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Well, if competitors want to believe the nonsense that putting on a skirt and abusing hormones makes you a woman- go ahead.
Let them all get clobbered by guys. People will tune out anyhow, and then shortly thereafter there will be no more woman's sports. Problem solved. rjp |
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https://www.usatoday.com/story/sports/olympics/2024/08/01/olympic-gender-testing-boxers/74615354007/ Simply search for: “proved they had XY chromosomes and were thus excluded." The IBA tested and the IOC simply ignored the issue...so I think I would stick with the IBA decision. The IOC did not test so they have no criteria other than passport...which does not indicate chromosomes or testosterone levels (or anything at all). Claiming that a body that tests "lacks transparency" by a body that chooses to not do anything to determine eligibility is pretty lame and the fact that the media falls behind such nonsense is pretty typical for social and progressive issues. |
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This is the crux of this thread. |
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These competitors were born with vaginas, raised as girls, went through puberty as girls, and happen to have a birth defect, specifically they have the XY chromosome so their ovaries won’t develop. |
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Try as one might to make it so, XY chromosomes is not a birth defect. It’s being born male.
A person with XY and no man parts is still XY and still male. A person with XY no matter what performance parts or octane boosters he has or has not is still male. |
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Based on essential the same articles, I decided the IBA didn't test and wants to cover that up. You decided the IOC purposely ignored the IBA's testing so men can clandestinely compete in women's boxing. Maybe in time we'll both know more and can reevaluate our stance. |
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The IOC largely is angered at the IBA due to the fact that they refused to ban Russians from competition (due to Ukraine) as the IOC requested. Subsequent testing? Please provide info on the testing done by the WBA or the IOC. So far, the only one claiming to have done DNA Testing is the IBA through an independent lab that indicated XY. My understanding is that World Boxing has not published standards and did not test athletes. They are simply businessmen trying to wrest control of tournaments the IBA for financial reasons. |
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So yeah....things, and especially people, just don't fit as neatly into boxes as some folks imagine. On the poll, I voted "It's Complicated." ;) |
Also, blaming and judging are more fun for some than for others.
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Dixie, tell me more about this, "safety canard." |
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I like Crowbob's comment yesterday. That was good info. I'm still a little confused on the subject boxer. |
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Take for example this fairly recent, small study on male 'v' female punching power, which concluded, "But even with roughly uniform levels of fitness, the males' average power during a punching motion was 162% greater than females', with the least-powerful man still stronger than the most powerful woman". https://phys.org/news/2020-02-males-powerful.html Here is a study comparing strength in general, between male and female athletes, which again reinforces why born-as/biological males need to be kept out of all female sports that involve such things as strength/power, speed, and endurance, not just contact sports. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7930971/ |
I troubled by this whole thing… still.
I look at photos of my cousins daughter and she ain’t no man. I held her in my arms as a baby, I watched her grow up from afar. She is now a beautiful woman in her mid 20s. She may have the XY chromosome, and her inner womanly parts didn’t develop, but she is about as girly as girly gets. Nobody could pick her out of a crowd as a man. |
Under normal development in all placental mammals, including humans, a male has XY chromosomes, and he will develop and at some point have testes, a prostate, and a penis. A female, under normal development, has XX chromosomes, and she will develop and at some point have a uterus, ovaries, a cervix, and a vagina. Barring a disorder or disruption, a female can carry, give birth to, and nurse offspring at some point during her life cycle. A male cannot. Males and females also differ in the prevalence of hormones such as testosterone and estrogen, respectively, and develop distinct secondary anatomical differences under the influence of these hormones, especially during puberty.
A human male is, minimally, a member of the human species who, under normal development, produces relatively small, mobile gametes—sperm—at some point in his life cycle, and has a reproductive and endocrine system oriented around the production of that gamete. A human female is, minimally, a member of the human species who, under normal development, produces relatively large, relatively immobile gametes—ova—at some point in her life cycle, and has a reproductive and endocrine system oriented around the production of that gamete. This is why, in almost all cases, the presence of such features is sufficient to conclude that a newborn is either male or female. Sex in almost all cases is easily observed, not “assigned. |
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