Anonymous wrote:Why not disallow freakishly tall people from playing basketball or freakishly tiny people from gymnastic because they have a genetic advantage, too?
Anonymous wrote:Swimming: not a good comparison. The only divisions are men and women.
Running: If there is a division, there has to be a way to determine it and, if necessary, examine for it.
For nearly all competitors, a standard cheek swab and drug-test-like exam would (I think) be enough to determine if the genetic makeup is XX and if testosterone levels are in the normal range.
Then if these two tests indicate something unusual, other diagnostics (ultrasound, other) would be called in. These diagnostics would only be needed for a small minority of competitors.
Of course, I would also support very transparent rules and the idea that serious competitors would be tested early in their careers so as not to be surprised.
Perhaps what one other poster suggested is the fairest and best way.
If an athlete has testicles (even undecended), male levels of testosterone, and no ovaries, they compete as males.
Wambui was a full head taller than all the women competing. She is built like a male athlete. If she has the body of a male athlete, the muscles of the male athletes, the hormone levels of male athletes, and testicals then it is unfair for her to participate in the female races.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband and I have discussed this at length re: Semenya; he is a physician. No good answer, it seems, that would be fair to both Semenya and the women she competes against. Will be interesting to see how this is finally resolved.
I suppose this is a legal question, did she cheat, did she break a rule, can the international Olympics only test women for testosterone but not men, what is average, can a healthy person be required to have surgery that they do not need?
Why do you keep bringing up surgery? The IOC isn't forcing an athlete to have surgery. They would just not be allowed to compete.
Not be allowed to compete under what rule?
There is no rule, I'm asking why the PP keeps bringing up surgery. The IOC wouldn't force athletes into surgery, they just wouldn't be allowed to compete.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband and I have discussed this at length re: Semenya; he is a physician. No good answer, it seems, that would be fair to both Semenya and the women she competes against. Will be interesting to see how this is finally resolved.
I suppose this is a legal question, did she cheat, did she break a rule, can the international Olympics only test women for testosterone but not men, what is average, can a healthy person be required to have surgery that they do not need?
Why do you keep bringing up surgery? The IOC isn't forcing an athlete to have surgery. They would just not be allowed to compete.
Not be allowed to compete under what rule?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband and I have discussed this at length re: Semenya; he is a physician. No good answer, it seems, that would be fair to both Semenya and the women she competes against. Will be interesting to see how this is finally resolved.
I suppose this is a legal question, did she cheat, did she break a rule, can the international Olympics only test women for testosterone but not men, what is average, can a healthy person be required to have surgery that they do not need?
Why do you keep bringing up surgery? The IOC isn't forcing an athlete to have surgery. They would just not be allowed to compete.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My husband and I have discussed this at length re: Semenya; he is a physician. No good answer, it seems, that would be fair to both Semenya and the women she competes against. Will be interesting to see how this is finally resolved.
I suppose this is a legal question, did she cheat, did she break a rule, can the international Olympics only test women for testosterone but not men, what is average, can a healthy person be required to have surgery that they do not need?
Anonymous wrote:My husband and I have discussed this at length re: Semenya; he is a physician. No good answer, it seems, that would be fair to both Semenya and the women she competes against. Will be interesting to see how this is finally resolved.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A female with no ovaries is still a female, not a man
Where do you draw the line for testosterone? Are you going to test all women, or just the ones from a poor country?
Are short women OK, but not tall
How is the sport fair? Do we only look at internal sex organs, and ban only women who can never have children, or do we look at height, family wealth, length of arms, legs and other factors too?
We already draw a line for males at 4:1 T/E ratio. Arguing that you have a naturally off-the-charts T/E ratio is not a defense, even though it is theoretically possible. Many lines are drawn in sport. We have weight classes, height classes, age classes. Breaking out competition by sex is drawing a line.
And if you are going to break competition out by sex it has to mean something. Men are better at sports because of testosterone, which drives all the other secondary advantages in structural robustness, strength, reactivity, bone density, etc. There may be many constructions of gender by which Caster Semenya can be understood to be a woman. She is not, however, female as that word is meaningfully contemplated in the context of a speed/power sport.
Anonymous wrote:A female with no ovaries is still a female, not a man
Where do you draw the line for testosterone? Are you going to test all women, or just the ones from a poor country?
Are short women OK, but not tall
How is the sport fair? Do we only look at internal sex organs, and ban only women who can never have children, or do we look at height, family wealth, length of arms, legs and other factors too?
Anonymous wrote:I feel if you have testicles, you should compete against other athletes with testicles...