Becky Pepper-Jackson, a 13-year-old male student, won the female shot put at a track meet in West Virginia.
Yes, this child is the B.P.J. named in the case against West Virginia’s Save Women’s Sports Act. The Fourth Circuit sided with him, caring more about his feelings and wants than the females.
Then again, West Virginia allowed Becky’s family to change his name and sex on his birth certificate.
Becky started living as a female at three years old. A doctor diagnosed him with gender dysphoria. He started puberty-delaying treatment for almost a year when West Virginia enacted the act in 2021.
Five middle school girls refused to compete against him.
It’s a shame the girls had to miss out on the meet.
Becky dominated the shot put with a 32-foot throw. The second-place girl threw 29 feet:
The Harrison County middle school track championship was Thursday, just two days after the court ruling. Records show that Becky Pepper-Jackson won the shot put by a significant margin, three feet difference. She placed second in the discus, two feet behind the first place finisher from Lincoln Middle and three feet ahead of another Lincoln Middle competitor.The records show that five Lincoln Middle shot put athletes are listed with no distance. Athletes from other county middle schools participated in the event. Bridgeport Middle swept the top three shot put positions with Becky Pepper-Jackson’s 32-foot effort achieving the top mark.
“Oh, but he came in second in the discus!” That does not matter. That second-place belongs to a female.
By the way, stop saying biological female. Don’t let them take the word female from us.
CLICK HERE FOR FULL VERSION OF THIS STORY