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Laurel Hubbard
Comments
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Could she beat our very own Zuby though?
https://twitter.com/zubymusic/status/1100348562041462784?s=21
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My two pennies... I had a cousin who transitioned back in 1992. That cousin disappeared after that and went on to live her life as a woman happily elsewhere. I met up with her about 4 years ago. I consider myself as a big strong woman. I would not beat her in an arm wrestle.
Hope no offence caused by this.. trying to add humour.5 -
Curb_It said:My two pennies... I had a cousin who transitioned back in 1992. It was a scandal at the time to the family, coming from a big catholic family. That cousin disappeared after that and went on to live her life as a woman happily elsewhere. I met up with her about 4 years ago. I consider myself as a big strong woman. I would not beat her in an arm wrestle.
Hope no offence caused by this.. trying to add humour.10 -
Men, women, trans, bosh0
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cafcdave123 said:For professional sport, I believe you should only be able to compete as the gender you were born and if you’re not good enough to make it in that gender category then tough.
As for how people identify in life in general, who gives a fuck, it’s their business.
There have not, as far as I am aware, any instances of women claiming to be a man to win things. Of course some women would "pretend" to be men when women's sport was taboo, but there were serious issues in sport of men claiming to be women in order to win things. It subjected 100s of innocent women to embrassing "sex tests".
And this is a difficult question, where do you draw the line, if indeed you do draw one.0 -
Cafc43v3r said:cafcdave123 said:For professional sport, I believe you should only be able to compete as the gender you were born and if you’re not good enough to make it in that gender category then tough.
As for how people identify in life in general, who gives a fuck, it’s their business.
There have not, as far as I am aware, any instances of women claiming to be a man to win things. Of course some women would "pretend" to be men when women's sport was taboo, but there were serious issues in sport of men claiming to be women in order to win things. It subjected 100s of innocent women to embrassing "sex tests".
And this is a difficult question, where do you draw the line, if indeed you do draw one.0 -
PrincessFiona said:Chizz said:Addickted said:Chizz said:AFKABartram said:KBslittlesis said:Chizz said:Good luck to her.
And I am surprised and delighted to see so many people interested in women's weightlifting. It's not a subject many on CL have shown much interest in, in the past.I was wondering how she would feel if she had been training all this time, finally got to an Olympics only to find one of the competitors was a trans woman 🤷♀️
The examples of a para weightlifting competitor and a made-up swimmer are interesting, but not relevant.
Lauren Hubbard qualified to compete for New Zealand in the Olympics, within the rules of the Olympics and with the support of New Zealand. No-one has missed out.0 -
PrincessFiona said:Cafc43v3r said:cafcdave123 said:For professional sport, I believe you should only be able to compete as the gender you were born and if you’re not good enough to make it in that gender category then tough.
As for how people identify in life in general, who gives a fuck, it’s their business.
There have not, as far as I am aware, any instances of women claiming to be a man to win things. Of course some women would "pretend" to be men when women's sport was taboo, but there were serious issues in sport of men claiming to be women in order to win things. It subjected 100s of innocent women to embrassing "sex tests".
And this is a difficult question, where do you draw the line, if indeed you do draw one.0 -
Chizz said:PrincessFiona said:Chizz said:Addickted said:Chizz said:AFKABartram said:KBslittlesis said:Chizz said:Good luck to her.
And I am surprised and delighted to see so many people interested in women's weightlifting. It's not a subject many on CL have shown much interest in, in the past.I was wondering how she would feel if she had been training all this time, finally got to an Olympics only to find one of the competitors was a trans woman 🤷♀️
The examples of a para weightlifting competitor and a made-up swimmer are interesting, but not relevant.
Lauren Hubbard qualified to compete for New Zealand in the Olympics, within the rules of the Olympics and with the support of New Zealand. No-one has missed out.0 -
This article explains exactly why Laurel will have an unfair advantage:
https://www.insidethegames.biz/articles/1108392/big-read-laurel-hubbard
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Cafc43v3r said:PrincessFiona said:Cafc43v3r said:cafcdave123 said:For professional sport, I believe you should only be able to compete as the gender you were born and if you’re not good enough to make it in that gender category then tough.
As for how people identify in life in general, who gives a fuck, it’s their business.
There have not, as far as I am aware, any instances of women claiming to be a man to win things. Of course some women would "pretend" to be men when women's sport was taboo, but there were serious issues in sport of men claiming to be women in order to win things. It subjected 100s of innocent women to embrassing "sex tests".
And this is a difficult question, where do you draw the line, if indeed you do draw one.0 -
You can't have a third competition dubbed 'trans'.
There isn't three genders here. People are still either male or female.
Making a 'trans' section just makes the problem worse and actively highlights the fact they aren't considered true females/males in society. To go to the extreme, it will end up looking like society has set up a freak show to laugh at them.
Disallow them because of the unfair advantage sure, but do not segregate them into 'you're not a true woman' category. It would be horrible for trans people worldwide.7 -
PrincessFiona said:Cafc43v3r said:PrincessFiona said:Cafc43v3r said:cafcdave123 said:For professional sport, I believe you should only be able to compete as the gender you were born and if you’re not good enough to make it in that gender category then tough.
As for how people identify in life in general, who gives a fuck, it’s their business.
There have not, as far as I am aware, any instances of women claiming to be a man to win things. Of course some women would "pretend" to be men when women's sport was taboo, but there were serious issues in sport of men claiming to be women in order to win things. It subjected 100s of innocent women to embrassing "sex tests".
And this is a difficult question, where do you draw the line, if indeed you do draw one.1 -
There is a big problem for women's sport and indeed paralympic sport where the best are not the best on the planet. We see the issues around classification in the paralympics which is a minefield.
My view is that it is easier for women's sport as there is less complexity. I agree that there should be a criteria around testosterone levels but allied to that, also sex at birth. That should not detract from a person's right to be classified a woman in everything else, and should be a technical criteria to create a ceiling in sport where a ceiling is needed. In men's sport it clearly isn't. I would also stipulate that women can compete with men where they can without restriction. Otherwise women athletes for instance could devote their lives to achieving something that is impossible.
By using two criteria, the authorities would be excluding natural born women as well as transgender people which in a way makes it more acceptable. Whilst you would have to feel bad for those excluded. Finding a satisfying solution is impossible but I feel this is probably the best way forwards. I would only apply this strictly to elite sport though were the advantage will be more profound. The authorities could also look at allowing trans athletes who haven't gone through puberty to compete in elite women's sport as that seems to be where an advantage that can't be removed is gained.2 -
Stefco said:This article explains exactly why Laurel will have an unfair advantage:
https://www.insidethegames.biz/articles/1108392/big-read-laurel-hubbard1 -
If they don't ban him/her then the other competitors should refuse to take part that would stymie them, cant see how otherwise it could be a fair competition. Mind you i'm becoming a very reactionary old bugger, and the whole trans thing makes me feel very unsettled, I can't even handle the RuPaul drag thing.0
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I think the biggest thing I’ve learned here is the age of transition clearly has an influence on competitors strength in weightlifting.
This should be the starting point in the discussion going forward.
And as the author in the article supplied above states, Hubbard really shouldn’t be the first trans woman competing. It’s actually unfair to her and unfair to trans competitors going forward.
But most importantly for me, it’s a backwards step in woman’s sport.0 -
Hal1x said:If they don't ban him/her then the other competitors should refuse to take part that would stymie them, cant see how otherwise it could be a fair competition. Mind you i'm becoming a very reactionary old bugger, and the whole trans thing makes me feel very unsettled, I can't even handle the RuPaul drag thing.
Is it really 2021?2 -
Leroy Ambrose said:Hal1x said:If they don't ban him/her then the other competitors should refuse to take part that would stymie them, cant see how otherwise it could be a fair competition. Mind you i'm becoming a very reactionary old bugger, and the whole trans thing makes me feel very unsettled, I can't even handle the RuPaul drag thing.
Is it really 2021?1 -
SomervilleAddick said:shine166 said:Cheating in a competition historically riddled with cheating.2
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Hal1x said:Leroy Ambrose said:Hal1x said:If they don't ban him/her then the other competitors should refuse to take part that would stymie them, cant see how otherwise it could be a fair competition. Mind you i'm becoming a very reactionary old bugger, and the whole trans thing makes me feel very unsettled, I can't even handle the RuPaul drag thing.
Is it really 2021?
Just seems weird to me. I can't be that much younger than you, and grew up in an era when anyone cross dressing was viewed as a 'poof' (or worse), and my nan still called my black mates 'darkies' (or worse) - so I'm pretty sure we had similar formative years. Don't understand why anyone would look at transgender people (or cross dressers for that matter) with any 'unease' 🤷🏻♂️2 -
Leroy Ambrose said:Hal1x said:If they don't ban him/her then the other competitors should refuse to take part that would stymie them, cant see how otherwise it could be a fair competition. Mind you i'm becoming a very reactionary old bugger, and the whole trans thing makes me feel very unsettled, I can't even handle the RuPaul drag thing.
Is it really 2021?
commenting on the complexities of modern sexuality. Having said that
someone who was originally male and now identifies as female and someone who’s male and prefers adopting a female persona isn’t a million miles apart is it.
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Leroy Ambrose said:Hal1x said:Leroy Ambrose said:Hal1x said:If they don't ban him/her then the other competitors should refuse to take part that would stymie them, cant see how otherwise it could be a fair competition. Mind you i'm becoming a very reactionary old bugger, and the whole trans thing makes me feel very unsettled, I can't even handle the RuPaul drag thing.
Is it really 2021?
Just seems weird to me. I can't be that much younger than you, and grew up in an era when anyone cross dressing was viewed as a 'poof' (or worse), and my nan still called my black mates 'darkies' (or worse) - so I'm pretty sure we had similar formative years. Don't understand why anyone would look at transgender people (or cross dressers for that matter) with any 'unease' 🤷🏻♂️
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SELR_addicks said:You can't have a third competition dubbed 'trans'.
There isn't three genders here. People are still either male or female.
Making a 'trans' section just makes the problem worse and actively highlights the fact they aren't considered true females/males in society. To go to the extreme, it will end up looking like society has set up a freak show to laugh at them.
Disallow them because of the unfair advantage sure, but do not segregate them into 'you're not a true woman' category. It would be horrible for trans people worldwide.
Why does not allowing trans females to compete with natural born females mean it isn't accepting them as women.? It isn't because of that, it is because they have an unfair advantage, not because they are not being accepted as women. And it is unfair on natural born females.
It is down to individual opinions whether they are 'true women' or not. They are accepted as women.
Can a man have a baby? I believe a trans man can have a baby. Their are all sorts of (individual and personal reasons for) permutations of trans outcomes; with some having everything they can from their birth sex removed and others retaining some e.g. so a trans man retaining body parts of a natural born woman so they can still have a baby. Does that make them any less a trans man? They are accepted as the sex they want to identify as.0 -
SID said:Leroy Ambrose said:Hal1x said:If they don't ban him/her then the other competitors should refuse to take part that would stymie them, cant see how otherwise it could be a fair competition. Mind you i'm becoming a very reactionary old bugger, and the whole trans thing makes me feel very unsettled, I can't even handle the RuPaul drag thing.
Is it really 2021?
commenting on the complexities of modern sexuality. Having said that
someone who was originally male and now identifies as female and someone who’s male and prefers adopting a female persona isn’t a million miles apart is it.
There's nothing wrong with being 'different'. Where its wrong as when people perceive something 'different' as 'wrong'7 -
Leroy Ambrose said:SID said:Leroy Ambrose said:Hal1x said:If they don't ban him/her then the other competitors should refuse to take part that would stymie them, cant see how otherwise it could be a fair competition. Mind you i'm becoming a very reactionary old bugger, and the whole trans thing makes me feel very unsettled, I can't even handle the RuPaul drag thing.
Is it really 2021?
commenting on the complexities of modern sexuality. Having said that
someone who was originally male and now identifies as female and someone who’s male and prefers adopting a female persona isn’t a million miles apart is it.
There's nothing wrong with being 'different'. Where its wrong as when people perceive something 'different' as 'wrong'
The challenge lies in to what degree we attempt to accommodate every flavour of 'different' into all elements of modern life.
In certain circumstances Spock may just have got it right with "Logic clearly dictates that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.”
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How many people would actually compete in a Trans Olympics? And would the trans men beat the trans women.
Ridiculous idea.
The Olympics are about the pinnacle of sports not some plaything of a tiny minority of the population who feel they have the right to compete with a significant physiological and medically enhanced advantage.
Why don't the trans community start up a games specifically for the trans community. Cannot see any issues with that at all and it would be a level playing field.
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I met a female weightlifter. Despite my many years of being a man, if I transitioned I’d never have beaten her in a women’s competition. Not every man is stronger than every woman, I suspect a strength graph split by gender would be bell curves with a very big overlap.1
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AddicksAddict said:I met a female weightlifter. Despite my many years of being a man, if I transitioned I’d never have beaten her in a women’s competition. Not every man is stronger than every woman, I suspect a strength graph split by gender would be bell curves with a very big overlap.
The strongest of men and the strongest of women become Olympic weightlifters - and the strongest of men would ALWAYS beat the strongest of women.15 -
Cafc43v3r said:PrincessFiona said:Cafc43v3r said:cafcdave123 said:For professional sport, I believe you should only be able to compete as the gender you were born and if you’re not good enough to make it in that gender category then tough.
As for how people identify in life in general, who gives a fuck, it’s their business.
There have not, as far as I am aware, any instances of women claiming to be a man to win things. Of course some women would "pretend" to be men when women's sport was taboo, but there were serious issues in sport of men claiming to be women in order to win things. It subjected 100s of innocent women to embrassing "sex tests".
And this is a difficult question, where do you draw the line, if indeed you do draw one.2