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Teenage volleyball player knocked out by transgender for season
MADISON, Wis., December 6, 2023 /4 WINDS/ — A father in California is upset at his school district for allowing a transgender to play volleyball against his 17-year-old daughter.
The daughter took a spiked ball to the head that caused a concussion leaving her with blurry vision and a lost season. The volleyball match was at Half Moon High School. The boy pretending to be a girl is Aaron Lester, the son of California musician John Lester and radical activist Lisa Phelan.
Steve McConkey, President of the worldwide sports ministry 4 WINDS, counters the LGBTQ sports movement. “The first thing Biden did in office was reverse Trump’s policies stopping transgender athletes,” states McConkey. “Never in my wildest imagination would I have thought we would have to address situations where men pretend to be women in sports. On top of that, women are being hurt by men in competition. This shows how bankrupt we have become as a country.”
In 2003, McConkey started fighting against the International Olympic Committee’s transgender policies. He was the only one who stood against this publicly.
From there, the transgender movement spread to state high schools, the NCAA, NFL, NBA, MLB, and NHL. McConkey has fought this agenda every step of the way.
After years of standing up, World Athletics (track and field), World Aquatics (swimming), Union Cycliste Internationale (cycling), and the International Powerlifting Federation voted to ban transgenders from participating at the international level. Twenty-three states have passed anti-transgender athlete bills.
On October 4, 2023, McConkey talked at three hearings at the Wisconsin Capitol. Two bills were against transgender athletes on high school and college teams. The third bill was against transgender surgeries and hormone treatments for those under eighteen. The bills passed the Assembly and Senate, but Governor Evers vetoed them.
Megan Rapinoe mocks God in her last game
MADISON, Wis., November 13, 2023 /4 WINDS/ — Just minutes into her last soccer game, Magan Rapinoe injured her leg. Afterwards, she addressed reporters and mocked God.
“I’m not a religious person or anything and if there was a God, like, this is proof that there isn’t,” Rapinoe said. “This is f—-d up. It’s just f—-d up. Six minutes in and I eat my Achilles.”
Rapinoe played for the National Women’s Soccer League and the United States national team. She won gold with the national team at the 2012 Olympics in London.
“Rapinoe was a dominant figure in soccer for years,” states 4 WINDS President McConkey. “She promotes radical ideologies. Instead of realizing she has had a good run, she mocks God in the last minutes of her career. Whether they like it or not, athletes are role models. It is sad to see such a talented person use her status to promote bitterness.”
Only person fighting the International Olympic Committee over transgenders in 2003, Steve McConkey’s home state Wisconsin tries to stop transgender athletes
MADISON, Wis., October 12, 2023 /4 WINDS/ — After a contentious meeting, the Wisconsin Assembly passed a bill stopping transgenders from competing on high school and college teams. Also, they are trying to stop transgender surgeries and harmful hormone therapies for those under eighteen.
The legislation will now go to the Senate that is controlled by the Republicans. After passing there, it will go to Governor Evers who said he will veto the bills.
Steve McConkey, President of the worldwide sports ministry 4 WINDS, counters the transgender sports movement. “After speaking at the hearings on these bills last week with hecklers trying to interrupt me, I am pleased to see that Wisconsin is taking the right steps,” states McConkey. “Last year, I visited Washington D.C. offices and multiple offices at the Wisconsin Capitol asking them to stop transgender athletes and the barbaric surgeries and hormone treatment of kids. I am not a lobbyist or politician, just an average citizen standing up for Christian principles. Many prayers were answered Thanks to those who stood up with us.”
In 2003, McConkey started fighting against the International Olympic Committee’s transgender policies. He was the only one who stood against this publicly.
From there, the transgender movement spread to state high schools, the NCAA, NFL, NBA, MLB, and NHL. McConkey has fought this agenda every step of the way.
After years of standing up, World Athletics (track and field), World Aquatics (swimming), Union Cycliste Internationale (cycling), and the International Powerlifting Federation voted to ban transgenders from participating at the international level. Twenty-three states have passed anti-transgender athlete bills.