Nike responds to backlash over Dylan Mulvaney partnership, instructs customers to 'Be kind, be inclusive'

Athletic apparel giant Nike doubled down on its decision to use transgender influencer Dylan Mulvaney in marketing campaigns to promote the company's female clothing.

In a pinned comment to Nike's verified Instagram account, the company instructed customers to "Be kind, be inclusive … Encourage each other."

The response came amid calls for a boycott of the company shortly after Mulvaney, who identifies as female, appeared in paid social media content dancing in Nike women's sportswear.

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Olympic swimmer Sharron Davies has been one of the athletes leading calls for customers to stop buying Nike's products.

Davies, who won silver in the 1980 Moscow Olympics, said Nike's decision represented a "step" back after some sports organizations created protected categories for biological women in competitions.

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"It's so frustrating. We take two steps forward with World Athletics and Swim England protecting women's sport and then Nike does this," Davies told Dan Wootton Tonight on GB News.

"The ad feels like a parody of what women are. In the past, it was always seen as an insult to say ‘run like a girl,’ and here we've got someone behaving in a way that's very unsporty and very unathletic. And it's so frustrating when only 1% of the USA sponsorship dollar goes to females in sport. That Nike would do this feels like a kick in the teeth."

In Friday's social media response, Nike vowed to remove any comments that were not "in the spirit of a diverse and inclusive community."

"You are an essential component to the success of your community! We welcome comments that contribute to a positive and constructive discussion: Be kind… Be inclusive… Encourage each other… Hate speech, bullying, or other behaviors that are not in the spirit of a diverse and inclusive community will be deleted," Nike wrote.

Nike has recently experienced an uptick in overall sales, especially after English soccer star Chloe Kelly showed off Nike gear after scoring a goal in the World Cup.

Davies also took issue with the item of clothing Mulvaney wore in the advertisement, pointing out the company's treatment of other athletes in the past.

"Dylan is advertising sports bras when there's nothing to put in the sports bra, when actually it's really important women get proper support when they do sport. It just doesn't make sense.

"For a long time, Nike sponsored Allyson Felix, one of the world's most incredible track athletes. Then, when Allyson got pregnant, they reduced her sponsorship by 70% when she had something happen to her that happens only to women. Women are being treated with total disdain at the moment, particularly in the world of sport where physiology makes so much difference."

Caitlyn Jenner has also been outspoken about Mulvaney's partnership with Nike.

Mulvaney has worked as a comedian, has appeared in Broadway plays and has a big social media following. Mulvaney's compensation for the paid social media posts has not been publicly revealed.

Crucifix found in debris after WWI battle in France is being returned to church over 100 years later

A crucifix from World War I is being returned to its home church in Doingt, France. 

The crucifix was rescued from the remains of the church, which was destroyed during the Battle of the Somme — a battle that took over 300,000 lives, according to SWNS. 

The northern France church was destroyed in 1916, and those who rescued the cross knew they needed to take it to a safe place. 

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The British eventually transported the cross to the All Saints Church of Tinwell, Rutland, England — a 297-mile trip. 

But now that the original church where the cross was found has been rebuilt, the cross will be returning home in June of this year.

The Doingt church was rebuilt in 1925 — something the Tinwell community did not know about until 2018. 

The residents were shocked by the idea of returning the cross to its original home — saying they thought the village was destroyed and gone, former British churchwarden June Dodkin told SWNS.

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"We were open-mouthed," she said. 

"No one had ever thought of doing that," she added of returning the cross.

After several months of writing to the mayor of Doingt, Dodkin and others from the community received a response, she noted.

"They said they would very much like their crucifix back, so we started to organize the trip," she told SWNS. 

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The trip has taken four years to put together.

It has required special permission from the chancellor of the Peterborough diocese to remove a Christ figure from a church, according to SWNS. 

Hubert Boizard, a member of a local history group in Doingt, France, said he was shocked to receive the news of the British wanting to return the cross. 

"I look forward to meeting our English friends to remember the past when their country defended France and freedom," he told SWNS. 

Upon digging into the history of the since rebuilt church, Boizard said he found a description of the original church from the founding priest, Father Carton. 

Boizard read the diary and shared some of the words from Father Carton, written after the church fell. 

"The church of Doingt is down, except for the two side walls, the apse, the main alter," he recalled from the diary's pages.

"To get to the altar, I had to climb up a pile of rubble, made of whole beams, pieces of ceiling or vault, debris from the pulpit, bricks, slates," Father Carton also wrote. 

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The journey to northern France will take those transporting the cross eight days, as SWNS reported. 

There will be a reception at the Doingt town hall, a handover ceremony and a church service to commemorate the special homecoming, the British news service also reported.