This is an interesting article by Helena, a detransitioner, describing how she came to identify as trans as a result of becoming immersed in a cult-like social media community. It's long but worth reading.
This is an interesting article by Helena, a detransitioner, describing how she came to identify as trans as a result of becoming immersed in a cult-like social media community. It's long but worth reading.
I trust you understand that sports in school aren't competition for the sake of competition.Saw this quote in a news story about Indiana's proposed transgender sports law.
It really speaks volumes about the debate.
Competition is never entirely for its own sake. The competitive instinct helps people drive themselves harder than they would in individual trials and helps them bond with teammates. Both of these goals are undermined when someone with an obvious physiological advantage (like Thomas or Hubbard) joins the club.I trust you understand that sports in school aren't competition for the sake of competition.
Competition is never entirely for its own sake. The competitive instinct helps people drive themselves harder than they would in individual trials and helps them bond with teammates. Both of these goals are undermined when someone with an obvious physiological advantage (like Thomas or Hubbard) joins the club.
An amendment was just filed by the sponsor of #DontSayGay to make it even more dangerous for vulnerable kids with a STATE-MANDATED outing of LGBTQ students to parents, specifically in cases of abuse, abandonment + neglect.
This will have devastating consequences for our youth.
I trust you understand that sports in school aren't competition for the sake of competition.
https://twitter.com/CarlosGSmith/status/1495481777217052676
Sponsor of the "don't say gay" bill in Florida is proposing an amendment that would require a school to out queer students to their parents, even in cases where they reasonably believe that doing so would result in abuse, abandonment, or neglect.
The woman who made the quote is taking the "sports don't matter" thing to a whole new level of stupid by saying that sports don't matter to your daughters, but they have to keep playing so that my daughter gets the benefit.
Sort of.Sure, but everyone generally understands that K-12 school sports are not about winning matches alone. There's a general understanding that sports are an educational experience for students, not just a competition to see the most talented athletes rise to the top.
Around here, school sports start in junior high. Team membership is, from the start, based on a skill-based tryout. There are no "equal participation" rules. Take it from someone whose stepsons were bench-warmers in Jr. High basketball.There's a pretty obvious sliding scale of priorities that tracks with age. In the youngest sports, who wins or loses is largely unimportant. There are often rules in place to ensure almost any child can play and gets more or less equal play time, even if doing so results in a team being less competitive. Everyone rolls their eyes at the loudmouth parent at the peewee game who takes the competitive element a bit too seriously.
First, little league is private. We aren't talking about students there. Second, some of the upper levels of Little League are highly competitive. See Little League World Series. There are even cheating scandals related to recruiting in Little League.It's not unusual to see very unskilled players, or even players with severe physical disabilities, playing on a little league team, as an example. Thankfully such rules were in place that yours truly was able to play nearly 10 years of youth hockey, despite being consistently poorer player than my peers. Had I the inclination, I likely could have played all through high school despite my lack of skill, likely as a third stringer on a JV team. Obviously competition and winning are not the only goals here.
Yes. That means they can try out for the team. It doesn't mean they have to be given a spot on the team.As kids become older competition gets more intense, but even then there's concessions made, often explicitly written into rules, to ensure that sports remain somewhat accessible to any interested student.
Sure. But that education is only being provided to those who are able to make the team. Through tryouts. It's not provided to the student body at large.Some sports really seem to lose the thread more than others (say high school varsity football in some parts of the country), but many rightly understand that school sports are as much about educating students than it is about assembling the most competitive team possible.
Sort of. It's a bit complex and takes into account things like interest levels, type of sport (contact/non-contact) etc.ETA: Hell, Title IX itself is such a concession. The interest of ensuring that girls have as much access to school sports as boys, even in spite of any interest the community might have in these games, is the compelling force behind such laws.
What you are missing here is that trans kids do have the same access to sports as non-trans kids. That is not an issue. The question is which sports teams do they have access to.So yeah, making accommodations that trans kids can participate in physical education via school sports is as much a concern as some cis kid collecting medals.
And yet most of the items of inclusion you mention do not really apply to school sports.It's also noteworthy that private sports clubs exist, often marketing themselves directly to high skill young athletes who wish to compete more intensely than the school system will allow.
Saw this quote in a news story about Indiana's proposed transgender sports law.
It really speaks volumes about the debate.
Hard for me to comment on that, I'm not seeing a link to any article that quote comes from. I imagine the context for such a statement matters quite a bit.
<sigh>
Ignoring the medals part, usually rosters are limited to X number of athletes. If her daughter is on the team, someone else's daughter is not on the team and misses out on the life lessons and confidence boosts sports provides.
Another way of phrasing it is "My daughter's mental health is more important than that other girl's mental health."
I actually kind of understand that. As parents are primary concern is the well-being of our children. "Fair" is what benefits our kids. But as a neutral third party, it doesn't really fly.
What you are missing here is that trans kids do have the same access to sports as non-trans kids. That is not an issue. The question is which sports teams do they have access to.
Here's a link for ST that contains the quote:
https://www.heraldtimesonline.com/story/news/local/2022/02/06/hb-1041-indiana-trans-rights-transgender-swimmer-sports/9319116002/
Now, there is some context here to be considered.
The woman's daughter transitioned at the age of 3, and has not and will not, apparently, go through male puberty. Regardless of my mixed feelings about transitioning that early, I think that is quite different than someone who has transitioned at a later age.
Unfortunately, I don't really see either side addressing the differences between a pre-pubescent vs. post-pubescent transition.
And that's a bit of a shame.
Not really. Indiana is debating a bill that would require all participants in girls' sports to be female. Some people like it. Some people don't. A journalist wrote a pretty formulaic article with quotes from both sides.
Meanwhile, somehow the fact that I got to play two innings in every Little League game even though I never reached first base is somehow related to why Terry Miller gets to stand on the podium at the New England regional championships, and have her name in the record books as the fastest of all time in that region. I didn't qutie follow the reasoning why those two were connected, but I'm sure it makes sense to someone.
Now, if Terry had said, "It's not really about the competition for me. I was just happy to be able to run. Selina can take my spot at the regional competition," then I could see some sort of connection, but that didn't happen. Terry seemed to be pretty darned competitive, and happy about winning, just like Lia Thomas, setting an Ivy League record this weekend. It sure seems like these people are competing, so the absence of competitiveness seems kind of a non sequitur.
ETA: If you want the context of the quote: https://www.indystar.com/story/news...ban-transgender-girls-from-sports/6829163001/
And yet students across this country participate in organized sports at the non-elite level in huge numbers. Let's not be daft, there's more going on here besides the small number of top level athletes competing for the record books.
There's educational and social value in playing in school sports, even if you're not a championship team competing in highest skill divisions.