San Jose State women’s volleyball star Brooke Silser Alerted the NCAA After Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton filed a lawsuit against the organization over transgender inclusion in women’s sports.
Paxton Filed a case on Sunday, accusing the organization of deceptive marketing practices to allow transgender women to compete with biological women. Paxton said in a news release that the NCAA violated the Texas Trade Practices Act “which exists to protect consumers from businesses that attempt to mislead or deceive them into purchasing goods or services.” which have not been advertised.”
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Slesser, who this season was part of a lawsuit against her own school and the NCAA for allowing a transgender woman on the Spartans’ roster, posted about Paxton’s suit.
“Hey NCAA, just in case you haven’t realized yet this fight is going to get tougher for you until you make a change. Don’t!” Silser wrote on X.
Silser and Other Plaintiffs A judge asked for an injunction barring Blair Fleming from competing in the Mountain West Conference women’s volleyball tournament last month, but she refused.
SJSU responds to mass exodus of volleyball players after dramatic episode of trans-athlete scandal
San Jose State made it to the tournament finals but lost to Colorado State.
Paxton accused the NCAA of “engaging in false, deceptive and misleading practices by marketing sports events as ‘women’s’ events only to then provide consumers with mixed-sex events where Biological males compete with biological females.”
“The NCAA is knowingly and knowingly endangering the safety and well-being of women by fraudulently changing women’s competitions to co-ed competitions,” Paxton said in a statement. “When people watch a women’s volleyball game, for example, they expect to see women playing against other women — not biological men pretending to be something they’re not. Radical ‘sex.’ ‘Ideology’ has no place in college sports.”
Paxton said he is asking the court to order the NCAA to allow transgender athletes in women’s sports in Texas or “add Texas teams, or alternatively require the NCAA to allow ‘women’ “prevent marketing events when in fact they are mixed sex,” the news release said.
The NCAA released a statement to Fox News Digital later Sunday.
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“College sports are the largest stage of women’s sports in the United States, and while the NCAA does not comment on pending litigation, the association and its members continue to promote Title IX, an unprecedented investment in women’s sports. And will continue to ensure fair competition in all NCAA championships, the organization said.
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