A woman student at Western Carolina University (WCU) who recorded a cross-dressing man in a women’s restroom at the school is under investigation.
The flouncing fella dried his hands and tried to explain himself as the woman asked why he was in the wrong restroom. The man’s reply: “I’m a trans girl.”
And because we’re all living in Clown World, the woman student might land in hot water. Meanwhile, the man, apparently, can continue terrifying the girls on campus.
The video went viral when Payton McNabb, a WCU student and women’s sport advocate, posted it to X. Libs of TikTok posted it as well.
The Video
The exchange with the cross-dresser, who wore a ladies hat, sandals, and a gold, patterned sundress, was brief.
“What are you doing,” the woman asked as he dried his hands.
“I’m going to the bathroom,” he replied.
“Why are you in the girls’ bathroom?” the woman rightly asked.
Man: I’m a trans girl.
Woman: But you’re not a girl.…
Man: Interesting. Never had this before. I don’t know what to say. I’m sorry you feel that way.
Woman: Yeah. I pay a lot of money to be safe in the bathroom.
Man: Me, too. Excuse me.
Woman: Do you think that’s OK?
The leftist mainstream media has yet to pick up the story, but the homosexual Advocate website received a statement from the school:
Western Carolina University is dedicated to fostering a safe and welcoming environment for all students. The university’s primary concern is the safety and wellbeing of all members of its campus community.
As well, the Advocate reported, “the university also reaffirmed its stance against unlawful discrimination and its dedication to upholding principles that ensure equal access to education and opportunities for all students. It concluded with a note that the issue was being investigated.”
A pro-”trans” X-user noted that recording someone in a private space is a misdemeanor.
Concussion From “Trans Girl”
Involved in the Save Women’s Sports movement, McNabb was severely injured during a high-school volleyball game when a “trans girl” on the opposing team spiked a ball into McNabb’s head.
“Neither I nor anyone else on the team agreed with it [the transgender athlete being allowed to play] and were against it from the beginning. We were all just so confused by how it could be allowed, and I guess we just had no idea what to do,” McNabb said for an article at the Independent Women’s Forum, for which she serves as an ambassador.
Even her squad’s biggest hitter couldn’t handle the bruiser on the other team, McNabb said.
The brutal spike knocked her out for 30 seconds. But that’s not all that happened, because North Carolina authorities don’t have the nerve to stand up and say “no” to the “trans” movement.
After the spike, McNabb was on the floor, “twisted into a ‘fencing position’” that suggested severe brain trauma, the story continued:
“My coach’s wife kept trying to push my arms and legs down, but they kept coming back up. She had no idea what was happening,” McNabb said. Meanwhile, “the boy who hit me and the girls on his team were standing on the other side of the net laughing at me,” she said.
According to McNabb, few people took her injury seriously at first. Her trainer even told her to get back in the game right after the injury happened.
However, a later medical evaluation revealed that the ball’s impact caused neurological impairments including a concussion, vision problems, and partial paralysis to the right side of her body. The year following her traumatic brain injury, McNabb said, was full of “blank spaces” that she’ll never remember.
McNabb still suffers from the “trans girl’s” vicious spike.
Man on Team San Jose
What will happen at Western Carolina is unclear, but the legal situation regardless, school officials nationwide are less concerned about the women who might be victimized in bathrooms — or how many are injured by a man on a women’s team — than they are about “trans rights.”
In a related story, a 6-foot-1-inch “feminine” man has joined the volleyball squad at San Jose State, Reduxx reported last month.
Brayden Fleming calls himself Blaire, and landed on the Division I team “after his biological sex was reportedly withheld from his teammates and his opponents.”
The mom of a girl on an opposing team told Reduxx that Brayden’s sex was obvious.
“He jumped higher and hit harder than any woman on the court,” she told the website after watching Fleming play:
There was no other female athlete on the court that day that could compare with Blaire’s athleticism. He also had very narrow hips. I took notice of how he was dressed with a longer shirt in the front as well.
But beyond that, it appears it won’t be long before a woman who plays against Fleming winds up like McNabb.
“During the match, the anonymous parent noted that her daughter was suffering far more physical injuries and strains than she ever had before in her volleyball career, and was constantly icing and rubbing her arms after blocking shots from Fleming,” the website reported:
She says her daughter’s teammates were also struggling, with the defenders being unable to react quickly to his high-intensity strikes.
“He was basically unstoppable at times. He was jumping so high that I was concerned our blockers could not defend against such a fast moving hit,” she says.
On average, the difference between upper body strength in the sexes is 52%, with men having 10% larger hands on average and being 7% taller. These factors have contributed to a volleyball net height difference of over 7 inches between male and female games. According to his San Jose Spartans profile, Fleming stands at [6 feet, 1 inch].
And in the world of darts, Reduxx reported, a top woman player recently forfeited a match against a man.