VICTORIA, British Columbia (LifeSiteNews) — A gender-confused man has been awarded a women’s golf championship trophy in Victoria, British Columbia.
In an August 25 post on Instagram, a gender-confused man going by the name “Veronica” Ivy celebrated his victory in the women’s division at the Olympic View Golf Club, just months after taking up the sport competitively.
“Was -3 thru 9 today, but finished +1. Had a lot of fun with amazing people. Rose, you can have this back next year,” he wrote, referring to last year’s winner.
Interestingly, while the Olympic View Golf Club typically announce their winners online, they have remained silent over Ivy taking the women’s trophy.
In past months, Ivy, who views himself as a transgender activist, has also won a variety of other women’s titles in golfing, dominating the sport despite only beginning to compete in golf this February.
Previously known as Rachel McKinnon, Ivy gained prominence as the first openly “transgender woman” to win a world track cycling championship, securing the UCI Women’s Masters Track World Championship in the women’s 35–44 age bracket in 2018 and defending his title in 2019.
He also set a world record in the 200-meter sprint for women aged 34–39 in October 2019.
However, in 2023, the Union Cycliste Internationale (UCI) enforced a new policy which essentially banned men from competing against women. As a result, Ivy retired his cycling career.
Studies have repeatedly confirmed that males have a considerable advantage over women in sports and athletics.
Indeed, a recent study published in Sports Medicine found that a year of “transgender” hormone drugs results in “very modest changes” in the inherent strength advantages of men.
Additionally, male athletes competing in women’s sports are known to be violent, especially toward female athletes who oppose their dominance in women’s sports.
While the U.S. has implemented bans on men competing in women’s sports, Canada has no such law. Instead, female athletes who train their whole lives for a sport are robbed of their victories by male athletes, many of whom have underperformed in the male category of the same sports.
As LifeSiteNews previously reported, males have taken almost 2,000 medals from female Americans in female athletic programs since the 1980s.