Friday, October 25

Riley Gaines says she was hit by activist, ambushed by pro-trans mob at San Francisco State

Former collegiate swimmer Riley Gaines mentioned she was hit by an activist and compelled to barricade in a room to flee an enraged pro-transgender mob after a speech advocating for single-sex ladies’s sports at San Francisco State University.
 
“I was ambushed and physically hit twice by a man,” mentioned Ms. Gaines in an announcement posted Friday by the Independent Women’s Forum. “This is proof that women need sex-protected spaces. Still only further assures me I’m doing something right. When they want you silent, speak louder.”
 
Louis Barker, husband of the previous University of Kentucky swimmer, mentioned she informed him that she was struck by a person carrying a gown at the same time as she was being protected by campus police on the Thursday look.
 
“She told me she was hit multiple times by a guy in a dress,” Mr. Barker informed Fox News Digital. “I was shaking. It made me that mad. It makes me sick to feel so helpless about it. She was under police protection and was still hit by a man wearing a dress.”
 
He mentioned he spoke to her whereas she remained barricaded within the room for about three hours after the speech.
 
Going viral Friday was a video displaying a mob of screaming protesters following Ms. Gaines as officers hustled her down a hall and right into a room.
 
“Last night, IWF Spokeswoman Riley Gaines was violently accosted, ambushed, and physically assaulted during a speech at San Francisco State University,” mentioned the IWF assertion. “We strongly condemn the violence perpetrated against Riley as she spoke on the sex discrimination women face in their own single-sex sports category.”
 
After Ms. Gaines was barricaded, demonstrators exterior the door continued to yell obscenities and slogans reminiscent of “trans women are women” and “trans rights are human rights,” as proven within the video.
 
The college launched an announcement from the University Police Department saying that no protesters have been detained and the episode is below investigation.
 
“We are conducting an ongoing investigation into the situation. There were no arrests related to the event,” mentioned the e-mail. “The disruption occurred after the conclusion of the event which made it necessary for UPD officers to move the event speaker from the room to a different, safe location.”

Sen. Marsha Blackburn, Tennessee Republican, tweeted: “San Francisco State University and law enforcement must take immediate action to hold those who assaulted @Riley_Gaines_accountable. We will not allow the violent radical left mob to silence us.”
 
Another video confirmed a big crowd ready exterior the room making an attempt to determine what to do subsequent. One man says, “Tell her to pay us. Tell her to pay us and she can go. Ten bucks each.” Another says, “Make her lose her flight.”
 
Conservative commentator Matt Walsh tweeted: “This is kidnapping.”
 
Ms. Gaines “should pursue felony charges against every single person in that hallway,” he mentioned. “They all should be expelled and thrown in prison. There is nothing ambiguous about this. Harassment, intimidation, kidnapping. Go after them, Riley. Make them pay.”

Ms. Gaines started talking out in opposition to male-born athletes who establish as ladies competing in feminine sports after she raced in opposition to Lia Thomas on the 2022 NCAA Division I ladies’s swimming championships. They tied for fifth within the 200 freestyle.
 


Ms. Gaines mentioned afterward that the judges solely had one fifth-place trophy, which they gave to Lia Thomas. Ms. Gaines was later mailed a reproduction trophy.
 
Lia Thomas, a former University of Pennsylvania swimmer, turned the primary organic male to win a ladies’s NCAA Division I title by taking first within the 500 freestyle, fueling a nationwide debate over equity versus inclusion in ladies’s sports.
 
Those backing Ms. Gaines after the San Francisco melee included ESPN host Sage Steele, who tweeted: “Stay strong @Riley_Gaines_ …you have more people than you know supporting you & standing up to this madness.”

Content Source: www.washingtontimes.com