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authorNicholas Johnson <nick@nicholasjohnson.ch>2023-12-07 00:00:00 +0000
committerNicholas Johnson <nick@nicholasjohnson.ch>2023-12-07 00:00:00 +0000
commit3a61bac5d8181073f2bcdbac4762ade86f9985028a3bd642605fed800ecab9a3 (patch)
tree9df1ad985e57df48b5e43d658b0c1afe3410a829e2bdd533e425c463eac6aed4
parent184bc63cd626d3add482c57cce2e5b325e43160d32d7e6c6499956bea0106646 (diff)
Clarify potentially inflammatory clip
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@@ -21,6 +21,8 @@ A more conservative approach would be to preserve the notion of binary biologica
Whether you choose to define biological sex as a binary or a spectrum is another matter. Whatever your opinions are on the language we use, it should be clear that what matters for sports leagues are the biological differences. It's likely that leagues based on gender identity would not be very useful. There's actually [a hilarious South Park clip](https://yewtu.be/embed/URz-RYEOaig?local=true "South Park: Go, Strong Woman, Go") showing exactly why biology is more important for sports than gender identity.
+Edit (06-12-2023): To clarify, I was using this South Park clip merely to make a point. I wasn't using it to mock trans people nor endorse any perceived sentiments South Park has towards trans people.
+
> "...biological men and women have indisputable biological differences that surgery can't change."
Here, I failed to mention hormones, which can lessen or even eliminate the relevant biological differences for certain sports. For example, if a trans man went through puberty as a male, there may be no reason to bar him from a male bodybuilding competition. The fact that his chromosomes would be XX might not be irrelevant. I don't know enough to say that with certainty, but you get my point.