WE ARE A MOVEMENT, NON-PARTISAN IN NATURE, WITH THE INTENTION OF EMPOWERING PARENTAL RIGHTS ESPECIALLY IN LIGHT OF RADICAL GENDER IDEOLOGY INFILTRATING OUR CHILDREN IN SCHOOL - ESPECIALLY IN SPORTS AND THE CLASSROOM. WE VALUE PROTECTING YOUNG CHILDREN, AND THE PARENTAL RIGHTS ASSOCIATED WITH HAVING YOUR YOUNG CHILD GO THROUGH THE INDOCTRINATING INSTRUCTION IN SCHOOL AND UNFAIR ADVANTAGES OF BIOLOGICAL BOYS COMPETING AGAINST GIRLS IN SPORTS.
Fairness First is prepared to fight on behalf of parents and their children. Our plan is simple. We will protect our children by rejecting radical gender ideology in our schools and in youth sports, from the top of the ballot to the bottom. Will you join us?
October 3, 2022
Fox News contributor Caitlyn Jenner accused the left of politicizing the transgender community, warning they are "driving this country apart." Jenner joined "Fox & Friends" on Monday to discuss a report alleging Vermont female high school athletes were banned from their locker room over their objections to a transgender student.
CAITLYN JENNER: The left has hijacked and politicized, yet another minority group in our wonderful country, the good old USA. And this time again, it's trans people. As a result of their radical left and their use of identity politics agenda, they're really driving this country apart. I thought Joe Biden was supposed to be the great unifier, and all they're doing is driving us apart. Now, does this trans girl have the right under Vermont law to be on the team and to use the locker room? Yes, she does. Do these girls have the right to comment and tell the school board how uncomfortable they are being in a locker room with basically a biological boy with a penis? Absolutely, they do. And what is the school's solution to this? Well, let's ban the ten girls who complain, the complainers, put them off in the corner in their own little part of the locker room and don't do anything when it comes to this trans person. So honestly, everything is out of whack right now and these things have to stop.
October 7, 2022
The left, which “thrives on using identity politics to divide us,” is sending America “down the tubes,” according to Olympic gold medalist Caitlyn Jenner, who lashed out after a girls’ high school volleyball team in Vermont was banned from their own locker room after girls raised concerns about a biological male claiming to be a transgender girl using the facility.
In a series of fiery tweets this week, Caitlyn Jenner, who came out as a trans woman in 2015 and underwent sex change surgery in 2017, accused the left of having “hijacked” minority populations and the trans community in order to divide the country.
“The left thrives on using identity politics to divide us,” Jenner wrote. “This Vermont story is another example of how they have hijacked and politicized the trans population, like they do with so many other minority populations, in this country.”
“Joe Biden – Divider in Chief!” Jenner, 72, added.
The reality star also called the enforced mixing of transgender athletes with those of their newfound gender to be “backwards.”
“We cannot have biological boys with penises changing next to our daughters in locker rooms, and then have our daughters scolded by the school,” Jenner said. “This is so backwards.”
“Shame on Vermont!” the former California gubernatorial aspirant added.
In another tweet, Jenner pledged to continue to combat the “radical left” on these issues.
“I will continue advocating for common sense solutions no matter what, esp[ecially] on the trans in sports and schools stories becoming all too common, b/c of the radical left,” the 1976 Olympic decathlon gold medal winner wrote.
“I am an American, that loves my country and hates to see it going down the tubes to these radical leftists!” Jenner added.
Last week, Vermont’s Randolph High School charged natural-born girls with “harassment” and “bullying” for speaking out against the administration for allowing a biological boy to change with them in their locker room, according to WCAX Burlington.
The girls claimed the transgender student using their facilities acted inappropriately and made insulting comments.
Subsequent to raising concerns, the girls were blocked from using the facilities, in a move exemplifying why more women tend to avoid speaking out against transgender athletes.
The school insists the ban is legitimate and within the law, with administrators claiming there is “plenty of space where students who feel uncomfortable with the laws may change in privacy.”
Transgender students using changing facilities and bathrooms of their new gender has been an ongoing struggle nationwide.
For several years, individual schools have created their own rules, some in keeping with trans-friendly state education rules.
During the Trump presidency, the federal government looked to reverse former President Barack Obama’s rules which forced schools to give trans students preferential treatment.
However, since the coming into office of the Biden administration, the federal government reasserted its dominance over the states by reissuing trans-coddling rules.
Despite Biden’s move to force America to accept transgenderism in school locker rooms, the states have passed their own laws and sports and education rules putting limits on transgender students.
One Georgia high school sports association even moved to ban trans girls from merely playing with biological girls.
With nearly a dozen states now passing laws to put bans and limitations on transgender athletes and more than a dozen more looking at similar laws, the issue seems ultimately destined for the Supreme Court.
Jenner has long opposes transgendered biological boys competing in girls’ sports.
Last year, when asked about certain states that passed legislation to protect girls’ sports from transgender biological boys participating in them, Jenner said, “This is a question of fairness. That’s why I oppose biological boys who are trans competing in girls’ sports in school.”
“It just isn’t fair,” Jenner reiterated. “And we have to protect girls’ sports in our schools.”
In January, Jenner called on the NCAA “to make the right decision” to not allow biological men like transgender Penn swimmer Lia Thomas to compete as a female.
Instead, the Olympic gold medalist suggested that transgender athletes should either continue competing in the category corresponding to their birth gender or compete in their own separate category.
In February, Jenner blamed the “woke world” of gender identity amid reports that parents of students at California’s Los Alamitos School District alleged biologically male counselors who identify as “nonbinary” were allowed to sleep in the same cabins as fifth-grade girls at a school-organized science camp.
October 11, 2022
W Series, a free-to-enter racing series that boasts an all-women grid and supports Formula One at select Grand Prix weekends, canceled its final three scheduled races of the 2022 season due to a lack of funding.
In a statement Monday, W Series CEO Catherine Bond Muir said the decision was made because an investment fell through, and the organization will now "focus on the longer-term fundraising process" to support a full season in 2023 and beyond.
That means W Series will not hold its annual race at the 2022 United States Grand Prix in Austin, Texas Oct. 22, or its scheduled doubleheader at the 2022 Mexican Grand Prix in Mexico City Oct. 29.
With the season over, the 2022 championship was awarded to British driver Jamie Chadwick, who races for Jenner Racing, a team owned by former Olympic athlete and racing driver Caitlyn Jenner.
W Series is an all-women, single-seater racing series sanctioned by the FIA, the global governing body of motorsport. The series' first season was in 2019. It did not have a 2020 season due to the COVID-19 pandemic.
The series competes at select Formula One Grand Prix weekends. Along with other junior racing series, such as Formula 2 and Formula 3, W Series holds practices, qualifying sessions and feature races on the same weekends and on the same tracks used by F1.
W Series says it aims to create pathways for women racing drivers and to encourage more girls to participate in junior karting. With the exposure of competing at F1 events, W Series hopes more sponsors consider supporting women racing drivers as they progress into the upper tiers of motorsport.
"The more high-profile role models it can create, the more W Series believes it will inspire young girls to go karting — if you can see it, you can be it," a statement from the W Series read.
Required funding owed to the business from a "recent contracted investment was not received." No further details were provided about the investment.
Muir said the lack of funds forced W Series into an unfortunate cost-cutting decision to axe the final three races of 2022. She called the situation sad and frustrating.
"As a start-up in only our third season of racing, we are always working hard to ensure regularity of funding as we continue to grow our business," Muir said in a statement. "We have worked hard to raise the required funding to enable us to finish the season. Unfortunately, it was not possible to do this in the short timeframe required following the failure of contracted funds to arrive and the global economic downturn.
"However, while we are all incredibly disappointed that this decision has had to be made in the short term, we remain positive about the future of W Series in the long term. It is well-documented that women’s sports receive far less funding than its male counterparts, and W Series is no exception. We are incredibly thankful for the help and support we have received in recent weeks."
Caitlyn Jenner, former Olympic athlete and racing driver, owns a team that competes in W Series called Jenner Racing. Chadwick, one of the team's two drivers, was named the 2022 champion in wake of the curtailed season. It is Chadwick's third championship in three seasons.
American driver Chloe Chambers was the second member of the Jenner Racing.
Jenner posted a tweet Monday congratulating Chadwick on her championship but did not comment specifically on W Series curtailing its season.
"Great work @JamieChadwick and thank you for your dedication to Jenner Racing, this season!" Jenner's Twitter account posted. "You are officially a champion (again) and made our first year, epic! Onwards and upwards!"
Jenner had a brief career as a racing driver in the 1980s driving in the International Motorsports Association's Camel GT Series. Jenner won the 1986 12 Hours of Sebring event and finished second in the championship that year. She formed her W Series team earlier this year.
Chadwick, 24, has dominated the series since its inception but has been unable to secure a position at a higher level, including F2 and F3. It is unclear whether Chadwick will return to W Series in 2023, but she tested an IndyLights car for Andretti Autosport in September.
"I want to extend a huge congratulations to our triple-champion Jamie Chadwick," Muir said in the statement. “She has dominated the 2022 W Series and this championship is well-deserved. We have been and always will be incredibly proud and supportive of her career and wish her well in her next exciting chapter.”