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Nike Won’t Say If It Is Funding Trans Kids Study, But Evidence Suggests It Is

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The New York Times published more than 10,000 words about former San Jose State volleyball player Blaire Fleming over the weekend. Fleming is a biological male who identifies as a woman, who competed on the women’s team and who helped make the Spartans one of the top teams in their conference. 

Buried deep in the story was a single paragraph that should raise some eyebrows. The author mentions Joanna Harper, a biological male who identifies as a woman and purportedly studies transgender athletes. It’s important to note that Harper played an advisory role in the 2015 Olympics transgender decision allowing males to compete in women’s Olympic events with testosterone suppression.

But that’s not the interesting part. 

“Harper is currently helping to lead an ambitious study of trans adolescents that measures their results on a 10-step fitness test before they start hormone therapy and then, after they have begun to medically transition, every six months for five years,” the NYT story reads. 

It continues, “But, she told me when we talked in February, ‘the current climate makes the study somewhat uncertain.’ I assumed she was referring to the Trump administration’s cuts to National Institutes of Health research grants, but she said money was not a problem: The study is being funded by Nike. The problem was Trump’s separate order targeting medical care for transgender youth. ‘If we can’t perform gender-affirming care,’ she explained, ‘then we can’t bring people into the study.’” 

Wait, “the study is being funded by Nike?” Why is a sports apparel company allegedly funding research that focuses on children and young teenagers taking potentially life-altering medications simply to try and prove that males should be allowed in girls’ and women’s sports? Basic common sense tells us they shouldn’t.

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