Why would you blithely assume female athletes generally take this view, given that they have access to the record books?
Can't make everyone happy. I'm just going to nod and agree at who ever screams the loudest and calls me the worst insult.
Why would you blithely assume female athletes generally take this view, given that they have access to the record books?
I don't see sports as the game breaker (no pun) that others do.
We already have skill based sports demarcation. (AA, AAA, Pro or Varsity/JV or whatever).
Sports can just become skill based with gender ignored.
Hell you could probably gender neutral (yeah I'm using neutral as a verb, sue me) boxing just with weight classes and maintain a pretty fair level of both fairness and competition.
Tyson Fury is 6 foot 9 and about ~255 lbs. Most women shouldn't fight him just because there aren't "most women" that are that big.
I find this brief letter in Scientific American says it better than I ever could.
https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/voices/stop-using-phony-science-to-justify-transphobia/
The whole thing is pretty short and worth a read, but the concluding paragraph is below for brevity:
The "facts don't care about your feelings" crowd is doing a lot more non-scientific judgement than they like to let on.
Not sure why the obvious analogy to the Satanic Panic isn't being made here. The same types of people who made baseless accusations of child sexual abuse by deviants [...]
I think your belief that transwomen don't face many of the same barriers as women is absurd.
In every way that matters, transwomen are much more like other women than they are like men.
I find this brief letter in Scientific American says it better than I ever could.
https://blogs.scientificamerican.com/voices/stop-using-phony-science-to-justify-transphobia/
The whole thing is pretty short and worth a read, but the concluding paragraph is below for brevity:
The "facts don't care about your feelings" crowd is doing a lot more non-scientific judgement than they like to let on.
That opinion piece (not a peer-reviewed article) conflates secondary characteristics with primary sex.
Leading experts in the field include Zucker (who chaired the DSM5 working group and is the world leading expert on gender dysphoria) and Cantor, who are both at loggerheads with trans activists. Both are critical of the gender identity lobby and of politicians who are passing legislation not based on science, and without consulting experts. That's why they are hated by activists and are the constant target of smear campaigns.
One of the things that keeps coming up is the whole definition thing. We've been over it before, more than once, but we just keep coming around to it.
If we accept the modern jargon of cis/trans/male/female, we have a set of people that consists of the union of the sets of cisgender females plus transgender males. This is the set that was formerly known as "women", but times change. So what should we call them now? Boudicca90 apparently doesn't like "biological women". Maybe, "People with uteri"? (I suppose "uteri" is the plural of uterus. Uteruses doesn't sound great. Maybe "People that have a uterus", since each of them only has one uterus.) It sounds kind of awkward.
To my way of thinking, that whole set of people who can have babies, plus the people who used to be able to have babies, or are likely to be able to have babies in the future, or who have most of the same organs, and but for some other medical condition could have babies, seems like a useful set to have a more concise term for. What is that group of people supposed to be called?
I'm kind of beginning to lose interest after 4 humungous threads now, but why do you bother putting "cis" in your options when you have male and female?
Cis is and always will be redundant, to give other people the warm fuzzies.
It isn't redundant, but yes it is used to give people warm fuzzies. I think specifically it is used to say that there are two different types of women, and two different types of men, and to put the two types on equal footing.
As for what I'm doing with my most recent post is that I'm really pointing out that classifying people by their means of reproduction is actually pretty useful. Bringing it up again, for the umpteenth time, is a reaction to Boudicca90's insistence that she is a biological woman, and just wondering if we can get an acknowledgement that there is a very significant difference between those who bear children, and people with bodies very similar to them, and those who sire children, and people with bodies very similar to them. There is a thing called "sex" in the biology books, and everyone pretty much agrees that transwomen are of the male sex, except Boudicca90 and some other trans-activists.
Well, fine, if one insists that sex is "really" a spectrum, and that people born with a uterus can actually be male, there is still a pretty significant thing about all those people who we used to call "women", but in our new, enlightened, society, are called something else. Nevertheless, the people still exist, and they share anatomical features, and I just wonder if the trans-activists think there's some benefit of lumping all of those people into a category that has a name.
Putting it differently, it is acknowledging that some of these debates are all about terms, so if you want "woman" to mean something different, that's all well and good. It would be nice if you could do the dictionary thing and use some other words to provide a new definition of "woman", but we've been down that road, too. However, there is, underneath those words, an actual reality that actually matters. Having a uterus is kind of worth mentioning, so much so that most languages use a shortened term to capture the idea. Will transactivists actually acknowledge that significance?
(Note: If anyone says that somehow the existence of hysterectomies somehow negates the above, it means either,
1) You don't understand what I mean, in which case you are stupid. or
2) You do understand what I mean, but you are going to say it anyway, in which case you are pretending to be stupid.)
That is a misunderstanding of what the term spectrum implies in mathematical contexts.
To my way of thinking, that whole set of people who can have babies, plus the people who used to be able to have babies, or are likely to be able to have babies in the future, or who have most of the same organs, and but for some other medical condition could have babies, seems like a useful set to have a more concise term for. What is that group of people supposed to be called?