In case anyone didn’t already realize this, the gold medal in women’s boxing in 2024 was awarded to a fraud. That’s not a matter of opinion, it’s literally scientifically tested.
Now that he’s had his chromosomes checked, there’s an official statement by the olympic association.
The Independent Council on Women’s Sports (ICONS) released a statement addressing Khelif’s admission.
“Algerian Olympic women’s gold medalist Imane Khelif has now confirmed he is male. With men no longer eligible for Olympic women’s boxing under World Boxing rules, Khelif reportedly plans to box professionally in Europe, though he inexplicably says he will still undergo sex screening for the LA 2028 Games in hopes of competing,” the statement said. —FoxNews
As has been our objection since the beginning, the mediocre male athlete has no interest in having his head caved in by more competent male boxers when he’s still got a shot at getting a spot on the podium by beating up on girls. That’s an opinion, to be sure. But enough women’s records have fallen to newly-minted female athletes who previously trained as men that it will take a lot to convince us otherwise.
“We all have different genetics, different hormone levels. I’m not transgender. My difference is natural. This is who I am. I haven’t done anything to change the way nature made me. That’s why I’m not afraid,” Khelif said. —FoxNews
That’s the counter-claim, for what it’s worth.
For anyone who thinks this is a question of fairness to the athlete, let us recall that his female opponents, after being struck by an athlete we now know to be genetically male refused to finish the bout because it was unlike any other bout she had been in before.
That’s a familiar statement. It’s reminiscent of another such bout from many years ago.
Remember the 2014 bout between male-to-female Fallon Fox and Tamikka Brents? Fractured Orbital Bone and seven staples to go with her concussion when all was said and done. Brents didn’t last one full round.
Here’s what Tamikka had to say after the bout.
“I’ve fought a lot of women and have never felt the strength that I felt in a fight as I did that night. I can’t answer whether it’s because she was born a man or not because I’m not a doctor. I can only say, I’ve never felt so overpowered ever in my life and I am an abnormally strong female in my own right,” she stated. “Her grip was different, I could usually move around in the clinch against other females but couldn’t move at all in Fox’s clinch…
“I still disagree with Fox fighting,” Brents stated. “Any other job or career I say have a go at it, but when it comes to a combat sport I think it just isn’t fair. At least not until we have more scientific proof that it is or isn’t fair. More research is needed for sure. Like I said, I am not a doctor, I can only say my opinion and I don’t believe that she should be allowed to fight other women. If it were strictly BJJ or wrestling or something like that sure, but MMA is a completely different sport.” — LowKickMMA, 2017
Important line in that quote: ‘And I am an abnormally strong female in my own right.’
Hers isn’t even a ‘my opponent was not a girl’ objection. It was ‘the fight was not the same’ objection.
It is worth remembering that this entire question exists for only one reason.
The entire point for a separate category of female sport being opened, was to acknowledge that women were athletic and competitive but would be crushed in direct competition against men. (For objective proof, look no further than the world records for men and women’s events.)
It was given as a ‘safe space’ where the best of women could compete against each other without worrying about being shown up by men.
If there were no such divisions it would not matter in the least. But now that it does, the same considerations responsible for the creation of the separate women’s athletic category must come into play in maintaining the reason for which it was created in the first place.
And if anyone thinks that no country would EVER stoop to entering men into women’s competition to game the system for ulterior motives? Well as just one example, East Germany pumped female athletes full of male hormones to win medals.
Thousands of athletes, including minors, were treated with androgenics each year, and there was a special emphasis placed on treating women and girls due to the effectiveness of steroids on the female sex. The system paid off. From 1968 to 1988 the GDR athletes won 1360 Olympic medals, solidifying itself as one of the top three medalling nations during this time. — Portland State University
If giving male hormones to female athletes can provide that kind of a competitive advantage against other females, how much greater an advantage might someone have if they’ve naturally produced such hormones over a lifetime?
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