Washie
Well-known member
Dunno, i'm not her doctorOk. So can Khelif give birth?
Dunno, i'm not her doctorOk. So can Khelif give birth?
Not necessarily.
This really comes down to the whole concept that sex is not actually binary.
I donāt think that many people can cope with this fact. Certainly folk like Boris Johnson and JK Rowling would tell you itās not true. They know what a man or a woman is and believe opinion trumps science.Not necessarily.
This really comes down to the whole concept that sex is not actually binary.
for the first few hours of reading about this story, I fell for the implication that she had transitioned at some point, possibly for sporting advantage.
This is not the case.
The issue here, is the discrepancy between IOC and IBF.
I appreciate it is within your nature to do this, but really?Ok. So can Khelif give birth?
Dunno, i'm not her doctor
Not necessarily.
This really comes down to the whole concept that sex is not actually binary.
In the old days, the concept of hermaphrodites was something we were aware of, but little else was known other than "it happens".
It seems there are many versions of this.
There are reported examples of athletic champions of the past, who had a natural physical advantage.
This particular story is being plugged into the zeitgeist and is being portrayed as a man attacking a woman..
In any other era, this would have happened without the furore surrounding this particular case.
I appreciate it is within your nature to do this, but really?
Is that the benchmark for all women?
The IOC have fudged this issue (presumably because it opens a whole can of worms around classifications in other sports).
i.e should Hermaphrodites (almost certainly no longer the correct term, but apologies, I am old) be excluded from Olympic archery?
Yeah sure, but for decades, women with her genetics, would have been excluded from doing just that in many sports..I'll try and ignore the personal dig.
For someone to be a woman in life, no. If someone is born a man, but feels they should be a woman for any reason, and transitions, then as far as I'm concerned, they're a woman. But I don't think sport should follow the same rules as society. Just as people might legally be able to take steroids to make themselves really big and strong, but I don't think they should then be able to compete in sport.
No of course they shouldn't be excluded from archery. They should compete in the category for people with some male genetics (currently called the men's category).
What I find irritating about this debate, is that the issue is not with the athlete, but the categorization methods of the IOC.
What is needed is CHANGE from IOC. Not indignation because one fighter stopped another in 46 seconds.
I'll try and ignore the personal dig.
For someone to be a woman in life, no. If someone is born a man, but feels they should be a woman for any reason, and transitions, then as far as I'm concerned, they're a woman. But I don't think sport should follow the same rules as society. Just as people might legally be able to take steroids to make themselves really big and strong, but I don't think they should then be able to compete in sport.
No of course they shouldn't be excluded from archery. They should compete in the category for people with some male genetics (currently called the men's category).
Everybody wants to be inclusive... but being too inclusive would mean almost 50% of the world population can't compete for medals in sport because in the end it would be men in one competition and kind-of-not-men in the other. You have to put the line somewhere if you want to avoid that. XY chromosomes seems like one of the reasonble lines.
Like literally everything else, it is binary, and the only way it can't be is through creation of intersubjective realities where it isn't, and that should be avoided: firm and steadfast measurement of what is a woman and what is a man is required if we want to keep it fair. Leave no room for emotions or subjectivity.
The human body is quite a remarkable thing, and there are a number of ways it can f*ck up in development.The general issue of people with some male attributes (eg, a Y chromosome and higher testosterone levels than females generally have) competing against females who don't have those attributes, and therefore aren't as strong.
Fair enough - what are those terms? Do you mean she was born with a womb?
The human body is quite a remarkable thing, and there are a number of ways it can f*ck up in development.
If anything, it sounds like the boxer in question is intersex, in that while they are coded to be male (they have a y chromosome) they developed female sex organs and present as such. What they won't be able to do is produce female gametes.
What I think we can all probably agree on is that any person who has been through male puberty should not be competing in any physical sports with females, due to their physiological advantages.
Thats not how the IBF see it ..Khelif is not a man, and never has been.
This is not a ātransā issue, she was born a woman and still is.
That I do not know. Intersex conditions are rare, so present an equally rare and specific problem for the governing bodies of female sports.I'm sure you are right about that, but how does one tell what type of puberty an intersex athlete has gone through?
Well theyāre wrong then, as Khelif is not a trans womanThats not how the IBF see it ..
She wishes to transition to a male but it is illegal in Algeria so she has to continue living and boxing as a female.She was born with female organs - I don't know the precise nature of her condition.
And for the first few hours of reading about this story, I fell for the implication that she had transitioned at some point, possibly for sporting advantage.
This is not the case.
Boxing is littered with champions who had physical advantages.
Some great athletes have unique attributes.
The issue here, is the discrepancy between IOC and IBF.
The IBF rightly (IMO) acknowledge that this particular physical advantage, poses a risk to other competitors.
There is also another factor in this story, Khelif isn't really that good.
It's not like she has a string of gold medals, from smacking all and sundry into the ground.