Nope, not satire.
Kirralie Smith, a spokeswoman with Binary Australia, a campaign group dedicated to advocating for single-sex sports in Australia, has been told by the local court of New South Wales that she 'unlawfully vilified' the two men - Justin 'Riley' Dennis and Nicholas 'Stephanie' Blanch - by raising public awareness of their inclusion in women's sports after learning of injuries sustained by female players.
The injuries aren't fake, either. Watch how easily Justin Dennis hurts this woman:
Are you trying to warn people about the injuries that women are sustaining on the field by men in lipstick?

Demands made by Dennis and Blanch that may be imposed upon Smith and Binary Australia include: two payouts to the trans-identified men, at a maximum of $100,000 each, for 'damages' to their reputation; a further financial penalty requiring Smith and Binary to cover the men's court costs; a requirement that Smith and Binary issue a public apology; and the expectation that they 'develop a policy aimed at eliminating unlawful discrimination and transgender vilification in relation to any future public acts.'
A decision is expected in November.
Personally, I think I'm in the wrong career field.
I never knew I could make six figures a pop by joining women's sports, crushing them into a pulp on the field, then suing them when they complain.
What a gig!
Here is one specific comment that got Smith in trouble.
'I have cried a lot today,' Smith wrote on Facebook on March 27, 2023. 'Last night I was contacted by people in Sydney. It is alleged that two female soccer players were hospitalised over the weekend after being forced to play against a male appropriating womanhood. Trying to get hold of the video. Football Australia have received more than 2000 complaints about the men in teams such as Wingham FC and some Sydney first grade teams,' she said, referencing both Blanch and Dennis.
'No one is excluding trans,' Smith continued. 'We simply want female sex-based services and spaces. The trans can play according to biology or on a mixed or trans team.'
THAT is what the courts consider problematic.
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