Anonymous wrote:In general, I support the rights of trans people, but I think this is just wrong. If that means that trans people can't compete at such levels in sports, than be it.
I respect your wish to be identified as whatever gender you choose, use the bathroom of your choice, and live however you please provided others aren't affected (this goes for all people, not just trans people). But this is biologically unfair to women in sports.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is an interesting discussion and I don't know where I stand on it yet. Having a "trans" category for sports, probably wouldn't solve everything. Are you going to need 2 (or more) trans categories -- male to female and female to male? And what about people with gender issues that exist at birth (ex. ambiguous genitalia)? And are there enough trans people competing in sports to fill this new category?
To me the issue is perhaps most important at the high school level. I think at that level, inclusivity should be one goal.
The latest figure I've seen is that an estimated 0.6 percent of the adult US population identifies as transgender. While it is likely a larger percentage for younger people (say teens to 20s), its still a very small segment of the population. So, I'm I just wondering how big of issue transgender individuals in sports really is.
I agree that the high school level is most important, but disagree that it should be about inclusivity.
At the high schoolnlevel it should be a strict literal interpretation of Title IX and focused on providing biological girls the opportunity to compete on a fair playing field, with other girls, and not made to take second fiddle to boys who happen to identify as girls at this point in their life.
This is about fairness at a basic level.
It is also about safety. A biological male has so many natural physical advantages over girls of the same age that are separate from just testosterone.
and a biological female has natural physical advantages of boys of the same age. Why are we not talking about this fact?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is an interesting discussion and I don't know where I stand on it yet. Having a "trans" category for sports, probably wouldn't solve everything. Are you going to need 2 (or more) trans categories -- male to female and female to male? And what about people with gender issues that exist at birth (ex. ambiguous genitalia)? And are there enough trans people competing in sports to fill this new category?
To me the issue is perhaps most important at the high school level. I think at that level, inclusivity should be one goal.
The latest figure I've seen is that an estimated 0.6 percent of the adult US population identifies as transgender. While it is likely a larger percentage for younger people (say teens to 20s), its still a very small segment of the population. So, I'm I just wondering how big of issue transgender individuals in sports really is.
How is it different from having a Special Olympics? Serious athletes all around with competitive adjustments for differences.
Are you saying transgendered people should have to compete in the special olympics? Wouldn't they dominate there too?
Anonymous wrote:If there are going to separate sports events for males and females, then biology has to determine participation.
One option would be to go the way of rowing, where for some events there are "lightweight" and "open" events. Following this analogy, there could be "female" and "open" sports. The standard for participation in the female events would be testosterone below a certain level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is an interesting discussion and I don't know where I stand on it yet. Having a "trans" category for sports, probably wouldn't solve everything. Are you going to need 2 (or more) trans categories -- male to female and female to male? And what about people with gender issues that exist at birth (ex. ambiguous genitalia)? And are there enough trans people competing in sports to fill this new category?
To me the issue is perhaps most important at the high school level. I think at that level, inclusivity should be one goal.
The latest figure I've seen is that an estimated 0.6 percent of the adult US population identifies as transgender. While it is likely a larger percentage for younger people (say teens to 20s), its still a very small segment of the population. So, I'm I just wondering how big of issue transgender individuals in sports really is.
I agree that the high school level is most important, but disagree that it should be about inclusivity.
At the high schoolnlevel it should be a strict literal interpretation of Title IX and focused on providing biological girls the opportunity to compete on a fair playing field, with other girls, and not made to take second fiddle to boys who happen to identify as girls at this point in their life.
This is about fairness at a basic level.
It is also about safety. A biological male has so many natural physical advantages over girls of the same age that are separate from just testosterone.
and a biological female has natural physical advantages of boys of the same age. Why are we not talking about this fact?
Anonymous wrote:If there are going to separate sports events for males and females, then biology has to determine participation.
One option would be to go the way of rowing, where for some events there are "lightweight" and "open" events. Following this analogy, there could be "female" and "open" sports. The standard for participation in the female events would be testosterone below a certain level.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is an interesting discussion and I don't know where I stand on it yet. Having a "trans" category for sports, probably wouldn't solve everything. Are you going to need 2 (or more) trans categories -- male to female and female to male? And what about people with gender issues that exist at birth (ex. ambiguous genitalia)? And are there enough trans people competing in sports to fill this new category?
To me the issue is perhaps most important at the high school level. I think at that level, inclusivity should be one goal.
The latest figure I've seen is that an estimated 0.6 percent of the adult US population identifies as transgender. While it is likely a larger percentage for younger people (say teens to 20s), its still a very small segment of the population. So, I'm I just wondering how big of issue transgender individuals in sports really is.
I agree that the high school level is most important, but disagree that it should be about inclusivity.
At the high schoolnlevel it should be a strict literal interpretation of Title IX and focused on providing biological girls the opportunity to compete on a fair playing field, with other girls, and not made to take second fiddle to boys who happen to identify as girls at this point in their life.
This is about fairness at a basic level.
It is also about safety. A biological male has so many natural physical advantages over girls of the same age that are separate from just testosterone.
Anonymous wrote:I think this is an interesting discussion and I don't know where I stand on it yet. Having a "trans" category for sports, probably wouldn't solve everything. Are you going to need 2 (or more) trans categories -- male to female and female to male? And what about people with gender issues that exist at birth (ex. ambiguous genitalia)? And are there enough trans people competing in sports to fill this new category?
To me the issue is perhaps most important at the high school level. I think at that level, inclusivity should be one goal.
The latest figure I've seen is that an estimated 0.6 percent of the adult US population identifies as transgender. While it is likely a larger percentage for younger people (say teens to 20s), its still a very small segment of the population. So, I'm I just wondering how big of issue transgender individuals in sports really is.
Anonymous wrote:Well maybe we are due for a larger conversation about the value of sports in our society. If it’s to bring people together, then competition is just a fun side show and it shouldn’t matter who wins. It’s just for fun.. If it’s about identifying the best woman or man, then we probably need a trans category. What is the point of being the best at something? Does it add to our society or is it another source of division?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think this is an interesting discussion and I don't know where I stand on it yet. Having a "trans" category for sports, probably wouldn't solve everything. Are you going to need 2 (or more) trans categories -- male to female and female to male? And what about people with gender issues that exist at birth (ex. ambiguous genitalia)? And are there enough trans people competing in sports to fill this new category?
To me the issue is perhaps most important at the high school level. I think at that level, inclusivity should be one goal.
The latest figure I've seen is that an estimated 0.6 percent of the adult US population identifies as transgender. While it is likely a larger percentage for younger people (say teens to 20s), its still a very small segment of the population. So, I'm I just wondering how big of issue transgender individuals in sports really is.
How is it different from having a Special Olympics? Serious athletes all around with competitive adjustments for differences.
Anonymous wrote:I think this is an interesting discussion and I don't know where I stand on it yet. Having a "trans" category for sports, probably wouldn't solve everything. Are you going to need 2 (or more) trans categories -- male to female and female to male? And what about people with gender issues that exist at birth (ex. ambiguous genitalia)? And are there enough trans people competing in sports to fill this new category?
To me the issue is perhaps most important at the high school level. I think at that level, inclusivity should be one goal.
The latest figure I've seen is that an estimated 0.6 percent of the adult US population identifies as transgender. While it is likely a larger percentage for younger people (say teens to 20s), its still a very small segment of the population. So, I'm I just wondering how big of issue transgender individuals in sports really is.