‘It Needs To Happen’: Olympic Gymnast Pushes IOC To Ban Transgender Athletes

An Olympic silver medalist is no longer staying quiet. After MyKayla Skinner’s former USA Gymnastics teammate, Simone Biles, attacked Riley Gaines this summer, she is not afraid to speak out anymore.

“We shouldn’t let transgender men be in women’s sports. How can you be one of the best athletes in the world and think that it’s okay for that to happen? They’re literally not competing because they don’t want to go up against a man,” she told The Daily Wire.

I interviewed Olympic Silver Medalist, @mykaylaskinner, on her latest push for the @iocmedia to ban men from competing as women in the Olympics. She said more athletes need to demand the Olympic Committee protect women’s sports. pic.twitter.com/tGR9GeMerc

— Lynden Blake (@LyndenBlake) December 2, 2025

Skinner is now calling on the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to ban transgender athletes.

“I hope that they make a change and that it does happen. Because it’s not fair, it’s not right. It’s just sad to think that we even have to vote on this. Us women work so hard, especially being in the Olympics,” Skinner added.

The IOC, under its new president, Kirsty Coventry, created a Working Group on the protection of the female category this summer. An IOC spokesperson told The Daily Wire that a final decision on banning men from the women’s category has yet to be reached.

“An update was given by the IOC’s Director of Health, Medicine and Science to the IOC Members during the recent IOC commission meetings,” the spokesperson said. “The working group is continuing its discussions on this topic and no decisions have been taken yet. Further information will be provided in due course.”

Skinner said having discussions on whether men should compete in the Olympics against women is “mind-blowing.”

“It shouldn’t even be an issue. I couldn’t imagine having to compete against a male and getting medals stripped,” The Olympian continued. “Especially having a daughter, she’s gonna be raised in this next generation, and I want her to have an even playing field like I had. Like we all had on the Olympic team.”

During the 2024 Olympics, the IOC dismissed gender tests for Imane Khelif as not legitimate. The Algerian boxer came under scrutiny for competing in the women’s category, winning gold, even though an independent analysis in 2023 revealed a “male karyotype,” according to The Telegraph.

Since then, other sports organizations have required sex testing to ensure fair competition. In August, World Boxing announced mandatory sex testing for boxers wanting to compete in their competitions. Khelif has refused to take the test and appealed the rule. He hasn’t boxed in a World Boxing event since the testing was put in place.

“Watching the last Olympics, it was just so crazy that we’re experiencing this,” Skinner said. “We’re watching it, we’re witnessing it, it just shouldn’t be happening. We shouldn’t have to be competing against trans biological men. Girls need to have a safe place. That’s what I want for my daughter and the next generation to have.”

RELATED: ‘We Were Right’: Leaked Medical Report Says Boxer Who Beat Up Women At Olympics Is A Man

Coventry, the first female IOC President, wasn’t in power in 2024, but since being elected, she has said she wants fair competition.

“There was overwhelming support from all of the Members who were present here, and those who were able to share with us before they left, that we should protect the female category,” Coventry said.

Another key action emerging from the ‘Pause & Reflect’ session held with IOC members on 24-25 June is the setting up of a working group that will look into the protection of the female category – on which there was broad consensus. pic.twitter.com/09Pxwfm4Io

— IOC MEDIA (@iocmedia) June 26, 2025

Republican Senator John Cornyn urged the IOC to make its decision before the 2026 Winter Olympics in February.

“As the IOC continues its deliberations, this issue has become a global policy concern and a question of athletic integrity,” Coryn said. “In the United States, President Trump honored his unwavering commitment to women and girls with the issuance of Executive Order 14201: Keeping Men Out of Women’s Sports. His action reaffirmed the longstanding belief that women’s sports must be preserved for biological females.”

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While the IOC deliberates, Skinner wants more athletes to publicly state that men should not be in women’s sports.

“I would love to see more athletes, my Olympic teammates, Team USA National Team members, join this fight and stand up, because I didn’t have to go through this. If this is something that you’re really passionate about, just find the courage deep down inside, and just speak up.”

It took Skinner longer than she would like to admit to speak out on this issue. She was scared of being canceled, but said the amount of support she’s received has been overwhelmingly more than hate.

“I feel like I can finally use my platform to do something good. That’s the most important thing to me. I hope by showing that, it will really give all these athletes the courage to do the same.”

The IOC told The Daily Wire that no date has been set to vote on a transgender ban.

Observatories Detect First-Ever Cosmic Signal From Elusive Primordial Black Hole

Scientists may have detected the first tantalizing hint of primordial black holes, which are thought to have formed in the initial moments after the Big Bang.

The excitement centers on a cosmic gravitational-wave signal recorded on November 12, 2025, when the LIGO/Virgo/KAGRA (LVK) network issued an automated alert for an unusual event. Unlike the hundreds of black hole and neutron-star mergers routinely observed since 2015, this signal appeared to involve at least one object far too light to be any known stellar remnant.

Ordinary black holes form when massive stars collapse, and neutron stars also arise from stellar cores; both types of objects have masses roughly equal to or greater than the Sun. The November 12 signal instead pointed to a sub-solar-mass compact object, something astrophysics cannot easily explain.

This has led to speculation that the lighter component might be a primordial black hole, a long-theorized relic born directly from density fluctuations in the ultra-hot plasma of the early universe — long before stars existed. These exotic objects could span a huge mass range: from far lighter than a paperclip to hundreds of thousands of solar masses.

If they exist, primordial black holes could influence cosmic evolution and even account for dark matter, the mysterious invisible substance that makes up most of the universe’s mass but does not interact with light.

The scientific reaction, however, remains cautious. LIGO member Christopher Berry highlighted the event as a potential subsolar source but emphasized the possibility of a false alarm. For an event this unusual, the estimated false-alarm rate — about once every four years — is too high to claim a discovery. Noise artifacts often mimic faint or atypical gravitational-wave signals. Researchers are searching for any accompanying electromagnetic flash, but the localization region spans an enormous patch of sky, making such follow-up nearly impossible.

Even so, the possibility is captivating because primordial black holes have never been observed despite decades of theoretical work. Some could have evaporated through Hawking radiation early in cosmic history, while larger ones might survive today. A merger between two such objects would produce exactly the kind of signal LIGO and Virgo detected. Yet without additional events, scientists may never be certain whether S251112cm was real or merely a glitch.

Experts say the best path forward is to wait for more detections — something future upgrades to LIGO, Virgo, and KAGRA are expected to enable. If similar signals appear, they could provide the first direct evidence for primordial black holes and offer crucial clues to the nature of dark matter.

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