There are natural conditions where it's sometimes not as simple as that. Of course, nobody has confirmed what medical evaluations were done on her, but one example is androgen insensitivity syndrome (you are born with male chromosomes but your body is unresponsive to testosterone and can't use it, so you end up developing as female). In those cases, despite the XY chromosomes, you experience little developmental difference from a female, as your body cannot respond to testosterone either partially or completely. In other words your hormonal development is essentially completely as that of a female and it's a natural condition. Rare but sometimes happens and very likely underreported.If you have XY chromosomes you are at least in part male.
She is a normal woman... nothing would be significantly different about her development her whole life and she would experience no advantage from testosterone.Yea, it doesn't matter for me if she is trans or not. She is something different than a normal woman, and she should not be competing vs normal women.
She is a normal woman... nothing would be significantly different about her development her whole life and she would experience no advantage from testosterone.
You would identify her as a man even though her body wouldn't be able to use testosterone? How does that make any sense?
And if their development is entirely female despite this?she (he?) was disqualified from the 2023 World Champions in New Delhi due to having elevated testosterone levels. Allowing someone with male chromosomes to fight against biological females is something only the far-left would dream up.
Biological males should compete against biological males.
Biological females should compete against biological females.
Trans should compete against trans. If a female is born with male chromosomes, I suppose it would only be fair to allow this individual to compete against other trans candidates. It is a special case, as said athlete is neither a biological male nor a biological female.
The only thing controversial here is allowing an athlete with both male and female traits to compete against female athletes. Then again, if the athletes really cared, they’d speak out against said unfairness and political correctness. As @Loki said, we get what we tolerate.
And if their development is entirely female despite this?
If you would read my responses in full you would read that I gave an example of a condition where XY people are completely unresponsive to testosterone. So people with that condition (I'm not saying she does or doesn't have it) would not experience any advantage as they can't use the elevated testosterone at all.I don't have to identify her as a man. She is not a man either. She is a special case, that probably, unfortunately, has no place in either women or men's pro sports.
I identify her as a woman, born with a rare condition that should make her ineligible for women sports.
She is NOT a normal woman btw. That much is clear. Of course she experienced advantages from high levels of testosterone.
If you would read my responses in full you would read that I gave an example of a condition where XY people are completely unresponsive to testosterone. So people with that condition (I'm not saying she does or doesn't have it) would not experience any advantage as they can't use the elevated testosterone at all.
It is a proven condition with clear diagnostic criteria and has been linked directly to a gene mutation so not hypothetical or clinical guess from doctors either.
That is where the debate is... it still isn't clear to me she is some super powerful force given she has already lost 9 times in her amateur career.So you think the male-like power and the presence of Y chromosome and high testosterone are coincidence?
I'm not saying you are necessarily wrong. She could benefit from it. I'm saying we haven't been provided near enough medical information to comment and its not entirely clear if she is really such an incredibly powerful boxer.One look at a picture and she looks half man, half female. That's obviously the effects of testosterone on the body.
The condition you describe could be real, but by all probabilities, the Algerian boxer is responsive to high testosterone.
That isn't exactly clear for me either. She isn't particularly muscular or built and I have seen much more muscular biological women and furthermore much more muscular female boxers. Her build looks very standard for a female boxer.Yeah, I don't think that flies. The signs tell the story. Don't buy the unresponsive to testosterone, but effects of testosterone are all clear
on the body instantly.
Because they're confused. Their minds are programmed on the traditional "white misogynistic man attacks women's rights" argument. Now their brain have a compilation error, when other men using their movement and arguments to get themselves advantages in sports.The feminist movement is shite these days too. Kind of hard to concede for them just how much naturally stronger the male genes are.