Real women and girls are paying a high price of liberal-Satanic trans dogma. A Dutch athlete is calling for a ban on men in women’s rugby after an injury from a trans player ended her career.
Elena King’s knee was torn from its socket when she was tackled by a male player identifying as a woman in a Dutch premiership rugby match in January. She was told that she will have life-long knee pain and needs to endure months of physiotherapy before she can run again.
The Dutch rugby association Rugby Nederland (RN) has since set up a group to review policies and make recommendations on transgender athletes, but has been criticised for not acting before the injury happened. World Rugby banned men from international women’s contact rugby in 2020 due to the risk of injury.
King explained that a woman “could not have pulled my leg out of its socket” and added: “It could have been prevented.”
She criticised the organisers for endangering women to promote an ideology: “They allow transgender women to play in a contact sport like rugby because they put inclusivity above our safety.”
The twenty-year-old stated: “I hope we can create a future where we don’t have to worry about being labelled as transphobic when talking about safety and our own spaces.
“And even more important, a future where we don’t have to worry about getting hurt by someone with male strength when we only want to play the sport we so love.”
Last year, the same man knocked unconscious another female rugby player in a match. She is still undergoing tests for suspected brain injury and can no longer use a helmet due to migraines.
She said: “Although I think that everyone should have a chance, this is already a dangerous sport. Biological men are just much stronger.”
A clinical physiology expert from the Karolinska Institutet in Sweden, Dr Tommy Lundberg, criticised sports federations for waiting until high-profile cases happen before acting. He explained: “Males certainly have a profound advantage in both muscle mass and strength and power and especially in the upper body”.
Board member at RN Simone de Bruin commented: “Inclusion, fairness, and player safety are extremely important principles of the sport of rugby. Precisely because the risk of injury is higher in rugby, RN takes safety on the field very seriously.”