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Nolte: Caitlyn Jenner Regrets Accepting ‘Woman’ Award, Wants Access to Women’s Bathroom

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Caitlyn Jenner, the Olympic decathlete turned reality TV star and transgender icon, has dropped a bombshell: he regrets accepting Glamour Magazine’s Woman of the Year award back in 2015. In a recent interview, Jenner admitted the honor felt hollow, especially as it thrust him into the heart of the gender identity wars, including the push for unrestricted access to women’s bathrooms. This isn’t just celebrity gossip—it’s a rare crack in the facade of the trans activist movement, where biological realities are often steamrolled in favor of ideology. Jenner, who once embodied the poster child for trans women are women, now seems to be recoiling from the very cultural battlefield that award ignited, highlighting how even high-profile figures can wake up to the discomfort of blurring sex-based spaces.

What’s fascinating here is the irony: Jenner’s regret underscores a growing backlash against policies that prioritize feelings over facts, much like the overreach we’ve seen in gun control debates where emotional narratives trump empirical data. Just as assault weapon bans ignore how criminals don’t follow laws, mandating shared bathrooms based on self-ID erodes women’s privacy and safety—spaces where vulnerability is real, and biological men, even post-transition, retain physical advantages. Jenner’s pivot isn’t about rejecting his identity but recognizing the practical fallout, a sentiment echoing women’s sports advocates like Riley Gaines, who’s been pummeled (literally) for defending female-only categories.

For the 2A community, this is a masterclass in cultural parallels. The same progressive playbook that demonizes gun owners as threats to safety is now boomeranging on trans activism, exposing hypocrisy when protecting the vulnerable means invading women’s locker rooms while disarming law-abiding citizens. As Jenner regrets his award, it signals momentum for common-sense boundaries—whether safeguarding Second Amendment rights or preserving sex-segregated facilities. Gun rights defenders should take note: when ideologues overplay their hand, reality bites back, and public opinion shifts toward protecting actual rights, not manufactured ones. Stay vigilant; these cultural wins bolster our fight against erosion of foundational freedoms.

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