There you go, Wejo. You will be forced to do obey once you accept the supposition that one's gender can be changed on a whim and everyone else must recognize your new projection of reality. Doesn't matter how ridiculous or harmful or unfair to everyone else it is.
If you refer to a male as "she" as you did in your last post, you've accepted someone else's skewed reality. You have set yourself up to be required to get up and dance the way they want, and to have to change immediately if they decide to alter reality in another direction again. Inevitably, if you buy into this politically correct verbiage of using pronouns that can change any day for any reason, you've set yourself up logically to accept the perverse result - sacrificing any integrity in a great sport when it involves innocent teenage girls.
You've allowed the whims of a troubled child to spin you away from common sense. We have a female division for sports for a reason. You know that. Women and men are different. It's ridiculous that poster after poster has to point this out.
Speaking the truth is the ultimate method of destroying tyranny. And, make no mistake, going against this insanity is considered by the PC tyrants to be a thoughtcrime which must be punished. Wejo, is this fear why you're unwilling to think and write on this issue like a mature adult?
Rojo, one of the reasons I've respected your website has been your relentless determination to support a drug free sport, even when it's opened you up to severe criticism.
Drugs are not the answer to every problem. In this case, it is medical malpractice, educational malpractice and child abuse by parents to mess with a child's hormonal system just because you are unwilling to give guidance like grown ups used to.
I'm in my mid 50's now. A number of the brawny steroid monsters that were my age are now dead. Several of them are now disabled, both physically and mentally. Some have unusual cancers. When I started coaching in the 80's, there were some 400 pound benching throwers who had heart attacks..... in high school.
Put away the prescription pads and stop believing every problem has an answer in pharmaceuticals.
Act like responsible adults instead.