Imane Khelif Launches Hyper-Feminizing PR Campaign as a Distraction
At some point, you can no longer pretend to be a victim. That point has been reached.
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About the Author
Dr. Colin Wright is the Founding Editor of Reality’s Last Stand, an evolutionary biology PhD, Manhattan Institute Fellow, and a member of The Killarney Group, the world’s leading think-tank on sex and gender. His writing has appeared in The Wall Street Journal, The Times, the New York Post, Newsweek, City Journal, Quillette, Queer Majority, and other major news outlets and peer-reviewed journals.
It’s been barely a week since two male boxers—Imane Khelif and Lin Yu-Ting—won Olympic gold in women’s boxing. During and after the controversial fights, public discourse split into two main camps. One side advocates for transparency, arguing that both boxers should be forthcoming about their conditions and make their DNA test results public to quell widespread confusion. After all, the fairness and safety of women’s boxing is at stake, and it’s imperative that the relevant facts be brought to light. In contrast, the other group seeks to obscure the facts by any means necessary while simultaneously accusing anyone who questions the sex of the boxers of bigotry.
The former approach reflects the honest pursuit of truth, whereas the latter amounts to an elaborate game of smoke and mirrors intended to conceal it.
As if the activist and media gaslighting surrounding the biology of these fighters wasn’t dizzying enough, Khelif’s team has now launched a PR campaign aimed at hyper-feminizing Khelif to further manipulate public perceptions and emotions.
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