It’s hard to believe we’ve reached a point where stating the obvious — that a female is, in fact, a biological woman — is considered a controversial, even punishable offense.
Yet here we are, watching the Miss North Florida 2025 titleholder, Kayleigh Bush, get stripped of her crown because she had the audacity to say what every sane, grounded person already knows: that boys, no matter how many surgeries they undergo, are still boys. And that forcing women to pretend otherwise isn’t “inclusive.” It’s absurd.
This isn’t just a spat over semantics. The contract Bush was asked to sign didn’t just push boundaries — it bulldozed biological truth, legal precedent, and basic common sense. According to the Miss America Organization (and, sadly, the Miss Florida Scholarship Program), “female” now means a surgically altered male, so long as there’s notarized documentation of his “vaginoplasty” stapled to the application. Read that again and try not to gag. This isn’t progressive — it’s grotesque.
Kayleigh Bush did everything right. She competed, she won, and she honored her commitment to the pageant system under the good-faith belief that being female actually meant something. What she didn’t sign up for was a bait-and-switch contract crafted by a bureaucracy so lost in the fog of gender ideology that they no longer recognize the very contestants their pageants were designed to celebrate.
The fact that this Orwellian definition of “female” was only presented after she’d won — after the public-facing requirements said nothing about it — makes this even worse. It’s dishonest, it’s manipulative, and it reeks of agenda-pushing behind closed doors.
And let’s talk about the age bracket here. We’re not talking about grown adults. This contract would apply to boys as young as fourteen who’ve been subjected to sterilization procedures under the false promise of gender salvation. This isn’t inclusivity. It’s exploitation. It’s medical abuse dressed up in a sash and tiara. And it is completely at odds with Florida law, which already bans the sterilization and castration of minors under the phony guise of “gender-affirming care.”
The Miss America Organization may think they’re being trailblazers, but what they’re really doing is advancing a radical, destructive ideology that targets the most vulnerable among us: confused children and young women who are being told that truth is hate and biology is bigotry. And the worst part? They’re doing it while cloaking themselves in the language of empowerment.
Fortunately, not everyone is asleep at the wheel. Liberty Counsel has stepped in, demanding that Bush’s title be restored and this delusional contract be tossed in the shredder where it belongs. They rightly point out that not only is this contract morally offensive and scientifically laughable, it’s illegal.
Under both the Florida Constitution and multiple statutes, this attempt to redefine reality holds no water. If you can’t legally castrate a minor in Florida — and thank God you can’t — you also can’t demand that mutilation be the price of admission for competing in a scholarship pageant.
Kayleigh Bush, Miss North Florida 2025, was stripped of her crown for refusing to give in to the lie that men can become women.
We are fighting for her title to be restored and for the Miss America contract language to be reconsidered. Keep standing strong, Kayleigh!👑 https://t.co/N5VfdKxVeW
— Liberty Counsel (@libertycounsel) June 5, 2025
Attorney General Pam Bondi isn’t mincing words either. In her April 2025 memorandum, she condemned the butchering of children under the label of gender care as a “barbaric practice,” aligning with President Trump’s executive order cutting off federal funding for these Frankenstein procedures. She called it what it is: junk science being weaponized to prey on vulnerable kids and force society to go along with the lie — or else.
Kayleigh Bush deserves more than a crown. She deserves respect, applause, and frankly, a round of thanks for standing firm in the face of an ideology that’s trying to erase women, one contract clause at a time. The Miss America Organization has made its position clear — but so has Florida law, the Constitution, and common sense. And on this one, they’re not on the same side.