A Man Takes Miss Universe Netherlands

Rikkie Valerie Kolle has defeated a field of nine women to be named Miss Universe Netherlands to become the first-ever man to win the national women’s beauty title. Thanks in part to Donald Trump, who used to own the Miss Universe, men have been able to compete as women in the contest for some time.

Rikkie Valerie Kolle, the first man to win a national Miss Universe competition

Kolle will now represent the Netherlands at the 72nd Miss Universe competition in El Salvador. He may take the contest. He’s gorgeous.

In an Instagram post, Kolle said, “Hey darlings, as you know, I proudly admit that I wasn’t born as the woman I wanted to be, but I have developed myself into the woman I am. Over four months ago, I had my surgery.”

Soon men will dominate beautify pageants like they will dominate sports and everything else. Men are better at everything. Indeed, in many ways, men make the best women. They are taller, have better proportions, better bone structure, better facial features, less body fat, etc.

All the women who competed against Kolle agree. Look at them clapping and cheering. They’re so happy to be beaten by a man. They know who’s superior.

Now all we need is to be more aggressive in marginalizing and punishing those who refuse to complete the illusion by saying the magic works: “Transwomen are women.”

Say it with me…. Or don’t, bigot.

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Update (7/10/23):

Rikkie Valerie Kolle, left, is the trans-identifying male who just won Miss Universe. Nathalie Mogbelzada, right, is the second place runner up. It would seem that Kolle’s transgender status had a bit more to do with the outcome than selecting the more beautiful women among the group. Of course, it did. This is among the more flattering pictures of Kolle. But Kolle isn’t a woman, so why even the comparison? To make the point that this stunt wasted the women’s time just to advance the politics of gender ideology. Holland, with its semi-commercial health care system, has a special interest in pulling this stunt given that the Dutch pioneered the practices that make permanent medical patients of virtually everybody who goes through the process to “change” genders (which is an impossibility).

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Andrew Austin

Andrew Austin is on the faculty of Democracy and Justice Studies and Sociology at the University of Wisconsin—Green Bay. He has published numerous articles, essays, and reviews in books, encyclopedia, journals, and newspapers.

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