Taylor Starling still remembers the day when his life changed.
On October 22, it was dropped from the Versei Cross Country Team at the Junior Versic Squad at Martin Luther King High School in the River School, California.
It was replaced by a trans -athlete.
“When I was removed from my version team, I felt angry because I knew that the requirements were changed because he was a transgender,” Starling told Starling. Starling told Fox News Digital. “
“As far as fighting it, my family and friends are very helpful. I also know that everything happens for some reason and God has a plan for me. When matters are difficult and walking, I always try to find good.”
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California High School Girls Athlete Taylor Starling. (Provided to Fox News Digital)
Now, after just five months and two weeks, at the age of 16, its plate is much higher than just exercises and homework.
He spoke in support of two state bills at the California Capital Building in Secretary Capital, which supported the trapped protesters against the bills to ban trans -athletes from girls’ sports.
His case against her school district and California Attorney General Rob Bonta is the first May 15 court history. He is the center of a month -long movement within his school and community, in which students show T -shirts every Wednesday, wearing T -shirts of “Baby Girls Games”, which controls administrative efforts to prevent it.
However, this has not won all for him and his family.
His testimony may not agree to support the majority of the Democrats to support both bills to ban trans athletes. Her mother, a local public school teachers, face uncertainty of other people around her school and other California when she is likely to lose federal funds because the state of President Donald Trump refuses to comply with the executive order to keep men away from girls’ sports.
In March, Starling had to lose his sister, Abe Starling, a 200 -meter race from the same trans -athlete, which replaced his heritage in the fall.
In addition, the focus he has received for his activity in the past few months has come up with some tough moments.
“Social media is very bad,” his father, Ryan Starling, told Fox News Digital. “You have 99 positive comments, and then you get a comment that has called it a biased, called the word ‘C’, it has called it all kinds of names.”
Teen girls open on a trans -athlete scandal that turned their high school into a culture war field
His family was ready to respond when he signed up for the fight, as he was warned by his lawyer, Robert Tyler.
“When we presented the matter, we had a real heart,” Tyler told Fox News Digital. “I asked Taylor and Caitlin ‘Are you ready to deal with it? Will you be able to pass through the halls and dislike you at his school, you will call the name, and you will call?’ And they were. ”
The family entered the Trans Athlete Culture War in November, when they filed a lawsuit against the River Side Unified School District with their friend and teammate Catlin Slavin. He later extended the legalization to include Bonta in February in protest of existing laws in California that enabled transit.
It is a litigation that Tyler and family Hoop has set a new example of gender qualification in the state after the May 15 trial on May 15, as the state legislature and government GwenNewsom have refused to endanger federal financial support in the state.
In California, a law was called Ab 1266 Enforcement since 2014, California students have been given the right to participate in sexual school programs and activities, including “athletic teams and competitions, at scallistic and collegiate levels, and the use of facilities according to its gender identification, regardless of the student’s records.”
The state’s devotion to this law and the state’s devotion has already shocked by the Trump administration. Education Secretary Linda Mac Memon formally warned the rest of the state and the rest of the state at the end of March, suggesting that federal funds could be deducted to the state if he could be able to add transit to girls’ sports.
Starlings and other California families are witnessing a potential model in real time to do what can happen to the country soon in the mine. The state has adopted the stage as a “ground zero” in the Trans -Athlete dispute, as his reluctance to comply with Trump has already been funded from the USDA last week, and more potential restrictions are imposed this week.
“Good,” Ryan Starling said in response to the Mine’s situation, knowing that it could soon end in his state. “This is the only thing they respond to, when their financing is cut off and when it really affects their pocket books, this is the only thing that will give it a chance to change.
Mine Girl involved in the Trans Athlete War shows how state policies hurt his childhood and sports career

In the California River Side, students from Martin Luther King High School wear T -shirts that read “Baby Girls’ Games” to protest against trans -cantoning teams. (Courtesy of Sophia Lauri)
“Unfortunately, some of these teachers may have a slightly rigorous road, but our teachers are flexible.”
Taylor Starling played a role in helping to avoid it when he lobbyed in Sacramento last week, presented his story in support of bills 89 and AB -844. Both bills banned trans -athletes from girls’ sports across the state and put California into compliance with Trump’s executive order.
Instead, the bill failed to pass, and the Democrat Assembly Member Rick Zuber compared them to the Nazi German ways. For Taylor Starling, it was a comparison that she had succeeded in the stomach more than others in the room because, according to her legalism, Martin Luther King High’s school administrators compared her “Safe Girls Sports” T -shirts in November.
“I have already been called by the Athletic Director, so to now, I am in the habit of it. But it was a shock to all, because he was calling the Nazis to all. So I think it created a huge response from everyone and they are more willing to speak against it.”
“Looking at the Democratic leadership in California, I am very sorry that they could not stand for our girls and the rights we deserve.”
Therefore, Taylor and his father had to leave Sacramento and had to go back home without any progress in the important legislation.
Now they look forward to the date of their first court.
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Ryan and Taylor Starling of River Side, California. (Provided to Fox News Digital)
In this case, in this case, he is trying to review the court’s current California law that enables translation to girls’ sports, and possibly rules that the law is a violation of the IX.
“We want to challenge it and argue that this is merely a violation of the title IX, that it is illegal, and we are hoping that the court will see it and throw it out,” Tyler said. “We want the matter to stand up to the suggestion that it is time to take our schools back, now it is time to take our girls’ games back, now it is time to take back the intellect.”
The Starling Family, Sloven Family and Tyler will seek a step to take an important decision on the matter on May 15.
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