January 17, 2025
FFS (Female Free Speech) Friday honors women and girls who are speaking out about the harms that “gender identity” poses to women and girls as a sex class. FFS Friday posts are free and shareable. If you would like access to content that delves deeper into the movement to protect the sex-based rights of women and girls and to stop the abolition of sex, please consider a paid subscription.
Today’s FFS Friday honors Sarah Cunningham, a boxer who is not having USA Boxing’s policy of allowing men to compete in women’s boxing on the basis of their woman “gender identities” (or, as Outkick might phrase it, “USA Boxing to Allow Men Who Have Their Junk Cut Off to Beat Up Women”). And she’s speaking out.
Photo: Sarah Cunningham’s Instagram
A male has a different body structure, bone structure, and muscle structure, and that’s what gives them an advantage. Having them come over and take over women’s sports … even if they’ve had surgery, it still doesn’t make it right.
Sarah Cunningham is a boxer, registered nurse, and sports dietician.
In 2023, USA Boxing adopted a new policy allowing male athletes to compete in the female category under certain conditions. According to Outkick:
The governing body, which oversees amateur and Olympic-style boxing in the United States, will now permit adults who identify as transgender to fight in the category of their choice. However, they will be required to declare their new gender identity, complete regular hormone testing and undergo gender reassignment surgery.
In other words, the men have to chop off their junk.
Cunningham wasn’t having it, and started speaking out on social media (she’s @sarahcunn on Instagram).
She posted a video on Instagram, criticizing the Olympics for essentially making male violence against women an Olympic sport by allowing male boxers to beat up women in the ring. She called is “disheartening,” and I couldn’t agree more. I wrote about this last summer.
USA Boxing’s policy also does not require athletes or coaches to be notified if a female boxer is going to be competing against a man. When Cunningham’s coach complained about this, he ran into problems with his licensing and coaching renewals, which he had never had a problem with before.
Then, according to Outkick:
Sarah Cunningham had her own issues with social media, with regard to her opposition to the transgender policy, but hers came directly from Instagram. Cunningham told OutKick that Instagram removed some of her posts and deemed them as "misinformation."
Her posts were about Imane Khelif, the fighter who won Olympic gold in women's boxing despite previously failing gender tests. She shared those posts with OutKick.
One of her Instagram posts said “#thisisnotokay Now the @olympics” (with a photo of Khelif).
In a recent interview with Outkick, she said: “A male has a different body structure, bone structure, and muscle structure… and that's what gives them an advantage. Having them come over and take over women's sports… [even if] they've had surgery, it still doesn't make it right.”
Sarah, I agree. This is not okay, and you’re right to be speaking out. Thanks to you and your coach! If you’re reading this, today’s FFS Friday is for you.
Women are not dickless men.
Chase Strangio's aunt told me: "there are only two women's sports in America--hockey and volleyball--so how much harm could men do in just two sports?"
She didn't know any of the more commonly-available information about transgenderism, so she could only have gotten that very specific disinformation from Chase herself.