Join Us
XX-XY Athletics is almost two-years old. We’ve accomplished a lot. And, along with activists and advocacy organizations that came before us, we’ve made progress in protecting girls’ and women’s sports.
As you know, the brand comes at it from the angle of cultural change (vs political or legislative). So we’ve rounded out the working group nicely. And we couldn’t have made all this progress without YOU.
Despite the fact that ~80% of Americans believe in biological reality and that women’s sports must be for XX only, the vast majority have been silent for fear of being smeared by the angry mob. But that is changing. And more and more of you are standing up every day, to protect your daughters, to fight for truth and to restore sanity to the public square. And young women are leading the charge.
We are proud to be part of this movement and we are grateful to each of you willing to stand up and use your voice. Or wear the t-shirt. Or both.
We still have work to do. And as always, we encourage you to have those hard conversations. One on one conversations drive change.
If you are XX-XY Athletics curious but haven’t yet pulled the trigger to make your voice heard, we’d encourage you to make 2026 the year you do it.
Join us. The water is warm.
What’s happened? Achievements to date!
On February 5, 2025, President Trump signed an executive order to protect girls’ sports.
On February 6, 2025, the NCAA has said they will keep women’s sports female, stopping short of testing for sex but stating that the organization would uphold the executive order. (It remains to be seen exactly how they will do this without sex testing.)
27 states have laws on the books to keep women’s sports female.
In July 2025, the US Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC) said that it will uphold the executive order to protect women’s sports.
In November 2025, the International Olympic Committee announced findings that males, even those placed on puberty blockers, have physical advantages in competing against women, and tipped their hat to establishing a clear policy that bans males from competing in women’s sports. The organization has not yet announced its official policy as to how they will protect women’s sports, merely its intention to do so in 2026, just in time for the Winter Games.
At XX-XY Athletics, more and people take the simple step of declaring their belief in material biological reality by making a purchase and wearing our logo loudly and proudly.
We’ve taken over 40,000 orders. We’ve sold more than 80,000 products. We’ve amassed nearly 4000 reviews with an average of 4.8 out of 5 stars. And we’re just getting started.
We’ve been seen courtside at the US Open, behind the President at the White House and at countless school board meetings and rallies across the country.
The #1 women’s tennis player in the world is on team sanity (Aryna Sabalenka) and so is the queen of rap, Nicki Minaj.
We have made so much progress. But we aren’t done yet.
Work still to be done.
In blue states across the country, boys are competing – and winning – in girls’ sports.
Advocates for women and girls’ opportunities, fairness, privacy and safety are attacked as bigots and transphobes.
Fewer than 5, count ‘em 5, currently competing professional athletes have stood up for the protection of women’s sports. And when Elizabeth Eddy – a National Women’s Soccer League player for Angel City FC – did it, she was attacked as a bigot by her own teammates in a press conference.
If you don’t think that makes other female athletes afraid to stand up for the protection of their own sports, you’d be mistaken.
On January 13, oral arguments for two critical Supreme Court cases will kick off. The Court will hear two similar cases on the same day: Little v. Hecox (from Idaho) and West Virginia v. B.P.J. Both cases filed by the ACLU challenge state laws protecting women’s sports and resulted in lower court rulings that force states to let boys compete with girls.
The ACLU’s clients are young men who identify as female & want to play women’s sports.
Together, these cases ask a simple question. Can states pass laws protecting women’s sports without violating Title IX or the Constitution? The appellate courts said “no,” they cannot. Idaho and West Virginia argue the correct answer is a resounding "yes."
If the Supreme Court rules on the side of biological reality, allowing states to pass laws protecting the integrity of women’s sports, it doesn’t mean this becomes the law of the land. It means the 27 states that currently have laws on the books protecting women’s sports can continue.
But the blue states that allow boys to compete in girls’ sports? Well, they will continue to do that as well. So we’ll need to continue to move the culture towards biological reality.
What now?
XX-XY Athletics will be rallying on the steps of the Supreme Court on January 13. Stay connected for more information as to how to join or tune in.
If there are ballot initiatives in your state – as there are in our home state of Colorado, make sure you sign. And collect signatures. When it is put to the people for a vote, the majority will make it clear that girls and women are not a category that can be elected into.
Don’t be afraid. Speak up. As Nicki Minaj said at the Turning Point USA conference in December 2025, she just "just got tired of being pushed around.” And: “I'm not going to back down anymore. I'm not going to back down ever again.”
We’re the majority. We can’t go backwards when it comes to women’s rights. We’ve fought too long and too hard.
Move forward in truth. Say it out loud. Now is the time.

