The WallBuilders Show

Saving Fairness In Women’s Sports

Tim Barton, David Barton & Rick Green

Start with a simple question: should medals, scholarships, and roster spots meant for girls be decided by biology or identity? We dive straight into a Supreme Court showdown that could reset Title IX and define fairness in women’s sports for more than half the country. With Senator Mayes Middleton at the table, we unpack how states like Idaho and West Virginia crafted sex-based competition laws, why Texas took similar steps, and what the Justices’ questions reveal about where this ruling might land.

This conversation moves beyond headlines. We revisit the legal sea change that came when the Court scrapped the Lemon test, opening the door for public expressions of faith—like Fort Worth’s granite Ten Commandments monument—and explore how that shift affects the way courts weigh moral clarity against ideological pressure. Senator Middleton shares hard-won lessons from the legislative trenches, why the Save Women’s Sports movement centers on immutable realities, and how safety, privacy, and opportunity for girls are compromised when categories lose their meaning. We also look at the contradictions exposed in arguments that refuse to define “woman” while seeking to reshape female sports.

The stakes are real: 29 states have laws that hinge on the Court’s next move. We spotlight athlete stories, the practical impact on competitions and locker rooms, and the broader principle that durable civil rights require objective standards. This isn’t about partisan talking points—it’s about restoring fairness to competition and coherence to policy. We close by connecting the legal fight to education reforms in Texas and the importance of leaders who defend constitutional order with courage and clarity.

If you care about Title IX, women’s sports, or the future of faith and law in public life, this episode brings context, candor, and a roadmap for what comes next. Listen, share with a friend, and leave a review to tell us where you think the Court should draw the line.

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