Brazilian Woman Investigated for “Transphobia” for Calling Lucy the Skeleton a “Female”
Reduxx/X
Karen Mizuno
Article audio sponsored by The John Birch Society

If the trannies in Brazil get their way, no more will bossa nova fans hear The Girl From Ipanema.

For in the largest country in South America, girls are no more. Nor women. Nor “females,” to use scientific lingo, which is most appropriate in the case of a woman who has landed in hot water for noting that Lucy, the incomplete australopithecine skeleton found in Ethiopia in 1974, was, indeed, a “female.”

The cops are investigating Karen Mizuno, Reduxx has reported, for observing the obvious about Lucy in a social media post. Mizuno thus committed the crime of “transphobia.”

Science Is No More

In April, when she spoke at a women’s rights protest in Rio de Janeiro, Reduxx reported, Mizuno disclosed that criminal charges might be forthcoming. Her crime? She ridiculed a “trans activist” who claimed that “archaeologists are transphobic.”

“Mizuno explained that her ordeal began after an article was circulated about Lucy, a well-known fossil of a female human ancestor which dates back approximately 3.2 million years,” Reduxx reported:

“The situation was, there was an article going around about the bones belonging to the fossil of Lucy, and how the archaeologists found out that she was a woman, because of the pelvic bone,” Mizuno said. “Trans activists were saying that attesting that Lucy was a woman, because of her female pelvic bone, was transphobia. In other words, they said she could be a trans man. They really think that someone who lived three million years ago had a ‘gender identity.’ It’s an unreasonable argument, an anachronism.”

Madness, yes, but there you have it.

Anyway, Mizuno screenshot the tweet, which said this:

This tweet reminds me of something I never see people talking about. Archaeologists are indeed transphobic. That so-called Lucy, for example, are they inferring she was a woman based on the bones alone? Does that mean that if I die, in 500 or 5000 years someone might disrespect my gender because of that?

Mizuno’s big crime was adding commentary to the ridiculous tweet.

“With each passing day, human extinction ceases to become a fear and becomes something to hope for,” she quipped. Mizuno told Reduxx that she “said nothing about ‘trans,’ there was no hateful speech, I only suggested that the question in the post was ridiculous, and clamored for the extinction of the planet.”

No matter. Two cops showed up at her home to say they were investigating the comments, Reduxx continued. “I was notified on November 19, 2024,” she told the website:

“The police came to my house but I wasn’t at home. They told my mother if I didn’t go to the police station on the scheduled date they would arrest me,” she said. “In other words, I could literally be arrested for agreeing with the archaeologists that a 3 million year-old fossil, which had a female pelvis, had been a woman.”

Perhaps even more frightening is how the Brazilian coppers got onto Mizuno’s trail. They were investigating the social media of Isabela Cêpa, another women’s rights activist accused of “transphobia.” 

Cêpa’s Ordeal

As Reduxx reported in 2022, Cêpa’s crime was calling a politician who pretends to be a woman what he is: a man. And that man, “Erika” Hilton, flew into a lipstick-hurling rage when Cêpa dared to tell the truth about him.

“Hilton was elected to São Paolo’s [sic] municipal government in November of 2020, winning his seat by a landslide that gave him the title of the most voted-for ‘woman’ in Brazil,” Reduxx reported:

At the time of his victory, Hilton was celebrated in international media as being a “symbolic triumph” for transgender people. Hilton was amongst the top 10 most-voted for candidates in all of Brazil, and was touted as the “only woman” to make the list.

Except that he’s not a woman, as Cêpa rightly observed.

“At the time I didn’t even know who this person was,” she told Reduxx:

I just saw a headline on an Instagram page celebrating that ‘the most voted woman in São Paulo is a transwoman. Then, I shared a video with my followers saying I was disappointed to hear that the most voted-for woman in São Paulo — later found out that it was in the entire country — was a man.

The trans lobby exploded. Indeed, such was the fury that an editor for Elle not only attacked Cêpa for telling the truth about Hilton, but also falsely accused Cêpa of filing a false police report, in which she, Cêpa, supposedly claimed a black man sexually assaulted her. It was, Reduxx observed, “an attempt to also paint her as a racist.”

When the lunatic editor threatened to harm Cêpa, she reported it to the cops. They did nothing.

“Transphobia” was the crime they wanted to investigate.

Mizuno Criminal Complaint

Thus the “criminal complaint against Mizuno mentions Cêpa by name, and indicates that the complaint against Mizuno was lodged after law enforcement conducted an ‘investigation’ into posts from other accounts shared by Cêpa,” Reduxx continued:

“The owner of the Twitter account ISA @afeminisa, identified as Isabel Alves Cêpa, had made a transphobic post related to councilwoman Erika Hilton,” the criminal complaint states.

“After the conclusion of the investigations, the Prosecutor’s Office carried out research on this account, observing that Isabela had republished posts shared from third parties, also transphobic, denying transgender women their gender identity.”

More amazingly, Mizuno’s attorney, Raquel Marques, is yet another victim of the witch hunt.

She was co-deputy for the Legislative Assembly of São Paulo until 2021, when she too committed the crime of “transphobia.” That, too, involved a social media post.

“I hope one day the disrespect for the rights of children and adolescents will generate the same outrage in the minds of the left that transphobia causes,” Marques wrote about those denied an education during the China Virus Hoax.

“Speaking to Reduxx, Mizuno explains that all of Brazil is facing a ‘very difficult situation’ with respect to its embrace of gender ideology and gender self-identification,” the website reported:

Despite being a very conservative country, Brazil has some of the most extensive laws against transphobia in the world. In 2019, Brazil’s Supreme Federal Court ruled that discrimination against [the] “LGBTQ Community” constituted a penal offense, but fell under existing race-based protections as a form of “social racism.”

Good thing is, as Mizuno told the website, now that the Trump administration has curtailed the tax subsidies for tranny programs and propaganda, the trans lobby is “desperate.”

Nonetheless, Mizuno faces three years in prison if found guilty of the speech crime.

Astrud Gilberto fans might want to buy her famous tune while they can. Or not. A purchase might be considered “transphobia.”