Don’t really care about what people do with themselves generally. If a guy wants to be a lady instead or vice versa, whatever. I just how one does is of their own free will and after puberty.
To change from man to woman and then compete as a woman is just someone being a jerk, to put mildly.
And guess who wrote this comment? (A very prominent hurdler most people here would immediately recognize.)
This disingenuous and you know it. Didn’t Tia-Adana Belle run 55s at the DII level? How is CeCe running 57s “unequal ability” but Tia‘s 55 wasn’t? The only explanation is transphobia.
Don’t really care about what people do with themselves generally. If a guy wants to be a lady instead or vice versa, whatever. I just how one does is of their own free will and after puberty.
To change from man to woman and then compete as a woman is just someone being a jerk, to put mildly.
Cool, just don't expect others to see you as someting you obviously aren't.
Yes a man NEEDING to beat girls in some sport.....JERK~~~~
Trans persons are human, they deserve inclusion and respect. They DO NOT deserve sports. Trans women have the right to exist, trans women DO NOT have the right to compete in sports with cisgender women
Trans women are women. She just lost to a faster woman.
If trans women are women then you don't need to add the modifier "trans" to women.
Obviously, even you don't believe this BS.
I agree with them, trans women are women. It is a qualifier in a discussion about a specific subject. No different than "blond women are women" or "black women are women".
In this case a faster woman (no qualifier needed) just ran faster.
Today, the Wall Street Journal published an op-ed by the female athlete who in 2019 lost the NCAA Division II national women's title in the 400m hurdles to a male athlete who previously had competed in the men's division without much success.
Recalling the national women's championship race she lost nearly six years ago as a sophomore at East Texas A&M University to a male senior from Franklin Pierce who had adopted a trans gender identity the previous year, Minna Svärd writes
The video from that event shows me racing in lane 8. In lane 4 is CeCé Telfer of Franklin Pierce University—who competed for that school’s men’s team in 2016 and 2017. Craig Telfer ranked 390th among NCAA Division II men. CeCé Telfer destroyed the women’s field and crossed the finish line almost two seconds before me, becoming the first known transgender-identified athlete to win an NCAA title.
That made me the first collegiate woman to be told her victory was worth less than a man’s feelings. I cried a lot that day—not because I lost, but because of how I lost.
I’m a people-pleaser and don’t like to upset people—a stereotypical female quality that trans activists often exploit to suppress dissent. It took me a year before I found the nerve to post my feelings about the race on Instagram. When Cecé Telfer alerted supporters to my post, I was denounced as a “transphobe” and racist and received harassment and threats.
Whilst praising recent directives and policy changes aimed at tightening up eligiblity rules to keep males out of women's NCAA competition and other female sports from now on, Svärd said these moves aren't enough. She wants the records amended:
The official results of past competitions should be corrected to align with reality. Male competitors should be removed and the rank of affected women increased accordingly.
Cecé Telfer went on to write a book and was profiled by the New York Times magazine in a lengthy article titled “For My People’: A Transgender Woman Pursues an Olympic Dream.” That dream collapsed in 2021 when he failed a testosterone test.
I don’t expect I’ll ever be profiled in a fawning magazine feature. But I did accomplish one thing that will always fill me with pride: In 2019 I was the fastest female 400-meter hurdler at any NCAA Division II school. It’s been five years since that honor was stolen from me. I want it back.
I have to say it is such a blessing that a woman can speak about an experience like this, in a major news outlet, and be taken seriously and not cancelled as a “bigot.” Until very recently I thought those days had passed in America, and that speech like this would one day be forbidden altogether. There are Western countries where speech of this nature could get you sanctioned by the government, even arrested. But it seems that America has given itself one last chance.
Today, the Wall Street Journal published an op-ed by the female athlete who in 2019 lost the NCAA Division II national women's title in the 400m hurdles to a male athlete who previously had competed in the men's division without much success.
Recalling the national women's championship race she lost nearly six years ago as a sophomore at East Texas A&M University to a male senior from Franklin Pierce who had adopted a trans gender identity the previous year, Minna Svärd writes
The video from that event shows me racing in lane 8. In lane 4 is CeCé Telfer of Franklin Pierce University—who competed for that school’s men’s team in 2016 and 2017. Craig Telfer ranked 390th among NCAA Division II men. CeCé Telfer destroyed the women’s field and crossed the finish line almost two seconds before me, becoming the first known transgender-identified athlete to win an NCAA title.
That made me the first collegiate woman to be told her victory was worth less than a man’s feelings. I cried a lot that day—not because I lost, but because of how I lost.
I’m a people-pleaser and don’t like to upset people—a stereotypical female quality that trans activists often exploit to suppress dissent. It took me a year before I found the nerve to post my feelings about the race on Instagram. When Cecé Telfer alerted supporters to my post, I was denounced as a “transphobe” and racist and received harassment and threats.
Whilst praising recent directives and policy changes aimed at tightening up eligiblity rules to keep males out of women's NCAA competition and other female sports from now on, Svärd said these moves aren't enough. She wants the records amended:
The official results of past competitions should be corrected to align with reality. Male competitors should be removed and the rank of affected women increased accordingly.
Cecé Telfer went on to write a book and was profiled by the New York Times magazine in a lengthy article titled “For My People’: A Transgender Woman Pursues an Olympic Dream.” That dream collapsed in 2021 when he failed a testosterone test.
I don’t expect I’ll ever be profiled in a fawning magazine feature. But I did accomplish one thing that will always fill me with pride: In 2019 I was the fastest female 400-meter hurdler at any NCAA Division II school. It’s been five years since that honor was stolen from me. I want it back.
I have to say it is such a blessing that a woman can speak about an experience like this, in a major news outlet, and be taken seriously and not cancelled as a “bigot.” Until very recently I thought those days had passed in America, and that speech like this would one day be forbidden altogether. There are Western countries where speech of this nature could get you sanctioned by the government, even arrested. But it seems that America has given itself one last chance.
Oh please. What countries can you not say “speech of this nature?” You really are a drama queen. Maybe not transgender though.
“In September, a criminal investigation was opened into a German citizen who called politician Ricarda Lang fat on Gab. Under Section 185 of the German Criminal Code, that individual could serve up to a year in prison.”
“Former cop Harry Miller, for instance, was visited by officers at his Humberside home in 2020 for posting “transphobic” comments online, such as: “I was assigned mammal at birth, but my orientation is fish. Don’t mis-species me.””
If trans women are women then you don't need to add the modifier "trans" to women.
Obviously, even you don't believe this BS.
You are not very bright of course. That is like saying if African Americans are Americans you don’t need to add the modifier “African” to Americans. Obviously even you don’t believe this BS.
You're right Qeeef. You shouldn't add the modifier "African" to American. You should call them Americans.
Unless you're describing where a foreign-born American came from. For example, you would call Elon Musk an African American because he's a former African. Just like you would call a "woman" a trans woman because she's a former (and biologically still is) dude.
If trans women are women then you don't need to add the modifier "trans" to women.
Obviously, even you don't believe this BS.
I agree with them, trans women are women. It is a qualifier in a discussion about a specific subject. No different than "blond women are women" or "black women are women".
In this case a faster woman (no qualifier needed) just ran faster.
When you add the modifier "blond" or "black" then you are describing a woman with a specific hair color or skin color. Just like adding the modifier "trans" tells you that the woman is actually male.
“In September, a criminal investigation was opened into a German citizen who called politician Ricarda Lang fat on Gab. Under Section 185 of the German Criminal Code, that individual could serve up to a year in prison.”
“Former cop Harry Miller, for instance, was visited by officers at his Humberside home in 2020 for posting “transphobic” comments online, such as: “I was assigned mammal at birth, but my orientation is fish. Don’t mis-species me.””