"WDI USA Statement Regarding University of Nevada Reno Women’s Volleyball Team"
A statement from WDI USA
November 4, 2024
The big news today is that Imane Khelif is a man. For anyone who doesn’t remember, Imane Khelif is a boxer from Algeria who was permitted to compete in the female boxing category in this year’s Olympics. The feminist magazine Reduxx broke the story that he is male this summer, inspiring me to write a piece titled, “Male Violence Against Women is Now an Olympic Sport.” Reduxx has now confirmed what we all knew - that he’s a man. A French journalist named Djaffar Ait Aoudia “obtained a copy of a thorough physical examination that was conducted on Khelif in order to verify the presence of a disorder of sexual development.” From Reduxx:
According to Aoudia, the clinical report reveals that an MRI determined that Khelif had no uterus, but instead had internal testicles and a “micropenis” resembling an enlarged clitoris. A chromosomal test further confirmed that Khelif has an XY karyotype, while a hormone test found that Khelif had a testosterone level typical of males.
I have Facebook friends who insisted throughout the entire episode that Khelif is female and that the whole thing was a Russian hoax. I guess they were wrong.
But what I really want to share is an excellent statement from Women’s Declaration International USA about the University of Nevada Reno Women’s Volleyball Team, which I am posting in its entirety below. You can read the statement on the WDI USA website or in its Substack.
On October 26, the University of Nevada Reno (UNR) women’s volleyball team forfeited a match against San Jose State University (SJSU), the fifth team to do so. They joined the women of Southern Utah University, Boise State University, Utah State University, and the University of Wyoming in refusing to compete against a male player who claims to have a “woman gender identity.”
UNR co-captain Sia Liilii and eight of her teammates joined Riley Gaines and the Independent Council on Women’s Sports (ICONS) at a standing-room-only rally at the Reno-Sparks Convention Center on the day the match was scheduled. Weeks earlier, the team had told the UNR athletic department that they did not wish to compete against SJSU, but it wasn’t until the day before that the program announced the match would be forfeited due to not having enough players. Meanwhile, the student athletes were told that they did not understand science and needed to educate themselves. In a statement dated October 13, UNR announced that the team would compete against SJSU despite its players having voted to forfeit.
“Our university had made a decision for us. We were not consulted, we were not given a voice, and we did not agree,” said Liilii at the October 26 rally. “It hurt knowing our university was putting us in a position that could potentially hurt us.”
At least one American volleyball player, North Carolina student-athlete Payton McNabb, has been left with life-altering head and neck injuries, including impaired vision and partial paralysis, after being spiked in the face by a male player. Blaire Fleming, the male SJSU player, has knocked down two opponents with the force of his spike.
In an op-ed published to Fox News Digital on October 25, the UNR volleyball players said, “As proud female athletes, we will continue to fight for fairness on the court and in women’s sports. But it shouldn’t have to be a fight we take on alone.”
They are not alone; Article 7 of the Declaration on Women’s Sex-Based Rights reaffirms women’s rights to the same opportunities as men to participate actively in sports and physical education. Sia Liilii and her teammates have shown immense courage and discipline in defying their university’s unjust treatment of female athletes. WDI USA commends these young women for taking a principled stand for fairness in women’s sports.
Thank You WDI!
What those girls really need now is a lawyer, now that their own school's DEI department has publicly defamed them and incited harassment against them with an email sent to every person at the school.
https://x.com/babybeginner/status/1852824563027243172
Kara or anyone else, can you help them with contact info for civil rights lawyers who practice in NV, or put them in touch with someone who can? Please reach out to them, or to Riley Gaines who likely has their contact info.
Let's keep our eye out for a GiveSendGo on their behalf, they will need it if they decide to take action. Student-athletes are extremely busy during their athletic season, they don't have the time & energy to fight a smear campaign, they'll need all the logistical help they can get.
It’s even more important to support the SJSU players who object to having a trans player on their team. The assistant coach who supported them has been removed after speaking to the press about an incident where the trans player threw a match and attempted to harm Brooke Slusser, the player who joined the Title IX lawsuit. Instead of investigating that incident, SJSU said the assistant coach violated players’ privacy. The players are being hung out to dry.