It would probably differ by sport. Skeletal size would be an advantage in some sports, and there's no doubt that the average man has a larger skeleton than the average woman. |
+1 |
Yes but are you going to Rio? Of course trans should be allowed to play sport in their chosen gender, but Olympics and other high profile competitions are a whole other story. |
| Wouldn't a woman taking male hormones to transition fail even the simplest Olympic drug test? |
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fuck the olympics....
who cares if a man wants to dress up like a woman... and claims to be a woman to win an Olympic medal... in the grand scheme of things it means nothing and will not affect 99.9999999991% of the worlds population... hell if you are an Olympic athlete and go to rio and come back alive without some some communicable disease that's worthy of a medal... |
You logged in to post this drivel?
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| Transwomen should absolutely not compete against women in the Olympics. Even if they reduce testosterone to compete, they had the advantage of testosterone in developing their big, powerful bodies, while women's bodies divert a certain amount of energy to the vital job of potential life creation. Men and women are physiologically different. Intersex athletes are a different issue. Otherwise, it is very clear. |