Extreme transgender activists have been rebuffed in their attempts to take over female athletic events.
With a Wyoming federal judge’s decision allowing a male-to-female transgender “woman” to stay in a University of Washington all-female sorority and continue living in their chapter house, the latest domino in America’s continuing culture war has fallen.
The student in issue, Artemis Langford, 21, is six feet two inches tall and weighs twenty pounds more than the typical linebacker in the NFL. According to reports, the transgender student has not had any surgical transition and just “occasionally” dresses in women’s clothing.
After what several sorority sisters thought was a shady political move by their senior leadership, Artemis was admitted into the Wyoming chapter of Kappa Kappa Gamma.
After being accepted into KKG in September 2022, Langford transferred to the chapter house. Sisters began to accuse him of voyeurism at that point, with some saying he would become fully erect while observing them change or dress. Based on reports, these erections were so strong that they were visible through clothing.
Along with engaging in unethical behavior, Artemis has also been charged with prying into people’s personal lives by posing intrusive queries regarding female anatomy and treatment options like breast reduction or birth control. Several sisters voiced their discomfort with these interactions.
The decision was made to file a lawsuit against Langford and the University of Wyoming by six current and former KKG sisters. The sisters asserted that membership was restricted to biological women only and that Langford’s approval resulted from a rigged voting process.
Before Langford’s presentation, pledges allegedly underwent anonymous voting, as alleged by the plaintiffs. The sisters asserted that they were forced to give up their identity by their chapter leadership when it came time to decide on his admission.
The plaintiffs in the complaint argued that most of the sorority’s female members did not want this individual, essentially a man, among them.
The ladies who filed the lawsuit claim that those who would have opposed Langford’s election altered their minds in response to fears of political repercussions and charges of anti-trans discrimination.
US District Judge Alan B. Johnson decided in the case and claimed that she was not legally allowed to “invade” the sorority’s right to free speech and establish what constitutes a woman.










