WaPo Runs Glowing Profile Of Trans-Identifying Athlete To ‘Prove’ There’s No Biological Advantage
- The Washington Post featured Eliza Munshi, a trans-identifying athlete, preparing for her track meet, as part of an article addressing President Donald Trump's order banning males from competing in women's sports.
- Munshi's throwing distances of 43 feet 2 inches, 41 feet 4 inches, and 46 feet 10 inches fell significantly short of the boys' average of 74 feet 6 inches at the same meet.
- A 2022 Washington Post-KFF poll indicated that two-thirds of Americans believe trans girls should not participate in girls' high school sports.
- Supporters of sports bans argue that transgender girls possess an unfair advantage over cisgender girls, despite Munshi's own belief that she lacks advantages in competition.
6 Articles
6 Articles
Washington Post, AP Articles Expose Pro-Transgender Athlete Bias of Legacy Media
By Peter Parisi, The Daily Signal | April 05, 2025 If there were any lingering doubts about the unabashedly pro-transgender bias of the liberal media, they were demolished Thursday by the marked contrast between a feature story and a news article, both in The Washington Post, on two separate cases of trans athletes competing in the suburbs of Washington, D.C. At 6 a.m. Thursday morning, The Post published online a 2,238-word magnum opus, headlin…

WaPo Runs Glowing Profile Of Trans-Identifying Athlete To ‘Prove’ There’s No Biological Advantage
The Washington Post ran a glowing profile of a trans-identifying male athlete on Thursday, framed around President Donald Trump’s recent order barring males from competing in women’s high school and collegiate sports, in an effort to prove that biological males have no advantage. The article began with trans-identifying Eliza Munshi preparing for the first track meet of the season at Falls Church, Virginia, debating the merits of one French-brai…
Local Transgender Youth featured on Last Week – South DaCola
I have actually known this kid since he was in kindergarten (FF: 30:00) and he has always been the same. A boy. Even when I met him at 6 I didn’t know he was a biological female. I don’t think they have a choice but to live their lives on how they want to.
Coverage Details
Bias Distribution
- 100% of the sources lean Right
To view factuality data please Upgrade to Premium
Ownership
To view ownership data please Upgrade to Vantage