Justice Samuel Alito Obliterates Leftist Attorney Arguing for Allowing Boys in Girls' Sports With a Couple of Simple Questions - đ The Liberty Daily

(WND News Center)âThe U.S. Supreme Court on Tuesday heard arguments in a pair of cases challenging state laws that provide for boys to be in boys sports, and girls to be in girls.
The fight is over claims by transgender community advocates that males who pretend to be female must be allowed in girlsâ sports.
ADVERTISEMENTThat ideology in recent years has put adolescent boys in the shower rooms with adolescent girls, adult males in community center showers with young girls, and much worse.
Alito pinpointed the failing of the entirety of the agenda by asking a lawyer advocate for the deviant lifestyle choices how are boys and girls, men and woman, defined.
The lawyer was unable to answer.
But she did obfuscate with comments about not being a biologist, not having a definition for that and more.
An analyst for lawyers representing the plaintiffs pointed out the ACLU lawyer would not offer an answer.
Most people, he confirmed, would assign âno credibilityâ to someone who cannot answer that question.
In fact, transgender promoters insist that itâs all changeable, and a 5-year-old can be a boy, but that boy can be a girl at 10 years old, and vice versa.
Justice Alito asks "What is a woman".@ACLU has no answer.
Dave Cortman is not impressed. pic.twitter.com/LBgvGDnklU
â Alliance Defending Freedom (@ADFLegal) January 13, 2026
Attorney General Pam Bondi said the government, in the cases, is arguing for common sense that has prevailed for millennia: That sports for women and girls must be protected from the overwhelming physical advantage of men.
âWe are fighting to protect girls and women in the locker roomâŚâ she said.
Today, my attorneys are arguing a crucial Supreme Court case pushing back against the trans agenda. Our position: states have the authority to ban men from participating in womenâs sports.
This is common sense. We are fighting to protect girls and women in the locker room and⌠pic.twitter.com/xJEpPEZC9P
â Attorney General Pamela Bondi (@AGPamBondi) January 13, 2026
Actor James Woods was unable to withhold sarcasm over the entire argument:
Listening now to the Supreme Court arguing about how many angels can dance on the head of a pin.
Oh wait, theyâre arguing about whether a 240 lb. guy can knock out a 90 lb. high school girl on the soccer field and then shower with her later.
Weâve advanced since Medieval times. pic.twitter.com/QyPM3p8voR
â James Woods (@RealJamesWoods) January 13, 2026
âListening now to the Supreme Court arguing about how many angels can dance on the head of a pin. Oh wait, theyâre arguing about whether a 240 lb. guy can knock out a 90 lb. high school girl on the soccer field and then shower with her later.â
The two cases heard are Little v. Hecox and West Virginia v. B.P.J. involving an Idaho student who insisted that, as a male, he had the right to participate on college teams for females, and a similar fight brought by a West Virginia student, a male.
Lower courts struck state laws that barred boys and men from teams for girls and women.
Leftist justice Elena Kagan complained during the arguments that most chess grandmasters are male, and West Virginia Solicitor General Michael Williams pointed out thereâs a lack of any evidence of a physiological difference that would come to light in a chess match.
According to a report at Fox, ACLU lawyer Josh Block insisted that the Supreme Court should recognized only the studies that support his organizationâs pro-transgender claims.
He said, âI donât think the best way to get it right is to rely on cherry-picked studies or assertions in amicus briefs. I think the way to get it right is to let all the facts theyâre trying to put in the record actually be put in the record, and then weâll have the facts in front of us, and maybe theyâll make the issue go away. But I think thatâs unnecessary to intervene at this instance with a sweeping legal conclusion to something that might actually be a narrow factual dispute.â
Justice Neil Gorsuch raised the issue of discrimination based on academic performance and how that should be handled.
âThe statute says no discrimination on the basis of sex. And youâre saying, âYeah, itâs okay when theyâre not similarly situated.â And youâre worried about locker rooms. Great. I appreciate that, but Iâm worried about that math remedial class or the chess club or whatever.â
Alitoâs concerns were addressed to Kathleen Hartnett, arguing for the pro-transgender policies mostly adopted under the administration of activist Joe Biden.
âWe do not have a definition for the court, and we donât take issue with the â weâre not disputing the definition here. What weâre saying is that the way it applies in practice is to exclude birth sex males categorically from womenâs teams, and that thereâs a subset of those birth sex males where it doesnât make sense to do so, according to the stateâs own interest,â Hartnett claimed.
Alito cited the obvious: âHow can a court determine whether thereâs discrimination on the basis of sex without knowing what sex means for equal protection purposes?â
Idaho Governor Brad Little posted a statement to X, explaining his state always has âled with common sense.â
âItâs why we were the first state in the nation to ban men from competing in womenâs sports,â Little posted to X. âIâm confident that same common sense will prevail as the Supreme Court reviews our law that set the precedent in defending girls and women.â
Justice Sonia Sotomayor claimed there are ânearly 3 million trans-identifyingâ people in the U.S., and thatâs âan awfully big figure.â
Justice Ketanji Jackson complained Idahoâs law discriminates on the basis of sex.
The ACLU, in a statement promoting its arguments to the court, insisted that the focal point was that discrimination is âharmful to a studentâs self-esteem.â
The organization insisted that participation in âteam sportsâ is good for students, and that denying a boy the right to be on a girlsâ team is just wrong.
The organization referenced Becky, the boy it is representing.
âAs the lower court recognized, forcing Becky to either give up sports or play on the boysâ teamâin contradiction of who she is at school, at home, and across her lifeâis really no choice at all.â
The student, Becky Pepper-Jackson, complained in the statement that he was banned from âplaying as who I really am. This is unfair to meâŚ.â
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