
My Story
In a world where women's hard-won rights, fought for through decades of sacrifice and struggle, are being quietly eroded, I decided enough was enough. My name is Vic Pichette, a private investigator with over 35 years of experience.
An Acute Lymphoblastic Leukemia Survivor, a Heart Attack Survivor, and a survivor of Divorce. I have been uncovering truths in the shadows. For years, I have delved into abuse cases, witnessing firsthand the devastation inflicted when boundaries are ignored and power imbalances go unchecked. From domestic violence investigations to child pornography. I've seen how silence enables harm, and how speaking out can shatter the cycle.
But it was the relentless headlines of 2025 that lit the fuse. Stories like singer-songwriter Tish Hyman's harrowing encounter at a Los Angeles Gold's Gym hit Vic like a gut punch. In November, Hyman, a lesbian artist known for her raw vulnerability in tracks like her viral anthems of self-empowerment, found herself naked and vulnerable in the women's locker room when a biological male entered, stared her down, and verbally assaulted her, calling her a "bitch" in a deep, aggressive voice.
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Despite multiple prior complaints from women about harassment in that space, the gym did nothing until Hyman raised her voice. Then, she was the one banned, her membership revoked as punishment for demanding basic privacy and safety.
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Her raw videos exploded online, flooding the gym with backlash and reigniting national fury over women's-only spaces. Hyman's cry, "This is why we can’t be quiet" echoed the violation felt by countless women, turning a personal nightmare into a rallying call for change.
Then there was Riley Gaines, the 12-time NCAA All-American swimmer whose story has become synonymous with stolen victories. In 2022, Gaines tied for fifth in the 200-yard freestyle at the championships, only to watch Lia Thomas, a biological male, claim the trophy while she walked away empty-handed.
Fast-forward to 2025: Gaines's unyielding advocacy has reshaped the landscape. She's testified before Congress, launched the Riley Gaines Center to safeguard women's sports, and stood beside President Trump as he signed Executive Order 14201 on National Girls and Women in Sports Day, tying federal funding to policies barring transgender women from girls' competitions. States rushed to pass the "Riley Gaines Act," defining "female" by biological sex at birth and protecting single-sex programs.
Even as critics like Simone Biles weighed in (later apologizing for personal jabs), Gaines's voice, now amplified through HHS videos and campus tours, has exposed how male-bodied athletes have shattered over 600 female records, displacing opportunities earned through blood, sweat, and unyielding grit.
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These weren't isolated outrages; they were symptoms of a deeper madness, the steady dismantling of Title IX protections, the invasion of women's prisons, shelters, and sports arenas under the banner of inclusion. I am a father, survivor, and lifelong defender of the vulnerable, couldn't unsee it. After years of piecing together fractured lives in his PI work, I recognized the pattern: predators thrive in ambiguity, and allies are forged in action. In late 2025, inspired by Hyman's unfiltered courage and Gaines's relentless fight, I took a stand, channeled his investigative instincts into advocacy, and launching Real Men For Women's Rights as a beacon for everyday guys ready to reject complicity and reclaim their role as protectors.
Please Join Me.



