101010.pl is one of the many independent Mastodon servers you can use to participate in the fediverse.
101010.pl czyli najstarszy polski serwer Mastodon. Posiadamy wpisy do 2048 znaków.

Server stats:

583
active users

@rysiek @muiren A simple Google search on #Zambia 🇿🇲 by J.K. Rowling would have easily dispelled such accusations. Zambia 🇿🇲 imprisons #LGBT people, so they obviously would not allow a Transgender player to represent them on the football ⚽️ field.

Some people are “too smart” for their own good.

@darnell @muiren it was exactly the same with Imane Khelif. She is Algerian, represented Algeria, and Algeria also is LGBT-hostile.

@rysiek
You are very misinformed on the nature of this controversy. It has nothing to do with being transgender. Please educate yourself before making harsh judgements.

@rcz not sure why you removed @darnell and @muiren from your reply.

But please, do educate me about this controversy? What is it *really* about, in your view?

Radek Czajka

@rysiek

I try to engage in a respectful discussion of a complex subject, so I will choose to take your request at face value, ignoring the obvious, while unwarranted, sarcastic undertone.

The controversy is about DSDs.
Particularly, about 5-alpha-reductase defficiency — a condition affecting male sex development in a way which leads to new-born boys being mistaken for girls, because of undeveloped extenal genitalia.

There is no suggestion of anyone being transgender in any of these cases, so the whole discussion of countries being LGBT-hostile is entirely irrelevant.

@darnell @muiren

@rcz regarding the tone, I think that's only fair, I did the same with your patronizing tone after all.

Before we jump in, I asked the other two people mentioned earlier if they want to continue being mentioned, I'll re-add them if they confirm. Should have asked first, to be fair.

@rcz and let's do one more thing and remove the specific person from this, as there are going to be a lot of uncomfortable hypotheticals in this thread, I'm sure.

So let' say there is a person called Amal. She has been assigned female at birth, and since then has participated in sports all her life, with considerable success.

When she's twentysomething, suddenly there's a test showing the result you mention.

What gender is she, in your opinion?

@rysiek
There are multiple conflicting definitions of “gender” — I take it here to be a synonym for “sex”, but you're free to specify a different meaning.

If the test shows Amal is a XY person with 5-alpha-reductase deficiency, that would mean Amal is male.

@rcz right. You added the chromosome thing, we'll get back to that.

So a person assigned female at birth, participating in sports for years upon years (meaning being close quarters in changing rooms with other women), is in your opinion now considered male.

Should Amal be allowed to participate in sports as a woman?

Should Amal be allowed to participate in sports as a man?

And, how come nobody noticed until now?

/re-adding @darnell after confirming he's okay with that

@rysiek @darnell

I've only added the chromosome thing for clearer context, as, as I said, 5-alpha-reductase deficiency only affects males anyway. But sure, we can get back to that if something isn't clear here.

No, in my opinion Amal should not be allowed to participate in sports as a woman.

Yes, Amal should definitely be allowed to participate in sports as a man.

I don't understand the last question. What has nobody notices until now? Amal has definitely noticed “something is off”. After being mistakenly assigned female at birth, Amal might have not noticed anything until puberty. But then, when menstruation doesn't start, and instead external male genitalia do belatedly appear, Amal definitely noticed that — understandably very embarrassing and confusing — development.

@rcz I also assume Amal should in your opinion start using the mens' room now, as well, right?

Edit: sorry, mistakenly wrote "ladies'" room.

@darnell

@rysiek @darnell

Really, you've decided to pivot to The Bathroom Issue instead of actually engaging with the actual issue we're discussing?

Do you accept that your understanding of this controversy as of two hours ago was wrong on the level of facts, and that you've now learned important additional facts changing this understanding?

Did this realization push you to actually make an effort to reevaluate your opinion?

@rcz but if Amal must switch from participating in female sports to participating in male sports, then it follows Amal must switch from using the ladies' room to using the mens' room?

Is it not the case?

Amal was assigned female at birth, went through her life as a woman, and then at twenty something is informed that she "is a male".

Apart from being "embarrassing and confusing" as you put it, it's a huge practical and personal safety problem for Amal in LBGT-hostile places.

@darnell

@rysiek @darnell

Does it follow? Maybe. It's just a different discussion. We can have that discussion at some point also, bathrooms do have practical and safety-related issues and it's a whole topic. But why do you want to pivot from the topic we're actually discussing?

You asked me a series of questions on this sports issue, but what do you think?

We now know, and Amal knows, that Amal enjoys full sports-related benefit of male development, because this condition doesn't affect it. Amal still wants to take part in a women's kick-boxing competition.

Do you think it's fine?

@rcz @darnell I think it's fine, yes. I think Amal lived her whole life as a woman, and if she considers herself a woman, she is a woman.

I think somehow the "sports-related benefits" are only considered problematic in sports when it just so happens that a discussion of biological sex is involved.

Nobody is banning Phelps from competing with people who do not happen to benefit from similar physical quirks, for example.

@rcz @darnell I also know there are men with XX chromosomes, and I have not seen so far anyone suggesting that if that happens to be a man participating in competitive sports, he should participate in female disciplines only.

All of this, frankly, heavily reminds me of all the "scientific" ways people had used in the past, and sometimes still use, to defend racism and homophobia.

Do you think men that happen to have XX chromosomes should participate in female disciplines?

@rysiek @darnell

No, men with XX chromosomes who benefit from male development should not participate in female disciplines. Why should they?

And frankly, the unjustified associations you present here are stupid and insulting.

@rcz @darnell ok, so:

1. In case of our Amal, XY chromosomes in your opinion define a male person, and regardless of what's on her birth certificate and how she had lived her life till that point in time, she should be considered a "male", and only allowed to participate in male sports disciplines, right?

2. But male-presenting people who identify as men but happen to have XX chromosomes should still be allowed to participate in male sports disciplines, correct?

@rysiek @darnell
No, at no point did I say XY chromosomes “define a male person”.

@rcz @darnell well, you did bring chromosomes into this before, and I said we will come back to them.

In your opinion, is there a medical test that can be performed to clearly and unambiguously establish whether any given person is "male" or "female"?

In your opinion, do men with XX chromosomes should be considered "female"? Why/why not?

@rysiek @darnell
I did bring chromosomes into the hypothetical scenario for clearer context, yes. I did not say chromosomes define sex. They don't.

BTW, I do also think there is a valid case for some XY people to be included in female sport category. 5-ARD is just not one of these cases.

I don't think there is a singular test to clearly and unambiguously establish sex. Chromosome testing is a fairly good screen, but there can be more diagnostics needed in some rare cases (diagnostics which provide information which those people need anyway for health reasons).

Men with XX chromosomes should not be considered female, because they don't follow female development path.

@rcz @darnell in your opinion, is there a set of tests that can be performed to clearly and unambiguously establish whether any given person is "male" or "female"?

@rysiek @darnell

For a given definition of sex, yes.

Specifically, for a definition of sex relevant in sport, yes.

@rysiek @rcz @darnell This person just wants to shut people who are not gender conforming out of participation in anything, including public life.

Having factory-original female anatomy, being raised as a woman, being socialized as a woman, and living one’s life as a woman doesn’t matter, if your invisible chromosomes don’t line up. Every tiny, even involuntary and uncontrollable non-conformity is verboten!

@MisuseCase

You're misinformed (or lying). This isn't about “conformity”, and XY people with 5-alpha-reductase defficiency do not have any “female anatomy”.

@rysiek @darnell

@MisuseCase I'd appreciate if we kept it civil in my mentions though. It's not a good look and does not help.

With all due respect to you @rysiek
What @ rcz is doing is not civil.

Stripping away someone's identity using medical language is not civil behavior.

@MisuseCase

@eric I get what you're saying and I agree on a basic level. And I am glad you made that point. That's also one of the reasons why I introduced our hypothetical Amal, instead of discussing the living breathing person affected by this.

That said, I think it still behooves us to stay civil ourselves. Getting into a shouting match is not something I want.

@MisuseCase

@rysiek

Oh!

I'm not going to lie, I am taken aback that you chose not to tag me in a post discussing me personally, even after specifically making a point about how I earlier untagged some people I had never even had any contact with. Why would you do that? This looks like disingenuous engagement on your part, while pretending to have some moral high ground in terms of civility.

I'm very happy, as I think I've shown, to move the discussion to hypothetical people. I'm also doing my best to steer clear of ad hominems, which you are not. But if you have any more requests with regards to my civility, please do not hesitate to make them, I'll do my best to oblige.

In my view, this self-satisfied discussion here, ostensibly about my alleged lack of civility, isn't actually about finding a civil way of having this discussion. It is, instead, about replacing the discussion, in any form, with taking offense.

I have patiently answered your sarcastic questions, and I'm quite convinced you already know that your view at the start of this conversation (that the story is about “attacking a cis female” by “implying she's trans” because “she's too buff”) was substantially wrong.

Instead of acknowledging that (even though you did move the discussion in a different direction, to whether sex categories in sport are needed), what you did is to repeatedly try to smear my position, without slightest justification, just based on what it ”reminds you of”, as equivalent to racism, homophobia, misogyny.

No, you are not staying civil. Not even close.

You're just wrong, and desperate not to acknowledge it.

Thank you for this conversation, anyway.

@eric @MisuseCase@twit.social

@rcz well we don't agree here on most basic things. I still have more questions that I do want to ask.

I did not smear you, I did not use any ad hominems against you personally.

I did mention racism and homophobia explicitly, but only when you had specifically asked me what my position is. I answered your question honestly and without trying to beat around the bush. Should I have not?

I asked you about misogyny. Was that too far for some reason?

@eric

@rcz I did move the conversation towards whether gender based categories in sports are needed, because that is the underlying issue here. I would be happy to continue that conversation, as I believe we are getting close to the end of that tunnel.

The thing about "being buff" came directly from one of the sources I linked to.

Meanwhile you implied a specific medical condition as affecting the player, for which you have not provided any specific source yourself.

Do you have such source?

@eric

@rcz the reason I didn't re-add you was that my previous re-adding in this thread was a mistake. I should not have done that, and I made a note of that in the edited post afterwards.

You will perhaps also note, that in a different branch I reacted to someone name-calling you, asking them to stop.

Anyway, I will gladly reply to your other posts in this thread tomorrow, as today I am working under a short deadline.

If, that is, you're open to continuing this conversation, of course.

@eric

@rysiek @darnell

I've disscussed the “Phelps argument” in some length here:
101010.pl/@rcz/112959498924669

TL;DR:
We don't have categories for Phelps' quirks. We could have, and then we would expect Phelps to be in the category for people with these quirts and would very much exclude him from the category for people without these quirks. That's how categories work.
But the advantage due to Phelps' quirks was actually relatively small, compared to the *huge* advantage due to sex. We don't have categories for all advantages, but there are reasons we do have categories for some advantages.

And no, it's NOT true that ”sports-related benefits” are only problematic when sex is involved. We do also create (and police) other categories related to sports-related benefits, and do not let people with those benefits into categories without those benefits, for well-understood reasons. There are age categories, weight categories, disability categories. I wouldn't be able to get into a children boxing competition, because I do have a “problematic” sports-related benefit of not being a child.

But let's dig a bit. Let's introduce another hypothetical person, let's call him Bob. Bob is just a plain guy. He's quite sporty and also trains kick-boxing, but he is the only male kick-boxing enthusiast in the area, so he feels left out when the women have their competition. He asks if it maybe the next competition could be organized as open-category, so that he could participate too and kick-box with the women.

Do you think it's fine to let Bob into the ring with the women? Do you think, for example, that there are any safety reasons not to let men kick-box with women?

@rcz @darnell I think weight and age and disability categories are enough to handle any safety issues.

And I also think in many places we used to have other categories in sports that we do not have for very good reasons – namely, racial segregation.

@rysiek @darnell

I think this is very misguided (and wishful thinking). There are still huge differences between sexes in muscle mass and strength, bone density etc., leading to serious safety concerns, even after controlling for these other categories such as weight, age and disability.

(Yes, there are attributes which should not, for good reasons, be used for categorizing sport,s such as race or self-defined identity).

@rcz @darnell well if we are able to establish that there are such "huge" as you say differences in muscle mass and strength, and bone density, surely we are able to measure those. Are we not?

@rcz @darnell grate.

In that case, why even bother with the "male/female" thing in sports?

If muscle mass and density, and bone strength, are the issue, and we can measure them, why not make categories based on those characteristics instead?

@rysiek @darnell
What you proposing is more invasive testing which would still end up with Amal in the category with all the males. Why would you want to do that? Just to avoid the word “sex”?

I mean, think about it: age affects a lot of sport-related things, that's why we have age categories — so you could also measure those things instead of checking a person's age.

Sure, but why?

@rcz @darnell I'm glad we agree that how invasive the tests are should be taken into account.

You also said that in your opinion there is a set of tests that can be performed to clearly and unambiguously establish whether a given person is "male" or "female".

So: is it possible that some people who (based on that set of tests) are considered "female" would still have muscle mass and strength and bone density, higher than some people who (based on that same set of tests) are considered "male"?

@rysiek @darnell
I don't know, but let's say it is.

@rcz @darnell and do I understand correctly based on our conversation so far, that in your opinion the "male" and "female" categories of sports disciplines are, first and foremost, about safety and fairness?