Christ-Follower, Wife, Mom, and Passionate Advocate. My tweets are my own and do not necessarily represent the opinions of any other person or organization.
Maria Shahbaz was just 13 when she was abducted in Pakistan, forced to convert to Islam, and married off to a 30-year-old man.
In February, a court sent her back to her kidnapper instead of her family.
Now, with our support, she is seeking justice again from the court.
End forced conversions and child marriage.
Maria must be reunited with her family.
Read more 👇
🇧🇷 In Brazil, a judge has sentenced 2 parents to prison because their daughters, 15 and 11, don't listen to folk or "trap" music.
He concluded that the girls' music taste meant their homeschool education had failed to teach them culture and diversity.
This is an egregious violation of parental rights.
Read more from @FoxNews:
https://t.co/tgjaBrQC5m
WATCH: "I definitely have a sense of peace about all of it. Although I had to go through all of that, and it doesn’t make up for what I had to go through, I know that other girls can be protected, like my sister and my friends who are still on the team."
Our client, Adeleia, spoke with Fox News Digital about how standing up for women's sports in West Virginia has impacted her and how she feels after the recent Supreme Court decision.
This UN official has grasped what too many in the American media still haven’t: our women’s sports cases aren’t about the feelings of male athletes.
They’re about the rights of women and girls.
‼️ NEW from @FoxNews: Brazilian parents Audato and Ieda Denardi were sentenced to 50 days in prison for homeschooling their daughters.
The judge cited that because the daughters did not listen to “trap” music, their curriculum had failed to teach them diversity and culture.
👇
READ: "Men are not women, nor can they become women."
ADF's @LathanWatts discusses our recent women's sports victories at the Supreme Court in @townhallcom.
https://t.co/x15mrHgp1r
What happens when an amendment goes beyond what most people think it does?
The debate over Virginia's proposed abortion amendment isn't just about access—it also raises questions about safety standards, parental involvement, and what would be written into the state constitution.
There's more to the conversation than the headlines.
Join the conversation and watch the full episode!
#SpeakUpVirginia #Virginia #ProLife
🚨 A Monumental Victory for Women & Girls! 🚨
"One man in my conference affected hundreds of women and changed the entire course of our season." -@BrookeSlusser, Save Women's Sports & Women's Privacy Leader at the Rally for Women’s Sports outside the U.S. Supreme Court
Today, the United States Supreme Court released a decision in two cases: West Virginia v. BPJ and Hecox v. Little in favor of keeping men and boys out of women’s sports. This decision is a landmark victory after many notable women athletes have shared their stories of having to surrender victories and their safety when they were forced to compete against male athletes.
Texas Values was at the U.S. Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. for the oral arguments and signed onto a legal amicus brief with other family policy organizations in support of female athletes in this case. Visit https://t.co/q9FDJ2AoCi to learn more!
Grateful for the chance to tell “the rest of the story” about the male athlete from the SCOTUS case just now on @CNN.
When a male is making threats of sexual assault in the locker room, I’d say that’s a time when sex matters.
WATCH: "My entire future has truly been impacted by that scholarship and by athletics."
Madison Kenyon explains what Title IX means to her as she joins @megynkelly with @KristenWaggoner.
Today you will read many sympathetic media stories about B.P.J., the male athlete who challenged WV’s law and lost at SCOTUS.
I’m guessing none will mention that B.P.J. defeated 470+ girls 1,400+ times (including a state title) and sexually harassed our client Adaleia (pictured) in the girls’ locker room. Sadly, Adaleia stopped playing the school sports she loved due to B.P.J.’s ongoing presence in girls’ sports and spaces.
But we’ll probably be lucky if those girls get even a passing mention—let alone a front-page photo.
This has been the pattern on this issue from far too many institutions of power. Boys’ feelings are the focus. Girls’ safety, fairness, and opportunity take a back seat.
I’m so thankful today that the Supreme Court reversed that pattern, acknowledged the reality of biological sex, and remembered the girls.
A win for reality with West Virginia v. B. P. J. Thomas knows what’s up:
"A man does not have a legal right to compete against women just because he believes that he is a woman."
“Men and boys with gender dysphoria are not women or girls, even if they believe they are.”
Hard not to love Justice Clarence Thomas, who clearly and resolutely declares in his concurrence in the women's sports cases:
"Men and boys with gender dysphoria are not women or girls, even if they believe they are."
🎉 VICTORY! Today, the United States Supreme Court released a decision in two cases in favor of keeping men and boys out of women’s sports.
“Today is a monumental day for women and girls in the United States. What the Supreme Court decided today was simply the truth. No woman or girl should have her victory in competition or her privacy in locker rooms be taken from her. Idaho started this bold fight in saving women’s sports and Texas will help them fight to the finish on Tuesday.” -@MECastlePolicy1, Director of Government Relations for Texas Values
Read the full press release here: https://t.co/Tk9GcON3cP
We still have work to do. But today we celebrate.
We held the line.
Now we change the culture.
And with it, the 23 states that still allow boys in girls' sports.