My name is Ella, I'm 17 years old.
I do long jump. I play volleyball. I go to school in New Richmond, Wisconsin.
When my school allowed a biological male into the girls' restroom without telling parents —
I went to the school board.
With my name attached.
In my own town.
I got bullied for it. Harassed online. Even some of my own teachers came after me.
I'm still here.
Because here's what I know:
The net in women's volleyball is set nearly a foot lower for a reason.
A biological male can hit a ball across that net at force that could seriously injure a girl.
And in track — all it takes is three biological males entering the girls' category
and not a single girl in this state stands on a podium.
I didn't speak up because it was easy.
I spoke up because somebody had to.
The Supreme Court is about to answer the question every girl in America is asking.
We're ready.
@JenniferSey@xx_xyathletics
🚨🇫🇷 NEWS: A French woman was given a six month suspended sentence and a €3,000 fine after her home was invaded by a Tunisian migrant who sexually assaulted her.
She appeared on national television to discuss her ordeal and said "the main danger for women in France is Black African and Arab immigrant men"
The Police then charged her with "incitement to racial hatred"
Her appeal against this punishment is due later today
You have our support @ThaisEscufon 🙏
Bad News: Japanese Police Finally Move to Hide Crimes by Foreigners
It has come to light that the Ibaraki Prefectural Police in Japan, which began withholding suspects’ nationalities in August 2025 by only describing them as “foreign nationals,” has now gone even further and removed nationality information entirely from the arrest reports published on its website, no longer even using the term “foreign national” as of today.
The public can no longer know when crimes are committed by foreigners.