Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Welcome to the Patriot Barbie Podcast. This show is made
possible by Spreely Media. Download the Freedom Hub app today
and join the free speech movement. I want to thank
the people and the companies that keep my show going.
All my sponsors can be found on Patriot Barbie dot
com on my shop page. Century h two O water
systems for your home that provide clean, toxic free, fluoride free,
(00:22):
and pharmaceutical free drinking water for your family and pets
for under three hundred dollars. Dylan's Restaurants has been a
proud podcast partner for years and the owner is my
personal friend. With four locations throughout Arizona, you'll always find
one to dine out and love, especially the Zoo, Well,
especially the ranch. Well, maybe the one floating on Lake Pleasant,
dang it. They're all good. Support your freedom loving businesses
(00:44):
and please check out Dylan's Restaurants. Small business owners claim
your Employee Attention Tax credit for twenty twenty and twenty
one with an accountant you can trust. If you don't
know what this is, you could be missing out on
hundreds of thousands of dollars. Go to Patriot Barbie dot
com look on my partner's page to read up. My
Freedom Cart, a conservative owned, made in America, toxic free
(01:06):
company that lets you shop online and delivers everything to
your front door clean products, proteins, snacks, haircare, makeup, toiletries,
dude Ditch Amazon, keep the perks and support a pro
life and pro freedom company. My Freedomcart dot com. My
Beautiful Smile is brought to you by doctor Daniel Slike.
(01:28):
His dental team is passionate, detailed, gentle, and clearly very talented.
My entire smile has been restored to stunning and I
owe it all to him. He's right here in Scottsdale
and consults are free. Go to Patriot Barbie dot com
look him up and schedule your free consultation. Are you
worried about Spike proteins? If not, you should be get
(01:49):
the Spike formula developed by experts like doctor Peter McCollough
from the Wellness Company. By going to TWC dot health
slash Patriot Barbie. Listeners of my podcast can use code
Patrire barbieat checkout for a discount. You guys. Once again,
you can find all my partners, my makeup line, my
Patriot Wine, my merch company, and the freedom cart at
(02:09):
Patriot Barbie dot Com on the shop page. Now, are
you ready to get started? Let's go. Welcome to the
Patriot Barbie Podcast. I'm your host, Lindsey Graham, author and
conservative activist. I love Jesus, I love America. I'm a
proud wife, mom of three, and I'm having bold and
witty conversations with America's patriots, the ones that cancel culture
(02:32):
desperately want a blacklist. Trust me, I've been there. In
twenty twenty, I defied government lockdowns in Oregon, reopened my
salon and became an icon of freedom. I've been targeted
by government and raging liberals every day since, and I
refuse to back down. Patriots. I'm here to tell you
your values are worth fighting for. The Patriot Barbie Podcast
starts now. Welcome to the Patriot Barbie Podcast. You know
(03:00):
I like to empower strong women. I was a weak
woman once. I'm a strong woman now. One of the
strongest women I know, At least I wish I knew.
She's one of the strongest women in the country right now.
She's been attacked, slandered, harassed, assaulted, drug through the mud,
(03:22):
beaten by men, which is totally illegal. Riley Gaines. You
guys know her. She's the NCAA champion swimmer. She's an athlete,
and she got I don't even want to say annihilated
because that's not fair, but annihilated by a dude claiming
to be a woman in her sport. We're going to
(03:43):
talk all things women, empowerment, all things fiercely feminine with
the one and only Riley Gaines.
Speaker 2 (03:52):
Well, you were so sweet and I'm so glad to
be on with exactly like you said, a strong woman
to be a rarity. So I just think amazing and
I thank you for having me on. Oh my goodness.
Speaker 1 (04:04):
We've traded guys, just so you know. We Her and
I we've gone like weeks, each of us rescheduling, each
being like, we're so sorry, but you know what, all
in God's timing totally was meant to be. I swear
like the week that I would have had you on,
I think it was probably last week. I think before.
My mindset wasn't in it. I was so distracted by
(04:24):
their stuff. So I'm like, all right, I think that
God needs me to be like fully fully focused on
this because it's such a strong movement and it's so
it's so important, we're like literally losing womanhood totally weird
for our very eyes. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (04:39):
Absolutely, in regards to of course, it's bigger than just
women's sports. I mean, they're changing the language of what
it means to be a woman. Yeah, you're not a
mom anymore, you're a birth giver, breastfeed, you actually chest feed.
So it's a lot bigger than I think what people
even realize in terms of the erasure of women.
Speaker 1 (04:58):
Right, and there's no rules around it anymore. It's crazy,
Like I have conversations, one conversation, particularly with an actual
and I feel like I need to say that now,
an actual transgender, right and now, I won't change my
vocabulary or my beliefs to accommodate any one person. And
this person, I am showing them love and respect. But
(05:22):
this person is a man. He understands that he's a man.
He's transgender, which I don't really believe in the word
because I believe you can't be the other gender. So
just stay that real quick. But there's no rules around
what transgender means anymore. So like this person, for example,
he looks like a woman, he acts like a woman,
(05:44):
he doesn't participate in women's sports. He probably uses the
female locker room because he looks just.
Speaker 2 (05:51):
Like a woman.
Speaker 1 (05:53):
And now I don't agree with that, But now, like,
what do you do? What do you do to dis
engage him from like the feminine movement? Is it remove
your breast and plants? Is it remove your lipstick? Is
it go back to your male name? Is it put
your penis back on? Like those rules flip flop every day,
and now it's literally just men going, well, I identify
(06:16):
as a woman.
Speaker 2 (06:17):
Absolutely, We're seeing this all the time. They're just like
you've mentioned, there's no standard to be met to be
someone who is transgender. All someone does is grow out
the hair and say I'm a woman. We're seeing that
happen in prisons, and not even the growing out the
hair part. They's a plan that if you say I
am a woman, you get to be housed with women,
(06:38):
which conscome to a rapist right, Yeah, to get into
a woman's prison. They're impregnating women. It's happened in Kansas,
New Jersey, Ohio, of course, California. In California, in just
recent weeks, over fourteen hundred men applied to be women
to get into women's prisons. So if nothing else, this
isn't to deny that people struggle with gender dysphoria, that
(06:59):
that's not a real that they're They're not people out
there who truly are in this mental kind of delusion
that deserves care. I think a lot of impartmental care.
But can we not acknowledge how the system we have
in place is putting women in harm's way acting it's
taking away our privacy, it's taking away our safety, our
(07:21):
fair our equal opportunities, our dignity, our I mean, I
could keep going on our feelings, our identity, our mental
health at the expense or they're they're prioritizing men's at
the expense of our own. Yeah, that's what we're seeing
across the board.
Speaker 1 (07:37):
Yeah exactly. And also, I mean, even though you and
I are probably on social media a lot, and we
are seeing this like prevalently for those people who aren't
on social media as much as we are. This this
is a pandemic of the mentally ill. And by the way,
we can say that because I don't pute post my
podcast anywhere where I can get censored, so YouTube out.
(08:00):
It's a pandemic of the mentally ill. And even though
this is happening nationally, and it's happening in areas where
it should certainly not be happening, it really is that
we're catering to like this minority. Now, the minority is
(08:21):
men who think that they can become women and therefore
are entitled to all women's rights. There's not that many
of them, I really believe there's not that many. But
it's the people supporting them that come out that are
allowed in numbers and want to give up you know,
want you to give up your title for this one man.
(08:42):
It's like you want all these hundreds of thousands, millions
of women to change the way we operate, to sacrifice
our safety and security for point zero one percent and
by the way, for men like the strongest creatures God created.
Speaker 2 (09:03):
Right to prod them exactly. And that's again, that's something
we're consistently seeing, is it is allowed minority. And as
you mentioned, this doesn't even make up one percent of
the population, this group, Yet we have people elected in office.
We just saw this in the US House of Representatives
a few weeks ago. This is an issue that fell
(09:24):
completely on party lines. How can every single Democrat in
office representatives how can they each and every one of
them vote in opposition of protecting women and girls. That's
not accurately representing their voters, that's not accurately even representing
the Democrat party. Of course, nearly one percent of Republicans
(09:45):
agree here, but recent holes show that eighty five percent
of independent voters and sixty to seventy percent of Democrats
don't even think men should be in women's sports. Yet
every single Democrat elected Democrat official in the House, and
I'm sure if it gets hurt on the Senate, it
will be the same conclusion. Every single one voted no.
(10:07):
And these are parents. These are moms and dads who
have children, who have daughters. Yeah, telling me they would
be okay with their daughter sharing a locker room with
a fully exposed man while they're simultaneously undressing undressing. And
if that answer is yes, then they're twisted parents. That's
exactly wrong with them, They really do. That's what we're
(10:28):
choosing to ignore. That being said, I think a lot
of liberal women, especially, they're waking up to this. You know,
these are women who once prided themselves on being feminists.
When the original feminist movement was brought to light really
in the nineties, these are women who took pride in
being a woman, and now they're seeing this administration not
(10:48):
even be able to define what a woman is. I mean,
we have a sitting Supreme Court justice who can't even
define what a woman is. And women are seeing this
and they're understanding, you know, how can we defend what
we can't even define? And so I think more and
more people are waking up to really see how these
elected officials aren't even accurately representing their own party.
Speaker 1 (11:10):
They're not. And you know what, You're right, the fact
that they all unanimously voted for it just proves that
there's an agenda, because are you? Are you? You can't
tell me that all the Republicans think alike. You can't
tell me that every woman thinks alike, that every married
couple thinks alike, that every child thinks I like, everyone
has their own individual beliefs and opinions and morals. You
(11:32):
all unanimously believe. And by the way, you're pointing out
that their moms and dads you just said their moms.
So they are female. So they even are willing to
say loud and proud on a platform. Yep, if I
go in the bathroom in the courthouse right down here,
and there's a man in there with his junk out.
(11:54):
I'm okay with it, and it's like, you know that
you're not, and you know what. They're voting on things
that don't affect them.
Speaker 2 (12:02):
That's the problem, amen, That's what we're seeing across the
board these and like you mentioned, it is typically women
who are fighting against sex based protections. It doesn't make sense,
but these are women who were never an athlete. They
don't understand what it takes to compete at the highest level.
They don't understand the value of sports, especially at that
(12:24):
collegiate level. It's not about humanity, it's not about being inclusive,
it's not about your feelings. It's not a right to
be able to play at the D one level. It's
a privilege and you have to work for it. And
they don't understand that. They think everyone is entitled to
being a collegiate athlete. No. I can tell you from
my own experience. I dedicated eighteen years of my life
(12:44):
to my sport, eighteen years of grueling, awful, miserable workouts.
I mean, it's not fun, to put it, quite frankly,
you're starving yourself of oxygen. You're bored because you're looking
at the same black line at the bottom of the
pool for hours every day. In college, we swam ten
miles every day.
Speaker 1 (13:04):
Oh my gosh.
Speaker 2 (13:05):
It's not fun, but that's what it takes to be
able to compete at that level. And the winning it
makes it all worth it. The competing it makes it
worth it. But these women who are fighting against it,
they don't understand that. They don't get it, and you're right,
it's something that doesn't affect them well.
Speaker 1 (13:20):
And that is what There's a new term that a
lot of people are using, and it's called trans privilege.
And I think that what you just said, which is
something I would never know anything about, is college swimming.
Like never, I swim leisurely with my kids. When you
say things like, oh, I swam ten miles a day,
and I would you know, I'm there staring at this
black line in the pool and you're sacrificing your life
and your body and your mental health. I think about
(13:43):
rules like this. You can't take steroids, right because it
would give you an advantage. It's illegal, and yet if
you were to take steroids, you wouldn't have to swim
ten miles a day, and you wouldn't have to starve
yourself or starve your body of oxygen. You would get to,
(14:03):
I don't know, spend an extra two or three hours
during the day doing what you wanted to do. Leah
Thomas and I hate even calling him that. What is
his real name, William William Thomas had trans privilege. He
probably didn't swim ten miles a day, and he probably
didn't go on the diet that you had to go
(14:24):
on and the routine that you had to go on
because he was already going to win, because he was
a man, so he took everything. He didn't just take
that award, okay, people, he didn't just take the medal
that didn't belong to him. He took every single minute
and every single mental block that you overcame, and everything
(14:48):
you sacrificed for years. He took that away from you.
Speaker 2 (14:52):
It means nothing, absolutely, it's all devalued, it's all meaningless.
And this is at the hands of the instead of
a of course, of course, will Leah Thomas. I mean
Leah displayed an utter disregard for anyone else other than himself.
He did not show any sort of remorse, any sort
(15:13):
of caring, any sort of understanding of where we came from.
Yet demands we use his pronouns to be respectful. Where
was our respect?
Speaker 1 (15:23):
Yeah?
Speaker 2 (15:24):
Where was that? Because maybe I'm missing something, but I
didn't receive any sort of respect when we all felt
uncomfortable in the locker room. Yet he's still undressing and
simultaneously watching us other girls undress. You want to say,
give you respect. It's the same thing we saw with
the shooter in Nashville, which I'm from Nashville. This is
I mean, that shooting that just happened was in my
(15:44):
backyard essentially, and it was a trans identified shooter was
a female who identifies as a male. Yet the media
demanded us we use her correct pronouns as him. Where
is the respect?
Speaker 1 (15:57):
There's the respect for the kids that were shot?
Speaker 2 (16:00):
I mean, come on, absolutely, And so it's it's people
come at me all the time and say, you know,
I agree with you, but you could at least usually
as correct pronouns.
Speaker 1 (16:10):
Now, now, no.
Speaker 2 (16:14):
And I'm with you. You know, someone like Caitlyn Jenner
who no, I don't support that lifestyle. I think it's
quite blatantly. I believe God made man and woman. I
believe our God doesn't make mistakes, and so while I
don't necessarily support transitioning in that capacity, I can respect
(16:34):
Caitlyn Jenner as a person because you know you, everyone
goes through their own struggles. Everyone sins. I'm just as
much a sinner as anyone else, and no one send
weighs more than the other. That being said, I can
be more respectful towards Kaitlyn Jenner as a person. But
Leah Thomas wanting respect from me, forget it. You can
absolutely throw that out of the window.
Speaker 1 (16:55):
Absolutely. And you know what, Caitlyn Jenner if and I'm
gonna say he because I'm struggling. If he gets respect,
it's for different reasons, Like you don't just get respect,
especially William Thomas. You don't just get it. Okay, we're
(17:16):
not getting it, and we're even throwing less of a
fit by demanding just our basic rights, not even privileges.
But one thing I will say is, you know, Caitlin
Jenner is on our side if you will. He doesn't
believe that William Thomas should be competing in women's sports.
(17:39):
But one thing I have said publicly and I will
continue to say it is that he needs to give
back his Woman of the Year award. Okay, it doesn't
matter how much you believe that what is happening is wrong,
as much as you believe and admit that you helped
facilitate it. Because the year that you came out and
(18:01):
said I'm a woman, even though the world knew that
you're a man, and you claimed awards for women, knowing
and knowing that we know that you're fully at all
not a woman, you started this, and so all love,
all respect, but also blame. And if you want to,
(18:24):
and I say this, you need to. If Bruce Jenner,
if Caitlyn Jenner wants to really make waves, then he
needs to go public and say I would like to
award this to this person, Riley Gaines. I vote Riley Gaines,
and I denounce it. I am not a woman. I
(18:45):
dress as a woman, I identify as a woman, and
I will never be one. And so I give back
this award. I should never have accepted it. That's what
he needs to do.
Speaker 2 (18:54):
Absolutely, that would be the most powerful, most respectful thing,
because that's we're fighting against. Women deserve to be celebrated
on our own uniqueness, our own physical ceilings that set
us apart from men. So taking any kind of award,
I don't care. If it's academic, I don't care. If
it's athletic, I don't care. I mean we're seeing the
Nike sponsorship for sports Bronze go to Dylan mulvaney. These
(19:17):
are things that are specific to women.
Speaker 1 (19:19):
So yeah, like what tits is it? Holding up? What boob?
Is that brawl? The whole point is like support. Real
women know that, Hey, we need support, you know, totally.
Speaker 2 (19:29):
And the Tampak sponsorship, it's like, imagine missing your target
audience by this much.
Speaker 1 (19:35):
Yeah, imagine going the complete to opposite. I would like
to sell red lipstick. I think I'll sell it to
one year old baby boys. I mean, like that's how
stupid they're marketing.
Speaker 2 (19:48):
Is It's like selling Viagara to a woman. This doesn't work.
Speaker 1 (19:53):
I mean, don't give many ideas I should. Maybe we
should try to get that sponsorship.
Speaker 2 (19:57):
Yeah, come on, Rainy gets stampas. I'm nominate the Patriot
barbie for yes.
Speaker 1 (20:04):
Thank you, thank you, thank you. I will accept my
million dollar sponsorship endorsement. So all right, I want to
get a little more like real about we all know
you know what we stand for. I want to know
what it felt like, because my heart broke. And this
was before you came out, and I was actually really
(20:25):
mad at you. I was mad at all the girls
and I think I made videos. Look at them standing
up there with him. They shouldn't be standing up there
with him. They allowed him to do this. But what
did it feel like standing up there? And just like
you lost so much in that moment, like you lost
so many opportunities, You lost what was yours to a man,
(20:49):
and to stand there and be photographed and to have
him cheering and smiling and being a dude that just
annihilated women and the disrespect and like the pain of
lose that.
Speaker 2 (21:01):
I'll say. First of all, I had planned on I
had pondered with the idea of what happens if I
don't swim. I knew I qualified for finals and I
qualified top eight in the morning, so I went up
to one of the NSA officials on the pull deck
and I said, what happens if I don't get on
the block? I mean, what can you do? He said,
(21:22):
That's why we have alternates. He said, someone if you
don't step up, someone will gladly take your place. So
I thought to myself, you know, okay, I'll race, but
I'm My kind of statement being made was I'm not
going to get on the podium. I talked with my
coach about it. I talked with my teammates, and they
were all well aware that I was not going to
get on the podium. And my coach was very supportive
(21:43):
of that. He said, you shouldn't have to you do
what feels right for you. And so we finished racing,
and I look at the board and I look at
my teammates and all of their jaws are on the floor,
and I realized Thomas and I tied. And so in
the brief moments of realizing we tied, I'm thinking to myself, Okay,
I wasn't going to get on the podium, but now
(22:04):
if I don't, there's not even an empty space, because
we share the freaking podium. It won't even be making
a statement because there will be no blank.
Speaker 1 (22:12):
Say he'll just take all the credit.
Speaker 2 (22:14):
Absolutely, And so then I'm thinking to myself, Okay, maybe
I will get on the podium and it can be
used as sort of this opportunity to highlight a six
or flour man compared to five five female. Maybe this
will be something good, Maybe this will be something that
can be used to really highlight the disadvantage, which is
ultimately what happened. But to answer your question, how it felt.
(22:36):
It felt like belittlement, It felt like betrayal. It felt
like we weren't worthy of our privacy, we weren't worthy
of safety, we weren't worthy of voicing our opinions because
we had to be kind, we had to be inclusive.
We were being totally gaslt.
Speaker 1 (22:55):
We really were.
Speaker 2 (22:56):
And I look back now and I could realize it
in the time, but now looking back at some of
the things that were said from these institutions and from
the NCAA of just how badly they were trying to
they will actually they successfully succeeded in suppressing our voices,
and we complied for the most part. I am so
(23:18):
regretful of that whole time period. I know it's easier
said than done, especially now that I'm in the same
boat as Megan Rapino and Britney Grinder where I'm done competing,
So it is easier said than done. But that's why
now I'm advocating for women to boycott I hate that
it has to come to this. I hate that women
have to compromise anything. Women should be able to play
(23:40):
their sports. They shouldn't have to give up anything. It
was really after I saw the US House of Representatives
not willing to the Democrats, not willing to protect women
and girls, I realized legislation is not the answer. Boycott
is the answer. That's the way we can effectively make change.
Because up until that point, I was advocating for girls
(24:00):
not to boycott because I thought it was crazy. We're
asking them to do that, right, that's what it's going
to take. That's the path that less women get injured,
less women feel exploited in a locker room, and less
women lose out on opportunities.
Speaker 1 (24:14):
It is sad because the solution, unfortunately, is that we
don't get to do what we should be we should
be completely entitled to do. We don't get to enjoy
our rights, we don't get to thrive in our community.
But the thing that everyone needs to hear is that
this does need to be everyone Like, you can't say
(24:37):
let's all boycott and then one or two girls boycott.
Then they miss out and they don't get to do
what they want to do, and you still do and
you are going to lose because if men are competing
against you, you're going to lose. But you now cost
your fellow women their rights and their abilities and their
entitlement to participate because you were weak. And you know,
(25:01):
I don't want you to feel bad about well, now
I don't compete. So it's easier said than done. The
reason that it happened to you is so that you
could feel it, you could experience it and say I
went through it, and I'm telling you this is what
it feels like. Spare yourself the belittlement and the betrayal
and the disrespect of the NCAA that they would that
(25:26):
organizations would just I don't know. The whole rule is
what does NCAAA stand.
Speaker 2 (25:33):
For National Collegiate Athletic Association.
Speaker 1 (25:38):
And there's a women's division and a men's division.
Speaker 2 (25:42):
Their job was to protect us and ensure an uphold
Title nine. I mean, it's that simple. Yet it failed.
They failed miserably. Yeah, and quite honestly, what they did
was illegal by not upholding Title nine. Title nine is,
of course, a federal civil rights law that is supposed
to stop discrimination on the basis of sex we were
overtly discriminated on the basis of sex at the hands
(26:04):
of the NC double A. That is a lawsuit. Of course,
they make it a burden to sue because it is
a financial investment. It's of course you're involving yourself politically,
You're it's a huge time investment.
Speaker 1 (26:17):
Right.
Speaker 2 (26:18):
My lawyer for the whole San Francisco incident, he costs
six hundred and fifty bucks an hour. What twenty two
year old has money to do that?
Speaker 1 (26:26):
I know. And you can fundraise all you want and
people will support you. But there it's getting to be
like situation after situation after situation where we the people
are now giving to give send goes to fund other
people's fights, which is great, but it's like we're all
funneling our money into these you know, people that have
(26:48):
that have stood up for this stuff, and we shouldn't
have to. There should be a government entity created to so, Okay,
I need to sue because you did violate, all right,
Well the government has to provide you an attorney, right, right.
Speaker 2 (27:01):
I know, but you're exactly right. This is becoming less
and less unique. It's more and more common. It's happening
at a rampant rate across the country, all sports, all divisions,
all levels, all ages, in every state. And I wholeheartedly
mean that I could list off one hundred examples off
the top of my head. So to believe the narrative
that this is a non issue, it's not really happening,
(27:22):
So why should we protect women. We're just creating a
solution to a problem that doesn't exist. That is false.
It does exist. It's happening, it really really is, and
so many women are being sent a message, and that
messages that they should smile and step aside and give
up their truth as.
Speaker 1 (27:40):
Long as it is to a man. Yeah, which is
the opposite of feminism. Literally, it's crazy. Yes, Oh shoot,
it's a really good question. I was going to ask
you done it? What was it? What's your next step?
So you were going to go to dental school? Are
you going to be speaking? Are you considering writing a book?
What's I know you're doing a lot with Turning Point.
(28:01):
I will see you at YWLS in June.
Speaker 2 (28:04):
I think my next step is really to continue doing
what I've been doing, getting in front of state legislature
last year when really all of this kind of took
off for me, and I realized how important this is
to fight. I was paying out of my own pocket
to go to travel state to state to testify, to
allow them to hear my experience, because I wanted them
to look me in my eye and tell me that
(28:27):
it's not happening, look me in my eye and tell
me that we don't matter. And they couldn't do it.
They still can't every state I'm traveling to, and this
is consistent across the board. They won't ask me questions.
The Democrats they have the opportunity to, yet they refuse
to because one they know they can't.
Speaker 1 (28:44):
Actually, they can't trap you. They can't ask a trick
question and trap you. The truth always prevails.
Speaker 2 (28:51):
No, Yeah, I think just continuing to travel state to state.
I'm going to Texas actually tonight I am going to
then Michigan or the next day. I think that's incredibly
important as well as fighting to uphold Title nine at
the federal level. We mentioned the US House of Representatives
and what the Senate looks like right now, but what
(29:11):
the Biden administration is doing is abysmal. They're working to
rewrite Title nine to where it's now preventing discrimination on
the basis of gender identity. So what this means is
or sorry, Men couldjoin sororities. Men could have full access
to bathrooms, locker rooms, any changing space on campuses. Men
(29:31):
could take academic and athletic scholarships away from women. Men
could live in dorm rooms with women, and you could
do nothing about it. Actually, we try to do something
about it. If you were to misgender the transigentifying individual
under this new rewrite, that is sexual harassment and you
are guilty. So upholding what Title nine was created to protect.
I'm doing everything in my power to urge people to
(29:54):
comment on the new rewrite. Their comment period is open
for I think another week, So really important for people
to get out there comment on this and allow your
voice to be heard. Yeah, and just you mentioned traveling around,
getting in front of colleges super important to engage kind
of our age range younger people. They need to be
(30:16):
willing to have their eyes opened see different perspectives that
they're not seeing through the media or through TikTok or
through whatever source they get their news from. They need
to hear how this is really affecting women.
Speaker 1 (30:31):
Yeah, good for you, Riley, I'm so proud of you.
Speaker 2 (30:34):
You're so sweet. I just I'm so excited to meet you,
and I'm just so grateful. You have done such amazing
work for women for a couple of years now, so
I feel as if I'm indebted to you. So thank you,
thank you.
Speaker 1 (30:46):
Well, I'm going to cry. God is bringing us together
on purpose, like he is creating an army, and I'm
I feel like we are going to lead a military
forward to protect women. I'm excited to fight by your side.
So where can people find you? Follow you, support you,
(31:09):
all of that.
Speaker 2 (31:10):
Yes, my Twitter is Riley Underscore Gains Underscore. Again. I
try to post breaking stories. I try to highlight how
politicians are responding, whether that's good or bad, just so
people don't believe that narrative that I was informing you
about the non issue, that it's not really happening, because
again that's a lie. So I tried to post some
MythBusters and different things there and surrounding this issue. Secondly,
(31:35):
I think my last piece of advice to parents, to
parents especially actually defend your daughters and teach your son's masculinity.
I think that's something that's being lost and talking about
this issue, or we're talking about how it specifically affects women,
but men can do something about this too. We need
(31:55):
men to feel as if they should protect women. That's
their duty. Not to get in to the whole gender
role thing here, but we need men too. That boycott
I was talking about for female athletes, men are more
than welcome to boycott as well. We need we need
statements to be sent.
Speaker 1 (32:11):
That's right, And I mean people need to start doing
kind of ridiculous things too, Like all the men on
the men's swimming team need to all go into the
office and say I actually identify as a woman, one
after the other, and then all the men are over
on the women's team and it makes no sense and
they're like, well this is stupid, and you're like, ah, no,
this is this is this is gender inclusivity, and how
(32:32):
dare you as gender me like you want to be
make a mockery. Let's make a mockery. Okay, yeah, it's ridiculous.
Well I'm getting all fired up at the very end.
Thank you for coming on, Riley. I adore you, and
thanks for being such a strong woman and a guest.
Speaker 2 (32:48):
Anytime. I'll see you in June.
Speaker 1 (32:50):
Okay, we have to cheers first. You get to decide
what we're cheersing too.
Speaker 2 (32:54):
I have to get a cup, hold on, Grab a cup,
grab a cup. Hold on. This is actually my water
bottle that I got at the Olympics. At the Olympics.
Speaker 1 (33:06):
So all right, so we're going to cheers to whatever
you would like to cheers to.
Speaker 2 (33:16):
We are going to cheers to strong women. I think
you embodied that perfectly. I'm hoping to follow in your
footsteps and we need more of them. So two strong
women cheers.
Speaker 1 (33:32):
Thanks for tuning in to the Patriot Barbie podcast. Follow
me on truth social at the Patriot Barbie and Instagram
at the dot Patriot dot Barbie. Subscribe, leave a review,
and share this podcast with your friends. You can find
this show, my book Targeted, and my apparel line on
www Dot Patriot Barbie dot com. God Bless America and
(33:53):
God Bless you.