvious.

" My, how the times have changed! NWLC recently filed a brief to defend men in women’s sports that goes beyond confusing — it’s alarming to the point of comedy. HIGH SCHOOL COACH FIRED AFTER PUSHING TO CHANGE STATE TRANS ATHLETE LAW: 'VILIFIED' FOR STANDING UP FOR GIRLS NWLC seeks to intervene in Gaines v. NCAA, to oppose Riley Gaines and other female athletes who challenge the NCAA’s violations of Title IX.



The NCAA determined that women’s athletics should include males, subjecting women to risk of injury and unfair competition, not to mention severe discomfort, from being fully nude with a male minutes before taking the starting block. The National Women’s Law Center started out as feminist and fought for Title IX rights for women in sports. Now it fights against them.

(Fox News Digital) Seems like a perfectly pro-woman lawsuit, so what’s the NWLC got to say against it? A lot, unfortunately. NWLC starts by redefining women: "NWLC advoca.