• SSJMarx@lemm.ee
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    4 months ago

    Put simply, it was never really about transgender women, they were just used to create a psuedoscientific smokescreen around the same thing that misogyny has always been about: policing women’s bodies. If the patriarchy doesn’t consider you a woman, you don’t get to be one.

    • CitizenKong@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      And transphobic selfrightious “feminists” like Rowling fell right into that trap. Bravo, you played yourself.

    • scarabic@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      I think the transphobic trend inherited a lot of its energy from the anti-gay currents I watched my entire life, and which largely had the breath kicked out of them when gay marriage became recognized around the country.

      Not all of the anti-gay current was about policing women’s bodies. Thats in there. But it’s also about what they call deviance. They have strict roles for people and you can’t keep anyone focused on their strict roles when anyone has absolute freedom to flout them. I don’t even think they care what trans and gay people are doing in other places. They care about their own authority to command their children how to be, and they think this authority is undermined if anyone out there can live a happy life in defiance of it.

      That includes policing women’s bodies but is not limited to it. Things like making sure your sons have short haircuts and work hard at practicing sports are in there too. It’s about policing people generally. Blows my mind how they think the Left are waging a culture war when all we are doing is busting out of the cages they try to keep everyone in.

  • werefreeatlast@lemmy.world
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    4 months ago

    I was listening on NPR about how women were checked for femininity and given a card after an official go to see their reproductive organs for Olympic sports. Fun times!

    • Zron@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Do they also do Olympic penis inspection day for the make athletes?

      • werefreeatlast@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        It would be interesting for statistical analysis of our evolution, and for fun, to measure every one’s penis and be given a male card:

        Name: Robert Schmidt Soft penis size: 3" Soft curvature= downward Hard penis size: 5.75"… He keeps saying 7" Hard curvature= left up Right ball r1= 1.5" Right ball r1= 1" Left ball r1= 3" Left ball r1= 1.5" Semen color= 270, 265, 256 Semen quantity= 10ml Semen smell= standard musky 275 Semen motility= 50% above average Semen morphology= 10% at average Semen taste= pineapple and onion Penis elastic modulii data…

  • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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    4 months ago

    We do not know what is between Imane Khelif’s legs. It is absolutely possible to be XY and be born with a vagina that looks and works like any vagina. They might even have rudimentary (but non-functional) female reproductive organs.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XY_gonadal_dysgenesis

    If that is true about Imane Khelif, she may not even have known about it most of her life.

    Should all Olympians be genetically tested or just examined to see what’s between their legs? If the former, which event do the women with Swyer Syndrome perform in? How about people with both sets of genitalia? They exist. What about people who are XXY or XYY?

    And if you think the latter- please do justify that sort of invasive examination for the purposes of athletic competition. Unpaid athletic competition at that.

    • Lemming6969@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      Do we need a protected class? If yes, there must be standards and those standards must be either endocrine or genetic or both. Yes they should be tested. Anyone failing the protected class can compete in the open class. It’s really that simple.

      • SSJMarx@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        there must be standards

        Here’s a standard: if you live as a woman you’re a woman.

        and those standards must be either endocrine or genetic or both

        There is absolutely no reason to assert that this must be the case.

        • realitista@lemm.ee
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          4 months ago

          Do you really think it’s fair for a full blown man to fight women in the ring just because he identifies as a woman? Women will get very seriously hurt or possibly killed fighting someone assigned male sex at birth. I have no problem letting them do anything that doesn’t hurt others, but this is a case where I think we need to be more sensible.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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            4 months ago

            If it’s about who might get hurt, maybe we should divide things up by something other than gender. I know plenty of women who could do a ton of damage with their fists and they aren’t even boxers.

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              4 months ago

              This is the correct answer. Divide competitors up by class, skill level, or anything else besides perceived sexual anatomy.

            • realitista@lemm.ee
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              4 months ago

              It’s one thing to work within the limits of your physique to become stronger, better, etc. It’s another thing to have a totally different physique that gives you a starting point higher than can be achieved naturally by anyone else.

              • scarabic@lemmy.world
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                4 months ago

                So many sports are entirely about the physique you inherited though. Yes there is some technique to swimming and obviously you have to train hard. But these are just prerequisites, not differentiators. If we start saying that winning because of your physique is no victory, then really half of the events become meaningless. To a large extent, the Olympics does measure inherited traits and I think we ought to recognize that that is its point. If you think back all those centuries, it was very obviously the point to prove that your people are genetically superior to their people.

              • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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                4 months ago

                So put those women in a higher class. There are plenty of women with “masculine” physiques… or are you going to claim Brittney Griner is also not a woman?

                • realitista@lemm.ee
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                  4 months ago

                  I don’t think it’s fair to penalize a woman who works all her life to get to a certain level and just make her compete against someone who maybe hasn’t had to work at all because they are physically male. If anything, we need to make a class for people who are physically male but presenting female.

          • Tryptaminev@lemm.ee
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            4 months ago

            Boxing has weight classes. As do most other martial arts.

            The problem is not a 50kg men fighting a 70kg women in terms of injuries and power imbalance. And in that set up the women most likely wins. The problem is the typical situation of a 80-100 kg men smacking down on a 50-60kg women. And that is the image the demagogues try to conjure.

            So if your full blown men is a 60kg feather to be able to compete against another 60kg women, the whole trope falls apart.

            • realitista@lemm.ee
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              4 months ago

              A man with the same body weight as a woman would still inherently have more upper body strength and higher ability to gain it as that’s just how men are built vs women. It’s still not a fair way of setting intersex classes.

              • Lime66@lemmy.world
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                4 months ago

                I mean if they’re doing the exact same rigor and type of training, eating the exact same diet, have had the exact same level of boxing experience and fought the exact same opponents at the same skill level, then yes there would be an advantage to whoever is assigned male

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            4 months ago

            Do you really think it’s fair for a full blown man to fight women in the ring just because he identifies as a woman?

            Can you cite an example of this?

            • realitista@lemm.ee
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              No I can’t because there’s no data to go off of. I’m honestly unclear as to whether it’s a valid issue or not. Even in this case where the data we have seems to indicate there’s an issue, the data doesn’t seem entirely trustable. Anyone claiming complete certainty in this environment with no evidence is clearly just blindly pushing an agenda in bad faith.

              • octopus_ink@lemmy.ml
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                4 months ago

                It seems odd that you’ve based multiple comments here on that example then, I think.

                • realitista@lemm.ee
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                  Did you actually read said comments? I’ve said this multiple times. It’s basically the thesis of my statements.

        • scarabic@lemmy.world
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          Boxers and wrestlers have weight classes because weight confers a massive advantage and almost predetermines the outcome of the match. You might as well just award someone for weighing more, because skill can only overcome it to a point.

          I would prefer if competitive classes were determined by things like weight which are universal and obvious and non-invasive to measure. However I don’t know if that works for everything. Hormones do in fact confer major advantages, as chemical doping does. Should we not test for doping either?

          I do think it’s actually more invasive to try to measure if someone “lives as a woman” than it is to measure what’s in their blood. How do you even begin to define that, and aren’t you engaging in prescriptive sexism as soon as you start? I can tell that your suggestion comes from a place of wanting to support women and their autonomy but I don’t think you thought it through at all, at least not in the context of competitive sport. If you don’t care at all about fair sports competition, it’s all super easy. If you do want to enable fair sport competition, you have to actually deal with the complexities and not just fire off leftist slogans.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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        4 months ago

        What open class? There is no open class at the Olympics. So no it isn’t really that simple.

        • arin@lemmy.world
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          Really? They prohibit women from competing alongside men?? No thats not the case, women only sports is to prevent males with higher biological advantage from taking over the women’s competition.

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            Males are not taking over any women’s competition anywhere in the world. I know that you think that trans women are men, but even by that standard this idea is a total farce - there is one transgender athlete out of like a thousand Olympians at this year’s Olympics. There have been no major trans competitors in the Olympics despite being allowed since 2004. There is no dominance of trans athletes in sports at any level in any country on this planet. This is a phantom that you have invented in your head, it is totally illusory and does not exist - and because it does not exist, the only thing trying to fight this phantom can possibly accomplish is hurting women by excluding them from their own competitions.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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            4 months ago

            Is this an “Air Bud Rule” thing?

            Also, we have no idea if Khelif is biologically male. We have one corrupt Russian official saying “well maybe.”

            • Mirshe@lemmy.world
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              We actually do have a pretty good indicator that she’s biologically female - the fact that her home country, where she still lives, would’ve jailed her if they figured out she was a trans woman before they sent her to the Olympics. Algeria doesn’t allow gender transitioning in any way, and they can and do imprison people who live as a gender other than the one they were born as.

              • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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                You clearly can’t convince people. Because they just move on to “even if she is biologically female…”

      • barsoap@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        At least one X is required because it contains instructions to make very crucial stuff, while Y contains a bunch of switches turning things on and off.

    • RickRussell_CA@lemmy.world
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      4 months ago

      The determination of who may compete in limited-class sports must be made by rules.

      It’s not a matter of who you or I think is a woman who qualifies. Only the governing body of that sport makes that determination.

      • Dran@lemmy.world
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        I think the debate is about what a reasonable class is. I don’t think that an appendage, or identity for that matter, is a reasonable proxy for capability class. In my mind you really have to go one of two ways.

        You either make everything class-less (think UFC 1) where all weights, sizes, abilities, genetics compete for a singular title

        Or

        You make science-based classes, based around whatever the best proxy for capabilities are (testosterone, chromosomes, height, weight, body fat percentage, some combination of the former, etc)

        If you use nothing as a proxy, there would be a lot of people unable to compete but it would at least be unequivocally “fair”. If you use science-based capability classes you would have a wider range of “fair-ish” competitions, but there might be some weird overlap where some men, some women, and those in-between bridge accepted norms.

      • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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        4 months ago

        That really doesn’t answer my question, it just splits it up between different bodies.

        So let’s say it’s just a specific governing body of a sport? I’ll reword it with a minor changes:

        Should athletes be genetically tested by that body or just examined to see what’s between their legs? If the former, do the women with Swyer Syndrome perform in the male or female divisions? How about people with both sets of genitalia? They exist. What about people who are XXY or XYY?

        And if you think the latter- please do justify that sort of invasive examination for the purposes of athletic competition.

        I think you can give a general answer to that question which applies to all members of, at the very least, the boxing league Khelif is in.

        • Bell@lemmy.world
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          This isn’t about the external genitalia, not sure why you keep going there. This is about the levels of hormones over an amount of time that is known to impart a muscular advantage. The IOC needs a formula for this to decide who can be in the class. This would not be a determination of who is female.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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            4 months ago

            So it is entirely based on hormones?

            I guess in that case, men with hypogonadism would fight women. Right?

            In that case, maybe they shouldn’t classify it between “men” and “women” classes.

            • Bell@lemmy.world
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              I think the thing we are trying to regulate is the muscular advantage imparted by certain hormones over certain periods of time. Whether the person being measured has been labeled male or female doesn’t make any difference.

        • RickRussell_CA@lemmy.world
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          That really doesn’t answer my question, it just splits it up between different bodies.

          Sorry, that’s just reality.

          I can’t give you a general answer that applies to all of women’s sport, and for a specific answer regarding a particular women’s sport, you’ll need to consult with the governing body of that sport, and recognize that body may pander to interests (commercial, or the preferences of its participants and other stakeholders, etc) that have nothing to do with how you prefer to define “woman”.

          • Flying Squid@lemmy.worldM
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            So just accept that’s how things are and be happy with it? That’s what you’re saying?

            • RickRussell_CA@lemmy.world
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              I not telling you to accept or be happy with anything. I am saying that if you want women’s sports to work the way you think they should work, you’ll need to go through their governance bodies.

                • RickRussell_CA@lemmy.world
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                  What is a sport? Why does it exist?

                  It exists because people come together to play it. And maybe because some people are willing to pay for tickets to watch it, or sometimes because powerful people want it (to sell product, to train people in national defense, etc).

                  If you’re not engaged with any of those stakeholders, you can’t change the sport. Ideas about the limited women’s class of sport will only change if the players & organizers want it to change – or in the rarer case, because the ticket buyers demand change. But many of these sports are not driven by ticket sales, so there is limited opportunity to win hearts and minds.

  • Socsa@sh.itjust.works
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    4 months ago

    Obviously women are only allowed to compete if they have six children and do the fundie baby voice just right.

      • Socsa@sh.itjust.works
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        4 months ago

        Exactly what it sounds like. Women who adopt an unnaturally high pitched voice (especially) around men as a way to signal a creepy form of submissiveness and youth that conservative men value.

  • OldWoodFrame@lemm.ee
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    4 months ago

    I don’t think it’s on purpose really, it’s just that sports is like the only case where being a trans woman could be a benefit, so it’s a critical part of the right wing attacks on trans people.

    But then they just look crazy when they see there are more CIS child molesters than trans women in the Olympics, like surely if it was appropriate to be so mad about trans women dominating in sports you would have them showing up in the Olympics.

    So they just had to invent a situation, and if it wasn’t the CIS woman they decided on, they would have found someone else.

  • Bell@lemmy.world
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    Why isn’t this labeled as an opinion piece? There’s nothing in here to substantiate the headline and almost no journalism. I’m not used to work like this from The Intercept.

      • Bell@lemmy.world
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        There’s a single quote of half a sentence from the New York Post, other than that where is the “right wing campaign”? Referencing Twitter and quoting other journalists does not equal journalism. Moreover, I see no reference at all to women being “purged” from women’s sports. This story is 98% opinion and 2% facts.

        • MerchantsOfMisery@lemmy.ml
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          I feel like you’re just being wilfully ignorant and hyperbolic. These days I don’t have the energy for folks like you.

  • Media Bias Fact Checker@lemmy.worldB
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    The Intercept Media Bias Fact Check Credibility: [High] (Click to view Full Report)

    Name: The Intercept Bias: Left
    Factual Reporting: Mostly Factual
    Country: United States of America
    Full Report: https://mediabiasfactcheck.com/the-intercept/

    Check the bias and credibility of this article on Ground.News


    Thanks to Media Bias Fact Check for their access to the API.
    Please consider supporting them by donating.

    Footer

    Beep boop. This action was performed automatically. If you dont like me then please block me.💔
    If you have any questions or comments about me, you can make a post to LW Support lemmy community.

  • ZK686@lemmy.world
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    This is stupid. There’s no “far right” to purge women… the outcry is whether or not women’s sports are being treated fairly. The whole controversy about this boxing issue started when information was released that this female has failed gender tests in the past. Of course there’s going to be an outcry from people.

    • Tarquinn2049@lemmy.world
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      If they were doing it to help, you’d think they’d actually look into if what they were doing was helping… when you care about someone or something, you put in the effort.

    • microphone900@lemmy.ml
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      Would it make a difference to you if the controversy kicked off because the org that disqualified these two fighters was banned by the IOC from participating in the Olympics for shady stuff? Or if the org has never said why they were disqualified? Or if the guy making the wild claims is the head of the org and a friend of Putin, and the DQ for one fighter happened after she beat an until then undefeated Russian fighter?

      You really should look into the background of it. Here’s an AP News link

    • Cheems@lemmy.world
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      The right is notoriously known for the stauch stance of treating women fairly.

    • Crampon@lemmy.world
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      Lemmy doesn’t care about fairness. Only about ideology.

      According to Lemmy it’s only fair to remove gender based competitions as gender is only a social construct. Fuck all the women who worked hard and dedicated their lives to a single event. Fuck them brutally because we want our ideology to stand victory.

      An extended result of the view is that unaltered women does belong in the home pursuing more domestic tasks.

    • Bell@lemmy.world
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      Exactly. And the outcry over unfairness in women’s sports is an effort to save it, not destroy it.

    • microphone900@lemmy.ml
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      4 months ago

      Banned governing body that’s fueling outcry on Olympic boxers has Russian ties and troubled history

      It was hard not to copy and paste the whole article, I did my best to pull excerpts and bold important portions.

      Summary- Long story short, the disqualifications were done in a tournament run by an organization banned by the Olympics. Both boxers participated in tournaments run by this organization with no issues for the last several years. The organization hasn’t said why they were disqualified. The man saying the weird trans woman claims is the leader of the organization. He’s a friend of Putin and described as a drug trafficker. The disqualification for Khelif happened after she beat the previously undefeated Russian boxer Amineva 3 days post fight.

      Strangely, nobody who’s up in arms about the weird claim has looked into who made it, when, the context around it, or an explanation for it. They just ate it up.

      Nearly 17 months ago in New Delhi, Algerian boxer Imane Khelif was disqualified from the International Boxing Association’s world championships three days after she won an early-round bout with Azalia Amineva, a previously unbeaten Russian prospect.

      The disqualification meant Amineva’s official record was perfect again.

      The governing body claimed the fighters had failed unspecified eligibility tests

      The BA’s decision last year — and its curious timing, particularly related to Amineva’s loss to Khelif — would have raised warning signs around the sports world if more people cared about amateur boxing, or even knew more about the IBA under president Umar Kremlev of Russia.

      The entire boxing world has already learned to expect almost anything from the Russian-dominated governing body that was given the unprecedented punishment of being permanently banned from the Olympics last year. In fact, it hasn’t run an Olympic boxing tournament since the Rio de Janeiro Games in 2016.

      The International Olympic Committee has decades of mostly bad history with the beleaguered governing body previously known for decades as AIBA, and it has exasperatedly begged non-boxing people to pay attention to the sole source of the allegations against Khelif and Lin.

      The IOC had stuck with the previous incarnation of boxing’s governing body through decades of judging scandals, bizarre leadership decisions and innumerable financial misdeeds while it presided over Olympic boxing tournaments.

      Not until 2019, nearly two years after the organization elected a president with what U.S. officials call deep ties to Russian organized crime and heroin trafficking, did the IOC finally banish the perpetually troubled group.

      The IOC permanently stripped the IBA’s Olympic credentials and ran the past two Olympic boxing tournaments with a task force.

      Kremlev also has made additional allegations about the gender of both fighters without providing proof, and people across the world have accepted his word.

      So much is unclear about the IBA’s decision to ban Khelif and Lin last year, particularly since both had competed in IBA events for years without problems.

      It’s even possible the decision was actually made according to the results of legitimate tests conducted over two years, as the IBA says — but the IBA has refused to officially say what, when or where these tests were administered, who evaluated them, or what the results meant.

      The IOC has said boxing will be dropped from the 2028 Los Angeles Olympics unless the sport lines up behind a new governing body

      • maniii@lemmy.world
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        4 months ago

        India is a very corrupt democracy. As an Indian, I can tell you that sports are inherently corrupted to the degree in which money flows into it. For example, cricket is a sport rife with corruption to the point that the entire world cricket organizations and matches and tournaments are all suspect due to the heavy involvement of Indian corruption spreading its vile degenerate fingers into everything cricketing worldwide.

        The only way you can trust anything here is if there is an independent individual measuring system that is completely corruption immune and resistant to external influences.

        For example, physics, chemistry or scientific measurements. If a boxer is doping or throwing their fights etc. You can measure for those.