Female Athletes Seek to Protect Women’s Sports in Minnesota

Our friends at Alliance Defending Freedom have filed a lawsuit on behalf of Female Athletes United to protect fairness in women’s sports in Minnesota.

Female student athletes in Minnesota have been forced to compete against biological males who identify as transgender.

The lawsuit challenges Minnesota’s decision to let males to compete in women’s sports.

We have written time and time again about how women’s athletics is in jeopardy.

Female swimmerspowerlifterscyclistssprintersvolleyball players, and others have seen their sports radically changed by men who claim to be women.

Letting men compete in women’s sports is unfair and reverses more than 50 years of advancements for women. In some cases — as our friends at ADF point out — it can even be dangerous.

Last year the Biden Administration released more than 1,500 pages of new rules drastically reinterpreting federal law to force public schools to let biological males compete in women’s sports and use girls’ locker rooms, showers, and changing areas at school.

In response, people across America — including Arkansas Attorney General Tim Griffin — filed lawsuits to block the Biden Administration’s new rules, and this year the Trump administration has taken steps to protect female athletes.

All of this reminds us why it is so important that Arkansas passed Act 461 in 2021 to prevent male athletes from competing against girls in women’s athletics at school.

This good law was one of the first of its kind in the nation. To date, some 29 states have passed similar measures protecting fairness in women’s sports.

It’s also worth noting that pollsters at Gallup have found most Americans agree that athletes should compete according to their biological sex — not their gender identity.

We appreciate our friends at Alliance Defending Freedom and our policymakers who work hard to protect fairness in women’s sports both in Arkansas and across the country.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.

Federal Proposal Would Close Illegal Hemp Loophole

A new proposal reportedly would close the federal loophole responsible for the expansion of dangerous hemp products.

In 2018, Congress passed the federal Agriculture Improvement Act to let farmers grow cannabis plants low in THC for use in textiles like hemp rope or cloth.

THC is the main psychoactive substance in marijuana, and health experts warn the drug poses serious risks.

Instead of growing hemp for textiles, manufacturers have found ways to extract and refine the little bit of THC in the plants. Doing this on a commercial scale means they can produce a lot of THC to infuse into drinks, candies, e-cigarettes, and other products.

Last week a U.S. House Appropriations subcommittee advanced a spending bill that would tighten down on these dangerous products. The legislation is the first meaningful restriction on hemp products in Congress in nearly a decade.

https://twitter.com/learnaboutsam/status/1930682769190875257

As we have pointed out, drinks with as much THC as recreational marijuana products have raised serious public health and safety concerns.

In response, many state and federal policymakers have pushed back against these dangerous drugs.

For example, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration has said that federal law prohibits hemp-derived THC in food products.

MassachusettsSouth DakotaCalifornia, and many other states have successfully prohibited food, drinks, and other products that contain THC made from hemp.

In 2023, Arkansas passed Act 629 by Sen. Tyler Dees (R – Siloam Springs) and Rep. Jimmy Gazaway (R – Paragould) to prohibit THC made from industrial hemp.

This year, multiple bills legalizing THC-infused drinks were filed at the Arkansas Legislature. Fortunately, none of those bad bills passed, and lawmakers enacted good legislation to help further protect Arkansans from these drugs.

We appreciate Arkansas’ policymakers taking this issue seriously, and we hope Congress will take action to close the loophole in the 2018 Farm Bill and restrict these dangerous drugs.

Articles appearing on this website are written with the aid of Family Council’s researchers and writers.