The Megyn Kelly Show - Destruction of Women's Sports Over Trans Ideology, and Target Backlash Grows, with Michael Knowles, Inga Thompson, and Hannah Arensman | Ep. 561
Episode Date: May 30, 2023Megyn Kelly is joined by Michael Knowles, host of The Michael Knowles Show on The Daily Wire, to talk about how transgender ideology is causing "LGB" backlash at Target and more, a USA Today columnis...t attacking an ESPN reporter for defending biological women in sports, trans men making women uncomfortable in previously women-only private places like the gynecologist, a CUNY law school commencement speaker attacking America as "white supremacist," how our future generation of lawyers don't understand the law,Gov. Ron DeSantis' message aimed at the woke military, and more. Then top female cyclists Inga Thompson and Hannah Arensman join to speak out together for the first time about about how transgender athletes are destroying women's sports, agencies claiming “inclusion is more important than fairness,” the massive costs women face for speaking out about the issue,female athletes leaving their careers because of how "dehumanizing" it is to compete against trans athletes, plans to protest in the future, how Great Britain has taken action against biological men in women's sports, and more.Knowles: https://www.michaeljknowles.comThompson: https://www.ingathompsonfoundation.org/Follow The Megyn Kelly Show on all social platforms: YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/MegynKellyTwitter: http://Twitter.com/MegynKellyShowInstagram: http://Instagram.com/MegynKellyShowFacebook: http://Facebook.com/MegynKellyShow Find out more information at: https://www.devilmaycaremedia.com/megynkellyshow
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Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show, your home for open, honest, and provocative conversations.
Hey everyone, I'm Megyn Kelly. Welcome to The Megyn Kelly Show and happy Tuesday. I
hope you and your family had a great Memorial Day weekend. If you have not yet had the chance,
please, please check out yesterday's show with Jason Redman.
What an extraordinary man who's served our country so honorably and paid such a high price,
he and his family. But the story is totally inspirational. He's the guy, he's the Navy seal who, after getting shot in the face, when they told him his face was shot off, posted the sign
outside of his hospital room saying,
don't come in here feeling sorry for me. This is a place of optimism. The sign went completely viral. He's legendary. His message of positivity is legendary. He's got a lot of thoughts about
where our US military is today, and it's well worth your time to meet and get to know Jason
Redman. Oh, it just makes you feel proud
of America and to be an American. But today, I want to tell you that in our second hour,
we have an exclusive interview with two very well-known female cyclists appearing together
for the first time. One is absolutely a legend in the sport who has recently begun speaking out
about transgender ideology hurting actual women in the sport of cycling.
This is a woman who is third, I think, a couple of times in the Tour de France,
U.S. Olympian, national champion. I mean, everybody knows this woman. And then another,
an up-and-comer who we have reported on on this show, who just retired at age 24 from cycling
because she keeps facing biological men in her sport. Men who are crushing
the sport of cycling because, oh, they're men. Yeah, that's what it is. But we begin today with
the news and our friend Michael Knowles, host of the Michael Knowles Show on The Daily Wire.
Michael, welcome back. How are you doing? How was your holiday?
The holiday was wonderful, Megan. I did basically
nothing at all other than lie on a couch and have my little children crawl all over me. So it was
wonderful and wonderful to be back with you as always. Oh, it's great to see you. Same. I didn't
do much of anything. My husband took our daughter to a soccer tournament. My mom came for a visit,
Michael. My mom is hilarious. Hurricane Linda is always fun.
Just listen.
I tweeted this out yesterday, but just listening to my mother play Sorry and Trouble with my
two boys was just a gift from God.
She's so funny.
She's so snarky.
She was holding back on the swearing because that's not her thing, but she was threatening
them.
She was accusing them.
She said they cheated. It was
really a thing of beauty. That's a music to my ears, to be honest. That's wonderful. It's truly
in the midst of this absolute chaos. You mentioned the transgender cycling. We've got the edifices
of our society falling down all around us. We no longer know what a man is. We've got this brutal
presidential primary. It is just lovely to take one last breath, say, ah, things can be normal within
the confines of my home. And then you open the door and you see absolute madness.
Yes. The best line I overheard was from my mother to my nine-year-old and 13-year-old,
I'm not going to give you the finger, but I want to.
Great lessons in restraint and prudence.
Exactly. All right. So this is where I want to start today. Target. Target is still in the mix of it because of its pride. We're going to go through this all next month. June is pride month.
And while this was never really a problematic thing, now they folded in
the T on the LGBTQ, whatever, it's getting problematic because now you're talking about
a very harmful, weird, different kind of messaging on baby onesies than we've ever seen before.
I mean, it's one thing, you know, I have two friends who are lesbians and they're married.
And Dave Rubin was just on the show on Friday. He's a gay man in a gay marriage. I can understand why they might want to put their child in a, you know,
a shirt with a rainbow. I can. You go to the tea place and you start saying, ask me my pronouns
on the little onesie of a baby. We have a problem. Yeah. I'm, I would also object to that in a Target
store. And I realized there are people who are to the right of me on this issue and wouldn't want the rainbow either. So it's causing massive problems for
Target. They've lost billions in their market share and people are going in Target after Target
and complaining about these displays being front and center right when you first walk in.
That leads me to Canadian actress, Rochelle Lefevre. She's, I think it's French.
L-E-F-E-V-R-E.
Lefevre.
Lefevre.
Croissante.
Oui.
Très bon.
Thank you.
It's like Brett Fervre.
She's very, very angry.
Very angry.
If you don't know who this is, I take you back to the Twilight series of movies.
She was in the big first one and she was in the second one and she ran around trying to kill
Kristen Stewart's character most of the time. Here's just a little refresher on who this actress
is. The humans were tracking us, but we led them east. You should be safe. I'm the one with the wicked curveball. I think it best if you leave.
That was her in better days.
Now, she's very angry that Target, in just a few of its stores in the South, has responded to the outcry by moving the displays to the back of the store.
They didn't pull the displays.
The displays are not gone.
It didn't happen nationwide like some of us would like. Just a couple of stores in the more conservative parts of the country. And she freaked out. So she posted on Twitter this long thing about how she
has a seven-year-old non-binary child, Michael. And she says the following. Actually, I think we have a,
well, we have a clip of what she said. Look at this. So I just walked into Target and the,
right behind me here, where you see all these lovely swimsuits, that's where the pride display
used to be. And I came in here two days ago and my seven-year-old who's non-binary saw it and
said look mom it's pride look they're gonna celebrate me and because some people complained
and um threw some stuff to the ground or I don't know what happened they have moved to the pride
section to the back of the store. So the next time my seven year
old comes to Target, or rather, I can't bring them here anymore, at least for the entire
month of June, because if they walk in, and all the other people who walk in and go, where
did it go? Are going to realize that they are being successful in trying to erase them.
We could do so much better than this.
We're not supposed to negotiate with terrorists.
OMG.
Thoughts on that?
I think most seven-year-olds who walk into Target are more concerned with getting
a cookie at the Starbucks kiosk than they are as to how radical
the LGBT pride setup is. That would be my guess. But you point out, Megan, a really important point,
which is that the pride display is going to be a totalizing phenomenon. It's going to include
stuff for adults. It's going to include baby onesies. It's going to be in every single store
around the country. It's going to go on for a month. It's really going to go on for more than
a month because we're technically not in Pride Month yet, right? Pride Month is June. We're in
May. So there's Pride Month. There's pre-Pride Month. There's going to be post-Pride Month.
But then by the way, October is LGBTQ History Month. So it's not Pride Month. There's another
one though. And so it's going to be, right now it's about a quarter of the year. It's going to be a third of the year.
It's going to be half the year by the time we're all through. And you're also really insightful
and beautiful and smart and charming, Megan. I love this part. Thank you.
You're really insightful on this point about the onesies, that the onesies are not for the babies.
The onesies, like all onesies, are for the babies. The onesies, like all onesies, are
for the parents. You want to dress your kid up in something that reflects some aspect
of your identity and your desires and who you are.
Now that we've redefined marriage, now that you've got same-sex male couples and same-sex
female couples defined as marriage, adopting children, creating children through in vitro
fertilization, you're going to want to see baby clothing that reflects that ideology as well.
I say this as someone who grew up in New York, I lived in LA, I'm a graduate of the gayest
university on the face of the earth, okay?
A disproportionate number of my loved ones identify as gay and all sorts of different
sexual identities. But this is inevitably going to be the consequence of redefining sexuality and human nature.
I know a lot of people want to try to chop the T off of the LGB, but ultimately you're
probably going to end up with the T regardless because the premise of LGB is that men and
women are pretty much interchangeable and two men is the same thing two women, is the same thing as a man and a woman.
And so if you accept that premise-
When it comes to parenting and family, you mean?
Yes, exactly.
When it comes to the definition of marriage, let's say.
So if you accept that premise in society, then it's not a huge leap to say that a man
can basically be a woman or a woman can basically be a man.
It doesn't mean you're hateful if you point this out.
It doesn't mean you don't like people or anything like that, but you cannot in society simultaneously
have mutually contradictory ideas.
You can't establish them as a fact of our law.
You see this especially with the bathrooms.
Either women get their own bathroom or they don't get their own bathroom and you kind of got to pick one. This is why
I think that the Pride Month celebrations have become so mandatory is either our society
is going to accept all of the ideology that goes along with the modern rainbow or it's
not. But if we do accept it, then we're going to have
it for everybody. It's going to be in every store. It's not just Target. It's going to
be in Kohl's. It's going to be on your Bud Light can. It's going to be everywhere for
a month and maybe two months and maybe three months. And it's not just going to be for
the adults. It's going to be for the onesies. And so the common people, the vast majority
of Americans don't like this stuff, including plenty of people who would identify as gay
and they say, okay, the onesies were taken a little bit far here. Get it out of my Target The vast majority of Americans don't like this stuff, including plenty of people who would identify as gay.
And they say, OK, the onesies, we're taking it a little bit far here.
Get it out of my Target store.
But the problem is that the elites, the people who control the corporations, the people who control the political order and the universities and the media and all the rest of this, they're
totally bought in on this liberalizing ideology.
And so that's where the tension is going to come.
And right now, the elites still have most of the political power.
See, I don't agree that the tea was the inevitable outcome of the LGB. I think a lot of the LGB folks are with you and me on this issue. Like enough. Stop. Like they're trying. They're speaking of erasure. She's saying, oh, she's been, you know, they her child. They has been erased by Target moving the display to the back of the store. Okay. Um,
as, as one of the people on, on Instagram responding to this was like, if your child
feels erased as a human, because they moved to display, you're doing things wrong. You got to
reevaluate your parenthood sister. Good point. Right. Um, but I think we had, I mean, look,
I was born in the seventies and I remember my sister dated a guy who came out as gay, unfortunately for my sister, in, let's say, it must have been 1986, around there.
And it was shocking back then.
So 86 was still absolutely shocking for somebody to come out as gay.
It still had a big stigma to it.
Maybe the society wasn't totally shocked, but it still had a big stigma.
But anyway, then we got past that. We had the nineties, we had the aughts and we kind of got to a place
where we were managed to remove much of the stigma of being gay or lesbian. Trans didn't pop up.
Trans wasn't immediately accepted. I think it happened because of, it happened in smaller
pockets. People were tolerant. And then people with an agenda stepped in and exploited, you know,
like the medical community who had dollars in their eyeballs and was like, oh, my God, you know,
we see some of these tapes, thanks to your colleague, Matt Walsh at The Daily Wire, you know,
who realized they could make tons of money off of this. And then woke school teachers who decided
to shove it into curriculum, which is the battle Ron DeSantis is fighting down in Florida to get
it out of curriculum. I really think it's not a natural outcome of those other two things. And
that's why for me, I can easily draw a line between the LGB and everything that comes after
it, which is very different, which is very political, and which I think is in its own
league when it comes to perniciousness and children. Sure, I agree with almost all of that, Megan.
And I think you're totally right.
I mean, you mentioned our pal Dave Rubin,
who identifies as gay, he's in a gay marriage
and all the rest of it.
But he says, look, all this crazy trans stuff,
this has gone way too far.
A lot of this pride movement stuff is...
So he's obviously much more reasonable on these issues.
And there are plenty of people just like Dave who say,
yeah, we don't want to trans the kids or anything like that. The problem is not the people. The problem is that ideas have
consequences. I totally grant that there are people who want to say, all right, we can go
this far in redefining sexuality and human nature, but we're going to stop right here.
Just seems to me that the problem is going to be that if you accept certain premises about the malleability of sex, that's going to open the
floodgates to other options. And then those floodgates are going to be exploited by those
cynical actors that you're talking about, many of whom just want to make a buck, many of whom
want to upend the political order for all sorts of other reasons. And so they're going to do that.
And the problem is if you redefine something like marriage, for example,
then you've taken away the limiting principle. And so I remember in the Obergefell decision,
when the conservatives dissented in, in redefining marriage, they asked, well,
what's the limiting principle here? Why is it that we're going to just cut it off
at two people of any sex? What about-
Oh, there was all sorts of crazy pushback on that at the time. Like, what do you say? Oh,
now they're saying that gay marriage is going to lead to bestiality. I remember these debates
when it happened. Keep going. Yeah. So the issue is what is that limiting principle? And
if we're now in a position where, yes, right away, you didn't see the transing of the children and the pride
flags in every single corner of society.
Well eventually that did happen and so there's got to be some pushback and the pushback is
going to have to answer this question of what is a man, what is a woman and what are we
going to exalt in our society?
Because the other aspect here is religious.
Pride month is really just a kind of liturgical month in the
religion of liberalism. We have woman month, we have black history month. Of course, those are
not really about black people or women, but they're about a very left-wing ideological view
of them. Now you have gay month in June, but everybody's got to ascend to that. Everybody's got to get down and accept it on their knees prayerfully, or you can be
ostracized from society.
This is why the corporations are doing it as well, by the way, because they know that
if a corporation does not have its pride display, it's going to be targeted by Garm, it's going
to be targeted by the ESG movement, it's going to have its access to capital cut off.
It's going to have its access to social media platforms cut off.
And so they just have to go along to get along.
And so I'm sure there are a lot of people who want to say, okay, this is the line and
we go no further.
But it reminds me in a way of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who's now running a presidential campaign
as a 1960 of Robert F. Kennedy Jr., who's now running a presidential campaign as a 1960s liberal
Democrat. From today's perspective, he seems rather conservative. And he says, well, why did
liberalism have to go any further than it did in the 60s? But the answer, I think, is that
ideas have consequences and you can't just tell history to stop.
You know, I hear you. I do. For me, I am able to draw the line after LG and B. I really
am. We've lived harmoniously with LGB for a long, long time. And I am happy to live harmoniously
with T as well and let them do their thing as adults, as long as they don't hurt others and
as long as they stay out of my spaces. Get out. I agree with you, get out of the women's bathroom, get out of the women's
locker room, get out of the gynecologist's office. There was a piece today, no, it was over the
weekend by USA Today columnist, Nancy Armour. Nancy Armour is up in arms over ESPN's Sam Ponder, who spoke out for fairness in sport, saying we shouldn't allow.
I mean, she didn't say this explicitly, but basically said she's come around on the issue of girl sports and not allowing trans kids to come in and take over and win all the titles in the girl sports.
It's always the male who comes into the girls' sport and wins. And Nancy's very upset with Sam Ponder because Sam Ponder wasn't tweeting and writing notes
about other Title IX fights
that apparently Nancy has written about.
So Sam Ponder, you see, is a hypocrite
because she's taken up this fight
but didn't take up all the others.
But Nancy Armour, she's not a hypocrite
for taking up the others but ignoring this one.
See, it only works one way.
And in Nancy's little article in USA Today, she brings yours truly into it, saying, dig
a little deeper into Ponder's timeline, and it's clear her hostility toward transgender
women.
By the way, there's no hostility by Sam Ponder, none at all.
It's about sports.
Goes far beyond their participation in sports. In January, she replied, yes, thank you, to Megyn Kelly's screed about a transgender woman
going to the gynecologist, quoting me, you can't just become a woman and take all of our things,
Kelly ranted. Nancy goes on, I'm at a loss to see how a transgender woman going to a gynecologist
takes anything away from anyone or how it's any of Kelly's or Ponder's business. Well, Nancy, I'm an actual woman who goes to a gynecologist. So it is my business.
As far as I can tell, Nancy has no children of her own, no daughter to protect. And I'll tell
you something, Nancy has a way of firing you up about this issue. And Sam Ponder lives her life
in the area of sports and coverage of them and sees firsthand every day. And I think she's a
mother too.
But as far as a gynecologist office, Michael, this is the thing that bothers me. So it's fine.
The left will cancel you for culturally appropriating a taco, but it's totally fine for a man to culturally appropriate everything there is to appropriate about a woman from
building a fake vagina to then going to a
gynecologist's office, which no man needs and making the rest of us sit there and wait. I'm
if I go into my gynecologist's office and I see some dude with a beard and I've got to wait to go
in, I'm never going back there again. It's bullshit. Those visits in particular, the breast
doctor, the mammogram, the gynecologist, those are
already tense visits for most women.
They're already tense.
You know, there's like 50% of the things you could die of are waiting for you in these
two exam rooms.
And we don't need it complicated by a man sitting there in yet another woman's space,
Nancy.
So this is what happens, right?
You get people like this trying to call everybody a transphobe, Sam Ponder, old Nancy in her
judgmental corner, for people like you, for people like me who actually find the nerve
to say, no, to draw that, even for me, right?
I'm to the left of you on this, but to finally find my own line and say, no.
I love, Megan, how it's always the leftists who tell us it takes a village. That's the title
of Hillary Clinton's memoir, who, when it comes to our private property and many of our private
decisions, they say, no, we're all part of society. You can't have your gun. We're all part of
society. No, you can't educate your child. No, you can't keep your money. No, you can't live in your
zoning area of your neighborhood. No, you can't build this part of your house. No, you can't keep your money. No, you can't live in your zoning area of your neighborhood.
No, you can't build this part of your house. No, you can't do this, that, or the other thing.
But then when it comes to transgenderism or whatever the social fad du jour is, they say,
well, how does it affect you? How does it affect you, Megan, if there's a burly fellow with a beard
waiting in the gynecologist office who's going to make you wait? And the answer to this, of course, is because we live in society. Because man is the social creature. We don't live
as floating atoms somewhere in the middle of the sea. We interact with one another and we're in
political community. And I don't think it's too much to ask if you're a woman to be able to go
to the gynecologist's office without having to pretend that some big husky guy is a woman.
I don't think it's too much to ask to say that in a public school where parents are
footing the bill and we're sending our kids, that the child not be exposed to gay porn
in the form of genderqueer by Maya Kababi, to cite just one book.
I don't think it's too much to ask even to say that when we're walking around our town square or our shops or our whole culture,
we're not just constantly inundated by this absurd transgender propaganda all the way
down to three month old onesies. We live in society. We're supposed to have a self-government
here. Why can't we set standards and norms that are standard and normal? Have we
lost that right? The only right that we have now is to set standards and norms that are abnormal,
that involve a big fella in your gynecologist's office. No, how come it only moves in that one
direction? It's crazy. And Michael, let me tell you something. When you go in for a mammogram,
you had to start getting them, I think, at 45. I can't remember when I started getting them. But
you go in there, and that's always a scary
one, right?
Cause you're there to look for cancer.
I mean, that's the only reason you go to the GYN for a lot of reasons, but you go there
to catch.
So you go and you put on your little robe and then they have you sit in a little like
waiting area.
This is where I go.
And in New York, you have to sit in this little waiting area.
It's a small little room and there's maybe four or five other women also wearing a little
robe.
We're all there for the same reason. And there's waiting area. It's a small little room. And there's maybe four or five other women also wearing a little robe. We're all there for the same reason.
And there's a tension.
There's a bonding.
There's something kind of lovely about it, to be honest with you, because it's like we're all there for the same thing.
We're all hoping for the same result.
We're all a little scared we're going to get something else.
And then they call you out one by one.
You go get the test.
And then you've got to go back into the waiting room until you get called in by the radiologist who will tell you what the results were.
So the whole thing is a little tense and I do not want to see fucking sorry, man sitting in
there with me and my fellow women who actually do have things to worry about, who don't, it's hard
enough to get in for these visits to the best doctors and go through all this stuff and deal
with the insurance, all that. It's absurd to pretend like,
what is, how does it affect your life? It affects my life in very vulnerable situations in which I already feel unsteady, Nancy. And so if people like Sam Ponder and you and me don't speak out
because of these nasty USA Today pieces or what have you, we lose. We've been losing too long
because those of us who didn't draw the line at the LGB, the B, whatever, and the T, sorry, LGB. We didn't draw the line.
The QIA, Elemento P, yeah.
We finally found our line. And now they're basically like, well,
camel's nose, you're done. Now you're a bigot. You don't get any credit for your priors.
I want to say two things.
Think about Megan. The big case, one of the big cases that established
this right to transgenderism as a matter of civil rights law, it was the Harris Funeral
Homes case.
Everyone talks about the Bostock decision, which changed the interpretation of Title
VII to now say that the protections on the basis of sex now don't protect sex.
They protect sexual orientation and gender identity, which obviously undermines that.
In the workplace only. There was the Harris Funeral Homes case. protect sex, they protect sexual orientation and gender identity, which obviously undermines that.
In the workplace only.
There was the Harris Funeral Homes case.
That case centered around whether a man who works at a funeral home can be made to dress
in respectful, somber garb as a man, because a man who worked at a funeral home decided
he wanted to put on a skirt one day because he wanted to pretend to be a woman.
The owner of that funeral home said, hey man, I don't know what you're going through and
I'm not judging or anything like that, but this is a funeral home.
People are mourning.
People are really vulnerable and upset when they come in here.
We're not going to make it about us and we're not going to make it about our fantasies and
delusions or anything else.
We're going to be respectful and behave in a way that is normal and reverent and somber for this occasion. And the Supreme Court got to pick who gets to decide,
the community, the people mourning, traditions, standards, or a man who wants to put on a mini
skirt while families are trying to grieve their loved ones. And unfortunately, the Supreme Court
chose the latter. And now we've got a regime of tyrannical self-expression that that has corroded anything even resembling a little girl. This is off of a woman's TikTok who posts a lot about the trans issues.
And we traced it back to the original TikTok, which was by a patron down at Disney who did not seem offended by it.
But, hey, to each their own. I am.
Look at what this woman found when she went into if you ever been to Disney, you can go into like the Cinderella castle and you can give your daughter like the princess experience where she can pay $450.
Didn't do it for some Cinderella or princess-esque dress. And normally you meet with
Cinderella or one of her helpers who welcomes you and your daughter as you walk into the shop.
Look what's happening here. This is at the one out in Florida, Disneyland. Watch.
In California.
Listening audience.
This guy's got a mustache. Yeah. Can we re-rack it? Start it again. What was his name? Nick?
His name is Nick. And he's a man. He's literally in the princess gear watch it again so my name's nick i'm one of fairy godmother's apprentices i'm here to shop you around and make
all your selections for the day i'm your fairy godmother okay he's got a mustache he's a clear clear man and his name is Nick. Michael, can you imagine?
Reason number 42,073 to not take your children to Disneyland would be encountering big,
burly, mustachioed, pretty little princess. It's a really telling episode and it's a great
way to view the whole culture at this point,
which is that this guy woke up in the morning and said, you know what?
My appearance as Princess whatever at Disneyland, it's about me.
It's not about the kids.
It's not about the parents who shout out a gazillion dollars to take their kids on this
once in a lifetime memorable.
It's just about me.
And that's how so many people are viewing society today.
It's the way that people view systems of government.
It's the way people view even the law.
Is the law, is human nature, is biology, is education, is it about something outside of
ourselves?
The truth, the moral order, science, you name it?
Or is it just about me, me, me, and whatever I want to do? A man wrapped up in himself
makes a very small package indeed. I guess that fellow made a relatively burly package.
But as a matter of society, it's very, very small. And it will diminish anything even resembling a kind of a society.
And then we're all just living sort of selfishly for ourselves rather than what you're supposed to do, at the very least, at Disneyland, which is give people a magical sort of experience that is about somebody else.
I mean, like, I've been there.
I've been to the Disney World with my kids a couple of times.
I can't imagine walking. I mean, I would turn around and walk out and, and I resent being put
in that position because I have no wish to be rude to a trans person's face or to make him feel bad
about his dysphoria. I really don't. Um, I just, but I don't buy into their ideology. I don't
believe a man can be a woman. And I believe a princess is a female who doesn't have a beard and a mustache and most are not named Nick. And like infants and young children, including, like I was saying earlier, an infant shirt that reads, ask me my pronouns.
Ask me my pronouns in Kohl's.
Like everyone's submitting to this nonsense.
We're not going to stop it with just Bud Light.
That helped.
But it and what we're doing to target helps, too. But it's got to be all with just Bud Light. That helped. And what we're doing
at Target helps too. But it's got to be all of them. They all have to feel some pain so that
there's a counterbalance to that enormous weight you were talking about from the DEI community and
the corporate equity index. We certainly do. You'll remember that when Transheiser Bush first
made this step with the Dylan Mulvaney beer can, you'll remember that part of the crisis communications
effort was to say, oh, it was this random VP of marketing, Alyssa Hirschenfeld or something
like that. And it was, she went rogue and we had nothing to do with this. And of course
that isn't true. These decisions to embrace LGBTism and transgender ideology and all the
rest of it were made at much, much higher levels of AB InBev.
And they were made across platforms. They were made in collusion with GARM and the World Economic
Forum and all sorts of industry standard setting groups. And so they allowed this VP of marketing
to take the fall, but this is a much deeper problem. And so, yes, obviously you've got to
replace these executives. You've got to recognize that personnel is policy, and so we have to put the right people
in these positions.
We also just need to reorient the way that we view truth and law and government and society,
because right now we're just locked in this battle of the wills, which is you've got the
normal people on one hand saying men shouldn't dress up as pretty little princesses at Disneyland, and men shouldn't
go into the girls' bathroom and they shouldn't dress up in skirts at funeral homes.
And then on the other side, you've got the leftists who say, yes, they should, and we
damn well will do it because that's what we want to do.
And in a battle of wills, you're just going to see ever escalating tensions that are one
day going to explode. I guess they already have exploded a few times you're just going to see ever escalating tensions that are one day going to explode.
I guess they already have exploded a few times and it's going to get worse.
That's not the only way that we have to run society though.
In fact, that's not the way that any flourishing society has ever been run.
It's not just a battle of wills.
It's also about reason.
That's the other thing that makes us human beings.
And so when you've got two people who disagree, the one guy says a man can't be a woman, the
one guy says a man can be a woman, then you can use your reason to point to objective truth
and say, oh no, actually, hey brother, no, you're just wrong about that.
You're actually not a woman and it's actually not right for you to dress up like a pretty
little princess and it's not right for you to take the girls' trophies and go into their
locker rooms and all the rest of it.
And here's why.
Here are my arguments from philosophy and from theology. And here's my examples from history. And here's my argument
from the civil law. And you just go and make a reasonable argument. You don't need to be filled
with hatred. You don't need to yell. You don't need to scream. You don't need to smash any windows
to do that. As our society neglects reason and discards truth and says that there's really
nothing beyond what I want to do and I'm damn well going to get it. As we do that, then our society is going to become less and less reasonable.
We're going to descend into cacophony. We're not even going to be able to understand one another
in the words that we're using. And frankly, we're already pretty far down that path.
I mean, it's amazing as if Disney hasn't taken a big enough beating on its stock price. And
Disney Plus is in serious danger.
The Wall Street Journal recently had a report on that, thanks to its wokeness.
And that's separate and apart from its legal fights with Ron DeSantis.
This is not the answer, Disney.
I got a little pro tip for you.
This is not the way forward.
I'm going to hold on to Transheiser Bush in many conversations.
I really appreciated that one.
Stand by much more with Michael Knowles right after this quick break.
Michael, I want to talk to you now about the madness of crowds.
A couple of rando examples of people losing their ever loving minds that I want your take
on this one.
We've got to start with, I got it from TMZ and it's spectacular.
We have friends, they're amazing.
And the male, well, one of the guys
is an expert on beauty pageants.
Like he can game it the way somebody at a racehorse
can game the racehorse.
You know, like this guy, these are the odds.
It's a tough mutter, but they can't do blah, blah.
That's how he approaches the beauty pageant circuit.
And I cannot wait to get his take
on what happened in Brazil as two contestants were down to the wire on not,
I I'm not sure if they were, if it was for miss Brazil or for a local, hold on, I've got it.
The tantrum took place on Saturday at the miss game, Mato Grosso, 2023 pageant. All right. So
they're at the lower level still where the contest came down to two finalists, Emmanuel Bellini from the municipality of Varzella Grande and Nathalie Becker of Cuba.
This is I'm a hot mess. I don't speak Portuguese. In any event, here they are in the crowning moment.
I will describe what happens for the listening audience. It's all I think in Portuguese and
Wait for the big finish
The one on the left wins she bends over she's so excited she wants about to get the big crowd which is on stage
Oh up comes a man grabs. It smashes it
Into pieces now grabs the loser by the wrist She's about to get the big crowd, which is on stage. Oh, up comes a man grabs it, smashes it into pieces.
Now grabs the loser by the wrist.
Shepherds are off the stage.
Picks up the crown again.
Smashes it a second time,
getting shepherded off by security.
Yells at security.
Very animated.
Grabs the loser again.
Runner up, I guess I should say.
And shepherds her off the screen.
So it turns out they say
that he is her husband.
I got questions about whether that man
actually has a wife,
but okay, they say that they're married.
And he's very, very upset.
Michael, what did you make of that?
Well, I have an alternate theory,
which is that that man is Kanye West
and he was going to let her finish,
but he
wanted to point out that Beyonce did have one of the greatest albums of all time.
I really like this.
I feel bad for the winner.
I'm sure she got her tiara eventually, but we are living in an age...
Elbrus.
Megan, we're in this age where everyone is just so sad and lame and clinical about love. There are people,
boyfriends and girlfriends, husbands and wives, who will refer to their beloved as their partner.
They'll say, not even, not just two men or two women. I mean, this is, a boyfriend will say,
oh, this girl over here, she's my partner, as though they have an accounting firm or something
together. They won't refer to love affairs. They'll talk about the relationship that they're in.
Like Cole Porter was singing, you know, let's do it.
Let's enter into a relationship together.
It's so sad and clinical.
And I want some fiery, hot-blooded Brazilian to get up there and say, no, I love this woman.
Even though, as you point out, that remains perhaps a little bit dubious.
We'll get to the details.
Listen, guess what?
Breaking news.
My team just informed me.
This just broke.
This is a gay pageant.
It's an LGBT thing.
So first of all, my gaydar worked, okay?
It did.
That's number one.
Spot on.
Second of all, are those even women?
I don't know what we just saw.
Oh, you're right,
because, well,
if it's a man
and he goes up there
and it is a woman,
then you think,
okay, this homosexual man
is setting an example
for the heterosexual man,
especially up in the Anglo world
who have gone so lame
about all of this.
Or is it a gay man and a man dressed as a woman,
a drag queen winning a beauty pageant? And if so, then those drag queens are setting an example for
gender roles that frankly, we haven't seen in the West in a long time. Either way, fascinating.
All around sore losers and congratulations to whoever it was that actually won that pageant and not for
nothing.
But as we,
as I circulated the story amongst our team,
I found out that Canadian Debbie,
Debbie Murphy,
who's been with me forever as my editorial producer,
guess what?
Debbie's from Ohio.
She had a very checkered past,
um,
some pipe bombs in her past.
That's why she'd be going into news producing.
She loves when I tell that story.
Actually, she had some highs and lows though, Michael, because it turns out Debbie revealed to me something I never knew in all the 15, 16 years we've been together.
She was Little Miss Hubbard.
Little Miss Hubbard.
Here she is.
She's the brunette getting the crown in this picture.
And check out the side eye from the loser on screen left.
Yeah.
But there were no little boys storming the stage to snatch her tiara.
No.
One is happy.
I asked her what happened.
Like, did you go to Little Miss Ohio after that?
She said she did not participate.
Her parents didn't want to make the drive.
You got the taste, though, at least.
Yeah.
She needed a partner like the runner-up had in that Brazilian thing.
All right, here's another example.
We go off to Sweden for the next one where there's a big finale in one of those reality shows.
It's basically they're dancing with the stars.
It's some dance show.
And what happened was there, as in many places, some crazy climate activists stormed the dancers.
You know, they've been like defiling art everywhere. In Sweden, they decided to storm the finale of the dancing,
interrupting the pair that was out there dancing.
And the jib operator,
and for those of you not familiar with television,
the jib is like the big camera on a crane
that's operated remotely usually.
And it's large and you stay the hell away from it
if you're in a studio.
The jib operator decided to take out the protesters.
Look at this.
Yeah, they're releasing some sort of toxic something.
There, the jib operator gets somebody down and we'll see it from another angle.
Look at this.
Check it out.
Wow.
This is how it's done, Michael Knowles.
That is how it's done.
I hope that that jib operator gets some sort of a prize because, you know, when we're talking about game shows, you've got to remember a rule of life in politics.
If you play stupid games, you will win stupid prizes. And I
think those protesters learned that firsthand. Yes, you will get hurt. You mess with the wrong
people. And that leads me to the madness of crowds right here in New York City. Well, I'm in
Connecticut, but the background's New York, where this lunatic law grad from CUNY, City University
of New York, who apparently was at John Jay college of
law and then transferred to Cooney. I mean, none of these is going to get this person any very far
in the legal profession based on what we just heard. Um, she decided she spoke at the graduation.
Mayor Adams was there. It was a nice occasion. He got booed because he mentioned that he's a
former cop. Okay. And now we understand exactly just how left that crowd was.
Who on earth is going to hire this woman?
This is how she sees our country and others in SOT3.
One of very few legal institutions created to recognize that the law is a manifestation
of white supremacy that continues to oppress and suppress people in
this nation and around the world. We joined this institution to be equipped with the necessary
legal skills to protect our communities, to protect the organizers fighting endlessly day in and out,
working to lift the facade of legal neutrality and confront the systems of oppression that
wreak violence on them.
Systems of oppression created to feed an empire with a ravenous appetite for destruction and
violence. May the rage that fills this auditorium, may it be the fuel for the fight against capitalism,
racism, imperialism, and Zionism around the world.
She wants to abolish ICE. She has some very unfortunate things to say about israel to the
point now where there are protests over her and calls to defund this publicly funded university
where we're helping this person get ahead in the law and this is just a window into how people
on law school campuses today feel right about? About how they see the world. It's absolutely
offensive. The headlines are about how this pro-Palestine student made all sorts of nasty
comments about Jews, which is an expected story. It's not newsworthy. It's not exactly man bites
dog. But what I think is still newsworthy is what this woman is saying about the law.
She's saying that CUNY uniquely recognizes that the law is just this facade to uphold
white supremacy and justice is all a big sham.
And so she graduates from this law school.
She's never even learned the basic meaning of law and of justice.
Law is an ordinance of reason for the common good by the one who has
care of the community and promulgate it. That's the most basic definition you could get of law.
Justice is a habit of virtue that inclines the will to give to each and to all what they deserve.
Again, this is pretty basic stuff. You don't need a law school education to have that.
And so we focus today on how so many things in our society are not what they seem.
We've been talking for a long time about how a lot of men are not the women that they present themselves to be and vice versa.
But this is the case with the law, too.
If this is what this girl learned from law school, then she doesn't know a damn thing about the law.
And a nation that doesn't know anything about the law and doesn't know anything about justice is not going to be able to render justice to anybody. Her name is Fatima Musa Mohammed.
She's from Yemen by way of Queens. And she views, yeah, this law school is one of the very few legal
institutions created, as you heard in the soundbite, to recognize that the law is a manifestation
of white supremacy that continues to oppress and suppress people in
this nation. She's working to help people fight against systems that were created to feed an
empire with a ravenous appetite for destruction and violence. And on she goes, calling the NYPD
and the U.S. military fascists. That's lovely. Over Memorial Day weekend, though it happened
May 12th. Yeah, NYPD, those are fascists, U.S. military fascists, called on her peers to continue to the revolution against capitalism and racism across the country. I mean, this is terrifying that this person's actually gotten a law degree. It doesn't thank God for the bar as it exists now and some of the justices sitting there and judges who fight back against this nonsense. The vast majority of the federal bench is not woke. Maybe some of the state bench, they're not woke and they law just exists to uphold white supremacy. That's what the law is about. Okay, ladies, so what's the alternative? What are you proposing? The only alternative to
law is lawlessness. And that is what she and her fellow radicals, and frankly, a lot of mainstream
Democrat politicians have been advocating in recent years. So it's not a bug of the liberal
system when you hear calls
to defund the police or abolish the police or empty out the prisons or, or any of the rest of
it. That's a feature of the program. The program is explicitly advocating for injustice now because
they don't believe in any such thing as justice. Meanwhile, you've got, you know, what is it, 11 people shot in Chicago over the weekend.
You know, violence breaking out
in a terrible melee in California.
People hurt down in Florida.
Like the numbers are bad.
So, I mean, to be so tone deaf now
to be attacking the police still as a bunch of fascists
and the military still as a bunch of fascists,
like she's probably never gonna have to deal with it, but others have.
You had DeSantis on Fox over the weekend making an interesting comment, I thought, about the
military.
In addition to going to Yale undergrad and Harvard Law School, I think that's the order,
he served.
He served in the U.S. military, in the Navy.
And he had some thoughts on why we're having such recruiting difficulties and some of the problems that we're seeing in our military. Here's a bit of that in
Sat.1. I think the military that I see is different from the military I served in. I see a lot of
emphasis now on political ideologies, things like gender pronouns. I see a lot about things like
DEI. And I think that that's caused recruiting to plummet. I think it's driven
off a lot of warriors. And I think morale is low. I remember being in Iraq and we were in Fallujah
and it was not going well. And yet people were still willing to sign up knowing they'd get sent
to Iraq because they believed that this was something special. And I think we've lost that
a little bit. And I think we really need to rejuvenate the morale in the military. So we will do that on day one,
and you will see very big changes in the services.
Michael, it's a good point. And it's from a vet, right? You forget that about DeSantis
because you hear so much about his current battles as governor, but he served the country
honorably and good on him for reminding people. You know, Megan, people are despairing of this primary.
You've got those who are on the DeSantis side who are just furious that Trump won't drop
out and anoint the next generation.
Then you got people on the Trump side who are just furious that DeSantis won't wait
his turn and allowed Trump to get a second term.
And here I am, I feel as though I'm alone. I'm very pro
primary. I like these guys. They've got thick skin. They're pretty tough. DeSantis, he's a
military vet. Donald Trump was born with the hide of a rhinoceros on him, okay? These are big,
tough guys. They can battle it out. They're going to push each other in a more conservative
direction. We've got great options ahead.
Bring it on, baby.
I love it.
Let's watch these two tough guys hash it out.
You are not alone.
I am 100% with you.
I think, I mean, either one of these obviously would be a better choice than what we have right now, who's pushing the country to the far left.
And, you know, it's good for DeSantis to remind us of some of his firsthand insider knowledge
on how things used to be
inside the military and the armed forces. As we know, Trump has a very different history. He dodged
many attempts to loop him in because of his bone spurs. So why not draw some distinctions there,
right? Between like, I did serve, I did so honorably, and I've learned a thing or two.
Michael, thank you so much. Looking for, I'll sit next to you with the open-minded primary
and enjoying the whole show as I always do when you are on. Thank you for coming on.
Thank you, Megan. Wonderful to be with you as always.
Coming up, two female cyclists speak out on gender ideology.
Transgender cyclists continue to take center stage in the debate for women's rights. This
past week, British Cycling decided to ban all transgender,
quote, women from competing in the female category. That's great. British Cycling is getting it right, saying, sorry, it's about fairness and we're not going to let biological
men compete against women in cycling. Great. That is a step in the right direction. Joining us today to discuss how many
others are making the opposite decision, leaving women cyclists hanging on a thread, are two female
cyclists and champions of their sport who have witnessed what trans athletes competing against
biological women does to female sports. Inga Thompson is a retired American road cyclist
and a badass one too. A 10-time national champion, three-time Olympian, two-time podium finisher at the Women's Tour de France.
Also with us today, Hannah Arendsman.
She's a 35-time national cyclocross champion who announced recently she was retiring from the sport at just 24 years old over this issue.
Ladies, thank you so much for being here and welcome to the show.
Thank you for having us. Yes, thank you. And I know you've never met officially, but we're
chatting in the pregame. And it's been interesting to me because I know, Inga, you've been out there
talking about Hannah saying, this is such a shame. We lost yet another young, promising female
cyclist because people are too
afraid to speak out about this issue because they understand very well there will be penalties. So
let's just start there. You had, I mean, your career has just been absolutely stunning. Amazing.
Lance Armstrong was singing your praises to me recently. I told the audience that.
So what made you finally speak out about this issue, understanding
there could be blowback? Well, when I first started this, I had ultimate compassion for
the transgender athletes, and I still do. And when this first started, it was for transgender women
who had gone through sexual reassignment surgery. And I had believed the the science that they put
forth where they said, Oh, this is fair. And, and I was a believer. And then we started kind of seeing
the abuse of it with people self ID and then realizing the science that they put forth for
this to get past was eight athletes who are transgender women who self-reported. And so you have this study,
which has since shown to be flawed. This self-reported people said, hey, yeah, we're a lot
weaker. And boom, in slides, the IOC slides in this new policy that transgender women can compete.
And from there, then it turned into, you know, a few more years goes by,
and they're realizing that these women are transgender women who have had gonadectomies
have serious health issues. So then it got changed to, you can take up to 10 nanomoles per liter of
testosterone, which is like, you know, 10 times the amount that women have. And you can compete with the women, they can get a therapeutic use exemption. And then we had self ID came in. And so you saw this slow
domino effect of the women's sports being destroyed. And here we have put forth 22 peer
reviewed studies that show that this is not fair, like, well, we're not quite sure, you know, first
five, 10 study come out, well, we're not sure sure. You know, first five, 10 study come out.
Well, we're not sure.
Oh, now there's 22 studies.
Well, we're really not sure.
And yet the IOC accepted one flawed study
and just threw it right in.
And you don't, and the reality is you don't need studies.
All you need is your eyes.
In elementary school, we all figured out what has taken them 22 years or 22 peer reviewed studies
ago. Yeah. I don't know. And so here we have Xavier Picard,
who is the, the, the medical commissioner at the, um, uh,
international cycling union, basically stating,
I've read all the studies, but inclusion is more important than fairness.
Right. And this is the person, and then there's the medical director, Dr. Richard Budget of the
IOC who says, everyone agrees that trans women are women. So that's at the Olympic level,
trans women are women. And then you point out that at the cycling level, you've got a similar
attitude by the person in charge there. They're totally on the side of, quote, inclusivity without
acknowledging the reality that that means unfairness, and in some cases, lack of safety
for actual women who are participating. Right. And yet they allowed a flawed study
and shoehorned it right through really easily.
And we can give them 22 studies and they're not sure.
I mean, you can see right here that they have zero intention of doing anything for the women.
So like for the last five years, I have written letters to the IOC and the International Olympic Committee.
And and it's all the tactic is silence ignore gaslight yeah we'll get to that and they
don't allow any women at the table to have a discussion about this they will have in their
medical directors who believe that transgender women are women and they'll allow the transgender
women to come and state their case but they will not allow the women to come in and state their case, but they will not allow the women to come in and state their case. And
when they do, if they're bringing in women athletes, if they were to speak up, they get
canceled. So how are we going to have fair representation when you have a woman athlete
who all they want to do is to compete and to step in front of all these people? So far,
we haven't seen it happen. But supposedly supposedly there's going to be four women athletes
at the International Cycling Union to speak up.
But all of this-
Well, let's talk about this.
And I want to tell the audience,
you too just got canceled
and we'll talk about what happened to you.
Let's talk about the International Cycling Union, the ICU,
because they've been terrible, terrible on this issue.
And you were pointing
out maybe, you know, it used to be, maybe they allow the 10 nanomules, whatever of testosterone.
Then it was lowered to five. In many places like California, we just saw those runners at the high
school level. You can have as much testosterone, testosterone as you want. They absolutely don't,
they require nothing for those trans girls. It's biological boys, to run against natural born girls. You don't have
to do a thing. You can be in the midst of full male puberty and crush these girls, which is
exactly what happened in that California race we just covered, foot race, that is running.
And nobody will say boo to you. So at the professional level, they've started to realize
they have to have some standards. But being past male puberty doesn't count against you. No problem whatsoever. All
that, you know, the strong legs, the femurs, the musculature, that's no problem. No problem. So
they only focus on the testosterone. So the UCI originally said, okay, it's at five, this five
nanomules on the testosterone. Then there was pushback and they lowered it to 2.5 and it has to have been at 2.5 for two years. And you and others have been saying newsflash that doesn't solve it. That's, that's not a fix. And now there's been more buzz amongst women cyclists about possibly boycotting the events where some of these trans cyclists are going to show up. And then the UCI realized it was going to have to do something because some of its biggest stars were saying, we're not going to show up at your biggest races.
And that's a problem. So you tell me, because it looked to me like you were not satisfied and go
with the UCI's fig leaf. Cause they were like, we're going to have a meeting. We'll have a
meeting in August and we're going to invite a female cyclist, someone named Katarina. She's
going to represent you ladies and fear not. Well, the last Cyclocost Championships about
a year and a half ago, Katarina, who is our representative, was wearing a trans flag wristband,
which goes against policy. You're not supposed to be promoting one side or the other.
And she's got the trans wristband on. And then I've had private Zoom meetings with her where
transgender women are women, and they should be included. So now we have the woman's representative
at the International Cycling Union stating also trans women are women, and this is who is representing us. And the Cycling Professional Association for the Women haven't even been contacted for this meeting.
And these are the women representing the pro cyclists.
Do we know how a majority of the female cyclists feel about this issue?
I think that the survey that they did was taken with only professional women cyclists feel about this issue? I think that the survey that they did was taken with
only professional women cyclists and 93% said they do not want to have women or transgender
women in the women's field. And so the International Cycling Union came back and they said,
well, you know, we're really not going to do this on the feelings of the women,
women, because that's not really right.
We have to follow the science.
But it's like, hold on.
So you're not going to let the women put their feelings out there,
but transgender women can get into the women's race based on their feelings.
I mean, does anybody not see the hypocrisy here?
And then we have the medical director saying transgender women are women. I mean, we don't even stand a chance.
And this is why I'm advocating for protesting, because every effort that we've had to do with trying to work with the policy, trying to get a seat at the table, has all been stonewalled, gaslit.
We can't get anywhere.
So it's like, all all right let's protest and we are getting somewhere because
two days after austin killips won gila two days afterwards the international cycling union said
we stand by our transgender policy and then we started calling for protest two days after that
it's like well maybe we will revisit this and no women yet have been consulted and so i want to go ahead with the protest and we
have it or um at the national championships coming up here pro nationals uh june 22nd to the 25th
and there's some women in um in scotland that are putting together a protest there and i think we
will be protesting until this gets changed and i know it'll probably
start very small but it'll grow and somewhere they have to listen to the women there are many
forms of protest including what what hannah's been doing and i know you know well yeah as i said you
you've been praising it so hannah you she mentioned uh inga mentioned Austin Killips, who is a biological man who is winning in women's
spaces in cycling. And I know there was, we recently covered Austin Killips because
Austin was involved in a race that I don't think you participated in. Inga mentioned Tour of the
Gila. It's in New Mexico. It happened on April 30th and it's an elite race. It's sanctioned by the UCI that we've been talking about. And Killips won the race and won the $35,000 prize money for first place.
The first time in the race's history that the women's prize money equaled that of the men.
And yet it went to a biological man.
Killips only took up cycling like yesterday, 2019, 2019.
Um, and now has been crushing it in the women's racing.
And my understanding is not only is Killips now a candidate to make the U S Olympic team,
our Olympic team, our female Olympic team, um, in Paris next summer, but that you raced
against Killips previously and Killips beat you.
Is that right?
Killips beat you.
And then there was a trans person right behind you as well.
You were sandwiched in between two, two biological men in a race that happened last
December.
Tell us about that.
Yeah.
He's been racing in the elite women's cyclocross field for about two years that i've
been aware of and it was interesting the first year he came out he didn't do well at all like
his handling skills weren't the elite level and uh now he's a new rider kind of jumping in right and then within
a year he was keeping up on strength along his handling skills have improved a little bit but
still running a lot of sections that us pro women ride and that showed forth a lot at the Hartford Cyclocross Nationals this last December
where he and another guy raced in our field and they were third and fifth in our in our elite
women's field and yeah it, it was just demoralizing
when you have two guys
who have been deluding themselves,
beat you like that,
when you've been working at it
since you were a kid.
My understanding is,
I don't know that much about cycling,
but you point out the distinction
between the tricky handling of the bike
in the tougher parts of the race
versus just sheer power,
you know, just using your legs and getting ahead.
And my understanding is that this was no problem to him in being new to cycling because he
could beat the women in the power phases of the race.
That's what you're saying, that his ineptitude as a new professional cycler in the trickier parts of the race was no problem for him because he had such an advantage over you when it came to the power pieces of the course.
Yes.
Yes.
And it's just, you know, it's biology.
If you look at a male body versus a female body, just look at their bone structure, their levers are longer and generally stronger bigger and the
muscles that they can build are a lot bigger too and especially if they've gone through puberty
already those effects never go away their heart is bigger their lungs are bigger which means they
can get blood to their muscles quicker and oxygen to their muscles quicker and then get the waste away quicker so that they can recover
faster. So it's,
there's no way to undo that and you shouldn't undo that.
That would be just, though, destroy human. Like that would be terrible.
Well now, um, at that race, cause we talked about this on the show,
not even knowing that you were coming on Hannah, that at that race, because we talked about this on the show, not even knowing that you were coming on, Hannah, that race in December, he was racing against you in the women's category.
And you're the you're the biker he pushed off course.
Right. We showed the audience video of this.
Are you that biker?
I am.
Cyclist. All right.
So let's let's show the video.
What's happening here?
Can you explain it?
So that is a very tricky off camber. You can't really see it from the camera angle,
but it's like a wall and you're riding across the side of it and it's all muddy.
It's very hard to ride, but if certain lines were grassy enough and grippy enough that you
could actually ride it. And Austin in the white is on a line there at the bottom of the hill.
And instead of cutting straight down the course, it seems that he stumbled and runs right into me.
I'm the rider in the red and the yellow. I didn't really pay attention to it because you're like,
when you're in that situation, you just kind kind of focus if you pay attention to the rider you're gonna go down so you gotta pay attention to your line stick your line and try to ride it
out which thankfully I was able to but it slowed me down a good bit and you know that kind of always
just knocks your focus a little bit so it was a little frustrating because you know like you're
professional field and you have like that really wasn't a place where somebody should have run into you.
But I don't I can't vouch for intentions.
I just, you know, it just seemed like a kind of a clumsy.
But is it the case that a new female cyclist probably never would have been in this race and therefore wouldn't have placed you in that kind of danger because this is a guy who's there only because of the power stretches and is inept on the more difficult technical stretches, endangering other cyclists like you.
Somebody who has that much power in the women's field should also have this handling to go along with it.
You wouldn't see a woman with that much strength doing that,
especially in cyclocross.
They just wouldn't be able to keep up.
What is cyclocross?
Can you explain that for those of us who don't follow?
Okay.
So if you think about road racing, that's just pavement.
That's big field.
You see like the Tour de France is a classic version of a road race.
And then you have mountain biking, fat tires, suspension.
Cyclocross was where those two meet in the middle.
So you have a skinnier knobby tire, no suspension, kind of looks like a road bike.
And you do these circuit courses, generally in parks, about 8 to 12 minutes long.
You can have mud, sand.
You could be running up staircases.
You could be riding down those steep off-camber hills.
It could be snowing.
It could be frozen ruts.
So you're on and off the bike constantly.
It's a great, big, fun party.
It's about an hour-long race, just all all out it's a good time it's awesome and no wonder he wants in uh so i presume there's a
male division uh for people like austin the i understand that there is something called
the cyclocross world uh and and that's do you believe that you know you could have made that my understanding is you you you were not considered for that's, do you believe that, you know, you could have made that?
I'm understanding is you, you, you were not considered for that.
Do you think you could have made that had you not been competing against these two males?
I kind of wonder, I can't say for sure, but they definitely have taken up slots from women.
They have taken opportunity from women.
It's so disheartening. So your concern, Inga,
is that people like Hannah, so Hannah decides she's going to retire. She's like, I'm at it.
I'm done. I'm not going to, what's the point? And that was her way of protesting. But your concern
is too few women are willing to do that. And they don't want to sacrifice their careers,
understandably. And even more so too few women will explain why they're really
leaving. In fact, in race after race and what we're seeing when these trans women, these biological
men win is you see the next in line, the actual woman say, Oh, I'm, I'm fine with it. Oh, it's
okay. I I'm fine. You know, I, I'm supportive. And your belief is that's BS. Yeah, they have to, because otherwise they lose
sponsorship. They get canceled by their teams. I mean, we've watched a lot of these team sponsors
actively go after any of the women who might even try to speak up. They are told to be quiet.
And I mean, you saw what they did to me. This is what happens to any women that
do speak up. We watched what happened to Chloe Dygert when she liked the tweet of a Black woman
that was about protecting women's rape shelters, and they labeled her as racist. And I'm like,
hold on, do you guys not see that she liked a Black woman's's tweet but you labeled her as racist and this is what
they're willing to do anything and everything to silence and so they'll take anything that an
athlete does and blow it out of proportion into something that that it wasn't even but as soon
as you start saying racist nazi fascist hoping that it will silence any woman and and it has worked i think up until now
where we have so many people speaking up now like uh specifically like right now it's a lot of the
more right-leaning um media left-leaning still won't touch it any bicycling media will not touch it, but they will in order to attack you.
And I mean, so you can just look at the advertisers all are all over you,
what they pull their sponsorships from you as a bike, as a cyclist,
they will pull sponsorship. I mean, I'm, I'm going to go back to Chloe Diger. I hate picking
on her here, but did you see what Rafa did when chloe digert liked candace owens tweet about protecting
rape shelters chloe was forced to put out an apology and then rafa was tweeting saying keep
keep keep rape shelters for women only don't allow for women only people and she liked it
and she liked to tweet by candace owens okay and and she was forced to put out an apology by her team and then rafa came
out and said that was not enough of an apology and basically sent her to a rafa is a clothing company
and high-end clothing company and they came back and they said that apology was not good enough it
was it was not it was not. We need you to apologize more.
Oh, my God.
Think about what happens to a young woman athlete when they go through this.
Like, let's look at our woman tennis player just not too recently,
long ago, maybe a year ago, Osana Osaka.
Sorry, I can't remember her name right now.
Naomi Osaka.
Right, that talked about her mental health and taking care of it.
And yet here we have Rafa that says it's not enough. Right, that talked about her mental health and taking care of it.
And yet here we have Rafa that says it's not enough.
We need another apology.
And we want everybody to know that we're sending her to re-education camp.
And I mean, they drug this poor woman through the gutter.
Thankfully, Chloe is as strong as she is.
But where would we be if she had not been that strong? And she had committed suicide from the incredible onslaught and defamation that got levied against this poor
athlete. I mean, where are all the people screaming bloody murder about what you just
did to a woman's mental health? Where are the teammates to say, we don't need you,
Ratha. We got a lot of sponsors. We stand with our teammate in solidarity with her. You can't do it or they
all lose their sponsorship. It is beyond repulsive what is happening to women in sports.
And I'm hoping that in about 10 years, we will see this as one of the biggest tragedies and scandals against women and against children is this ideology movement and all of the people
that just didn't stand behind it and said nothing, but have actively, actively attacked
anybody who speaks up.
What has your experience been, Hannah?
First of all, talk to us about the decision to peace out of the sport that you loved.
And then whether you had any blowback because you deigned to explain why.
So there were multiple reasons why I left the sport.
It was definitely part of it the biggest thing that i want to focus on now that i'm out though
is that it is wrong it is unfair to have guys racing in the women's sports i don't want to
watch any more of the young athletes i helped mentor have to go through that or have to look forward, but not even look forward, dread that if they get in the elite women's field one day, which would be a dream come true for them,
that they don't get to race women. They have to race guys. And it's sad to think that something
we fought so hard for, we have a great men's field. We have a great men's field we have a great women's field why are we trying to blend
the two like there's no there's no point to it they're not following science so yeah it's just
a hope that people will wake up and realize that this,
this can't go on.
Has there,
have you received any blowback or have people been respectful?
The day I went and did the first,
the signing of that Supreme court brief,
I put,
had to put all my social medias on private private and just kind of just be like you know
what there are just people who are going to be saying some not like life-giving things they're
just going to say some really vulgar things that i don't need to hear no one needs to hear that
and just walk away from that art which it's it's as much as most people can do to anyone who is outside the sport
but it's a big reason why nobody in the sport will say anything because if your
social media platform gets blasted like that that's your biggest
um platform to speak about your sponsors.
Sponsors see that, no one wants to touch you.
If no one wants to touch you, guess what?
It's an expensive sport and you can't race.
And I've also known some ladies who would have loved to say something about it and they're afraid to lose their job.
Pretty sure they would lose their job because even their workplace would have
been down on them for it like there's no freedom of speech for it
right i mean you're in a similar situation of riley gaines who was forced to swim against leah
thomas and tied for third and then they gave leah the trophy they wanted the picture with leah not
with riley and riley you know people have accused her of Katie Porter, I think accused her of, Oh, it's all about you.
And Riley's saying, I'm supposed to be, I think it was in dentistry school right now,
or dental to be a dental hygienist. I I'm not, I didn't mean to become an activist.
I just wanted to help the women coming after me who aren't in a position to speak out now that I am.
But still, you saw what happened to her at that San Francisco State University.
I mean, that's probably what would happen to you, Hannah, if you went on a college tour
and just in the kind, respectful manner that you speak, told your story.
They would do the same to you because you're not even allowed to, when you have standing
to object, lodge that objection.
Even those words, your feelings are too offensive
to be spoken, to be expressed.
And that leads you back to you, Inga.
So you went on Fox and raised some of these issues
and said, despite the 22 studies, they don't listen,
they don't listen to testimonials.
It's this UCI review
where we're going
to have a new result in August is a farce. And you said, I'm calling for female cyclists to,
to protest, you know, maybe take a knee, um, do what you can for fans to come and make their
voices heard for coaches to try to protect their players. And very soon thereafter, the Siniska Cycling Board,
which is a France-based American pro women's cycling team. So it's an American team,
but it's based in France. I mean, you were on their board. They parted ways with you.
And how? What they wrote was so disgusting. I mean, I'm glad you can laugh about it now,
because I'm sure it was very jarring when you saw this organization. How long had you been
working with them, first of all, just to set the scene? Well, the reason why I'm laughing about it
is back in November, when I joined Sineska, I told them my stance that I'm very, very outspoken. And Jeff Jones,
who bankrolls the team, and the other co-owner, Chris Katosky, agreed with my position. And I
had the email chain to back this up. And in one of the emails, it said, they would be breaking
windows riding in the streets if they were women. And they were very supportive of me. And so when the Riley
Games incident happened, I was asked to advocate more and to advocate louder. And I said, I don't
think that would be good for me to be on the board of Siniska if I did that. And so we had an
agreement. And once again, these are in emails, had an agreement that I would step down from Saniska and advocate more loudly. And that's what I did. And so really nice
email letter about wanting to advocate more. And then within about two weeks, here comes Chris Gretzky putting out this hateful that I was dehumanizing and demagoguery and bullying,
that I was bullying. And I'm like, hold on a second. So you mean that it's dehumanizing
for me to speak out to protect women? I think it's actually dehumanizing for men to be competing
against women. Demagoguery, that's on the political side.
I'm going to argue that one and say this is a human rights issue. This is a sports issue.
It's about fairness. And I said, so, and bullying when I'm speaking up for women's sports is-
Wait a minute. This is just dawning on me now because I'm an outsider they spun it like they had fired you you're what
you're saying is you voluntarily left with their with a handshake to go work on your advocacy
without them saying get out you're terrible you no longer represent because the way they spun it
the media is inga sucks she's a transphobe bye this is i'm i'm learning this for the first time
yeah no i mean if anything i mean i really like jeff jones um he paid me to step aside and go
speak up more because he was so upset about what happened to riley games and and when chris
katosky wrote this letter even jeff jones back and said, what the explicative did you write this for?
We had an agreement.
She honored her agreement to quietly walk away.
And now you're going to do this to her?
I mean, there was a mirror you.
Let me tell the audience what they said.
And then you continue.
So they know what they did.
This is a couple of choice pull quotes. Let me tell the audience what they said, and then you continue so they know what they did.
This is a couple of choice pull quotes.
The statement said, if shared in the absence of politics, Inga's knowledge and experience would benefit many and advance cycling for everyone.
However, she's decided to dedicate her time to excluding people that are otherwise and currently eligible to compete in UCI events.
She has also attempted to use our team as a platform for her political activity.
Development teams state, the team states, that due to associations with Inga, some lost media exposure.
Some respected cycling journalists refused to cover the team, while qualified and competent
people have declined job offers out of fear of crossing or appearing to align themselves
with her, meaning you.
Ms. Thompson's departure resolves a troubling conflict of interest. Sineska is an apolitical organization and her campaign
and methods are not and will never be Sineska's mission. Here's the final. To be clear, she's
entitled to her opinions and advocacy, but her methods and personal attacks are inconsistent
with our mission to advance opportunities for women.
Those methods, well documented on Ms. Thompson's social media presence,
include dehumanization of transgender people, spreading misinformation, demagoguery,
and personal attacks on anyone who opposes her views.
Our mission has been and always will be that of advancing women at all levels of cycling
and doing so in a framework of equality,
fairness, and intolerance. Despite the negativity fostered by Ms. Thompson,
we are succeeding and we will push forward faster without her.
I just start laughing. My standing up for women and fairness for women's sports,
women's rights issues,
putting forth scientific studies.
I'm just going to sit there and laugh.
I mean, what a great spin job.
Those must be the methods that are inconsistent with Sineska's mission.
Well, if they're there for women,
then what I find interesting with Sineska
is they had two women on there,
two highly decorated women Olympians,
me and Marion Cligny.
And Marion Cligny, multiple world championships,
multiple Olympics.
And then you have me with my credentials.
We're the only two women Olympian there. We're the only one with international pro experience. And we both were
removed from the team for standing up for women's rights while Soneska talks about being there for
women and the two men who own the team are there for women. And yet they turn around and they pull this stunt what i think happened was that
if that that they became cowards and they folded to the transgender advocacy crowd if you do not
go out there and flog yourself a hundred times and put out a statement against inga thompson we will
forever cancel you we will go after, we will forever cancel you.
We will go after you.
We will make sure you...
I mean, I don't know what happened behind the scenes,
but I see that Siniska had to flog themselves publicly
and denounce me in order to, I don't know,
throw women under the bus.
Sure up their wool credentials.
But this is a message because if they can do this to you, people need to understand, you know, what a goddess you are in this sport is if they can do this to you, they can certainly you first thought it was a private correspondence,
which was bad enough. But is it true that you did not realize they had publicly released this?
Yeah, the first hour, I kind of had my jaw on the ground. I'm like, all right,
it's public within the group. And then the next thing I know that it was a public statement.
I'm like, oh, this isn't going to go well for them.
Anybody who puts out a statement like that right out of the gate,
also no sponsor is going to touch them because you do not do that to a board member.
And if you have private correspondence that shows differently,
knowing that I can expose that and show that they are in fact lying,
what sponsor is going to touch them? And, and I mean, they, yeah, when they did that,
they're banking on being so inclusive, quote unquote, of everybody who's not a biological woman, that they'll just get a pass for treating you like this. But it's even worse
than we're outlining because, forgive me for raising this, but you had just been through
a terrible health scare and real issue and they knew about it and they couldn't have cared less
what this was going to do to you, to your mental health, to your reputation. It was all about them
and their virtue signaling.
Yeah. I mean, I had just come off of a double mastectomy from cancer and I wasn't five weeks out and went to a sponsorship fundraising dinner and had Adam Giles, who's also on the board of director, try to threaten to chest bump me and said that they couldn't get sponsors because of
me and they couldn't get interviews or press to sponsor them because of me. And we have Jeff
Jones standing there just going, Adam, stop, Adam, stop. And physically getting into my space, knowing that I have just gone through a double
mastectomy. I mean, the extent that Sineska will go to, to silence anybody who speaks up is beyond
the pale. And I will leave Jeff Jones out of this one and focus in on Chris Katosky and Adam Giles as to an active, active
intimidation and silencing campaign. And sorry, didn't work. Didn't work at all. All it did for
me is give me more resolve. And I really truly think that they thought that this last stunt
would silence me like that will get her out of
here. And I'm like, Nope, Nope. Sorry. Not going to happen. The other thing, and I can't help but
wonder in our first hour, we were talking about how I do have an objection to trans people coming
into my gynecologist office or my mammogram office. You have to wait long enough to get in
for these appointments. They're stressful enough. I don't want to walk in there and have to wait behind a biological man who has
no business going to a gynecologist or getting a mammogram, right? It's just not something I want
to deal with at these precarious moments. And I hear about your story where you were diagnosed
with cancer. You had a double mastectomy, extremely traumatic and unique for the most part
to women, to women. It is very possible. It's very remotely
possible for men to have breast cancer, but it's, it's extremely rare. Um, and I just wonder whether
how there couldn't be more compassion and open-mindedness to a woman going through a
uniquely woman's issue that cuts right to one's mortality as a result of being a woman trying to advocate for other women who are feeling helpless,
who are not empowered in the other ways that you were and responding in this way.
Yeah. Well, when you looked at during COVID, I saw again and again and again, transgender women who wanted breast augmentation felt like they're not committing suicide if they
didn't have breast augmentation was more important than women going through cancer
and I remember being upset at that point during COVID not not even comprehending the fact that
I would actually be living that um And it was pretty interesting being in,
you know, in the plastic, you're in the office and having transgender women in there that were
coming in for breast augmentation, and I'm going in there to have a double mastectomy.
And it felt very surreal to be in that same space with,
it was really tough to stomach because this is a female issue.
And,
and when you think about them also as,
you know,
transgender women asking for gynecological exams and asking for gynecologists just to have more understanding of their issues,
it's like,
no,
you need to go to your, your reconstructive surgeon for that,
or the person who did your sexual reassignment surgery.
But to be demanding to go into gynecologist offices for validation is as ludicrous as being in a women's sports for validation.
Yeah, yeah, I know.
I wrote down one of your lines, which I loved, and it was from
one of the articles in which you spoke, but I have it here someplace, but it was, we do not need to
participate in your dysphoria. We do not need to participate in your dysphoria. And it's just so
reductionist to even suggest that when we go into the gynecologist, it's all about some hole.
They have absolutely no clue what happens when you go into a gynecologist, what gets examined, what they're testing for from ovarian
cancer to other GYN issues that a lot of women suffer from that can be very painful to pregnancies.
I mean, we could go down the list, right? None of which any one of these people will ever suffer,
but we have to pretend because they do want us to participate in their dysphoria.
Yeah. And they want us to validate them. And so here's how I have a distinction here.
I believe that there are a very, very, very few true transgender women. And they are and I know
quite a few. And they are quietly living their lives. But this opens up this loophole to autogynephilia, which we call AGP, which is the sexual fetishization
of wanting to be a woman.
And part of this is they need everybody around them to validate their dysphoria.
And there was a time that I was willing to go along with this.
And anymore, it's like, no, if you were asking me to validate your dysphoria then I really don't think you have
dysphoria you have autogynephilia and and it's not on my shoulders what's that all the more reason
why you shouldn't be here yeah and it shouldn't fall on women's shoulders for men to try to figure out their gender dysphoria.
They have it.
Great.
Go to your support group.
Go to your therapist.
Go elsewhere.
But it is not on women to have to carry the issues of men.
And think about it.
I mean, sorry to take you to the worst place, but it's happening.
So you're there and you are worried about your breast cancer.
And now you have to sit in a small room with someone who is getting off on being in that space.
That is a new development in American life. That is never something we had to worry about.
To sit in the office with, in the same office that I'm in going in for breast cancer
and people don't understand it's really hard to get an appointment to get in there I mean I
I did everything possible to rush it through as soon as possible so that it wouldn't metastasize
and and and thankfully I did but I mean I had to I had to squeak and then the other funny thing was
you know issues about well we'll only give you one and I'm like no I want to double well you know we don't really want
to do that and it was like no I really think I'll go for double it's like yeah but that seems a
little bit extreme but I'm like hold on but if I if I identified as a transgender man you take
them off like that so if we have any issues then I'm just going to self-declare here. The doctor's like, okay. You can resume your racing career over in
the man's lane. Of course, that's never the way it goes. Never goes the other way. All right,
let's take a quick break and come right back. Thank you so much for this open, honest discussion.
It's an honor to have you both here. So it's not easy to speak out, but speak out. We must, no matter where we are,
to protect our women and support and support them. Or if you're in the sport to try what
happened over in great Britain is inspirational. The British cycling association changed the rules
to say, no, no men, no biological men, period. You're out. And this caused quite the kerfuffle.
Someone named Emily Bridges, who about two minutes ago was Zach Bridges setting national junior men's
records over there, um, came out as trans only in 2020, but it raced in men's events while
transitioning. So it was a man, a successful man in biking, and then transitioned over.
And it has been a woman for two minutes. And the Brits said, we are not racing against bridges. And the British cycling association
agreed and changed the rule. And now bridges reaction is this is a violent act. When the
government expresses admiration towards Ron DeSantis is fascist state, which kidnaps children
and is itching to pass legislation to ban us from public life. It is a violent act and goes on to say the British Cycling Group is furthering a genocide against us, a genocide.
So far, they're standing by their position, British Cycling.
U.S. Cycling, totally different.
They're allowing it 2.5 nanomoles of testosterone in 24 months as that.
Even if you've gone through male puberty
that's where the uci the cycling group is the ioc is terrible is it going to change what do you
think hannah as somebody who's connected to a lot of these racers still is it is american cycling
going to have to change yeah i hope so the ussc will probably change after a lot of the bigger organizations have changed.
Very concerned about their monetary gain.
And so they will do whatever is the popular opinion.
The Olympic Committee you're talking about.
And do you think this Killips is going to get on it? They will do whatever is the popular opinion. The Olympic Committee you're talking about. Mm-hmm.
And do you think this Killips is going to get on it? This person who transitioned in 2019 and is now racing as a female in your race?
On the Olympics?
Yeah.
Depends if rules are made to make women's sports for women only, then no. But if this continues, if, if, uh,
it continues that men who have been taking hormones can indeed join the women's field,
then yes, I think it is very possible for Austin to get on the Olympic team.
I mean, that's, that's in a way, Inga, it could help your cause.
You know, I think if Americans see that same as they saw Leah Thomas,
it could help.
What we're looking at right now is when after Austin Killips won a tour of
the Gila and they were riding just a simple road bike,
we did the numbers on this one with quite a few people.
I won't bring up their names.
And if they ride the same way and they go to the pro nationals coming up here in the end of June,
there's a very good chance that Austin Killips will win the individual time trial.
If that happens, they become an automatic onto the world championships,
and they also become on,
on the long team for next year's Olympics.
So we're looking at a potentially in cycling,
or at least on the road,
Austin Killips displacing some very highly decorated women from the world
championships and from potentially from the Olympics.
So in the time we have left, what can we do?
How can we help you?
How can we help support you?
We are looking at protesting at Pro Nationals, June 22nd to the 25th in Knoxville, Tennessee.
Go to my website.
I'm going to start posting more on there coming right up and wear a t-shirt that says 100% woman at the events at
any women's races. And for the cyclists, what should they do? I'm asking them to take a knee.
I'm asking for all of the support staff around to wear a t-shirt that says 100% woman. The athletes really can't speak up.
So we need the support staff anywhere and around
to wear this t-shirt, to talk to the sponsors.
And because it's only going to get louder.
And you know what?
The athletes can speak out.
They can speak out anonymously,
at least if they don't want to do it,
you know, with their name,
they can do it anonymously.
Go to ingathompsonfoundation.org,
ingathompsonfoundation.org. All the best, Hannah and Inga. Thank you so, so much.
Thank you, Megan.
And I'll speak to all of you more tomorrow. What a story.
Thanks for listening to The Megyn Kelly Show. No BS, no agenda, and no fear.
