Jennifer Bilek

Aug 30, 20205 min

Big Pharma in Ireland, "Transgenderism" and the Assault on Women’s Sports

Updated: Oct 16, 2022

Women's rights to their own sports teams are being overridden by the gender lobby. Let's look at Rugby in Ireland to understand why.

The gender industry, as is becoming abundantly clear, is a part of the techno-medical-industrial complex, and its only relation to the human rights of LGB people is to use the LGB civil rights framework and political infrastructure to obscure its dirty work, providing a human rights veneer to a dangerous, profiteering, and social engineering agenda.

AbbVie is a major Bio-pharmaceutical corporation intersecting with Rugby, Football, and the medical attack on human sex. More about them in a moment.

Ireland is home to TENI (Transgender Equality Network Ireland). Founded in 2005, TENI, and ILGA (International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Intersex Association), are two of the most prominent "transgender" organizations in Europe and Central Asia. TENI, With ILGA, represents over 800 organizations and groups across the region, working to normalize dissociation from the sexed body as identity and drive the idea globally that we are not a sexually dimorphic species.

ILGA credited TENI for their work with policymakers and said TENI “reminds them of the scaffolding you see when a house is being built. It’s not the finished product, but it is work that will provide a structure for future activities, work that is designed to have long-lasting positive effects.” This apparatus to drive "transgenderism" globally functions similarly to Arcus Foundation in the US, a behemoth LGBT non-governmental organization founded by a medical corporation heir, worth billions. It's not surprising they mirror Arcus Foundation. TENI is funded by Astraea Foundation. This purported lesbian organization went from supporting lesbians to driving gender ideology after millions of dollars in grants from the Arcus Foundation.

TENI does ongoing outreach and training with policymakers, healthcare professionals, and teachers in the concepts of gender ideology. TENI forms working relationships with the Health Service Executive (HSE – Ireland’s health service), school executive boards, researchers, and other key people and organizations that drive the normalization of gender ideology. Though no medical or scientific evidence of “gender” exists, TENI offers guidelines for general practitioners (GPs).

TENI also partners with HSE to deliver Gender Identity Skills Training (GIST). GIST training is offered to all healthcare providers in all regions of the Republic of Ireland. TENI also provides training for staff in 47 post-primary schools and 17 primary schools in the Republic of Ireland.

TENI plans for 2020-2023 are to further the trans agenda.

Ireland is also the home of Irish Rugby, the Irish Rugby Football Union, which allows men to play as women if they perceive themselves as female, and Gaelic Football, a game played between teams of 15 players on a rectangular grass pitch. Gaelic football is one of four sports (collectively referred to as the "Gaelic games") controlled by the Gaelic Athletic Association (GAA), the largest sporting organization in Ireland. Under the auspices of the GAA, Gaelic football is a male-only sport; however, the related sport of ladies' Gaelic football is governed by the Ladies Gaelic Football Association. Outside Ireland, football is mainly played among members of the Irish diaspora. Gaelic Park in New York City is the largest purpose-built Gaelic sports venue outside Ireland. Though not very profitable for managers, players, or coaches, who are prohibited from profiting from the sport, that doesn’t stop Big Pharma from profiting from injuries.

The current Irish healthcare system is primarily a tax-financed public system. Still, with significant out-of-pocket spending, mainly in primary care, and with supplementary health insurance for private hospital cover, it has a 45% rate of public participation.

Roughly 20 years ago, Ireland had about 50 biopharma companies dotted throughout the country. Recent numbers put that figure at more than 300 companies.

19 of the top 20 global pharmaceutical and biopharmaceutical companies are based in Ireland for a good reason. By establishing its manufacturing there, this industry has excellent geographical proximity to the mainland European markets. Easy international shipping across the Atlantic benefits pharmaceutical exports to North America. Five of the world’s eight top-selling drugs are produced in Ireland, making it the world’s largest net exporter of pharmaceuticals and a globally recognized center of excellence in Pharma.

One of those companies is AbbVie, makers of the puberty blocker Lupron,

pain medications, testosterone (andro gel), antibiotics for infections, and immunosuppressants to avoid rejection in transplant victims. All these drugs are used in surgeries being performed in the manipulation of people’s second sex characteristics. Puberty blockers are being used on the healthy bodies of children, treating puberty itself as a disease, all in the name of some indiscernible ideology being instituted globally that doesn't make an ounce of rational sense.

AbbVie has also expressed a firm commitment to equality, diversity, and inclusion (ED&I) practices (which is gender-lobby-speak for driving body dissociation), both inside and outside the organization.

AbbVie has created a unique sporting partnership with Ireland’s Gaelic Football team. It is the only sponsorship in Ireland between a multinational pharmaceutical company and a lady's or men’s inter-county Gaelic football team.

Sligo Ladies Gaelic Football Association (LGFA) and AbbVie recently announced a three-year sponsorship at the company’s Manorhamilton Road facility in Sligo.

The arrangement will see the AbbVie logo on the senior ladies’ football team jerseys until the end of 2022. AbbVie also sponsors the Sligo men’s county GAA Senior, U-21, and Junior football team jerseys. Many of the company’s 400-plus Sligo employees are involved in GAA and the LGFA or have previously played the sport at various levels.

Johnson & Johnson, the largest biotech company in the world, has also found a home in Ireland and is a significant contributor to the gender industry. Pfizer, joined by Merck, Sanofi, ViiV, Gilead, Allegan, Bayer, Abbott, and many more biopharmaceutical corporations, call Ireland home, and support the gender industry, via inclusive policies, donations for research, and pharmaceutical developments.

AbbVie has also found a market in the sports nutrition industry, like many other Pharma corporations serving the gender industry. The sports nutrition industry's global market value in 2019 was 15.6 billion dollars. The sector comprises protein bars, energy drinks, and various dietary supplements for athletes.

It is hard to ignore the implications of these intersections and why the gender industry carries the day in the sports arena, from high school to universities and the Olympics. It is very profitable for the Pharma and tech industries to embrace the newly emerging gender industry and leave a wasteland of women’s rights to their sports in their wake.

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