Cassidy Carlisle, Maine High School athlete, explained her message to the Governor Janet Mills, when the state continued to thumbs his nose as President Donald Trump and maintained the rules of transgender and sportsmen in the sport of women and girls.
Last week, Carlisle opened to Fox News Digital about how the transgender policy influenced her childhood, revealing that she modified before a transgender student to gym classes during junior high school.
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Cassidy Carlisle at the Maine High School in “Fox & Friends”. (Fox News Channel)
Carlisle, currently a high school student, has turn into a voice of a change in his condition. Last month, she met with the US prosecutor general Bondi and shared her story about the must compete with transgender athletes in sport. She also talked to the Maine status at the starting of this month, because a whole bunch protested against politics, including sex dislocations.
On Monday she appeared in “Fox & Friends” and continued to clarify what her message for Mills was.
“My message to the governor consisted in thinking of all of us women in your condition,” she said. “If he can really look at us and say that I will not fight for you, then you know, it’s really painful, because we had to fight for a long time to have a position she has, and many women fought hard for her. So to look at us all and say that I will not fight for you.”
Carlisle added that she knew that something was mistaken when she was exposed to the state’s transgender policy for the first time. However, she said that she didn’t know easy methods to say.
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The Democratic Governor Maine Janet Mills speaks to reporters at Lewiston City Hall in Lewiston, Maine, on Thursday, October 26, 2023. (AP Photo/Steven Senne, File)
“I think it’s one of these things when it happens, you don’t know what to do, but you definitely know that something is wrong,” she said. I used to be 13 that I do know that something was mistaken, but I didn’t know what to do.
“I didn’t have a platform to speak and I think it’s very difficult because you feel that you have no voice, but that’s not true. And I hope that by saying that many younger people know it’s okay to speak.”
Carlisle wrote in OP-ED in Fox News Digital, describing how she frightened about the future of ladies’s sports if the policy lasted.
“I am really afraid of the future of women’s sports, if the states like my own continue in this direction. Girls of all ages observe how women are removed from sport – they can no longer be sure that their effort and sacrifice will be honored with an honest shot against their equal uniform” – she wrote.
“We have to win this battle for them. It’s a competition that we can’t lose.”

Maine high schooler cassidy carlisle skiing. (Courtesy of Cassidy Carlisle)
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The Trump administration gave Maine until Thursday to follow the executive order to take care of biological males before women’s sport or risk the lack of federal funds of their public schools.
Jackson Thompson “Fox News” contributed to this report.
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