Piers Morgan calls to end ‘trans sport insanity’ before it ends up killing women



British commentator and former CNN host Piers Morgan castigated the idea of biological males competing in women's sports as transgender women after a special forces combat veteran demolished a biologically female MMA fighter during a Friday match.

What are the details?

In a blistering op-ed published in the Daily Mail, Morgan pointed to Friday's fight in which transgender fighter Alana McLaughlin, 38, used a "powerful chokehold" on a fellow MMA fighter who happened to be a biological female.

McLaughlin, a special forces combat veteran, defeated 32-year-old Celine Provost after placing her in a match-winning chokehold on Friday. The Friday match was McLaughlin's debut as a MMA fighter. McLaughlin easily ended the fight just three minutes and 32 seconds into the second round.

Alana McLaughlin🇺🇸 sale victoriosa en su debut profesional, ganando la pelea contra Celine Provost por sumisión en… https://t.co/dDlDsxHzR5

— Combate Global (@combateglobal) 1631332338.0

"It made me sick to watch a once-male special forces combat veteran beat up a woman on TV," he wrote. "It's time to stop this trans sport insanity before women start being killed."

McLaughlin, who took up MMA training earlier in 2021, fought against Provost, who has competed in the extreme sport for at least a decade, but as Morgan pointed out, Provost simply "couldn't compete with the overwhelming physical strength of her opponent."

Instead, Provost was barely able to leave a mark on McLaughlin, who was once a muscle-bound special forces operative.

"At this point let me be clear: McLaughlin was a war hero, rising through Army ranks to become a special forces medical sergeant who went to serve in Afghanistan in 2007 as part of an elite, 12-man team," Morgan wrote. "There, she helped save many lives as she treated IED casualties in a highly dangerous combat zone. I have huge respect for her military service, during which she was awarded eight distinguished service medals."

A conflicted history

McLaughlin, who grew up in South Carolina, has said that her mother — who had a strongly religious background — disowned McLaughlin once she heard that her son would soon be her daughter.

She told the Guardian in a Wednesday interview that a neighbor's son raped her when she was just 5 years old after having been subjected to what she referred to as "masculine time" with the neighbor's sons.

In the years following the incident, McLaughlin's family reportedly sent her to various conversion therapies to change her outlook on sexuality and gender. It didn't take, McLaughlin said, and she ended up begging her parents for gender reassignment surgery from a young age.

Before shipping out to Afghanistan, McLaughlin told her mother during a particularly heated phone call, "Maybe I should just go get myself killed at war."

McLaughlin's mother reportedly snapped, "Maybe you should."

Elsewhere in the interview, McLaughlin said, "My whole life I was a runt. I was undersized, I was bullied, I was raped, I was beaten, like I did not have an easy time. The story of my life has been trying to physically resist people that were larger and stronger and more skilled than me."

'Sickening to watch'

Morgan continued, "Regardless of her military record or personal struggles growing up, none of this justifies what happened on Friday night. I found the bout sickening to watch."

"It was obvious very quickly that McLaughlin was too strong, and equally obvious that this strength came from the 33 years she spent as a biological man," Morgan continued. "As I've said before, the restrictive hormone treatment that sports authorities make transgender women do before they can compete in women's sport does not reduce muscle density or power."

Calling the disparity "potentially deadly," Morgan added that such practices would end up killing women one day.

Morgan, who added that he's always supported trans rights to fairness and equality, said that while transgender men and women deserve fair treatment across the board, allowing mixed biological sexes to compete against one another in contact sports such as MMA will only lead to danger for biological women.

"If you're in any doubt about how unfair this all is, let me take you through a brief history of what's happened when male athletes have transitioned to be women and then competed against women born with female bodies," he wrote. "In 2017, American sprinter CeCe Telfer was ranked 390th among male NCAA Division II athletes in 400m hurdles. In 2018, Telfer transitioned, and in 2019, Telfer was national NCAA Division II women's 400m champion."

He also pointed to New Zealand weightlifter Laurel Hubbard, who qualified for women's tournaments and in the 2021 Tokyo Olympics, Hannah Mouncey, an Australian handball player who dominated on the country's women's team after scoring zero goals in 22 appearances for the men's team, and more as examples of unfairness in competition.

"We've already seen the same unfairness manifest itself with the first transgender MMA fighter, Fallon Fox, who served in the US Navy then transitioned, became an MMA fighter, and won all but one fights," Morgan noted. "In one of them, she fractured a woman's skull. I fear worse is to come."

"[McLaughlin is] a girl born with the massive physical advantage of a male body," Morgan concluded. "Yet now she's deliberately participating in a grotesquely unbalanced physical environment for other women. It's unfair, unequal, and in the case of combat sport, incredibly dangerous. But the real crime going on here is against women's sport."

Former US Army Special Forces member turned transgender MMA fighter beats woman to submission in debut



Alana McLaughlin, the second openly transgender woman to compete in professional mixed martial arts, beat a woman to submission in her MMA debut at the Combate Global prelims in Miami, Florida.

McLaughlin used a rear-naked choke on Celine Provost, ending the fight 3 minutes, 32 seconds into the second round.

When being declared the winner of the fight, McLaughlin wore a t-shirt that read: "end trans genocide."

Alana McLaughlin🇺🇸 sale victoriosa en su debut profesional, ganando la pelea contra Celine Provost por sumisión en… https://t.co/dDlDsxHzR5

— Combate Global (@combateglobal) 1631332338.0

McLaughlin was cleared to fight by the Florida State Boxing Commission after having her hormone levels tested, ESPN reported.

Fallon Fox, the first transgender MMA fighter, sat cageside at McLaughin's bout.

Fox broke the orbital bone of biological female fighter Tamikka Brents, and gave her a concussion during a 2014 fight. Brents said after the fight, "I've fought a lot of women and have never felt the strength that I felt in a fight as I did that night." In January, Fox was called the "bravest athlete in history" by Outsports, a sports news website centered around LGBTQ issues.

Before the fight, McLaughlin praised Fox and told Outsports, "I want to pick up the mantle that Fallon put down. Right now, I'm following in Fallon's footsteps. I'm just another step along the way and it's my great hope that there are more to follow behind me."

McLaughlin admitted it was a "nightmare" finding an opponent willing to fight her, but had "nothing but respect" for Provost, who recently recovered from COVID-19.

"If we want to see more trans athletes, if we want to see more opportunities for trans kids, we're going to have to work out way into those spaces and make it happen," McLaughlin said. "It's time for trans folks to be in sports and be more normalized."

McLaughlin wrote in an Instagram post that she was "getting a lot of variations of the same nasty messages calling me a cheater," adding, "Transphobes are just making my block hand stronger."

McLaughlin, 38, was a member of the U.S. Army Special Forces until 2010.

"It was my only option, to either force myself into manhood somehow or die," she said in a 2016 interview about joining the military. "I was playing a part that wasn't really me."

How Leaving The Army Special Forces Helped This Transgender Woman Love Herself www.youtube.com