If you're arguing that, say, trans women shouldn't be in the women's division in elite sport because "trans women aren't real women", that's transphobia. — fdrake
Can trans activists think of a higher authority. Or is their agenda fuelled solely on feelings. — Edy
When the question is, should we allow biological men to compete against woman, I would have thought that the best person to ask is a trans who played sports at an elite level. It seems this isn't the case..
Do you consider Caitlyn to be an authority on this question. Why/not? — Edy
If a trans male actually cares about women then they should stay out of the women’s leagues. To do otherwise is an affront.
If you think biological males do not have a tremendous physical advantage that compromises a women’s sport and any integrity or honour of the women in that sport then I’m sorry to tell you that you’ve lost your fucking mind. Time to reevaluate. — DingoJones
I understand they are trying to make policy but a year of hormone therapy doesn’t even the playing field by a long shot. — DingoJones
What makes sense to me would be a trans league, or an open league of some kind. — DingoJones
All you have to do is look at how badly women’s world records are being shattered every time a trans male competes in women’s leagues of any and all sports. — DingoJones
Science should be the reliable authority, but it's taken a back seat. — Edy
Do you have examples?[of woman's records being shattered by trans] I've found two: Mary Gregory in powerlifting (after just a year of hormone therapy) and Veronica Ivy in track cycling. — Michael
I'm not a fan of casting your own view as a-political and thoroughly rational. At best it demonstrates a lack of self-awareness — Echarmion
All that aside, I agree, that basically the biology should be the criterion. — 3017amen
That's where the problem lies. Science is clear that in physical competitions especially at top level a biological female is not the same as a biological male. So the issue seems to be political. Politics decides how science is applied. — Apollodorus
You're referring to this? Because I'm referring to actual transgender women, and in particular those who have undergone sufficient hormone therapy. — Michael
Are transgender women only tournaments even feasible? — Michael
According to the trans movement, hormone therapy has nothing to do with it. They believe in gender fluidity. Someone can change their identity from day to day. And if you don't agree, then you are a bigot. — Edy
Well, there are men or women only tournaments, so why not? — Apollodorus
Because there are far, far fewer transgender athletes than cisgender athletes. According to this "less than 1 percent of the NCAA’s student-athlete population is transgender." — Michael
For the sake of argument, suppose someone decides to be a horse and successfully undergoes surgery to become as horselike as possible. Which tournaments should we allow them to compete in? — Apollodorus
Horse racing. — Michael
I don't think cis woman's broken skulls agree with your research. — Edy
What I'm saying is that society can't always accommodate those who deliberately choose to be different yet at the same time insist on being equal. — Apollodorus
People don't choose to be transgender. They choose to transition, but not to be transgender. — Michael
A trans man is a person who was assigned female at birth and later identifies as/transitions to being a man. Did you mean to be referring to trans women (those who are assigned male at birth and later identify as/transition to being a woman)? — Michael
But on the topic of trans men, should they compete in women's or men's sports? — Michael
This is true. According to this study it takes at least two years of hormone therapy for transgender women to match cisgender women in push ups and sit ups, although they still have an advantage in the 1.5 mile run. — Michael
Using the study above you'll see that trans men have a significant advantage over trans women. So should there be both a transgender men's league and a transgender women's league? Perhaps also an intersex league for those with ambiguous genitalia/other sex chromosome disorders? — Michael
Do you have examples? I've found two: Mary Gregory in powerlifting (after just a year of hormone therapy) and Veronica Ivy in track cycling. — Michael
Have Fallon Fox fight Conor McGregor and the beatdown will be even more one-sided. — Michael
I believe so. A trans man, being assigned female at birth (so-called biological birthright), who wants to compete with other women would have a better argument... . — 3017amen
Trans men, after hormone therapy, are stronger and faster than trans women, after hormone therapy. If the concern with transgender women competing against cisgender women is that cisgender women have an athletic disadvantage then it would be an even greater concern for transgender men to compete against cisgender women.
Michael — Michael
I just think the reality is so much more complex than it is being portrayed in this thread. — Jack Cummins
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