UPenn Swimmer Tells Tales of Life in the Locker Room with Fake Woman Lia Thomashttps://pjmedia.com/robert-spencer/2025/07/06/upenn-swimmer-tells-tales-of-life-in-the-locker-room-with-fake-woman-lia-thomas-n4941488Monika Burzynska knew Will Thomas. He was a member of the men’s swimming team at the University of Pennsylvania, although she found that “he wasn’t very social.” Nonetheless, as he was a member of the men’s swimming team, she had every reason to believe that he was a male. Her certainties, however, would soon face a strong challenge from university officials, and, indeed, from the entire leftist political and cultural establishment.
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Once Thomas “became a fixture in the women's locker room,” a deeply uncomfortable Burzynska “often retreated to the corner of the room to change. Other times, Burzynska timed exactly when she changed to coincide with when Thomas showered. Eventually, Burzynska opted to only change in the stalls or in the family locker across the hall.” Comments Burzynska: "Around Lia, I wasn't going to risk anything."
It's easy to see why. Riley Gaines, who, like Monika Burzynska, is an actual woman and became an activist for women’s sports, explained that “a 6-foot-4 man was allowed in to undress, fully expose himself. He was full naked and, of course, full intact inches away from where we, 18-, 19-, 20-year-old girls, were fully undressed.”
Once Thomas “became a fixture in the women's locker room,” a deeply uncomfortable Burzynska “often retreated to the corner of the room to change. Other times, Burzynska timed exactly when she changed to coincide with when Thomas showered. Eventually, Burzynska opted to only change in the stalls or in the family locker across the hall.” Comments Burzynska: "Around Lia, I wasn't going to risk anything."
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And so now that UPenn has reversed course and dropped its insane push to force its real female athletes — and the world — to accept men pretending to be women as actual female athletes, Burzynska is relieved. She says that UPenn’s announcement that it was no longer going to boost the likes of Lia Thomas gave her "a deep sense of peace and validation. Not only for me, but for all the girls on the team, for all the girls in the swim world and in the sport world. And I think this decision, it brought back – at least for me – a sense of fairness that had been lost. Women's records belong to women and that protecting the integrity of women's sports still matters." ...
The POV the MSM would NEVER broadcast without smearing it as bigoted.