This is all so tiresome, yet our media and the trans activist Left continue this little semantic game, so I'll keep addressing it until they stop.
Just a few weeks ago, UPenn announced it would strip 'trans' swimmer William (Lia) Thomas and restore titles and records he stole from them during his time as a swimmer. To anyone with eyeballs, it was clear what Thomas was doing: he'd ranked 554th in the men's 200-yard freestyle and 65th in the men's 500-yard freestyle.
So he moved to the women's team where he used his advantages as a male to rank 1st in the 500-yard freestyle and 5th in the 200-yard freestyle.
In short, he cheated.
Thanks to Linda McMahon and the Trump administration, the tide is turning in favor of female athletes.
But that hasn't stopped the men and their allies in the media from trying to sue their way back into women's sports:
Transgender runner sues Princeton for keeping her out of women’s race https://t.co/QUudJwAwWK pic.twitter.com/2feImSih3w
— New York Post (@nypost) July 18, 2025
Transgender runner Sadie Schreiner is suing Princeton University after the school allegedly excluded the athlete from a May 3 women’s race.
Schreiner’s lawsuit claimed the athlete attempted to participate in the women’s 200-meter sprint at the Larry Ellis Invitational as one of the 141 participants unattached to a university or club. The suit alleges officials told Schreiner the athlete could not participate 15 minutes before the race began.
'I do not want to assume, but you are transgender,' a Princeton official allegedly told Schreiner, per the complaint.
'The actions of the two Princeton officials were in blatant and willful disregard of Sadie’s rights based on Sadie’s rights as a transgender woman under controlling New Jersey law, thereby causing Sadie Shreiner to foreseeable emotional and physical harm,' the lawsuit argued.
There is no emotional or physical harm done to Schreiner. He is free to compete in the men's races.
And, hey, New York Post? Stop referring to this man as 'she.'
Schreiner was born, and remains, a male named Camden. In December, he was rejected by 42 Division I women's programs. Some of those states cited their state laws prohibiting men from participating in women's sports, but even the 24 who had no such laws rejected Schreiner.
Schreiner said the rejections came because people were 'too afraid' to support him.
In March, CNN interviewed Schreiner over his 'disappointment' in the Trump administration defending women's sports and women's rights:
She’s a two-time All American in 200- and 400-meter races. A college athlete used to winning, with a goal of making the 2032 US Olympic team. But 21-year-old Sadie Schreiner says she feels “defeated.”
Not by the sport she loves or the physical rigors of the training but by the shifting rules on transgender athletes that have left her running alone around the track or now not running competitively at all.
But she won’t stop. “I don’t know what would happen if I don’t have track and field, and I’m not going to see that reality,” Schreiner insisted.
Schreiner knew when she was young that her physical body didn’t match her gender and began transitioning while in high school. She takes 8 pills daily to keep her testosterone levels low enough so they aren’t detectable on lab tests.
“(The hormone therapy) shrank my ligaments. It’s made me shorter. It’s made me weaker. It’s lessened my muscles. It’s redistributing my fat. It’s lowered my lung capacity,” Schreiner explained. “My biology is fundamentally different than a cis man.”
Once again, CNN, the correct pronoun here is 'he.'
Schreiner is still a man. He's taller, faster, and stronger than the women he competes against, and the record -- which CNN boasts about in their opening paragraph -- proves that. As I noted earlier, I spent time at the Marathon Run Museum in Marathon, Greece. In every race, no fewer than 30 men were faster than the top woman.
Of course, the Left will argue that those women need to train harder to beat Schreiner. Yet they never ask why guys like Schreiner can't be expected to train harder to beat their fellow men.
And that's where Schreiner is free to compete: against his fellow men.







