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How To Prove Someone Is Female?

krou writes "Caster Semenya won the 800m at the World Athletics Championship in blistering style, leaving her competitors in the dust, but she has been thrown into the midst of a scandal amidst claims that she's not really a woman. According to the many press reports, she's believed to shave, is flat chested, has a very masculine physique, previously preferred playing physical games with boys, and shunned traditional female activities and clothing. Questions about her gender have dogged her entire career. Previously, acceptance that she is a women relied on simple inspection of female genitals. But now the IAAF claim that they want to conduct further tests to see if 'she may have a rare medical condition that gives her an unfair advantage.' An IAAF spokesmen noted that 'The [testing] process was started after Semenya made her startling breakthroughs — a 25-second improvement at 1500m and eight seconds at 800m, just some weeks ago.' I'm curious what the Slashdot community thinks: what can be considered proof of someone being male or female? Is it simply a case of having the right genitals, or are there other criteria that should be used? Is the IAAF right in claiming that someone should be prevented from competing because they have a rare medical or genetic advantage?"

1,091 comments

  1. Make them write some code by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

    ... and see how it pans out.

    1. Re:Make them write some code by innerweb · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Close, but just let men and women compete equally. head to head, no men's leagues or women's leagues. Then all of this silliness just goes away.

      InnerWeb

      --
      Freud might say that Intelligent Design is religion's ID.
    2. Re:Make them write some code by triffid_98 · · Score: 3, Funny

      ( http://www.gotfuturama.com/Multimedia/EpisodeSounds/1ACV05/ )
      He's good, all right, but he's no Clem Johnson. And Johnson played back in the days before steroid injections were mandatory!

    3. Re:Make them write some code by BetterSense · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Mod parent up. Those with a natural genetic advantage should be allowed to compete and excel...this includes Shaq, Phelps, or anyone else with a natural genetic advantage.

      Of course, this is going to be pretty hard on the women, since they get the short end of the genetic stick regarding certain physical traits. But there are many, many MEN that cannot compete with either the men or the women in certain sports. Statistically, there are nearly as many men that cannot compete with the best male athletes as there are females that cannot compete with the best male athletes. And as an average man I know I would have no chance against many female athletes.

      I understand that the idea of a female league/sport/category for sports is something that a lot of people want, but things like TFA's quandary are just rule quibbles. There's nothing like "Oh, she was faster, but she's not really a she so it doesn't count". If she was faster, she was fucking faster, just like all the male athletes that are faster and you exclude from your league to give it a reason to exist.

    4. Re:Make them write some code by Koby77 · · Score: 1

      Close, but just let men and women compete equally. head to head, no men's leagues or women's leagues

      It was my understanding that women's sports were created because women couldn't compete directly against men due to inherent genetic disadvantages.

    5. Re:Make them write some code by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      This might be more reasonable then it appears on face value.

      By separating sports people based on gender you're admitting that women simply cannot compete with men physically.

      This causes many female teams to be largely ignored (I can't remember the last time a female baseball team was as well known as the Red Sox. And I don't even know what city they are based in. There are a few exceptions (tennis being the main one), but they're few and far between. This means its extremely difficult for female sportsmen to gain the popularity or wage of their male counterparts. Talk about unfair!

      Whereas if we abolish this segregation, sure most of the popular teams will be composed of men. But there might be a female or two that manage to make it to the big leagues.

    6. Re:Make them write some code by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      Genetic disadvantages makes it more difficult for women to compete. It doesn't make it impossible. And how is segregating women into a ghetto that is all but ignored with very few exceptions better than making them compete with men?

    7. Re:Make them write some code by sqldr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      On the face of it, this sounds like the best option, but when you get down to the dirty details, it gets a bit more complicated.

      I can't remember the name of the individual, but a women's football swedish striker was signed for an italian team, in what was originally described as a publicity stunt. It eventually caused controversy when one player, who was obviously into "traditional" values voices his concerns about tackling, basically saying he was nervous about doing "rough" full-contact tackles because of fear of harming her.

      You could just explain to the guy that she has signed up and agreed to do it, and if she breaks her legs then that's her own stupid fault, but this is a prevalent opinion in a lot of players, and could turn the game into a farce.

      --
      I wrote my first program at the age of six, and I still can't work out how this website works.
    8. Re:Make them write some code by samuX · · Score: 1

      This might be more reasonable then it appears on face value.

      By separating sports people based on gender you're admitting that women simply cannot compete with men physically.

      it's not about segregation but rather keeping the competition as much fair as possible and keep that sport interesting. that's the reason you don't see a male gymnast jumping around with a ball or a ribbon

      This causes many female teams to be largely ignored

      people don't go look for female baseball because they are not interested. in the same way they are not interested in floorball or male synchronized swimming. here where i live female volleyball is quite famous and many people go see their matches

    9. Re:Make them write some code by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

      Hi Mods.

      This is not insightful, because the entire point of gender physiques is that men have physical advantages for muscle-endurance based sports. So collapsing the genders just means that virually no women will ever win again.

      This is different from mental competitions where the factors are believed to be much more culturally meshed.

      --
      My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
    10. Re:Make them write some code by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

      So fix the cultural problems causing the women's leagues to be ignored. It basically IS "impossible" for women to compete vs men. Re: one poster above, "average men" vs. athlete women is a red herring.

      For you, it's a statistical thing. Off the top of my head (and cut the citation-needed gang), it's like 12% chance of competition if you put a world class woman with a colossal physique vs. any of the 2nd-tier men.

      It's not "0% aka no-chance", it's like a badly rigged bet at a carnival chance game. Yes, IF you had red one of those books on swindles, AND you know how to do lightning fast small-number arithmetic, AND you know that every time you "split your chances" or whatever the funky option is that you cede more %chance points, then YES you can compete and beat the carnie. But it's the same theme of not being a balanced-odds event. And that's when the carnie LIKES you and doesn't get even meaner by cheating.

      --
      My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
    11. Re:Make them write some code by SBrach · · Score: 1

      It is pretty close to the impossible end of the difficulty scale.

      The choice is:
      A) Segregating women into a "ghetto" that is all but ignored
      B) Having them tryout for the mens teams and all but 1 or 2 don't get signed

    12. Re:Make them write some code by russotto · · Score: 2, Informative

      Close, but just let men and women compete equally. head to head, no men's leagues or women's leagues. Then all of this silliness just goes away.

      Except that men and women aren't equal, physically. The top men are much better than the top women at most physical activities, and the effect continues well down the ability ladder. So if you get rid of that separation, you will get essentially no women at the top levels of competition.

    13. Re:Make them write some code by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mod parent up. Those with a natural genetic advantage should be allowed to compete and excel...this includes Shaq, Phelps, or anyone else with a natural genetic advantage.

      Like most blacks, they excel in sports... On the other hand whites excel in brain activities.

      So I suggest either we stop being politically correct and remove some equal opportunity laws OR start having special sport rules to let white athletes to play even with genetically superior blacks.

    14. Re:Make them write some code by wisdom_brewing · · Score: 1

      EXACTLY!!! There was an issue not that long ago regarding sexism inside the IOC - my first thought was "WTF? Isn't this the competition that they are still forcing the sexes to compete seperately?"

      then again, that would mean that women would be more or less completely exluded from many sports...

    15. Re:Make them write some code by bzipitidoo · · Score: 1

      "Disadvantages" is such a one dimensional way of putting it.

      We have many traits. Each one may or may not be advantageous in the huge variety of situations we encounter. Differences, including sex based ones, are a means of specializing. If this didn't confer advantages, we should have evolved into hermaphrodites. What men have more of is good for traditional Olympic competition. Change the competition, and we'd have to help out men against the inherent advantages women would have. And, yes, there are plenty of contests, even physical ones, that would favor women.

      --
      Intellectual Property is a monopolistic, selfish, and defective concept. It is "tyranny over the mind of man"
    16. Re:Make them write some code by boarder · · Score: 1

      You are 100% correct, it only makes it more difficult.

      Of course, how much more difficult is the whole fucking point. The fastest man in the world is a full 10% faster than the fastest woman in the world, moving to around 15% faster at longer events. The fastest woman in the world wouldn't have even passed the slowest male competitor in the last Olympics.

      So while the absolute fastest women in the world could compete with most men, they have no chance at all to compete with the best men.

      And this is in running, a sport that isn't contact based. How many women can compete with men at football, basketball and baseball? Sure, there is the odd female high school football player, but you don't see them at the college level for a reason (even though they are allowed) and when they do appear (3 total as far as I can tell) they are only playing kickers with little to no contact. Basketball and baseball are better, but women still can't compete with men at higher levels of competition.

      There's a reason boxing and wrestling have weight classes.

      --
      IANAL, but I play one on /.
    17. Re:Make them write some code by Adult+film+producer · · Score: 0

      I'm glad you brought up Tennis because it was Billie Jean King that annihilated Bobby Riggs in 73 but Riggs was in his 50's when that happened (IIRC.) Look at the serve speed in tennis, men vs women.. men do have an advantage during their prime years. Today the fastest serve for a woman is about 125 and for men it's roughly 150..

    18. Re:Make them write some code by GauteL · · Score: 1

      "Like most blacks, they excel in sports... On the other hand whites excel in brain activities."

      Excellent. Lets bring in some white supremacy bullshit into this discussion. First, there is no credible evidence that white people are better at 'brain activities'. While there certainly is a caucasian and asian dominance in science around the world, there is also a very hard to correct dominance in wealth coming from a very long history of economic and physical oppression. This means that black people on average have a much higher mountain to climb in terms of education.

      Second. This sports advantage (which racists often use to justify their stance) is extremely minimal. It just happens that a tiny advantage in physical capability makes all the difference in certain sports. Also, this apparant advantage has absolutely no effect in real life.

      Even if white people somehow had a tiny advantage in 'brain activities' it would be completely dwarfed by the massive advantage in wealth and access to education and it certainly would be moronic to base anything in our society on it.

      I see the term "political correctness" being misused all the time when racist idiots want to justify their moronic opinions.

    19. Re:Make them write some code by GauteL · · Score: 1

      "Genetic disadvantages makes it more difficult for women to compete. It doesn't make it impossible."

      Unfortunately in practical terms it makes it impossible. As an example: the world record for 100 meter sprint among women is 10.49. There are 69 male sprinters that have broken the 10 second barrier and certainly hundreds (if not thousands) male sprinters that have ran faster than 10.49. 10.49 would probably not even qualify you for any of the championships.

      The same pattern is repeated in most physical sports. The high jump world record for instance is 2.09 meters for women and 2.45 for men, with a huge list of men that have jumped higher than 2.09.

      For long jump, the longest ever woman still haven't beaten the male world record set in 1901, while the men have jumped more than 1 meter longer.

      The fact is that among athletes, if you put the top top women in the world into the male junior championships, they still wouldn't have much luck (Flo Jo would have lost every single junior athletics world cup race since the start in 1986, and the lowest winner in junior high jumps was 2.21 in 1998).

      This means that a merger of women and men's sports would basically obliterate top female athletics (and frankly most other sports). The female category exists so that we have top class sports featuring women at all.

    20. Re:Make them write some code by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that is a man man not woman

    21. Re:Make them write some code by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know, the whole racism thing never really entered into my sphere, much, as it's not something I've had to deal with often. But all this crap about "dominance in wealth" is -extremely- insulting. I'm attending college right now on student loans, I'm thousands of dollars in debt, and I work full time to make ends meet. I've received not one thin red cent from anyone since I turned 16. And yet, according to you, the only reason I'm getting through school is from my "dominance in wealth" caused by my group's "very long history of economic and physical oppression." Man, dominance in wealth sure does taste a lot like ramen and night shift. You're making an insulting, demeaning, and generalizing statement about a race of people. Do you know what that is? It's -racist-.

    22. Re:Make them write some code by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

      http://www.marathonguide.com/history/records/alltimelist.cfm?Gen=F&Sort=Time

      http://berlin.iaaf.org/results/racedate=08-22-2009/sex=M/discCode=MAR/combCode=hash/roundCode=f/results.html#detM_MAR_hash_f

      Check the 50 first on each case.

      Check the cut off time.

      Women sports were created initially by misogynistic men that thought women could not run more than 400 metres (really, it was that bad).

      --
      IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    23. Re:Make them write some code by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, if humans evolved in water, we'd look more like seals, and certainly wouldn't be human. Take any sport and turn it into selective pressure for humans and humans appearance would change drastically. So what?? Why can't a butch woman compete in sports where butchness is an advantage? No doubt it's been a disadvantage in other parts of her life. Maybe she's even a lesbian because her butchness isn't a handicap in lesbian circles. People have to make the best of what the have and they shouldn't be penalized for it. Why shouldn't she have an advantage? We seem to have no problem with jockey's who might be smaller than average for men competing competitively. Why not a butch woman with an extra Y chromasome doing something that her extra testosterone gives her an advantage for. And when she's won a few gold medals, she can work as a guard at Superjail.

    24. Re:Make them write some code by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      Um, well the fact that they now get to play at all?

    25. Re:Make them write some code by joggle · · Score: 1

      Sure, in running it would probably be pretty dumb to have the women compete directly against the men.

      But in other sports I'm not so sure, like baseball, golf and billiards. For baseball, here's an example of what a girl can do: http://www.todaysbigthing.com/2008/06/24

    26. Re:Make them write some code by flaming+error · · Score: 1

      > all the male athletes that are faster and you exclude from your league to give it a reason to exist.

      I agree. There really is no cause for having women's leagues in athletics. For decades, male athletes have sincerely reached out to women, futilely attempting to get women to join them. Women have obstinately refused to participate with the men, snubbing invitations from the NFL, NBA, MLB, and the NHL.

      Instead these fascist women have gone and created their own exclusive leagues, for the express purpose of justifying their own exclusive leagues.

      I for one think women should soften their stance, and consider participating with these male athletes that have been sidelined as first class citizens for so long.

    27. Re:Make them write some code by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's always going to be quibbling about rules. Even if you a have a male+female+whatever else is in between league, eventually the question will arise: is this unusually good competitor with strange genetic traits really a human? I mean, you wouldn't make the competition open to all animals, right?

    28. Re:Make them write some code by innerweb · · Score: 1

      Your sarcasm is correct. The flip side of what I am saying is that women/girls should compete directly in men/boys leagues. No exceptions. If there is a league, be it soccer, football, baseball, swimming, gymnastics, whatever, both male and female participants get equal footing.

      I coach soccer and the girls that are serious play at the same level as the boys that are serious. There is no need for male and female teams.

      InnerWeb

      --
      Freud might say that Intelligent Design is religion's ID.
    29. Re:Make them write some code by GauteL · · Score: 1

      But all this crap about "dominance in wealth" is -extremely- insulting. I'm attending college right now on student loans, I'm thousands of dollars in debt, and I work full time to make ends meet.

      It really isn't my fault if you are so insecure in your own worth that you can't admit that some of your progress in life comes down to pure luck or the work of others.

      You may not have received a cent from anyone since you turned 16, but what about before? Were you left to fend for yourself or raise your own brothers and sisters? Did you go to absolutely shit down town public city schools? Did you have parents who could hardly read themselves and who simply had no idea how to raise children? If not, consider yourself bloody, bloody lucky.

      If you base your entire sense of self worth on the notion that you have worked for everything in your life, then please be my guest. But that does not make it any more true. Nobody has ever made it completely on their own, and the ones that come close are few and far between.

      I was raised by a very capable but certainly not wealthy single mother with little income, I went to a reasonable school in a socialised education system.

      Of course I've had to fund my own education through loans and work, but do you see me whining about it? No, I consider myself very lucky to have had a solid upbringing that put me into an excellent position for making my own way in life. Not everyone in this world has had it as easy as I have had it. We all have different starting points.

  2. Easy by Wamoc · · Score: 3, Funny

    To test if someone is female or not, just ask them to go out with a geek. If she says yes, then she can't be a female.

    1. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      just ask her to show you her pussy. god damn, how hard is this really?

    2. Re:Easy by Joe+Jay+Bee · · Score: 2, Funny

      It's quite easy, actually - I'd imagine it's the slapping and the police involvement afterwards that's the hard part.

    3. Re:Easy by Ethanol-fueled · · Score: 0

      Here's the pussy in question. Now you tell me with a straight face what you think of that!

    4. Re:Easy by Bertie · · Score: 1

      I can't say such a direct approach has ever worked out favourably for me. Well, not without the assistance of the demon drink, anyway.

    5. Re:Easy by mewrei · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Seriously though, we live post-Genome Project, is it REALLY that difficult to just sequence her DNA to see if there exist two X Chromosomes without a freaking political scandal?

    6. Re:Easy by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 1

      Apparently, they have, and they're not satisfied with the results.

      God damn, how hard is it to RTFS, really?

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    7. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      Oh, that's right. I forgot there's only two options and no possibility of deviation from those options AT ALL.

      Fucking moron.

    8. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

      In the event that there is a deviation you take it on a case basis, its better than arguing that she has as many manly features as your mother.

    9. Re:Easy by gnupun · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      So athletes have to hand over their DNA to participate in a race? No way. Enough big brother garbage; govt is not god and citizens must have rights to some privacy, including protecting their DNA. Only criminals should be subject to such intrusion.

    10. Re:Easy by Minozake · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Even criminals have rights.

      If one wants to compete, they have to take a test. If they don't consent, they don't compete. This is not a violation of rights because there is no necessity or right to compete.

      --
      http://sourcemage.org/ - Have fun :)
    11. Re:Easy by mewrei · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And as much as I hate defending government, a DNA sequence is probably a heck of a lot less invasive and humiliating than what she's probably going through right now.

    12. Re:Easy by fitash · · Score: 0

      Just give her a car and just 4 meters of parking space.....

    13. Re:Easy by derGoldstein · · Score: 0

      To test if someone is female or not, just ask them to go out with a geek. If she says yes, then she can't be a female.

      I think that you should place that within a list of questions:
      - Did you see and like The Notebook?
      - Do you watch and enjoy Grey's Anatomy?
      - Did you manage to survive all the way through the Twilight movie?
      - Do you play WoW?


      A positive answer to any of these means female. No exceptions.

      --
      Entomologically speaking, the spider is not a bug, it's a feature.
    14. Re:Easy by Patch86 · · Score: 5, Interesting

      According to the venerable BBC report on the subject, it isn't as simple as all that. While the vast majority of us possess chromosomes in the traditional formations XX and XY, there exist some 25 OTHER possible arrangements, which, taking into account a variety of other factors, can lead to an even larger possible selection of physical effects and outcomes.

      The vast majority of us aren't in rigorous physical competition, and so might never know if we are one of these "intersex" conditions. If she of TFA does, how do you interpret the results?

    15. Re:Easy by gnupun · · Score: 1

      If one wants to compete, they have to take a test. If they don't consent, they don't compete.

      Then create a test that can output only male/female. No other genetic information about the athlete's DNA should be saved into a computer.

    16. Re:Easy by ZeRu · · Score: 0

      I wouldn't date her, and I'm a slashdot user. I think that speaks enough.

      --
      If you post as an AC, don't expect me to spend a mod point on you.
    17. Re:Easy by jeff4747 · · Score: 4, Informative

      It's not so simple.

      It's possible to be born with both an X and Y chromosome, but have all the physical traits of a female. There's a few ways a Y can be "defective".

      It wouldn't be fair to force such people to compete with the men, because they've got the body mass/strength/endurance/etc of typical XX humans despite having a Y.

      As in most things in life, the edge cases make it really hard to come up with a simple rule that's fair to everyone involved.

    18. Re:Easy by jerralb · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Athletes, the Track & Field ones, are already required to piss in a cup for drug testing. The results of which will eventually be published for a positive test. DNA testing is just an extrapolation of an existing process. From the IAAF's perspective participants have no right to hide their sexual identity. Don't like the rules? go form your own organization. Vince McMahon will tell you that's a dumb idea (re: XFL with no drug tests). You want to talk about privacy invasion, try looking at the list of drugs which aren't allowed in an athlete's system and see how many you may have in your medicine cabinet. The majority of cough medicines are verboten. The right question isn't so much about privacy as much as it is how a governing organization should go about sanctioning a fair competition.

    19. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First of all, this isn't the government smart guy. Second of all, considering that it is the government is who decides who is a criminal it seems silly to say that "Only criminals should be subject to such intrusion."

    20. Re:Easy by andymadigan · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Who said it's the government? It amazes me how many "libertarians" equate business with government.

      --
      The right to protest the State is more sacred than the State.
    21. Re:Easy by fatalwall · · Score: 1

      how is this government?

    22. Re:Easy by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1

      Now that's harsh.

      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    23. Re:Easy by fatalwall · · Score: 2, Insightful

      well you could just get rid of the men woman divisions and do it by physical aspects such as strengt

      its the only real way to be fair about the process and not risk issues with genetic testing and all.

    24. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      just ask her to show you her pussy. god damn, how hard is this really?

      If somebody just showed you their pussy, I don't want to know how hard it is.

    25. Re:Easy by stoolpigeon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That wont work because it would completely eliminate women from being competitive in a wide range of sports.

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
    26. Re:Easy by mewrei · · Score: 1

      Well we could always go with the classical definition of female within most mammals (yes I know exceptions exist) in ability to bear young. She may be a sterile subject or she might be a hostile subject for such, but does she have the remote capability of doing so =naturally=

    27. Re:Easy by Rei · · Score: 5, Informative

      Indeed. In fact, for example, XY women with CAIS (Complete Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome) are not only phenotpically female, but tend to be *weaker* and *less* masculinized than normal XX women.

      It's not the X chromosome or Y chromsome that's the key. There's this whole cascade of reactions that lead to prenatal masculinization/feminization. This is started off by the complex SRY (Sex Region Y), which is normally found on the Y chromosome. But it can be defective. Or it can migrate to the X chromosome. And even if it's perfectly normal, what about each subsequent step in the cascade? For example, AIS women produce androgens, but their body just ignores them.

      And then there's some of the really weird cases, like 5 alpha reductace deficiency syndrome. It's also called "guevedoche" in the parts of the Dominican Republic where it's unusually common. Guevedoche means "balls at twelve", and yes, it's like it sounds. A child is born, sometimes phenotypically intersexed, but sometimes seemingly a perfectly normal female. But when "she" hits puberty, "she" grows body hair, testes descend, the clitoris develops into a micropenis, and on and on. They usually develop a male gender identity, and in some cases, they can even father children.

      Gender is not as simple as we'd like to pretend. Did you know that your average man can lactate? I'm dead serious. Men have undeveloped breasts, including undeveloped mammary glands. Take estrogen for a year or two (to trigger breast development), then take a large dose of domperidone for two weeks. Domperidone inhibits dopamine levels (outside the brain; it doesn't cross the brain-blood barrier, so it doesn't lower brain dopamine). Dopamine inhibits prolactin production, so dropping its levels stimulates the production of prolactin, which stimulates the production of breast milk.

      We're all made of the same body parts, just with different degrees of development and activation of them.

      --
      Don't disrespect the denim sheep.
    28. Re:Easy by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh, that's right. I forgot there's only two options and no possibility of deviation from those options AT ALL.

      Fucking moron.

      Since in the vast majority of cases, it really is one of those two options - it seems like the logical first step, given that invasive testing is apparently already the norm for track and field anymore. If Caster's test shows XX or XY, either way the case is closed. Arguing that a remote possibility of a different genetic state exists means you can't first test for the heavily dominant typical state is, quite frankly, silly. That's like arguing that a doctor shouldn't do an influenza test on a patient with flu-like symptoms because there's a remote possibility it's Brucellosis.

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    29. Re:Easy by Thinboy00 · · Score: 4, Informative

      What they need is not called a DNA sequence, it's a karyotype. In other words, they look at her chromosomes, without looking at the actual sequence of base-pairs. That's better than a DNA sequence b/c you're only looking at what her chromosomes are, not what her actual genes are--and it's a hell of a lot more private than asking her to show people her genitals.

      --
      $ make available
    30. Re:Easy by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's becoming increasingly hard for me to tell the difference.

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
    31. Re:Easy by Hojima · · Score: 4, Insightful

      One of the most surefire way is to see if her gametes can play their respective roll. If they can manage to form a viable embryo from her egg, case closed. If not, some more testing would be needed. Also, a genetic advantage is the reason most athletes get the gold. If she has a rare/new trait, what are you going to do when a larger percentage of the population has it in the future? It's just as discriminatory to ban them now as it would be later. Especially if it's a naturally acquired trait.

    32. Re:Easy by gnupun · · Score: 1

      If stored on a computer, that DNA will be accessible to both business and government, at a certain level they are one and the same. First they test the athletes. A few years pass, then they start testing all citizens and nobody will question them, because everyone is so used to it. We don't want to create a new frickin' law, invading everyone's privacy, just because one woman looks like a man.

    33. Re:Easy by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 1

      My kingdom for modpoints - that was clearly composed and informative. Well done.

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
      altslashdot.org: The future of slashdot.
    34. Re:Easy by ToreTS · · Score: 5, Informative

      Actually, I imagine they would be doing a PCR assay looking for the SRY gene on the Y chromosome, which is what gets things going in the male direction during foetal development. This would have a greater chance of detecting any abnormalities since in some rare cases, the SRY gene can end up on the X chromosome, giving an XX male. This would not be detected by a karyotype, but would show up on a PCR assay. Also, PCR is heavily automatised and probably easier to do than a karyotype, which involves a lot of human work. There are also other conditions that could cause something to go wrong, such as being a XY male with some defect in testosterone synthesis/sensitivity. Anyways, if she has the SRY gene, then that is a pretty strong indicator that her genes intended for her to be a man, but that something happened during foetal development to make things go another way.

    35. Re:Easy by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 1

      You're forgetting that cash/fame has a moderating strong effect. Remember, Gates has been a businessman for far longer than he was ever a pimply-faced geek.

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
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    36. Re:Easy by Entropius · · Score: 1

      You don't have to look at the DNA. You just have to look at the chromosomes -- you can tell the difference between X and Y with a much more crude test than is required to actually read off the genes.

    37. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Easiest method: Females' pointer finger is longer than the ring, on males it's longer ring than pointer... test it out at home.

    38. Re:Easy by Odinlake · · Score: 1

      To test if someone is not female, just ask them to go out with a geek. If she says yes, then she can't be a female.

      fixed that.

    39. Re:Easy by swillden · · Score: 1

      Guevedoche means "balls at twelve"

      Are you sure that's not "Huevedoce"? I'm not very familiar with the Dominicano dialect of Spanish, but "Guevedoche" seems like a very unusual variant.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    40. Re:Easy by crmarvin42 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Anything that makes her develop into a woman is the result of the SRY gene being silenced.

      In this case Phenotype is more important than genotype. It'd be like a professional body building association requiring all body builders be tested for genes that result in superior muscling, which are very rare. Something like the Double Muscling genes. Ultimatly the Constitution lied and we are all not "Created Equal". Some of us a genetic predispositions to excel in various endeavors. She shouldn't be punished. If she has female phenotype, then she is a female. Regardelss of whether or not the SRY gene is present anywhere, it's not being expressed.

      --
      Bureaucracy expands to meet the needs of the expanding bureaucracy.-Oscar Wilde
    41. Re:Easy by Tomfrh · · Score: 1

      Speaking of cars, ask her what is the most important thing when buying a new car - its color, or how cute it is.

      Either answer passes the test.

    42. Re:Easy by Rei · · Score: 2, Informative

      It's short for "huevos a los doce".

      --
      Don't disrespect the denim sheep.
    43. Re:Easy by SkyDude · · Score: 1

      Here's the pussy in question. Now you tell me with a straight face what you think of that!

      I think anyone going near that needs a rope, flashlight and a buddy to keep from getting lost in the thickets!

      --
      == First cross river, then insult alligator.
    44. Re:Easy by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      It's becoming increasingly hard for me to tell the difference.

      Go ahead and ask.

      "Are you a business or a government?'

      Both will self-identify. Assume anyone who doesn't is a crook.

    45. Re:Easy by brizzadizza · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Kudos to you on your excellent post. Its refreshing to see you didn't get defensive at the "Fucking Moron" thing. That said, I believe, although this may be an unwarranted assumption on my part, the GP meant to suggest that even though a person could be chromosomally male or female they could in fact be gendered in other ways. And this is before considering things like Turner Syndrome or other sex chromosome related syndromes. We would most likely all agree that a developmentally standard individual should be sexed according to their external genitalia, but what of androgen insensitive males who were raised as females (a practice that used to be common) or women with Turner Mosaicism wherein many of her cells would exhibit XO and others would exhibit XX. Aneuploidy is a heady subject with some interesting implications for our understanding of sex and gender. Course, I could be way wrong about the intention of the GP, he seems kind of like a dick.

    46. Re:Easy by Trahloc · · Score: 1

      Weight classes? Works in boxing and a /. article a few weeks/months ago they were talking about how they may have to start doing the same for swimming... if its true in one sport it may be true in another. Skill matters but when you get to the elite level they are all of fairly equal skill so its less of an issue ... blinking at the wrong time could be the entire difference between gold and going home with nothing.

      --
      The Goal: A long simple life filled with many complex toys.
    47. Re:Easy by Onymous+Coward · · Score: 4, Funny

      No, we must stop the mutants.

      Test for presence of the X-gene and detain them if they test positive.

      At least disqualify them from athletic competition for starters.

    48. Re:Easy by Phoghat · · Score: 1

      2 *2 =25 for larger values of 2

      --
      Think of how stupid the average person is, and realize half of them are stupider than that.
    49. Re:Easy by andymadigan · · Score: 1

      This isn't creating a law. If you want to work in certain professions you have to jump through hoops. Sports is one of the big ones these days, with the increasing steroid/drug use. If you want to be a doctor, you have to be certified. I don't see the government certifying people to vote.

      There's a difference between business and government, you freely associate with a business, you don't freely associate with a government. You have rights when it comes to the government. Most of those rights don't exist when dealing with a business. I'm not saying business is good and government is bad.

      In this case, someone is participating in a sport that is designated for women only. Modern science has found that there can be something between male and female. It seems possible this person is somewhere in between, and thus may not be eligible to participate in women's sports. This person has the option to leave the sport and choose another profession, or be scrutinized. The business involved needs to ensure that qualifications of those participating for the sake of its fans.

      By the way, the fact that it's stored in a computer doesn't mean the government can see it. Plenty of tests are on a computer at one point or another, and many medical practices take steps to ensure private test results can never be traced back to the patient. HIV tests are a good example of this, though as a matter of public health those are reported to the government in some jurisdictions.

      --
      The right to protest the State is more sacred than the State.
    50. Re:Easy by baboo_jackal · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Divisions in sport are totally arbitrary and the point of them is to match individuals or teams of nearly equal ability so that the outcomes of their contests are maximally uncertain and therefore, entertaining for both the observers and the participants. Nobody wants to watch a game where they already know who will win. Likewise, the athletes don't want to compete in a contest they're sure to lose.

      Even if this "female" turns out to be an actual chick, it doesn't matter. If she's "too good" for her arbitrary division (which in this case happens to be by gender), then she will be excluded from it.

    51. Re:Easy by uberjack · · Score: 1

      Hail, hail Robonia, a land I didn't make up

    52. Re:Easy by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Your interpretation depends on who you are: If you're one of her competitors, then clearly all the other combinations indicate she's something other than a true 'Female'.

      If you were one of her sponsors, then she's a female, and they're just gunning for some reason to disqualify her from competing, because they can't stand the fact that she's so good, or that she was born with an advantage.

    53. Re:Easy by Kell+Bengal · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Sure, but how many actions of government (most egregiously law-making) seem to be entirely at the behest and benefit of businesses? Since when did it become "By the people, for some people"?

      --
      Scientists point out problems, engineers fix them
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    54. Re:Easy by mysidia · · Score: 1

      Apparently they did inspect at some point, but they are not convinced by that.

      Perhaps they think her organs are photoshopped?

    55. Re:Easy by mrmeval · · Score: 1

      How do you tell the difference? Who owns GM? Is there any government involvement or funding in the sport?

      --
      I'd go on a Vegan diet but the delivery time from Vega is too long. --brownkitty
    56. Re:Easy by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      Did you know that your average man can lactate? I'm dead serious.

      Given their diets and lifestyle, I suspect many Slashdotters are keenly aware of this fact.

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    57. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm a male with a longer pointer finger than ring finger, care to rethink your theory?

    58. Re:Easy by It's+Pat · · Score: 0

      Kudos, excellent comment. I suspect that only a small percentage of the population understands that important and profound point: that we are all made of the same body parts, just with different degrees of development and activation. It explains much with regards to human sexuality as well.

    59. Re:Easy by andymadigan · · Score: 1

      In both cases you still have the option not to associate with them, so they're a business, not a government. For myself, I might buy a Volt. I personally don't like it when the government funds sports (including building stadiums).

      --
      The right to protest the State is more sacred than the State.
    60. Re:Easy by ikono · · Score: 1

      Do you play WoW?

      A positive answer to any of these means female. No exceptions.

      buh?

      --
      Karma is for whores
    61. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well it can't hurt to demand hard proof. I vote for establishing MILF divisions for all Olympic sports, especially volleyball.

    62. Re:Easy by supermegadope · · Score: 0

      Oh cmon!!! Thats reealy not fair, i meaaan REEEALLY I cant unsee that. forever i will carry this in my mind

    63. Re:Easy by kimvette · · Score: 5, Informative

      What if it turns out she is in fact intersexed? Should she be banned from competing as a woman?

      Intersexed people are not so rare. XXY, XX males, and XY females do exist. True hermaphrodites are less common, but again, not as rare as you would think. In my case, I am a true hermaphrodite, have CAH and both XX and XY genes (genetic mosaicism), which leads doctors to believe I absorbed a twin in-utero. As I get older I am unfortunately becoming more androgynous.

      I had severe migraines my whole life, was ALWAYS hungry (I could eat an entire sub, a large candy bar, drink a coke, and still be hungry) - and could not gain weight no matter how much I ate. I went for all kinds of testing and one doctor mentioned my adrenals "are a little off" and when I asked what that meant he said it's not a big deal. Years later, I went through a very stressful situation and my adrenal glands finally decided to really act up. I gained 60lbs within six months and developed facial hair growth. I hated doctors by that point (being intersexed they wanted to use me as a guinea pig and get published, making names for themselves) so I didn't get checked out until a couple of years went by and things got so bad I was getting 3-4 migraines a week, went from bad-tempered to downright bitchy (read: batshit insane! ;)), and had severe heart pain. I finally got checked out by a cardiac physiologist friend (who had been telling me I have adrenal issues all along and had to get all soy out of my diet) who checked with a specialist friend of his after pulling my medical records, and confirmed the CAH suspicions. Why didn't my doctors catch that? The problem is now that my adrenals are functioning so poorly I gain weight easily.

      Within a couple of days of eliminating soy from my diet, the jaundice, migraines, fatigue, insomnia, heart palpitations (and resultant pain), and my behavioral issues disappeared completely. Now I don't get migraines unless I accidentally (or on rare occasion knowingly) ingest soy (vegetable oil, vegetable protein, vegetable shortening, etc.. all contain soy proteins). My mood changed and I no longer had a quick temper. It turns out I had a slight soy allergy and a severe intolerance. The intolerance comes from the SW/CAH.

      For my adrenal condition now doctors want to put me on corticosteroids, which will make me even more andgrogynous. I won't do that. So, what I decided to do instead was to adjust my diet to include a LOT more cholesterol, and a lot more salt (for the electrolyte imbalance). The extra cholesterol provides my adrenal glands with more cortisol precursors so that they can manufacture a little more cortisol, eliminating the need for injections.

      Taking in a lot more cholesterol eliminated the kidney pain (my adrenals were irritating my kidneys), and eliminated the constant hunger feeling. Before then, I never knew what it was like to not feel hunger pangs.

      Doctors often coerce parents to choose one sex over the other, in the name of profit. Peforming those "corrective" surgeries on infants is profitable, and they encourage parents to hide it from their children. In many cases, doctors don't even inform the parents of the causes of the intersex condition, and/or don't describe it as an intersex/hermaphroditic condition but as an "anomoly" which is intentionally vague. Unfortunately, in the case of children with CAH or PAIS, hiding those problems and not informing their children of their health condition can often lead to future health and societal problems.

      Had I known then what I knew now (I knew of the cosmetic situation when I was a child, but was never informed of the underlying causes - and neither were my parents) I'd have known to avoid soy, keep my electrolytes up, and eat extra cholesterol. On top of that, avoiding the temper issues would have allowed me to advance my career even more quickly than I did before I left the corporate life (I had a severe dislike for corporate politics because it irritated me. Now I'd welcome it and play the game, knowing

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    64. Re:Easy by InfiniteLoopCounter · · Score: 1

      That can be a misleading test. For me I find that when viewed from on top, my ring finger is clearly longer, and from the bottom, that my pointer is clearly longer. I think this is due to skin flaps where those fingers meet my index finger (and before you jump in here, my hand looks pretty average). The actual length from the end of my finger to the knuckle seems to be the same for both.

      I'd be interested in if you had any science for this test or it's just a fable, perpetuated by word of mouth.

    65. Re:Easy by Kratisto · · Score: 1

      X-gene? I think you mean the Y-chromosome.

      --
      Conscience is the inner voice which warns us that someone may be looking.
    66. Re:Easy by hardwarefreak · · Score: 3, Informative

      X-gene? I think you mean the Y-chromosome.

      Kratisto can't be a geek. "Mutant X gene", Kratisto, as in the X-Men movies. Please drop off your geek badge on the way out the door.

    67. Re:Easy by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Funny

      The first clue was when she kept leaving the toilet seat up.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    68. Re:Easy by nbauman · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Not only is the genetics of sexuality complicated, scientists haven't even identified all the genes.

      Even worse, they identified a lot of genes that turned out to wrong.

      Remember USP9Y? That's the gene that's supposed to be responsible for loss of sperm production in deletions of the AZFa region -- the balls of the AZFa region, as it were.

      The New England Journal of Medicine had a report last February of a man who had the whole USP9Y gene deleted, and still was able to produce sperm. In fact, his father had the same USP9Y deletion.

      You can divide the genes that determine human sexuality into two groups. One group determines the form that genitals take. The other group determines all the other physical and psychological aspects of sexuality. Conceptually, it's easy to see how someone could develop with female genitals and everything else male. That doesn't mean that anyone has identified it as a syndrome, much less the genes and protein-level mechanisms.

      I assume they'll give Caster Semenya a karyotyping, FISH, and test for every known gene involved with sexual development. Maybe they'll find an abnormality, and maybe they won't.

      But that won't answer the question. Is somebody female because she has female genitals, XX karyotype, some arbitrary sex-determining genes, female hormones, female body type, or female reproductive ability? Gender is a social construct, not a lab test.

      (BTW, I think the New Scientist had an article on this subject of sex tests for athletes a few years ago.)

    69. Re:Easy by mpaulsen · · Score: 1

      They are. I can tell from the prickcells.

    70. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Kudos, excellent comment. I suspect that only a small percentage of the population understands that important and profound point: that your average Slashdot user is a worthless fatbody.

    71. Re:Easy by mog007 · · Score: 1

      and it's a hell of a lot more private than asking her to show people her genitals.

      But it's not NEARLY as sexy.

    72. Re:Easy by Khyber · · Score: 1

      "Easiest method: Females' pointer finger is longer than the ring, on males it's longer ring than pointer... test it out at home."

      Funnily enough the test to see if a man is gay is the exact same thing - a gay man's pointer finger is longer than the ring.

      It's true for me. 100% gay male here.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    73. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't need to sequence anything, just do a karyotype analysis -- chromosome spread and count the chromosomes. Look for a Y chromosome.
      Easy
         

    74. Re:Easy by dougisfunny · · Score: 1

      Which is both usually isn't it?

      --
      This is not the funny you're looking for.
    75. Re:Easy by CronoCloud · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Even more important: unlike trannies (no offense intended to any TG folk reading this), we intersexed people do not choose to be in the situation we are in. I

      Interesting post you wrote. I'm transgendered, and I, meaning I personally, didn't choose to be trans. Trans is something I am, not that I pay attention to those HBSers who call themselves brain-intersexed that annoy you IS people so much. I didn't choose to be trans, but how I respond to trans and act upon my trans...that is the choice.

      I've been touched by IS too, and my genito-urinary system has given me trouble since I was young. Had a nice perineal urethrotomy in late spring to bypass all that. But I don't identify as IS, since, again, I know how IS folk feel about what they see as some transfolk trying to appropriate the IS identity and I had read about transgender stuff before I even knew I was IS. Doctors had never explained my problems to my parents and never ever used the word hypospadias. I was curious when my problems started getting worse a few years back and went back to the hospital and asked for my old records as a kid (when they tried to fix my recurring meatal stenosis and urethral strictures....twice)

    76. Re:Easy by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      The International Association of Athletics Federation is not a government organization (as in the government of a state), and they can require anyone to do whatever they want IF that person wants to prove their eligibility for a medal. This isn't big brother garbage...RTFA next time.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    77. Re:Easy by jim_v2000 · · Score: 1

      The point of having men's sports and women's sports is because it is fair competition. The fact of the matter is that the fastest woman will never be as fast as the fastest man...its simple biology. Male and female bodies are built differently.

      That said, it's not fair for a woman with a genetic abnormality that gives her to the build of a man and allows her to set records that are unbeatable by women without the abnormality.

      Yes, it's sad that she has the genetic issue, but life isn't rainbows and unicorns.

      --
      Don't take life so seriously. No one makes it out alive.
    78. Re:Easy by swillden · · Score: 1

      It's short for "huevos a los doce".

      That's what I figured, and contracting it to "huevodoce" or (nearly equivalently) "huevosadoce" would make sense. But it seemed odd that the 'h' turned to a 'g' (even though a 'g' at the beginning of a word in most spanish dialects tends to get voiced so lightly it's almost ignored) and that the 'c' turned to a 'ch'. Sibilants tend to fade, rather than being strengthened.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    79. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nice try, but there are already intersex people who are legally male (they were classified as male at birth based on their genitals) who actually function reproductively as women, including pregnancy.

      Personally I'd say that qualifies them as women, but law can disagree...

      On a mostly unrelated note, I find it exasperating that a woman in that situation, living as a woman, and having kids... if she was born in a state with stringent anti-transgender laws... she has to keep the "male" status and thus she can't legally marry the father of her children due to the "ZOMG GAY MARIAGE" factor.

    80. Re:Easy by mqduck · · Score: 1

      But if you do that, you simply rule out females from the competition altogether. The sex/gender division in athletic competitions is due to the inescapable, if very unfortunate, fact that men are physically superior to women in athletic ability. We (men) can't get pregnant. That's the trade-off. If you're a woman and don't plan on ever reproducing, it's kind of a raw deal, but there you go.

      --
      Property is theft.
    81. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not convicted ones, and I wouldn't call someone a criminal until he/she/it is convicted...

      know your rights..., and when you don't have them...

    82. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A case may be made that many male and female traits exist in varying degrees in all of us. We may all be able to lactate, but the primary difference starts with only one gender can lay eggs.

    83. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      is it not discriminatory to have people with disabilities compete in a totally different Olympics?

      if she's really part of a new race with special genetic traits, then she should also participate in a special championship, and since she's the only one for now, she's going to win every competition... (but she's going to do that anyway even now, if she's allowed to keep competing as "normal female"...)

    84. Re:Easy by dbIII · · Score: 2, Informative

      There are a lot of situations where the testing didn't work - including such a spectacular failure as a woman that later gave birth to children failing the test. There has also never been an imposter revealed by these tests. Here's a short article on the history of sex testing in sport:
      http://www.playthegame.org/knowledge-bank/articles/the-major-medical-blunder-of-the-twentieth-century-1090.html
      It has certainly destroyed a few careers, for instance Santhi Soundararajan.

    85. Re:Easy by cas2000 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That said, it's not fair for a woman with a genetic abnormality that gives her to the build of a man and allows her to set records that are unbeatable by women without the abnormality.

      yeah, that's unfair. almost as unfair as freaks with the genetic abnormality of being able to run fast or be good at weight-lifting or great hand-eye co-ordination winning all the damn time.

      freaks (or to use the politically-correct euphemism "winners") shouldn't be allowed to compete against normal people. it's not fair that they're good at something.

    86. Re:Easy by dbIII · · Score: 1

      No.
      In the case of Santhi Soundararajan she did have to submit to showing people her genitals and psychological tests because the genetic test doesn't really answer the question. She attempted suicide.
      The genetic test is a pointless waste of time since you can fail the test and still bear children and some men could pass the test and still father children. Google will bury you under so many articles on this at the moment that I didn't have a hope of finding anything on the woman that was stripped of her medals and later gave birth (heard it on the radio but forgot the name).

    87. Re:Easy by mysidia · · Score: 1

      The most successful athletes have "abnormal" characteristics you will not find in the general population. It's part of what gives them the ability to compete.

      The vast majority of the population will never be able to compete at the World Athletics Championship, no matter how much they train, it is in fact, a small portion of the population that are genetically fittest and able to be the best athletes.

      Clearly it is discriminatory to exclude women from competing when they have genetic advantages, but to allow men to compete when men have genetic advantages.

      Take Michael Phelps for example, and his size-14 feet, which bend 15 degrees farther than the vast majority of the population. Only a small number of individuals have this abnormality.

      Perhaps all his gold medals should be revoked, since this abnormality means he doesn't qualify as a Man?

      Take Lance Armstrong. Through (clearly) a genetic abnormality, his heart is 20% larger in size than the average athlete's, and grew even larger with training. And for some reason his body produces 30% less lactic acid than normal.

      There is no bonafide process that can distinguish some genetic advantage over this athlete from ones many other athletes will have.

      It also presents an undue burden on athletes. On Women. One can assess that many female athletes have some masculine characteristics, and one of their competitors will often notice and find it as something to complain about.

      Whereas, male athletes don't seem to get this issue -- when was the last time a male athlete had to prove they were a man, as-opposed to some sort of super-human being?

    88. Re:Easy by Alex+Belits · · Score: 3, Funny

      he seems kind of like a dick.

      I have to point out that in the context of this discussion (and by virtue of being Anonymous Coward) GP may be male or female, and independently of that be or not be a dick.

      --
      Contrary to the popular belief, there indeed is no God.
    89. Re:Easy by ericlondaits · · Score: 1

      Eggs at twelve?
      Now I now what comes after news at eleven.

      --
      As a Slashdot discussion grows longer, the probability of an analogy involving cars approaches one.
    90. Re:Easy by CorporateSuit · · Score: 1

      Santhi Soundarajan is a dangerous case to discuss. If you'll allow me to speak metaphorically: She brought a gun to a knife fight and won. No one knows if the gun was firing, but there were bullet holes everywhere. Does this mean she deserved her medal for knife fighting? Apologists SAY that it's possible her body wasn't responding to the testosterone in it, but considering she won a sporting event (silver medal, at least) where testosterone gives her an enormous edge over the competition. The outcome was tragic, but it's neccessary if they want to allow proper competition in women's sports. A woman would not be able to compete unless she was born with genetic defects, if it were otherwise. You cannot please everyone on this point.

      --
      I am the richest astronaut ever to win the superbowl.
    91. Re:Easy by ShakaUVM · · Score: 1

      Whereas, male athletes don't seem to get this issue -- when was the last time a male athlete had to prove they were a man, as-opposed to some sort of super-human being?

      Consider men being the "open" division.

      I'm sure that nobody would complain about "XX Males" or whatever other combinations exist... if she/he was competing as a man.

      The vast majority of the population will never be able to compete at the World Athletics Championship, no matter how much they train, it is in fact, a small portion of the population that are genetically fittest and able to be the best athletes.

      Speak for yourself. I have a line on joining the Thailand Olympic Curling team.

    92. Re:Easy by Zelucifer · · Score: 1

      I'd like you to hand in your geek card, real geeks read the comic books, THEN saw the movies.

      --
      The corner of a round room
    93. Re:Easy by Bill,+Shooter+of+Bul · · Score: 1

      Would creating a new group of competition for IS people be the most fair? There may be different types of IS, but at some point you can't blame genetics for not being able to compete at a high level. I can't compete at any sport, due to my extreme genetic suckiness at all sports. Small size, lack of athletic ability, ect, ect.

      --
      Well.. maybe. Or Maybe not. But Definitely not sort of.
    94. Re:Easy by Trillian_1138 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I'd like to echo CronoCloud's sentiment, as another trans /.er: Being trans isn't something anyone chooses to be.

      I totally understand and respect the more understandably medical situation that intersexed people are in and, for you, the issues that required a particular medical/biological solution. Likewise, if I'm misunderstanding what you wrote, kimvette, I apologize. All that said, I read, "It's not like we're cheating. We're dealt an unusual hand and society often punishes us for it because we do not conform to the norm." as implying A) trans people are cheating and B) trans people - and any who don't fit into nice, simple, gendered boxes - aren't also dealt an unusual hand, and punished accordingly for it by society.

      (I'm realizing as I reread your post that it's entirely possibly you mean "It's not like we're cheating" in reference to the original issue of the athlete in question. If that's the case, scratch the above paragraph.)

      I don't want to get into an Oppression Olympics, and I'm not for a second trying to deny the very real issues that all intersexed people, and you specifically, have faced. But I hope it's possible to express your experiences without feeling the need to justify them by calling into question the validity of trans experiences.

      -Trillian

    95. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Respect. Nothing more to say. Diagnosing and fixing problems is no easy work - I've done it myself.

      One question / theory though: it seems food intolerance cause extreme mood swings in some folk (like myself). Of course bipolarity is on the rise too... do you think what you experienced was similar to the symptoms of bipolar disorder?

    96. Re:Easy by Zemran · · Score: 1

      You went out with that bitch as well ? Be grateful that the slit is on the back or you would have had the meat rubbing your rear while you were at it.

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    97. Re:Easy by hardwarefreak · · Score: 1

      I'd like you to hand in your geek card, real geeks read the comic books, THEN saw the movies.

      I was aiming for the low hanging fruit Zelucifer. If s/he hasn't seen the movies, s/he def hasn't heard of (or read) the comics. However, given pop culture media and advertising being _everywhere_, s/he must have at least heard of the movies.

      You've made an incorrect assumption about me because you didn't comprehend my initial post.

    98. Re:Easy by MaskedSlacker · · Score: 1

      This has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING TO DO WITH GOVERNMENT. These sporting organizations are not the fucking fuzz. GGP was a one note troll.

    99. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In most spanish dialects a 'g' in the beggining of a word isn't really pronounced like a hard 'g'. Google for 'guëvos', there's ample reference to that intentional misspell of 'huevos'.

    100. Re:Easy by kimvette · · Score: 1

      A league for intersex folk? It'd be awfully boring. How many hermaphrodites attended your high school? _maybe_ one or two over a four-year spread if you attended a large school.

      What would the intersex olympics consist of: 10 athletes in total? *LOL*

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    101. Re:Easy by MadUndergrad · · Score: 1

      There's an easy way to solve this. Just have sports that men can compete in, like every sport they currently have in the olympics, and sports that only women can compete in, like making me a damn sandwich. Just choose one or the other - there's no fish/pond/fairness question to ponder.

    102. Re:Easy by Zemran · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Although I generally accept your points I do feel that without other categories she can only be male or female. Unless another category is introduced she must be one of those. I can accept the rare examples that make selection difficult but really it seems that she is just a really ugly girl and is being treated unfairly. If it turns out that she has cheated, i.e. born a boy and had an operation then the fuss is justified but otherwise it is just extremely insensitive.

      Sport is the domain of genetically abnormal people. A good runner is likely to have longer legs than normal etc.. I do not bitch about being unfairly treated because my short fat fingers make me a crap pianist and try and say that the average good pianist with long thin finger is a cheat. O.K., so this girl might be a bit more different but unless it is her fault then I do not see the arguement.

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    103. Re:Easy by jabuzz · · Score: 1

      Except there exist Y chromosome defects that result in an entirely female physiology. That is the problem it is not that simple.

    104. Re:Easy by kimvette · · Score: 1

      Not at all. I was consistently short-tempered and became more so over time. Removing soy from my diet caused an abrupt correction in my major personality flaws within two days. The personality change was a noticeable improvement by everyone around me. I've intentionally re-introduced soy back into my diet several times, and those same traits came back, along with the physical discomfort. The problem is, now that I've completely eliminated it from my diet, if I do eat it, the allergic reaction (hives) is more acute each time (I have scars on one wrist and on my ankles from scratching the hives in my sleep).

      Many would claim that vegetable oil is safe for people with soy intolerance or allergies - the truth is that _some_ vegetable oil is safe, and some is not. I can get away with eating some brands, and other brands put me in bed for two days, with severe migraines and abdominal pain. So, at restaurants I have NO way of knowing what brands of vegetable oil they used, or even if a brand is consistent from lot# to lot# in terms of how they process it, so I do my best to avoid it.

      Also, I can tolerate some soy lecithin (for example, I can eat six oreos without any kind of reaction) but even lecithin isn't so refined that I can eat as much as I want; if I eat too much I experience the same symptoms. The allergic reaction I can deal with: a little benedryl and I'm okay. The intolerance is something I can't do anything about except suffer through it.

      But no, there weren't mood swings. It wasn't like I'd ever experience manic episodes - it was a consistent downward spiral until it became life-threatening and the cause was finally identified.

      Now that I am very aware of the physiology and the implications of my physical issues, not just the cosmetic aspects, I often wonder when I encounter someone who is crabby or is constantly experiencing migraines: is it a food intolerance? Is it hormonal? Is it an undiagnosed case of PAIS? So, I try to cut people some slack when they're having bad days, because having been there/done that myself, I am extremely grateful I am more aware of my situation, and when I AM having a bad day, knowing that my anger is biological helps me to not act on that anger and take it out on others. I just take note and increase my cholesterol intake and am more careful to not trust "natural flavoring" ingredients when I am on the go.

      When I stick to the proper diet and am careful about checking ingredients on what I eat (I eat very little processed food, and I buy all my food fresh every 1-2 days) I never experience the quick temper or migraines I used to deal with on a constant basis.

      (that is the usual gotcha: all too often the "natural flavorings" catchall is soy-derived MSG, or some other form of soy, like annatto dye using soy oil as the carrier, and not other spices)

      To tell you the truth I wish it were BPD: that is easily controlled through lithium, and I'd be able to eat whatever the heck I want. Also the manic aspect of BPD sounds like it would be a blessing: I would love to be able to go days without sleep. As it is I am doing housework tonight (packing to move this week), and I am exhausted and want to be in bed. If I were manic I'd be able to go without sleep for a couple of days and be all done!

      On the food intolerance issue: I've read that as many as 40% of the population is slightly soy-intolerant, with the symnptoms exhibited being increased appetite (from suppressed electrolyte absorbtion) and migraines. I know quite a few people who say MSG gives them migraines so I tell them about elimination diets and how to go about it, and what various monikers major allergens (soy, wheat, milk, etc.) are listed. for example, I need to avoid "mono and diglycerides" and I REALLY need to avoid margarine. Margarine causes a very quick, acute reaction for me.

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    105. Re:Easy by iamacat · · Score: 1

      Name me any other job where it's legal to hire only man, or only women or only whites? We now require employees to evaluate candidates based on their actual abilities rather than prejudices about the group that the person belongs to. I don't see why sports should get a pass where firefighters or nurses don't.

      Simply let her and or any other female athlete compete in man's events if they qualify, without requiring any genetic testing. Athletes are ambitious and always go for the toughest competition that they have even a remote chance of winning. While blacks may be statistically better than whites in basketball or 100M run, we manage just fine without banning Usain Bolt from "white-only races".

      Would you rather ban someone who happened to be good athletically from any races, male or female? Doesn't sound like good sportsmanship to me.

    106. Re:Easy by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      Next up: those with a family advantage cannot compete. If you had a loving, supporting family growing up, you can't compete! Because its unfair to those whose fathers beat them up every day or those who had to whore themselves out to pay for their parents drug habits.

      Hooray for mediocrity!

    107. Re:Easy by aussie_a · · Score: 1

      Clearly you're female.

    108. Re:Easy by james_gnz · · Score: 1

      It's possible to be born with both an X and Y chromosome, but have all the physical traits of a female. There's a few ways a Y can be "defective".

      It wouldn't be fair to force such people to compete with the men, because they've got the body mass/strength/endurance/etc of typical XX humans despite having a Y.

      I'm not questioning the biology here, and this is kind of going on a bit of a tangent, but really whether or not it's fair kind of depends on what you mean by 'fair'. If we consider equal opportunity fair, then it is fair to have men and women compete together. And if we consider equal outcomes fair (which is kind of where gender separation is going, IMHO), then everyone should come equal, including me (who is not blessed with an Olympic physique). In the equal outcomes sense, it wouldn't be fair for me to compete with those Olympic females, since they're an awful lot better than I am. But, then, that's the point of competition, really, isn't it...

    109. Re:Easy by dbIII · · Score: 1

      The results of the tests were not made public so you are speculating about the testosterone. There are others that speculate she had a condition that actually inhibits the action of testosterone to less than that of anyone without it so there would be a slight disadvantage. I do not know (and neither do you) but wikipedia and google will help.
      The article I linked to outlines why the author thinks it is a demeaning waste of time - especially since a male can legally compete as a female after surgery and a couple of years of hormone treatment.

    110. Re:Easy by WinstonWolfIT · · Score: 0

      So yes a woman can actually "grow a pair". Cool.

    111. Re:Easy by roguetrick · · Score: 1

      Completely true, but due to the genetic differences between men and women, men will excel. Its a sticky subject, trying to develop true competition. You want to be fair but you also want the best to win. Wish I knew more about it though. For those interested, I seem to have found a very interesting section in google books: http://books.google.com/books?id=bn7TdYH9yUoC&pg=PA101&lpg=PA101&dq=mixed+sex+boxing&source=bl&ots=1Tl2CZAI5w&sig=ntRfKSJMy74fQtMdkIR9oWsKmgU&hl=en&ei=fQORSrCjL4eulAepstClDA&sa=X&oi=book_result&ct=result&resnum=10#v=onepage&q=mixed%20sex%20boxing&f=false

      --
      -The world would be a better place if everyone had a hoverboard
    112. Re:Easy by NoOneInParticular · · Score: 1

      You've made an incorrect assumption about me because you didn't comprehend my initial post.

      Does this mean that Zelucifer now gets an upgrade on his geek card?

    113. Re:Easy by ZeRu · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Dude, I was trying to be funny...apparently I didn't worked.

      --
      If you post as an AC, don't expect me to spend a mod point on you.
    114. Re:Easy by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      The first clue was when she kept leaving the toilet seat up.

      You must be one of those kids inexperienced about facts of life.

    115. Re:Easy by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      Seriously though, we live post-Genome Project, is it REALLY that difficult to just sequence her DNA to see if there exist two X Chromosomes without a freaking political scandal?

      If that would not be a political scandal, I don't know what would. Now imagine that your test shows that she indeed has two X chromosomes. What then?

    116. Re:Easy by Z00L00K · · Score: 1

      There are several variations on how the gender is developed, and some who have normal gender genes can still end up in a state of being inconclusive when it comes to the genitalia. That may be caused by an oversensitivity for testosterone.

      So besides the XXY XYY SingleX and YY you also have to count in testosterone sensitivity and a whole bunch of other genetic features and impact from the environment causing defects during the development, like those caused by Talidomid. It's fully possible that there are other medications that has other still undetected effects too, and who knows if using a certain medication at a certain point during pregnancy has a positive effect on the fetus?

      Maybe it's time to add a special Freaks class for athletes where people that are on the line between the genders can compete.

      Or do it the simple way - you have to give birth to a naturally conceived child to compete in the women's class.

      --
      If builders built buildings the way programmers wrote programs, then the first woodpecker would destroy civilization.
    117. Re:Easy by KDR_11k · · Score: 2, Informative

      Chromosomes aren't bits. You can theoretically have any number of chromosomes in your cells, most combinations just aren't viable and lead to a miscarriage or severe defects.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    118. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HAHAHA you are so damn right!!!

    119. Re:Easy by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      Lots of people are infertile for various reasons. That doesn't mean they belong to the opposite sex.

    120. Re:Easy by leenoble_uk · · Score: 1

      Probably redundant but it's clear that Usain Bolt is also a genetic 'freak'. No amount of training or branded shoes are going to bring any current 100 or 200m runner up to his level, well have to wait for another freak to come along to ever see such times again.

      Unless...we have camps where people are selectively bred for different skills: speed; strength; stamina; intelligence... but wasn't that type of activity universally banned?

    121. Re:Easy by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      I have to point out that in the context of this discussion (and by virtue of being Anonymous Coward) GP may be male or female, and independently of that be or not be a dick.

      As opposed of being a pussy?

    122. Re:Easy by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      That's better than a DNA sequence b/c you're only looking at what her chromosomes are, not what her actual genes are--and it's a hell of a lot more private than asking her to show people her genitals.

      So you're saying that showing her chromosomes is less private than showing her genitals. How is that possible?
      Anyhow, let me remind you at the words of her coach:

      We understand that people will ask questions because she looks like a man. It's a natural reaction and it's only human to be curious. People probably have the right to ask such questions if they are in doubt. But I can give you the telephone numbers of her roommates in Berlin. They have already seen her naked in the showers and she has nothing to hide.

      As humiliating as it can be, would this satisfy as least you?

    123. Re:Easy by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      I think you'd have to talk about the "advantages" of BPD with someone who suffers from it, they don't seem very happy about it and "easily controlled" is relative, they still need psychiatric care.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    124. Re:Easy by KDR_11k · · Score: 1

      Then you try more and more tests until you get a positive. I propose checking if she floats.

      --
      Justice is the sheep getting arrested while an impartial judge declares the vote void.
    125. Re:Easy by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      If one wants to compete, they have to take a test. If they don't consent, they don't compete. This is not a violation of rights because there is no necessity or right to compete.

      The question here is: what test?

    126. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gender is a social construct, not a lab test.

      So you're suggesting that the only difference between men and women is a socially constructed difference, and therefore scientifically men and women should play sports in the same league.

    127. Re:Easy by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      DNA testing is just an extrapolation of an existing process.

      This innocuous "just" you're trying to slip us carries a lot of weight: imagine an engineer or scientist or politician saying: these results/legislation we give is just an extrapolation of existing results/legislation.

    128. Re:Easy by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      Who said it's the government? It amazes me how many "libertarians" equate business with government.

      Who said it's business?

    129. Re:Easy by zoeblade · · Score: 1

      "Unlike trannies (no offense intended to any TG folk reading this), we intersexed people do not choose to be in the situation we are in."

      I'm not sure if you're using those phrases to refer to just cross dressers or to transsexuals as well... but I can tell you for a fact that transsexuals don't choose to be in the situation they're in. (I gather cross dressers don't either, but the main difference here is that with transsexuals, your brian and body actually don't match, so it's to do with your gender and your physical sex, not at all about your sexuality. A better analogy might actually be comparing transsexuals to people who feel they should be amputees. It's all about the brain's genuine self-image.)

      I'm probably not that articulate about this right now, but I've written a personal piece about this, Transitioning, and a story about it, Identity.

    130. Re:Easy by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      well you could just get rid of the men woman divisions and do it by physical aspects such as strengt

      Great idea. Why not then just give them medals based on your measurements of their strength?

    131. Re:Easy by X10 · · Score: 0

      yes, anyone having an X chromosome should not be allowed to participate in games.

      --
      no, I don't have a sig
    132. Re:Easy by attie · · Score: 1

      If it turns out that she has cheated, i.e. born a boy and had an operation then the fuss is justified

      Actually, that's not cheating. If you've had an MTF operation and have been on hormones for > 2 years, you're allowed to compete in the women's section. The rules say so, for the very good reason that the hormones make your muscles go away. http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2009/aug/21/semenya-gender-discrimination

    133. Re:Easy by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      [...]your average Slashdot user is a worthless fatbody.

      "[...]your average Slashdot user is a worthless fatboy."

      Here, fixed that for you.

    134. Re:Easy by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Nice try, but there are already intersex people who are legally male (they were classified as male at birth based on their genitals) who actually function reproductively as women, including pregnancy.

      Never heard of that. But there was a girl I was at school with who was discovered (when she was 30 and suffering from infertility) to be the opposite case.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    135. Re:Easy by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      I heard she can open jars.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    136. Re:Easy by Plunky · · Score: 1

      Take Michael Phelps for example, and his size-14 feet, which bend 15 degrees farther than the vast majority of the population. Only a small number of individuals have this abnormality.

      I would be interested to see a study done of a Michael Phelps when he didn't have any training, to see if the bend is any more or less than another person. Oh but we can't because there is only one

      Take Lance Armstrong. Through (clearly) a genetic abnormality, his heart is 20% larger in size than the average athlete's, and grew even larger with training. And for some reason his body produces 30% less lactic acid than normal.

      Both these are interesting "facts" too (no citation but I'm not disbelieving you). I have read that a lot of cycling will cause the heart (a muscle) to get larger anyway. Did anybody measure his heart during a life with no training? If not, how can they say it is 20% larger? I'm not sure about the lactic acid thing, but who is to say what a lot of intensive training will achieve? I don't believe that human body is fixed in its capabilites and clearly it is possible to adapt to physical stress

    137. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      working natural genitals should be the defining factor for sport - different genetics is what makes them athletes - it is too difficult to draw the line anywhere else.

    138. Re:Easy by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Name me any other job where it's legal to hire only man

      Pope. But since athletes aren't hired by the sport's governing body, your point is moot.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    139. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      2 *2 =25 for larger values of 2

      Thanks for that, Poindexter. It couldn't possibly be the case that some people have more than two, could it. I mean that's absurd.

      Perhaps you should do some research before proving to the whole wide world what an ignorant $genitalia you are?

    140. Re:Easy by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      Perhaps they don't choose their feelings, but surely surgery is a choice?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    141. Re:Easy by Bluesman · · Score: 5, Funny

      Nobody wants to watch a game where they already know who will win. Likewise, the athletes don't want to compete in a contest they're sure to lose.

      The continued existence of the Baltimore Orioles disproves your assertion.

      --
      If moderation could change anything, it would be illegal.
    142. Re:Easy by Elledan · · Score: 5, Informative

      Right now a similar investigation is taking place in my case as well. I was born intersexual, have a female build, but male genitals, possibly female too (no two radiologists seem to agree on the MRI images). I really hope that the genetical testing will tell me once and for all why I ended up like this with a body that is clearly neither male nor female, even if anyone who meets me on the street, at the pool, or at the gym, will call me female, and my ID card keeps getting (nearly) refused all the time.

      Worst is that the law here in the Netherlands doesn't allow me to have my official name and gender changed (I'm currently registered as male) due to the law only being focused on transsexuals (gender reassignment surgery requirement, which is impossible for intersexual people).

      You can find more info on my case at my site, www.mayaposch.com.

      --
      Site & blog: http://www.mayaposch.com
    143. Re:Easy by Kijori · · Score: 1

      It doesn't work to distinguish between men and women, just to keep the playing field relatively level within those groups. I can tell you from experience that fighting a lightweight woman is far, far easier than fighting a lightweight man, just because of the near-automatic strength advantage from fighting a woman.

    144. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Acting: you can even ask for a particular race.

    145. Re:Easy by Kt.foss.zealot · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I too am a transgendered slashdotter,
      And as I see it, being transgendered is not a choice, just like being born with any condition is not a choice, if someone has gender dysphoria, it's there, there is no choice about that. While technically choosing to transition IS a choice, to me it's kind of like the choice between fleeing a burning building or letting it engulf you in flames.

      I don't really understand your need to use transgendered people as a way to validate yourself to slashdotters or society, as I too have been "dealt an unusual hand and society often punishes us for it because we do not conform to the norm." Surely you understand that gender dysphoria is not something anyone chooses?

      As for sports, If I were even interested in competing, I would compete as a woman and I would not feel like I was cheating, I have been on HRT since before puberty so I don't understand how I would have an unfair advantage. Though I would rather see sports not segregated by sex at all, just let everyone compete together, OR have seperate leages based on bodysize/musclemass/whatever.

    146. Re:Easy by Lawman58 · · Score: 1

      Allowing various other arrangements of formulations of XX and XY to be considered traditional male or traditional female would significantly reduce the meaning of the words male and female. If we are not going to do away with separate categories and awards for each, then we should not allow these in.

    147. Re:Easy by tgv · · Score: 1

      If gender is a social construct, then
      1. To know if someone is female or male, you would have to ask other people (since they are the labelers), or
      2. The difference is so unclear that it is necessary to abolish the segregation between male and female contests.
      The consequences of both can be rather unpleasant.

      I don't know what your point of view is, but gender might be no more a social construct than an elephant is. We, language users and world observers, have classified nature, and gender is one of those classifications. This one happens to be based on reproductive capacities. Now either you conclude that those capacities are also a social construct or gender has a basis in reality.

      If you go for the first option, then we can call anyone an elephant, or a horse, and request that they be excluded from races since the races are for people and people alone. If you go for the second option, there must be some consensus on biological criteria for gender. That they are not always recognized on the outside is a different matter.

    148. Re:Easy by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      I know what you mean, likewise, I'm 67 and recently it got increasingly hard for me to tell the difference between my slippers and my puppy. I'm afraid it's time for me to get myself new glasses. And a new puppy :-(.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    149. Re:Easy by Devout_IPUite · · Score: 1

      I do hope your joking. There are so many mutations, many successful athletes probably have at least one rare gene.

    150. Re:Easy by Devout_IPUite · · Score: 1

      No one kicked Babe Ruth or Tiger Woods out for being too good.

    151. Re:Easy by nbauman · · Score: 1

      Is a mammoth an elephant?

    152. Re:Easy by Devout_IPUite · · Score: 1

      "If you like the Post Office and the Department of Motor Vehicles and you think they're run well, just wait till you see Medicare, Medicaid and healthcare done by the government." Arthur Laffer http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arthur_Laffer

      He actually said that. He's an economist... Amazing how some stupid morons can get a degree.

    153. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If stored on a computer, that DNA will be accessible to both business and government, at a certain level they are one and the same.

      What level is that - crackpot or loony?

    154. Re:Easy by Hatta · · Score: 1

      As in most things in life, the edge cases make it really hard to come up with a simple rule that's fair to everyone involved.

      I know a simple rule that's fair to everyone. Stop discriminating against people due to their sex in sports. All that should matter is what a person is physically capable of, not what their sex is.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    155. Re:Easy by p-k4 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      One of the most surefire way is to see if her gametes can play their respective roll. If they can manage to form a viable embryo from her egg, case closed.

      On a practical side you would never get this past any ethics committee. They would laugh you out of the room for proposing to create a new human life to determine gender.

      --
      Dean's Rule #45. The truth hurts for a moment. A lie hurts for a long time.
    156. Re:Easy by p-k4 · · Score: 1

      Anything that makes her develop into a woman is the result of the SRY gene being silenced.

      While SRY being silenced will lead to a female phenotype, it isn't the only cause. Another common cause is a mutation in the male androgen receptor. You can pump out testosterone and DHT all day long but if none of your cells can recognize it, you'll have the same net effect. My main point is that if you are going beyond karyotyping to determine gender you are going to have to inspect more than just the single SRY gene.

      --
      Dean's Rule #45. The truth hurts for a moment. A lie hurts for a long time.
    157. Re:Easy by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      This brings up an interesting ethical question.

      If she did have some kind of unusual trait to her sex chromosomes and she never knew about it, but did work her ass off training and hoping for success, would it be right to disqualify her after someone else decided she wasn't enough of a girl?

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    158. Re:Easy by Aphoxema · · Score: 1

      They may also be sexually ambiguous.

      --
      "Most people, I think, don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"
    159. Re:Easy by bay43270 · · Score: 1

      It's also important to point out that women with androgen insensitivity are allowed to compete as women in the olympics. Seven competed in '96:
      http://www.npr.org/blogs/health/2009/08/gender_questions_hover_over_ch.html

    160. Re:Easy by dcollins · · Score: 1

      "So, with all of that, if I were to compete in... professional auto racing (I could have done that but shunned publicity), should I compete as a woman or as a man?"

      Aren't all auto racing leagues mixed-gender?

      --
      We know where leadership by an anti-intellectual "strongman" who scapegoats minorities and likes boisterous rallies goes
    161. Re:Easy by p-k4 · · Score: 1

      Even more important: unlike trannies (no offense intended to any TG folk reading this), we intersexed people do not choose to be in the situation we are in.

      The current belief and understanding about Gender Identity Disorder (GID) is that it results from the uneven sex hormone distribution or possible localized insensitivity.

      The in utero developing embyo isn't a homogeneous vat of chemicals. When the gonads (either male or female) start releasing their sex hormones early in embryonic life they have to travel to the brain and take effect making that brain "male" or "female." We can see these gross (gross meaning "without a microscope") changes on brain slices take most-mortem. We can see a similar set of changes in many of the people who are homosexual.

      The theory is, compared to someone without GID or who is not homosexual, your brain was not exposed to inappropriate levels of sex androgens for its "programming" (for lack of a better word) to match the body's physical characteristics. It is also possible that the sex adrogen receptors are damaged and not able to see the signally molecules that are present. It isn't a choice any more than choosing to have 4 toes.

      This is all pretty mainstream stuff and it was taught to me in medical school which are not known to be the most liberal places.

      The people with GID probably understand your situation better than you might think at first glance.

      --
      Dean's Rule #45. The truth hurts for a moment. A lie hurts for a long time.
    162. Re:Easy by iamacat · · Score: 1

      Ok, so exclude actors, prostitutes, sperm/egg donors and surrogate mothers. Why should there be discrimination for jobs where you don't directly use male/female/white/black parts of your body? Even for actors, discriminating based on genetic tests would be illegal and locker room exams should be limited to porn flick screening. Simply see if someone looks a part for the role.

      By the way, there are many straight, physically normal males who played successful female roles.

    163. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except that:
      1) the simple test is inconclusive - many of the more remote possibilities involve differences in later parts of the process of sexual differentiation,
      2) there is a (possibly significant) selection bias.

      Moreover, I'd be surprised if *most* athletes at higher levels of global athletic competition do not have a genetic advantage of some sort over the average member of the population. We need to better define what we're trying to achieve, before we thrash about trying to achieve it.

    164. Re:Easy by Silas+is+back · · Score: 1

      It would be hard for her. But it would be right for all the other "real" women who have also trained very hard. It would be the only right thing, if she has a Y-chromosome, she has an unfair advantage.

      --
      this sig is useless
    165. Re:Easy by russotto · · Score: 1

      On a practical side you would never get this past any ethics committee. They would laugh you out of the room for proposing to create a new human life to determine gender.

      Unless you can choose the composition of the committee. Mine consists of Sir Francis Galton, Josef Mengele, all eight of the Chicago Black Sox, and is chaired by Richard Nixon.

    166. Re:Easy by flajann · · Score: 1
      DNA isn't it, guys. Gender issues in not about the DNA exclusively. You are only talking genotype, and all sorts of things can happen during embryogenesis, etc. which may cause the phenotype to be something different from what you'd expect.

      There's also issues of neural development as well, so, from the phenotype aspect, Gender is not a clear black or white.

      Alas, most people don't appreciate all of the subtle nuances, and that is where the controversy slips in.

    167. Re:Easy by m50d · · Score: 1
      It wouldn't be fair to force such people to compete with the men, because they've got the body mass/strength/endurance/etc of typical XX humans despite having a Y.

      A large part of me thinks the only fair thing would be to have everyone competing together. Why is it that we give a separate section for athletes with one particular disadvantage, femininity[*], but make no special allowances for any other genetic differences?

      [*] And a few others in the paralympics.

      --
      I am trolling
    168. Re:Easy by goatpunch · · Score: 1

      Doctors often coerce parents to choose one sex over the other, in the name of profit. Peforming those "corrective" surgeries on infants is profitable

      Thankyou for the very interesting post. Just one point I'd like to comment on: doctors still perform these surgeries in countries (such as the UK) where the healthcare system is nationalised and they have long waiting lists of more than enough work to keep them employed for life - so some (perhaps not all) doctors are performing these surgeries not for 'profit' but because they believe that they are helpful (I'm not sure if they are right or wrong to believe this).

    169. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you know that your average man can lactate? ... Take estrogen for a year or two (to trigger breast development)...

      Once you've been walking around with tits for a year, you're not exactly a regular Joe anymore.

    170. Re:Easy by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Is it the phytoestrogens in soy that cause your reaction? If so, you should also avoid flaxseed like the plague, as it has 3 times the phytoestrogens of soy!

      As to what's fair -- we divide some sports by preliminary trials, then you compete in your competence class. I think that would be a fair way to deal with the intersex issue -- wouldn't matter if you're M/F/N/combo, if you're up to Class A standards then that's where you compete, if not then Class B, or C, or whatever level. Might wind up with one class being 99% male and another class being 99% female, but so what, if the idea is to start with a level playing field?

      [silly thought: Class Z would consist entirely of slashdotters ;)

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    171. Re:Easy by swillden · · Score: 1

      In most spanish dialects a 'g' in the beggining of a word isn't really pronounced like a hard 'g'.

      I believe I said that.

      --
      Note to ACs: I usually delete AC replies without reading them. If you want to talk to me, log in.
    172. Re:Easy by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      I always thought the only law in that area of the world was "Do what the fuck you want and don't kill anyone".

      --
      $ make available
    173. Re:Easy by Thinboy00 · · Score: 1

      The right to protest corporate actions is more sacred than the corporation in question. (read his sig)

      --
      $ make available
    174. Re:Easy by kimvette · · Score: 1

      That would be similar to "bracket racing" in the NHRA or AHRA, or weight classes in boxing, right? That would make the most sense. Perhaps there could even be an "enhanced" bracked for those who take anabolic steroids for such purposes.

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    175. Re:Easy by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1

      If you did that, in most unaugmented sports, you'd get an overwhelming domination by men. There are women who can outbuff most men, but they are by far the exception, or else the gender split in athletics wouldn't exist.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    176. Re:Easy by Reziac · · Score: 1

      You may find this site interesting:

      http://www.soyonlineservice.co.nz/

      Some of it is a little overblown, but my background is biochem, and I'd say that in the whole, they are right. (See note from a skeptic at http://snhbw.blogspot.com/2009/02/update-on-soy-online-service.html)

      Dr.Mercola is a snake-oil salesman, but even so lists a number of good studies: http://www.mercola.com/article/soy/index.htm

      Soy-based baby formula is probably a major cause of plant allergies in adults (and likely of colic in babies); soy protein is known to be a broad-spectrum allergen. I personally know someone who, after a binge on toasted soy nuts, became allergic to practically all plant proteins. It happened almost immediately after the only time she ever ate lots of soy nuts, so there's little doubt about the trigger.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    177. Re:Easy by Herby+Sagues · · Score: 1

      By that criteria, strong men shouldn't be able to compete with other men as that would give them an unfair advantage. If a female (XX) has a condition that makes her stronger, then she has the right to compete with other women, even if there are physiological traits that make her much stronger than other women. Male sea horses give birth to their child. But we still define them as male because of the XY chromosomes. That's the only absolute definition of male and female. An XY dressed as a woman is not a woman. An XX that looks masculine is not a man. Yes, there might be some XY that do not conform to the usual physical stereotype. But that doesn't make them anything but an unusual female.

    178. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No one is forcing you to read her posts, Corky!

    179. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      unlike trannies (no offense intended to any TG folk reading this), we intersexed people do not choose to be in the situation we are in. It's not like we're cheating. We're dealt an unusual hand and society often punishes us for it because we do not conform to the norm.

      ... Wow.

      First of all, saying "no offense" after throwing out the word "tranny" isn't going to work. Quite a few transgendered and transsexual people find the word "tranny" offensive, though I suspect you know that already. It's rude, plain and simple.

      And if you'd done your homework, you'd know by now that transsexuality is being researched. Said research is coming closer to proving that being transsexual is one of many intersex conditions-- which aren't nearly as rare as people tend to think. So really, throwing trans people under the bus just because you want people to accept/understand/whatever YOU just makes you look like a jerk.

      Trans people of any sort don't CHOOSE to be that way. They can choose to act on it, but that's not wrong. There's nothing wrong with changing your outside body to match who you feel you are, especially when it get to the point where either something changes or you kill yourself. There's a reason the suicide rate among trans people is so bloody high-- it's not all sunshine and puppies.

      Which leads me to my last point... trans people are dealt just as rough of a hand as anyone else with an intersex condition. You do realize that trans people get slammed by society just as, if not more often, right? Again, there's a reason why the suicide rates are so high... and the murder rates are consistently on the high side. On average, one trans person per month gets murdered, plus when you had attempted murder, assault, rape and other hate crimes into the mix... Yeah, intersex people aren't alone on the "society doesn't accept us and we're treated like second class citizens" bus.

      I would have hoped that someone who is intersex and knows what it's like out there to be a bit more understanding, knowledgeable and all that, but I guess some people ride the high horse no matter what they've been through. It's a shame, it really is.

      - Will, who is too tired to make an account at the moment.

    180. Re:Easy by gadget+junkie · · Score: 1

      post a big sign saying "# Manolo Blahnik # Richard Tyler # Jimmy Choo # Dolce & Gabbana ALL 50% OFF!!!!!!!", then see what happens.

      --
      "If a boss demands loyalty, give him integrity. But if he demands integrity, give him loyalty." (John Boyd, 1927-1997)
    181. Re:Easy by It's+Pat · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Maya, thanks for sharing. I've read your blog and it sounds like life is very difficult for you. Hang in there! The comments here have helped me understand the full spectrum of possible sexual outcomes. It makes sense: when we are all created from the same parts, then differentiated in the womb based on various genetic and biochemical reasons, it is only logical that there will be a variety of possible outcomes. My point is that you are human as we all are, but you are unaccepted based on our ignorance of your situation and others like you. Your blog and the information you share helps to educate others, so please keep it up. I have no way to understand how difficult life must be for you, and I suppose it must be easy to despair living in a world that judges books by their cover's rather than their content. There are many in this world who know how to look deeper, I hope that you have found some of these folks or that you will find them soon.

    182. Re:Easy by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1

      It was funny. And harsh. :)

      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    183. Re:Easy by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Weight classes in boxing was exactly what I was thinking of, along with the divisions in baseball (Big League, Class AAA, AA, A, semi-pro, etc.) which are based wholly on level of competence. And if you became sufficiently dominant in your class (say, coming in first over 60% of the time), you'd get moved up to the next class. The idea being to have a fairly-delineated *range* of competition available to everyone involved, without arbitrary divisions based on gender or whatever.

      And since there's really no practical way to stop every "enhancement", yes, I think it makes sense to have "enhanced" and "natural" divisions, just as we have "pro" and "amateur" divisions. Always better to have that sort of thing out in the open where it can be monitored and regulated, than driven underground and becoming a "cheat".

      There will always be public perception that one class is better than another, just like for so long the only boxing class that mattered was the Heavyweight. But then along came Sugar Ray Leonard, and suddenly you didn't have to be a Big Guy to be in the limelight. That's up to the athletes, to achieve the public's fancy.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    184. Re:Easy by andymadigan · · Score: 1

      My sig refers to the right to rebel against a bad government.

      Actually, I completely agree that it is proper to argue against a test. It's completely proper to argue against anything you so choose. However, equating a test in a sport to government interference shows such a lack of intelligence and sanity that it needed to be pointed out.

      And yes, if a corporation tries to silence those that protest against them (as some governments do), then they should be brought down.

      --
      The right to protest the State is more sacred than the State.
    185. Re:Easy by zombie_monkey · · Score: 1

      I was also thinking about weight classes, but in a different way. The reason weight classes and female only competitions exist is because of the different homone levels in women. Therefore the basis for division in male and female competitions should be hormone levels. Say measure testosterone levels in all competitors and those above the average/median compete in the "male" group and those below in the "female".

    186. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Not sure if they can really answer the "why".

      From the site, I gather you prefer to keep your body more female in appearance but keep the male "bits" still around?

      If that's true, I don't blame you, I'm rather attached to my male bits ;).

      But that's probably why Netherlands has a problem with declaring you a female. With the male bits about, they might be reluctant to let you declare yourself female. A factor is probably how comfortable the more normal females would be with you in a female-only toilet etc.

      FWIW, I suspect more guys are able to cope gracefully with girls (or female looking humans) in a guy-only toilet than the other way round.

      That said, allegedly there was a case where a number of guys were grumbling about a particular female-looking guy allegedly trying to peek at guy's male bits in the toilet. Most guys aren't quite as accepting of that...

      Anyway, I hope you manage to resolve this to your satisfaction (and long term satisfaction too).

      On the bright side, I've heard that for many female humans there often isn't a refractory period after orgasms, unlike for most males (apparently some lucky guys don't have a refractory period).

    187. Re:Easy by Rei · · Score: 1

      We may all be able to lactate, but the primary difference starts with only one gender can lay eggs.

      And what about those who neither produce eggs nor sperm? Or those who can produce eggs, but also have a penis and male-typical musculature?

      --
      Don't disrespect the denim sheep.
    188. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Michael Phelps is 6' 4" but unusually has a width of outstretched arms of 6' 7" which is the perfect size for the Butterfly.

    189. Re:Easy by Rei · · Score: 1

      Sure, go ahead and tell a XY person with female-typical musculature, breasts, a vagina, etc that she's not a woman, and tell an XX person with male-typical musculature with a penis, testes, male-typical musculature, etc that he's not a man. And how do you deal with non-XX, non-XY karyotypes?

      Sorry, but XY=male and XX=female is just the most common situation. It's anything but an absolute. It's just that the Y chromosome *usually* has a *working* SRY, and the X chromosome *usually* doesn't.

      And FYI: we define male seahorses as male because they produce sperm and not eggs. Seahorses don't have a human-typical XX/XY karyotype distribution. I don't know why you assumed XY is universal. There's the ZW system, the XO system, and even non-genetic sex determination systems (such as incubation temperature-based, like alligators use). The platypus has a really weird 10-chromosome hybrid XY/ZW system.

      --
      Don't disrespect the denim sheep.
    190. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While life is a matter of chemistry..

       
      "We're all made of the same body parts, just with different degrees of development and activation of them."

       
      is simply false. Even at a very basic level, that statement is obviously false. While males and females obviously share organs and internal systems common to all human beings, humans cannot grow body parts they were not born with or genetically determined to have.

    191. Re:Easy by Rei · · Score: 1

      You simply misunderstand human development. It's not "body parts that they were not born with or genetically determined to have". We're all genetically determined to have the same body parts. The clitoris and penis are the same organ. Male and female breasts are the same organ. Testes and ovaries are the same organ. And on and on and on. It's simply what activation factors they're given and when. We're all the same up until about week six. By then, all of the major organs are already differentiated. The hormonal cascade that leads to sex differentiation simply changes what's already there; it doesn't make new things.

      Now, there are timing issues. And many changes are irreversible. So, for example, you can have a male develop breasts by giving estrogen, but a woman's breasts won't go away when estrogens are removed. As for timing, this can limit potential. For example, androgens in a fetus can lead to the clitoris/penis developing into a fully normal penis. If they're not present, the child is born as a woman, with a clitoris. If the woman is given testosterone, the clitoris will start to develop into a penis. However, it won't reach full size, and will end up as a micropenis; the capacity for a full-sized one has been cut off due to timing.

      --
      Don't disrespect the denim sheep.
    192. Re:Easy by snowgirl · · Score: 1

      One of the most surefire way is to see if her gametes can play their respective roll. If they can manage to form a viable embryo from her egg, case closed. If not, some more testing would be needed. Also, a genetic advantage is the reason most athletes get the gold. If she has a rare/new trait, what are you going to do when a larger percentage of the population has it in the future? It's just as discriminatory to ban them now as it would be later. Especially if it's a naturally acquired trait.

      Not entirely... there are different conditions on why one needs to make the distinction of male and female. In sports, men naturally have more steroids (androgens) available than females. Thus, men are at a significant advantage for developing muscle mass and strength. This is why it's unfair to make men and women compete in the same group. If this woman has a hormone profile that shows that it is outside of the standard range for women, then whether she is a woman or not is irrelevant, she should not be allowed to compete against other female athletes.

      All of this is ENTIRELY different with regards to whom she can marry (if she's outside of Massachusetts or whatever), which bathroom she is permitted to use, if she can contribute to a viable embryo, and what genitals she has. All of these are decided by entirely different criteria.

      Male and female are not the hard and fast rule that most people think they are. Quite apart, who cares if she eschewed playing with dolls and other girls? Should we allow a person with testicles and male-levels of testosterone to compete against women if he enjoyed playing with dolls, etc?

      The IOCC has already settled this, because they had to deal with intersexed and transsexual people before this particular group. Their decision was that as long as the hormone panel is consistent with the appropriate sex. Otherwise, this woman that they're investigating is doping... albeit naturally, but it's still unfair.

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    193. Re:Easy by TekPolitik · · Score: 1

      So if you are genetically and physically male but weak like a girl (appropriateness of that comparison aside) you shoud be able to compete as a woman? This is a very much more difficult issue than that, since in part what is tested in athletic competition is genetic comparison. If we split on gender then perhaps only true XX and XY properly manifested should be alllowed in at all. That is no more unfair to them than it is to those of us with genetics not lending themselves to athletic prowess at all.

    194. Re:Easy by snowgirl · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Oh, that's right. I forgot there's only two options and no possibility of deviation from those options AT ALL.

      Fucking moron.

      Since in the vast majority of cases, it really is one of those two options - it seems like the logical first step, given that invasive testing is apparently already the norm for track and field anymore. If Caster's test shows XX or XY, either way the case is closed. Arguing that a remote possibility of a different genetic state exists means you can't first test for the heavily dominant typical state is, quite frankly, silly. That's like arguing that a doctor shouldn't do an influenza test on a patient with flu-like symptoms because there's a remote possibility it's Brucellosis.

      They believe that she has congenital adrenal hyperplasia... if she does have that, then she's most likely XX. The problem is that there is no belief that she has an abnormal genotype or abnormal genitalia. They believe she has something ENTIRELY DIFFERENT.

      This is a hormone imbalance, specifically in that it causes the adrenal glands to produce too much androgens/steroids. She's naturally doped up the same as a man would be. That does not necessarily however make her a "man", any more than an XX genotype make her a "woman".

      Considering that a hormone panel takes less time and is less invasive than a genetic screening, I think that should be the FIRST and FOREMOST test upon women competing... you know, while you're testing for those artificial steroids, why not look at the natural levels of them as well?!

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    195. Re:Easy by snowgirl · · Score: 1

      You can divide the genes that determine human sexuality into two groups. One group determines the form that genitals take. The other group determines all the other physical and psychological aspects of sexuality. Conceptually, it's easy to see how someone could develop with female genitals and everything else male. That doesn't mean that anyone has identified it as a syndrome, much less the genes and protein-level mechanisms.

      My favorite intersex condition is AMH insensitivity. It makes men grow a uterus!

      "Well, while we were in getting your appendix out, we actually found a uterus... we took it out, because it's likely to just give you cancer."

      That's when most people would look at the doctor and say "scuse me wha?"

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    196. Re:Easy by Reziac · · Score: 1

      That's a possibility, but what do you do about people who have receptor problems, so they get no use out of their high hormone levels?

      There are too many variables and I don't really see any perfect way to divide 'em. It may well be that evident-gender is as good as we're going to get.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    197. Re:Easy by Sethumme · · Score: 1

      I thought the first clue was that she had an Adam's apple as big as her balls.

    198. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Has she produced a baby by conception?

    199. Re:Easy by ciderVisor · · Score: 1

      Now you tell me with a straight face what you think of that!

      I would.

      --
      Squirrel!
    200. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That solves it for the X-Men...

      How would you distinguish the "Supers", especially Dash?

      http://www.imdb.com/character/ch0003839/

    201. Re:Easy by Trahloc · · Score: 1

      Hrm, perhaps. I'm not sure that's true at the world class/elite level. But even so there may be certain sports where male/female makes a greater difference than 120lbs 5'2" vs 185lbs 5'11"... but there are many where it doesn't. Skiing for instance doesn't need to be separated by sex at least. Perhaps a study done by getting the top athletes of both sexes to see if it really mattered. They're experts of their own sport at the very least so having them work together for a few months and then submit their opinion if a different classification can be done that's superior to one based purely on male/female.

      --
      The Goal: A long simple life filled with many complex toys.
    202. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even more important: unlike trannies (no offense intended to any TG folk reading this), we intersexed people do not choose to be in the situation we are in.

      C'mon don't call me a tranny and then innocently insist "no offense". I don't know about your suggestion that I actually wanted to be trans either. The only choice I had was transition or die. Years ago, I remember digging up info, trying to figure out why I am the way I am. Though I'm no longer curious about specifics, I'm sufficiently convinced there's a rational explanation for my disorder - you know, "neurologically intersexed", no offense.

    203. Re:Easy by Tavor · · Score: 1

      Maya, your case is very interesting. Have you tried contacting researchers at any of the big U.S. research hospitals?

      --
      Windows has detected an undetectable error.
    204. Re:Easy by IntricateEnigma · · Score: 1

      Hi Maya,

      That must be a tough situation to be going through. I don't know you personally, but from your web page it's clear that you're more than just a curiosity, you are a person. I admire how you openly present the facts of your case, while still showing your other interests. Good luck with your book and other projects.
      I don't know anything about what faith you may have, but I pray that those with authority in your case would soon arrive at sound and accurate conclusions about your condition and that you are surrounded by the people who are attracted to you because of your personality.

      David

    205. Re:Easy by PopeRatzo · · Score: 2, Funny

      Jars? Son, she can open cans.

      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    206. Re:Easy by beav007 · · Score: 1
      It's easier than that.

      Gender Identification Test (no lying)
      1. How many pairs of shoes do you own? ____________
    207. Re:Easy by Elledan · · Score: 1

      Thank you :) Life most certainly isn't easy for me, but I hope that especially with the media (magazines, TV) getting more and more interested in my story that I may educate people on intersexuality and hopefully carve out some kind of place for people like me in society.

      --
      Site & blog: http://www.mayaposch.com
    208. Re:Easy by Elledan · · Score: 1

      No, I haven't. So far I have limited my attempts to my own country (The Netherlands), Germany and Belgium. There seems to be a distinct lack of interest in my case, possibly because they don't believe me or something. Last Friday, however, I had a successful appointment at the UMCG hospital here in Groningen where they are now carrying out genetical tests and everything. Only took nearly 5 years to get this far.

      I'm open to others bringing my case to the attention of other hospitals, though. A friend of mine (medical student) already tried it in Australia, but without luck.

      --
      Site & blog: http://www.mayaposch.com
    209. Re:Easy by Elledan · · Score: 1

      Basically that is true. If I were to pretend I were a transsexual as some hospitals and psychologists (looking at the VUMC hospital especially here) have attempted to brainwash me into, I could be made into a 'regular' woman and qualify for having my name & gender changed. Unfortunately I refuse to give up who and what I am. I'm intersexual and I won't ever deny that.

      So far the number of embarrassing situations has been kept to a minimum. During HS I already slept in the same room as the other girls without any complaints during school trips. At the pool I wear a skirtini instead of a bikini as a preventive measure, and that's about it.

      As for your bright side, it's true in my case ;)

      --
      Site & blog: http://www.mayaposch.com
    210. Re:Easy by celtic_hackr · · Score: 1

      I have an idea. What does her birth certificate say?

      Naturally she could be a true hermaphrodite (aka intersex). These are people with XXY, XXYY, XXYYY, et cetera chromosomal makeups. So, if a birth certificate and a physical exam aren't good enough for these creeps at RIAA, oops, I mean IAAF, then count her chromosomes. Does she have a Y chromosome? If no then, she's female. If yes, does she have more Y chromosomes? If yes, then does she have any male body parts? If yes, then does she have eggs or sperm? Eggs = female. Sperm = male. Both = male with benefits or lost queen of the Amazons (you pick). It's not rocket science folks. It's biology. What, did all these RIAA, err, IAAF folks fail high school biology?

      I, for one, welcome our new Amazon overlord! All hail Queen Semenya!

    211. Re:Easy by definate · · Score: 1

      You'd be surprised exactly how much Government is in some business, especially those which are done for cultural benefit (like sports) where the subsidies come with strings attached.

      Though, if it were a completely free business, then it should have the right to discriminate anyway it wants (Race, Gender, Sexuality, etc) as long as the people were voluntarily (Negative liberty wise) subjecting themselves to it.

      Not that there necessarily is a connection between the business and the government in this situation, but the reason the lines are blurred and some people (such as yourself) don't see these sorts of connections are due to how people aren't willing to relinquish control of these organizations, which means there almost always is a connection, though for some businesses it's far less.

      For instance:

      Do you really want to pay (through taxation) for a business which doesn't treat people "equally"? (The former point)

      Do you really want to let (through regulation) a business discriminate the way it wants? (The latter point)

      I've got a feeling you don't like either of these situations. Where as libertarians don't like the former (since it involves Government taking money) but have no problem with the latter (since they understand the market will take care of that business).

      --
      This is my footer. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
    212. Re:Easy by celtic_hackr · · Score: 1

      The IS poster is simply saying that for TGs, the surgical alteration to make them some form of apparent IS is optional from a physical perspective, and if I'm not mistaken expensive. Which is why she qualified that statement. Y'all are too sensitive. Not that you don't have reason to be. So lighten up on the girl. Personally, I find the whole surgical alteration a bit creepy, but totally logical. In fact, I find it hard to fathom why all G&L people don't do it. Based on my limited understanding of the whole thing. I mean if you're attracted to the same sex, the best chance of finding the best mate is to alter your parts to maximize potential relations with the sex you're attracted to. Fortunately, for me, I don't have that problem. I like women and I have all the necessary parts interact with them. My heart goes out to those poor souls that don't fit into the "right" pegs.

    213. Re:Easy by GauteL · · Score: 1

      "just ask her to show you her pussy. god damn, how hard is this really?"

      I used to think that my fellow Slashdot geeks only struggled with confidence when it came to meeting women. So much for that theory.

    214. Re:Easy by Kijori · · Score: 1

      You could be right - once you get outside contact sports, strength is less of a determiner. You'd still need to be careful though, since a quick Google suggests that mens' ski records are a fair distance ahead of womens' - having never skiied, I have no idea why, but a change that just "locks women out" of competition wouldn't be a great one!

      For the original sport mentioned, though - boxing - getting rid of the men/women division would be ludicrous. Firstly because women would have no chance - brute strength can make up for a considerable difference in skill, so if skill is equal at the very top, the women will be demolished. Secondly because women fight with slightly different rules in a lot of combat sports, for example wearing breast protectors. Unless you want to outfit men in chest-armour as well this poses a problem!

    215. Re:Easy by bickerdyke · · Score: 1

      Without noticing, Anonymous Coward would have earned his (or her...) "+1 insightful"

      That's exactly what was done at the olympics until 1968, but was replaced with genetic testing.

      Source: http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Geschlechts-Chromatin

      --
      bickerdyke
    216. Re:Easy by bickerdyke · · Score: 1

      By that criteria, strong men shouldn't be able to compete with other men as that would give them an unfair advantage.

      Exactly. I'm in favour of letting the typical slashdotter start dating outside the shallow end of the gene pool

      --
      bickerdyke
    217. Re:Easy by Stuarticus · · Score: 1

      I'm not by any stretch of the imagination a pro-lifer, but even I find that idea rather distasteful... Take an egg and fertilise it then destroy it just to satisfy someone else's curiosity?

        More tho the point if she does exhibit some inter-sex condition that gives her an unfair advantage should men who have similar unusual karotypes be banned as well, eg XYY? I'm sure some studies have shown increased strength and aggression in these cases.

      --
      If you think someone isn't free to have a different definition of "freedom" you may be a tyrant.
    218. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So sorry to hear of the trauma you've suffered, in your young years it's more than most of us have in a lifetime.

      Please don't give up. Ask for help when you really need it, life can still be enjoyed. We're all alone really and we all have to come to terms with it. I suffer from depression myself and wonder what's the point but you have to let go of the past, ignore the future and live in the present. If you can divert your attention at any one moment and enjoy music/video/reading, then it's a lot better than being in a wheelchair, out on the streets or starving in the third world... that's my philosophy.

      Life's what you make it. I hope you do make the most of what you have, you look like a pretty young lady and I wish you all the best.

      (I couldn't post anon to your blog so this will have to do)

    219. Re:Easy by Kt.foss.zealot · · Score: 1

      The IS poster is simply saying that for TGs, the surgical alteration to make them some form of apparent IS is optional from a physical perspective, and if I'm not mistaken expensive.

      Yes I agree, that is exactly what the OP has said, what I take offense to is the fact that it was said, and that it was said with the intent of legitimizing IS people at the expense of TG people in the eyes of society,.. or in this case, slashdotters.
      I am not bent out of shape, I am not angry, I am not upset,I am not sensitive, I am merely calling someone out on something they said that in my opinion is a wrong thing to say.

      Which is why she qualified that statement.

      Well, OK, you can qualify any statement but it does not erase the intent or the effect of the statement.
      As an example, what If I were to say "No offense to you black people, but you guys can't swim very well!", would the "No offense" erase any of the offense? I would think no, this is a pretty mild example but the possibilities are endless.

      Y'all are too sensitive. Not that you don't have reason to be. So lighten up on the girl.

      Well I can't speak for others but I can't say I am sensitive. Merely trying to right the wrong perceptions about my and other's gender/sex status, saying nothing would be negligent.
      One example of this is the way kids these days use the word "gay" = "bad", even people who have gay friends, saying nothing is permitting the practice to continue.

      Personally, I find the whole surgical alteration a bit creepy, but totally logical. In fact, I find it hard to fathom why all G&L people don't do it. Based on my limited understanding of the whole thing. I mean if you're attracted to the same sex, the best chance of finding the best mate is to alter your parts to maximize potential relations with the sex you're attracted to. Fortunately, for me, I don't have that problem. I like women and I have all the necessary parts interact with them. My heart goes out to those poor souls that don't fit into the "right" pegs.

      I do understand your logic and it is certainly not a stupid conclusion to come to without having experienced BEING transgendered or transsexual, but that's simply not how it works.
      Infact, the incidence of MtF(Male-to-Female) Transsexuals who are attracted to females, and the incidence of FtM(Female-to-Male) Transsexuals who are attracted to males are quite high.
      I think it's hard to explain to a cisgendered person when your brain says you are female/male and your body is the opposite, you can't go against how your brain is wired.

    220. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Businesses are willing to sell to anybody. Selling a hundred million widgets at $10 is better than selling one widget at $1 million.

      Government only sells to those with big money.

    221. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      X-Men MOVIES?! Please drop off your geek badge on the way out the door.

    222. Re:Easy by phrenq · · Score: 1

      I had a severe dislike for corporate politics because it irritated me. Now I'd welcome it and play the game, knowing my frustration was due to a genetic condition.

      You know, that may just indicate good sense.

    223. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I dont care about DNA; The person in question looks like a man to me. That is enough.

    224. Re:Easy by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      I think it's time to retire that old worn out joke, since according to this New Scientest article, we get laid more often than normal guys.

      Is smart sexy? Our knee-jerk reaction - reinforced by cultural stereotypes of Star Trek-convention attending geeks and a seeming obsession with ditzy, pretty starlets - would argue otherwise. Nerds are, well, nerds.

      Increasing scientific evidence shows that brains count for a lot in mate choice. And now - for the first time - researchers have directly linked a male's cognitive performance to his luck with the ladies.

      "Males that are better problem-solvers are mating with more females," says Jason Keagy, a behavioural ecologist at the University of Maryland in College Park, who studies not the mating rituals of the political elite in nearby Washington DC, but those of a bird native to the forests of eastern Australia.

      I submitted this to slashdot last week, but unfortunately it was rejected. The article has a pretty funny picture of a skinny nerd with glasses (Not unlike what I used to look like before I ditched the specs and grew a goatee) and two hotties.

    225. Re:Easy by Helge+Hafting · · Score: 1

      Skiing is definitely separated by sex! In cross-country skiing, men have the same advantages over women as in running. Look up the timing, men are faster. In downhill skiing, strength is needed to withstand several G when turning quickly. Men has a big advantage because they are stronger.

      The only cases where gender separation isn't needed, would be those where neither strength nor endurance matters. Maybe shooting, where good aim is what you need?

    226. Re:Easy by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      There are chromosomal defects resulting in three, rather than two, sex genes. So if a person has two X genes and one Y gene, is it a male or a female, since two XX is female and XY is male?

    227. Re:Easy by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      One of the most surefire way is to see if her gametes can play their respective roll.

      Bowling?

    228. Re:Easy by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      In a plutocracy there is no difference.

    229. Re:Easy by mcgrew · · Score: 1

      Why is it against the rules to take steroids to give you the strength to hit home runs, but perfectly legal to have LASIK surgery to improve your already 20/20 vision so you can better see that 90 mph fast ball?

    230. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gender is not just a social construct. Just become some men or women may not fit completely into one or the other doesn't mean that neither side exists. That's like saying because the El Camino is a little bit like a card AND a truck, that neither cars nor trucks really exist, they all must be some degree of both and socially constructed perception of being different so that the trucks can maintain dominance! Oh no! A car is still a car, and a woman is still a woman, etc...

    231. Re:Easy by Capt.DrumkenBum · · Score: 1

      Male and female bodies are built differently.

      Let me be the first to say "vive la différence".

      --
      If I were God, wouldn't I protect my churches from acts of me?
    232. Re:Easy by Capt.DrumkenBum · · Score: 1

      Well said Trillian.
      To anyone reading this with WTF thoughts. I have known several TG women, and one TG man. If you can work around your own prejudices and accept that a TG woman is a woman, and a TG man is a man. You may be lucky enough to get to know some incredible people. I know I did.

      --
      If I were God, wouldn't I protect my churches from acts of me?
    233. Re:Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very interesting. Leads me into another similar line of thinking: that different people deal with food intolerance in different ways. Of course certain regions (namely the Nordic countries) have higher rates of bipolar disorder. These are also the places where milk is most prevalent too. So anybody without the ability to fully digest lactose could have lots of sources to get their food tolerance.

      Also, packaged foods keep on getting more and more ingredients. As you noted, and I found out the hard way, natural flavorings are a way of putting lots of stuff in and not listing it on the label. This would also explain the rises of depression and other mood disorders; it's horribly hard to track down what food ingredient causes problems when it's in many foods and can even be unlisted on the ingredients.

      Bipolar is horrible and lithium is no fun. There are great times with bipolar (the manic phases) but the higher you go the worse the low was going to be. When I'd get auditory hallucinations I'd know the next phase would be absolute hell.

      I'm glad you've figured out your problem and can avoid it. For my part the problem is greatly diminished by avoiding lactose and sugars and keeping carbs and fat in check.

      At least they are getting a little better about labeling allergens clearly. Still, there are so many things in processed food that alter the body and mind in subtle ways. Good examples are thiamine in flour (thiamine causes more vivid dreams) and cultured wheat flour (alters intestinal flora). Usually the amounts are minute, but how many people might be sensitive to them?

    234. Re:Easy by CaptainPinko · · Score: 1

      This is just another thanks for sharing, it was very eye-opening, and good luck comment.

      --
      Your CPU is not doing anything else, at least do something.
    235. Re:Easy by stoolpigeon · · Score: 1

      The only sports where men and women compete against one another in the Olympics (to my knowledge) are the Equestrian sports. Otherwise they need to be separate so that the women have a chance. Maybe this is just true for the summer games though, because now that I think about it I may have seen men and women competing together in curling. Not sure though.

      --
      It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
  3. This is /. by desertfool · · Score: 3, Funny

    I doubt most people here would have experience with that.

    (sorry, just a bad joke.)

    --
    Just a dude. Stuck in IT.
    1. Re:This is /. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Yep.

      You know the solution is simple. Sexes compete together in the same events.

  4. Genetic by cob666 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I would think that a genetic test would prove whether or not she was.. well... a she.

    --
    Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law - Aleister Crowley
    1. Re:Genetic by Yvanhoe · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That.
      I would also use this occasion to state my amusement to see these sports officials embarrassed about someone having a clear advantage that can not be put on special training, drugs, equipment or techniques. At a high level, performances in sports like athletics will show differences that can have a clear genetic cause (that's okay. That is, after all, a feature of evolution, that some individual will outperform others on specific tasks) yet refuse to acknowledge it and emphasize on the training and work of athletes.

      Athletes keep talking about sports' spirit, about how it is all about fairness and balance. I am happy to see some reminders that top competitions are mostly about unfair genetic advantage. This focus on the top 1st, the gold medal, the world champion, is a bit insane. The most respectable difference I see in sport is between amateur and well-trained. Between these two levels, the difference is clear and is mostly about efforts. But it is not very convenient or spectacular to build a mediafest around.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
    2. Re:Genetic by El+Jynx · · Score: 1

      Well said!

      --
      A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it well worth the effort.
    3. Re:Genetic by Trepidity · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Indeed, some more organized and large countries (China being the most effective current example) have programs to try to find people with particular genetic variants to recruit into sports. Want to dope people with testosterone but it's illegal? Find someone with abnormally high levels of testosterone naturally! Thinking of competing in a sport where HGH would help? Find a guy who naturally produces really high levels. Etc.

      I guess I don't find that process that interesting. Is there really anything better or more fair about a guy who produces abnormally high levels of HGH, vs. someone else injecting HGH? Why is one more interesting to watch than the other? It seems the only possible answer is attaching some sort of mysticism to the fact that one was "natural".

    4. Re:Genetic by Hungus · · Score: 1

      *Agrees*
      As far as I am concerned if it has only X chromosomes it is female, else it is male.

      --
      Bad Panda! No Bamboo for you! In matters of importance ACs will not be responded to. Want to say something critical,OK
    5. Re:Genetic by Hurricane78 · · Score: 1

      Well, imagine having bone marrow replaced, and you maybe got blood from someone else in your body. They you could have 3 different genetic codes in your body at the same time! What then?

      Imagine one being male black, one being white female, and one being a Latino-Chinese hermaphrodite. Now imagine the real you being the latter one of those. ;)

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced intelligence is indistinguishable from stupidity.
    6. Re:Genetic by Ritz_Just_Ritz · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Genetic variants? By many accounts, China outright fabricated passports for some of their prepubescent gymnasts in the last olympics. After an initial hand flapping, that got ignored. But some poor girl who (apparently through no fault of her own) has some natural advantage is being punished. That is simply crazy.

    7. Re:Genetic by Kjella · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      I guess I don't find that process that interesting. Is there really anything better or more fair about a guy who produces abnormally high levels of HGH, vs. someone else injecting HGH? Why is one more interesting to watch than the other? It seems the only possible answer is attaching some sort of mysticism to the fact that one was "natural".

      If we wanted to set a new weight lifting record, we could just bring in a forklift. Sure, it's not entirely fair that you must play with the cards you've been dealt with but at least that puts reasonable bounds on things. Drugging people up with all sorts of shit that might make them win a medal today and screw tomorrow would certainly be no more fair and destroy any vision of the healthy athlete. You can tell with american athletes, the kind that never get drug tested that they're just shot up on everything and probably have sideeffects from here to Mars. But who cares when you a few years can be an NFL star...

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    8. Re:Genetic by Sique · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Persons who have the chromosome configuration XYXX tend to develop female genitals, even though they have an Y. So what are they?

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    9. Re:Genetic by pinkj · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We need:

      The Hormonally Abnormal Olympics
      The Clone Olympics (identical twins, triplets, etc.)
      The Trans Olympics
      The Hermaphrodite Olympics

    10. Re:Genetic by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      One possible mutation is to have a 'defective' Y. Such people are physically female, with typical female strength/speed/stamina/etc. The only time such women typically discover they have a Y is when they discover they have fertility problems.

      Unfortunatley, life isn't built out of neat little boxes where everything fits exactly. 'course that's what makes it interesting.

    11. Re:Genetic by Bent+Mind · · Score: 1

      If it has come to the point that you need a genetic test to categorize athletes into male and female, maybe they should just stop categorizing based on sex. I never have understood the practice. It is sexist and degrading. Sure, you're a great athlete, for a girl.

      --
      Request a Linux Shockwave player here: http://www.macromedia.com/support/email/wishform/
    12. Re:Genetic by Hungus · · Score: 1

      Male, as I already stated.

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      Bad Panda! No Bamboo for you! In matters of importance ACs will not be responded to. Want to say something critical,OK
    13. Re:Genetic by pbhj · · Score: 1

      [...] some poor girl who (apparently through no fault of her own) has some natural advantage is being punished. That is simply crazy.

      I'd be highly surprised to find that a genetic analysis determines this person to be female.

      Personally I'd go with presence anywhere (on X or Y) of the SRY gene as the definition of "non-female" to use - it appears that the IOC used to use that definition, I don't really understand why they dropped it; presumably those who wish not to be identified with their biological sex formed a strong lobby? The race groups would then be female sex and other. Ignore notions of gender and physical form.

      The closest you'd get then to the line, it seems, is those with a mutated SRY gene - in which case if TDF is produced assume it is SRY, if not (ie the gene is not functional) then assume it is not.

    14. Re:Genetic by Hungus · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Here you go in a nice logical format:
      the set "Proper Y" belongs to the superset "Y" or Yo -> Y
      the set "Defective Y" belongs to the superset "Y" or Y' ->Y
      Yo+Y' = Y
      Y -> male
      Y' -> male
      therefore the statement that "The only time such women typically discover they have a Yis when they discover they have fertility problems." is a nonsensical. Your statement should thus be:"The only time these men with female genitalia typically discover they have a Y is when they discover they have fertility problems."

      --
      Bad Panda! No Bamboo for you! In matters of importance ACs will not be responded to. Want to say something critical,OK
    15. Re:Genetic by Sique · · Score: 1

      This is incompatible with current legal practices ;)

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    16. Re:Genetic by miracle69 · · Score: 1

      Gender is a phenotype, not a genotype.

      If the genes don't get activated, then the phenotype is not seen.

      --
      Linux - Because Mommy taught me to Share.
    17. Re:Genetic by MaskDeSmith · · Score: 1

      It's unlikely that someone outside of your ethnicity would be a match for a bone marrow transplant, BUT it is very possible to get one from someone of the opposite gender, in which case all blood tests for sex would reveal that you are of the gender of the donor, even though it would in no way affect hormones or other sex-related characteristics.

    18. Re:Genetic by sjames · · Score: 1

      A good reason to ban performance enhancing drugs is that we don't really want our athletic heros and especially the many kids who will emulate them ( until they find out that's not where their talent is) to end up dieing in their 40s from the effects of those drugs. There's not much interesting in sports if any 90 pound weakling can shoot up and become a champion power lifter (at least until they're dead or crippled). Of course, people who inject HGH or steroids are likely to raise their levels higher than any genetic variation would. Or at least create a window where they are both old enough to compete but not yet too damaged to compete effectively.

    19. Re:Genetic by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      The rate of genetic "weird cases" is orders of magnitude higher than the rate of people competing at olympic levels - it's no wonder that the two cross occasionally. I imagine most "weird cases" (XYY, XY with female genitalia, etc.) don't end up being physically superior, but if one does, are they any less entitled to competition than the super-swimmer with the freakish body proportions, or any of the other genetic extremes that end up doing impossibly well in the games?

      In a way, world class competition is a celebration of freaks - people who are so far outside the norm that they are better at one or two things than billions of other people. People really should be prepared for there to be something other than grit, drive, determination and endless practice behind these people's success.

    20. Re:Genetic by mysidia · · Score: 1

      The genetics may be abnormal, and genes don't define gender, we just see them as related to gender.

      If she can bear young, cannot impregnate women, and has not been physically altered, then she's female, as she claims; even if she has 5 Y chromosomes.

    21. Re:Genetic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They've already got that covered. They've all been joined the above into one very large event, it's called Hollywood Boulevard.

    22. Re:Genetic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is she heavier than a duck?

    23. Re:Genetic by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      Male, as I already stated.

      But they have no male genitals, Hungus.

    24. Re:Genetic by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      Here is some logic for you: If it ain't hanging, it ain't Hungus.

    25. Re:Genetic by Hungus · · Score: 1

      Read my original post "As far as I am concerned if it has only X chromosomes it is female, else it is male."
      xxxy is a variation of klinefelter's syndrome people with klinefelter's syndrome are male regardless of external genitalia.
      Sorry guys, but I am consistent.

      --
      Bad Panda! No Bamboo for you! In matters of importance ACs will not be responded to. Want to say something critical,OK
  5. Obvious solution by master_p · · Score: 1

    If you can make love to her, then she is a woman (provided that you know where you put your willy in)...

    1. Re:Obvious solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

      As a general rule, if you can't tell what she is, then run.

    2. Re:Obvious solution by ultrabot · · Score: 5, Funny

      If you can make love to her, then she is a woman (provided that you know where you put your willy in)...

      ... or, if she uses the term "make love" for the act, she is a woman.

      --
      Save your wrists today - switch to Dvorak
    3. Re:Obvious solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My hand is a woman?

    4. Re:Obvious solution by El+Jynx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I disagree. Her ability to run was what got this whole discussion started in the first place :P

      --
      A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it well worth the effort.
    5. Re:Obvious solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess that tree with the knothole in your yard makes you very happy.

    6. Re:Obvious solution by Narcocide · · Score: 1

      Yea I agree with the parent post; that is a weak defense against what is clearly a mutant super-human track star. If you're trying to escape he/her by running away you're doomed.

    7. Re:Obvious solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Her ability to run was what got this whole discussion started in the first place"

      The point is, if you run from her you are not in danger of accidentally touching something, umm... you didn't expect!, so to speak ... so I think the parent post's advice was valid. You need to run as a general rule *long before* you get anywhere near wanting or trying to shag her! ... Previous generations summed it up as, "Caution Is the Better Part of Valor!" ... although I suspect most back then didn't even consider this situation was possible and I'm certain they didn't give medals for this kind of Valor! ;) ... (But then again, the peace of mind of escaping a near miss would be reward enough!).

    8. Re:Obvious solution by masmullin · · Score: 1

      She'll catch you... shes fast.

    9. Re:Obvious solution by ignavus · · Score: 1

      If you can make love to her, then she is a woman (provided that you know where you put your willy in)...

      ... or, if she uses the term "make love" for the act, she is a woman.

      Is that like "make install"?

      (Why are you looking at me like that?)

      --
      I am anarch of all I survey.
    10. Re:Obvious solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That won't help much, she's apparently pretty fast.

    11. Re:Obvious solution by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      It's more like: "insert floppy".

    12. Re:Obvious solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just fuck her. If she orgasms she's a woman. Then tell her you are not convinced and that you have to fuck her again and again and again.

  6. Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Fallen+Kell · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As subject says. If there is a "Y" cromosome, well, you have a male then...

    --
    We were all warned a long time ago that MS products sucked, remember the Magic 8 Ball said, "Outlook not so good"
    1. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by packeteer · · Score: 2, Informative

      You know that some people with XXY chromosomes are identified as female right?

      --
      unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep
    2. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by xZgf6xHx2uhoAj9D · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Even more confusing, how would you classify a chimera where some body parts have Y chromosomes and some don't?

    3. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by freeballer · · Score: 1

      I never saw this woman til just now... but she's really manly looking, no offence intended. Maybee the tests aren't infoulable but considering how many would test to be xxy I'd say test them and if they happen to be that 1% give it to them. but genetal checks don't mean anything if a guy could get a great doctor and other body differences (to my knowledge) are chopped upto things like hormones (size of middle/second last finger)

    4. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently that is not always the case. There has been a Dutch atlete (mid last century, forgot the name) who had a "Y" chromosome, yet was still considered female (well, after recent studies anyway)

      IMO just leave the girl alone. She came only recently to the world of athletics and is only 18: isn't it to be expected that someone in that situation can still drastically improve?

    5. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by chill · · Score: 4, Informative

      [citation needed]

      Every reference I could fine indicated that Klinefelter's Syndrome was considered "males born with extra chromosome". Wikipedia is just one, but everything else I found thru Google on "xxy chromosome" referred to the people born with this condition as "male".

      Can you site a reference otherwise?

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    6. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by SnoopJeDi · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's Not That Simpleâ.

      Besides, you're ignoring the point. The real issue here is highlighted by this passage:

      But now the IAAF claim that they want to conduct further tests to see if 'she may have a rare medical condition that gives her an unfair advantage.'

      In a world where people can change their identities at will (transsexualism, etc.), or otherwise, what changes need to be made to the outdated simple classifications?

      And additionally, the obnoxious notion of "fairness" further complicates the issue.

    7. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      You realize some people with XXY chromosomes may have genetic advantages over normal XX females, right?

    8. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by VulpesFoxnik · · Score: 1

      You cannot possibly be serious. Intersexed affects not only the genitals, but mental configurations as well, a condition known as transsexual. But please, continue your bigotry.

      --
      RES PUBLICA NON DOMINETUR
    9. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by girlintraining · · Score: 0

      Genitalia isn't determined by the Y chromosome, but by something called the "Testes Determining Factor". It is possible to have XY females and XX males. And even when it is present, that's not what causes differentiation, but rather a hormonal surge during about the 6th week of pregnancy -- which is environmentally mediated. Back to the drawing board you go.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    10. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are we talking about Lady Gaga here?

    11. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by LurkerXXX · · Score: 1

      The grandparent probably got it mixed up with

      Androgen-insensitivity-syndrome

    12. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Sancho · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And additionally, the obnoxious notion of "fairness" further complicates the issue.

      When issues like these come up, I'm always reminded of Harrison Bergeron

    13. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by gparent · · Score: 2, Funny

      Well man, if she's a chimera too we're fucked.

    14. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Johnno74 · · Score: 1

      You know that some people with XXY chromosomes are identified as female right?

      --
      unzip; strip; touch; finger; mount; fsck; more; yes; unmount; sleep

      /quote>

      When I first read your post I thought your sig was part of the post and not a sig.

      Nearly blew breakfast out my nose.

    15. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by girlintraining · · Score: 0

      In a world where people can change their identities at will (transsexualism, etc.),

      *face palm* 30 seconds on Google will tell you that the medical and scientific communities generally agree that people who are transsexual/transgender/whatever have a fixed identity. They don't choose it, it's what they are. Now, how the hell they got that way is a subject of much debate.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    16. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by cyberstealth1024 · · Score: 1

      quote fail

    17. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      She lives in a remote hovel in South Africa. Her dad works in the city, and gets to come home once per month to give his family his wages. I'm pretty sure she didn't get wisked off to Beverly Hills to get her penis removed.

      It may be an intersex issue, which still doesn't answer the question if she is "woman" enough to compete with other women. Intersex people often have to deal with these descriminations, and there are no easy answers. This is more complicated than being a Eunuch, which isn't a sexual developmental issue, but rather a choice, even if the recipient didn't make the choice themselves.

      Assuming she is intersex they will likely take it away from her, just as they took participating in womens football away from her at 14. I'm guessing the outcome will not be pretty.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    18. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by ObsessiveMathsFreak · · Score: 1

      You would burn the abomination as it is a perversion in the eyes of the Lord, duh!

      --
      May the Maths Be with you!
    19. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IYou could call it mosaic, too.

    20. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Admiral+Ag · · Score: 1

      "Oooh oohhh Laaady looks like a dude..."

      Nah, just doesn't have the same ring to it.

      --
      "by that I mean people who don't sit on slashdot all day wondering why everyone else isn't building robots" DECS
    21. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree. What about the "Bolt syndrome". I mean a tall guy who also happens to have incredibly explosive muscle fiber. That must be as unusual as any medical condition. This man can run 100 meters in 9.50 with some tailwind, while all the second best athletes have never been under 9.70!

    22. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Frankenstein's monster?

    23. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      bestiality is wrong, but what have you got against two consenting adults dressed in fur going at it! oh right your dadie raped you while dressed as a fox!

    24. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by __aarzwb9394 · · Score: 1

      And additionally, the obnoxious notion of "fairness" further complicates the issue.

      I almost didn't see through your scare quotes there:-)

      By ""fairness"" (help me, the big boy said a bad word!) do you mean the very laudable notion of having everyone play by the same rules?

    25. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by rrohbeck · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily. A Y chromosome means that the early precursors of gonads in the embryo produce testosterone.
      Now what if there's a mutation that makes the cells that would normally develop into genitals insensitive to testosterone? It's a multi-step process from genotype to phenotype and all sorts of interesting things can go "wrong" (and I know that term is very offensive to LGBT folks.)

    26. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The movie was one of those rare instances where it managed to be much better than the story it was based on... (showtime original movie of the late 80s or early 90s) I HIGHLY recommend you check it out!

    27. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hope this isn't akin to a rickroll--but I'll look for it!

      Thanks for the suggestion! (too lazy to log in on this machine)

    28. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Norsefire · · Score: 1

      Even more confusing, how would you classify a chimera where some body parts have Y chromosomes and some don't?

      I don't know, but the whole lions-head-that-breaths-fire thing might give it away.

    29. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      The data on klinefelter isusually wrong, papers on it can go both ways.

    30. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Blakey+Rat · · Score: 1

      Pixar's The Incredible's is a heck of a lot more commonly-known and accessible and carries fundamentally the same message as Harrison Bergeron. Just FYI.

    31. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by timbalara · · Score: 1

      That just gives a whole new meaning to the phrase "Go fdisk yourself."

    32. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by noidentity · · Score: 1

      Can you site a reference otherwise?

      What kind of site are you looking for? Flat, hilly, trees maybe? What about a stream? Any preference on the lot shape? Also, what's your budget?

    33. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by getuid() · · Score: 1

      It's Not That Simple.

      Besides, you're ignoring the point. The real issue here is highlighted by this passage:

      But now the IAAF claim that they want to conduct further tests to see if 'she may have a rare medical condition that gives her an unfair advantage.'

      Yes, it is. If it's a female (i.e. has the corresponding genitals from birth), then... she is a female. Period.

      What's an "unfair advantage"? How about being a 300 pound, 7foot tall hariy-back in heavy-weight boxing? Is that "unfair"? Tough luck. How about being so incredibly fast, that you make the 100m in 9 seconds flat? How about... well, just being a "natural" in whatever sports you're doing? How about having this thing called "talent"? Is that an "unfair advantage", too, if the wrong people win?

      The whole point of world championships and olympics is for the best of the best to measure with each other, not for the best of the average. Somebody has an advantage from birth? Well, as long as that's whote Mother Nature gave him (as opposed to 'was engineerd by man, in any way') that advantage... congratulations to him/her/it and good luck with it. And to all the others: get over it. It's not about who trains the hardest, it's about who's the best.

    34. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by LaurensVH · · Score: 1

      As subject says. If there is a "Y" cromosome, well, you have a male then...

      Yes, except, no.
      People with genotype XY, and non-active (mutated) SRY. Female phenotype.
      http://www.newscientist.com/article/dn16934

    35. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      In fact, 'genetics' determine almost nothing about how a person's body develops.

      Hormones determine all that. Genetics just tries to start the hormones in some logical manner...and often fails. Or at least does something weird.

      This not only applies to all aspects of gender (gender identity, sexual orientation, physical sex) but to basically everything.

      Basically, we got all pumped up thinking that 'genes' did certain things in the body, and at this point we've come to realize that, frankly, 99.999% of genetic information is the same, and that information is what does everything. Everyone has the genes for a penis, everyone has the genes for dark skin, everyone has the genes for perfect eyes, etc.

      What some people do, and some do not, have, however are the genes that trip on the hormones to enact such things in their body. That is the genetic variation among people. That's it. That's the whole extent of difference, genes that alter a hormonal dimmer switch.

      It is a little disconcerting to realize that someone could go back in time and remove you, at a week old, from your mother's womb and give you carefully calculated and timed doses of hormones for the first couple of months of development, and make you into any sort of person they wanted, including traits we normally think are 'genetic'.

      This, incidentally, is why we're not really making as much progress in the Human Genome Process as we should. What we're essentially identifying now are genes that cause 'too much' or 'too little' of specific hormones that make us susceptible to some disease, as opposed to what we thought we'd find, genes that actually 'cause' disease.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    36. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Female-phenotype XXY seems to be very rare but has been reported.

      Cases of individuals who had an XXY karyotype and a female phenotype have been reported [37].
      [37] Schmid M, Guttenbach M, Endres H, Terruhn V. A 47,XXY female with unusual genitalia. Hum Genet 1992;90:346â"9.
      source

      47,XXY female with testicular feminization and positive SRY: a case report.

      and even An SRY-negative 47,XXY mother and daughter

      Further discussion, rather inconclusive: bodieslikeours forum - anecdotal references to an XXY female in New Zealand, and of Klinefelter himself saying that 1 of his original 9 patients was female

    37. Re:Simple... if "Y" chromosome found = male by DigitalCrackPipe · · Score: 1

      Apparently, it can go both ways depending on how intact the gender-affecting part of the Y chromosome is, as seen here.

      However, it's odd that the IIAF doesn't just test for the more common cases of XY and XX, and deal with the anomaly case if needed. That would have already been a whole lot more accurate than a physical inspection.

  7. Medical advantage by Daimanta · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "she may have a rare medical condition that gives her an unfair advantage.' "

    What kind of bullshit is this? Your genetics are 80% of the winning. Personally, I was born with messed up feet so I have always known that I wouldn't be the sprinting world champion. The fact that this woman(because that's what she is) has the better genetic profile to win these kinds of races is to her advantage and the people who didn't win are to accept that or play another game.

    --
    Knowledge is power. Knowledge shared is power lost.
    1. Re:Medical advantage by NoobixCube · · Score: 4, Interesting

      To expand on what you said, if she's banned or pulled back because of her genetic condition, then you can probably expect your gold medal in the mail any day now. Treating people differently for their genetics has a very bad history so far, and sets a bad precedent for the future. Wake me up when the question is about whether someone genetically engineered to be better should compete in the same league as naturals. That's an interesting topic since genetic engineering could be construed as a performance enhancement.

      --
      Admit it. You post strawman arguments as AC so you get modded Insightful for refuting them, rather than Troll
    2. Re:Medical advantage by Trepidity · · Score: 1

      While that's true, the separation of male/female sporting competitions throws a wrench in the works, because it's already based entirely on the assumption that to be "fair", we ought to first do some genetic segregation. So then you open up the whole can of worms about whether a particular person is "unfairly" on the wrong side of the fence.

    3. Re:Medical advantage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At first I wanted to disagree with you, but the more I thought about it the more I agreed with you. The best example I can come up with is the horse Secretariat. When he died they examined his body and discovered his heart was much larger than average, allowing him to pump more blood faster through his body than other horses. I don't think anybody looks back on his accomplishments and considers them to be tainted in any way. He was just a freak of nature; other horses racing in his era were just out of luck.

    4. Re:Medical advantage by girlintraining · · Score: 4, Informative

      because it's already based entirely on the assumption that to be "fair", we ought to first do some genetic segregation

      They allow M2F transgendered persons to compete as women provided they've been on hormone therapy continuously for two or more years -- because it's been proven that hormones have a far greater role in athletic performance than genetics. So genetics is really not the issue here.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    5. Re:Medical advantage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "she may have a rare medical condition that gives her an unfair advantage."

      Ummm yeah! But it's not so rare. It's called being a GUY.

      "It's a MAN, baby!"

    6. Re:Medical advantage by Trepidity · · Score: 1

      Hmm, interesting. In that case, the commenters arguing that testing for XX vs. XY would settle the problem in this case would seem to be wrong, and instead the right test would be for hormone levels.

    7. Re:Medical advantage by dougmc · · Score: 1

      Assuming you're right (and I don't know either way), I imagine that such a rule would disappear quickly if these transgendered women started *winning* against the `real' women consistently. They would only allow something like that if it didn't actually make a difference. Once it made a difference, people would argue it was unfair and it would be thrown out.

    8. Re:Medical advantage by blackraven14250 · · Score: 1

      If you were him, this would be very similar to you being normal, and competing against people with mild physical handicaps.

    9. Re:Medical advantage by SanityInAnarchy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      It's especially interesting how outraged people got at the "chauvinistic" attitudes of people "assuming" that better performance means male. They certainly didn't complain about the fact that these events are split up by gender in the first place -- if they don't want questions like this, then simply make one mixed-gender competition, problem solved.

      --
      Don't thank God, thank a doctor!
    10. Re:Medical advantage by girlintraining · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Assuming you're right (and I don't know either way), I imagine that such a rule would disappear quickly if these transgendered women started *winning* against the `real' women consistently. They would only allow something like that if it didn't actually make a difference. Once it made a difference, people would argue it was unfair and it would be thrown out.

      I'd have to say the entire idea of athletic competition is a farce. We say genetics don't matter, but we've got demonstrated proof that certain clusters of genes lead to better physical performance -- and that almost without fail, the athletes in the top 0.01% of their sport have some or all of those genetic markers. Arguing over who is more 'real' than others is an argument that goes against nature; Questions about how 'real' they were would never come up if they weren't in a competition. If they weren't being reduced from human beings into objects for us to cheer, dissect, and comment about.

      We're creating an arbitrary line in the sand -- telling people they can't take certain drugs, or that their hormone levels need to be a certain way, or that they need to be born in just such a fashion, or raised just so -- in order to pass for "real". Most of the debate on this forum is not intellectual discourse but a mere re-arrangement of our prejudices.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    11. Re:Medical advantage by LaskoVortex · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Ummm yeah! But it's not so rare. It's called being a GUY.

      It's going to be unpopular here but I'll say it. That woman is the manliest looking 15 year old female on god's good earth. She walks like a man, talks like a man, has muscles like a man, and the general countenance of a man.

      People here are treating her case as if she were clearly a female and so are giving her a lot of leeway to be whatever gender she wants. But they are going to be crying foul play if she turns up a man and she is going to be cast a villain for it.

      What a difference gender makes, right folks?

      Own up to the gender favoritism, kids. When we think someone is a woman, we make psychological concessions, and any big bad man who suspects she might be male is unfair.

      None of the crusaders for her cause to be any gender she desires is thinking of her competitors or of the general concept of fairness.

      If she has such spectacular genetics, let her compete with the men.

      --
      Just callin' it like I see it.
    12. Re:Medical advantage by Kjella · · Score: 1

      Since males aren't allowed in female classes there's already some genetic profiles not allowed. We know there are people that fall outside the normal male/female genetics so the question then becomes in what class they can compete, you can't do away with that without doing away with separate classes altogether. If her body just happen to be very male-like but with regular XY chromosomes, then I don't see any problem with it, then she's just the same kind of genetic freak like most of the top male athletes. But if she's somewhere in between I don't think she's got anything to do in the female classes, it's basically missing the qualifications for the class like missing the weight limit in boxing.

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    13. Re:Medical advantage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Obviously in the future the only sporting events we'll have will be between clones.

      Removes all genetic advantages that one has over the other and allows for training to be the only advantage.

      Training and drugs.

    14. Re:Medical advantage by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 1

      Michael Phelps and Lance Armstrong are often held as examples of genetic advantage. Although there are some who disagree to some point. I wouldn't doubt that genetic advantage is just that - an advantage. It takes more than just genetics to succeed. But it appears that in modern sports, at that level, genetic advantages aren't all that uncommon.

    15. Re:Medical advantage by Attila+the+Bun · · Score: 1
      Bravo, well said.

      Semenya is a woman who has every right to feel badly treated. Apart from anything else, athletes are closely supervised whilst undergoing urine tests, and any physical ambiguity would have been spotted long ago.

      It's clear that there has been no deliberate deception here. If tests were needed, then simple human decency should have required that they were done privately and discreetly. Questioning her gender, in the most public and humiliating way possible, is absolutely disgraceful.

      As the previous poster points out, you're allowed to have good genes. And even if Semenya does have an extra Y chromosome, that's not against the rules, and it may not even be an advantage, as this article explains.

    16. Re:Medical advantage by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1

      I tend to agree with you. Now who I would test though is that Jamaican guy, Bolt. No-one these days comes in and just blows away the world record in the 100m by over a second. That seems too big a delta to the record. For both that and the 200m (which is what I believe is), the other race he set the world record in these games, by a similarly huge margin.

      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    17. Re:Medical advantage by Chees0rz · · Score: 1

      There MUST be more going on here than has been released.

      My big question is- when this person was born... did his/her parents or doctor make a choice as to his/her gender? Did he/she have 1 of each, or something in between and get it 'fixed' with a little nip tuck? This happens- and a lot of times people choose incorrectly. Is this the case?

      I just can't believe somebody causing this much controversy has had 100% natural his OR her genitals. My vote would be- 'Tough luck, you chose wrong'

      But if everything is natural and in tact down south (inc. eggs+plumbing)- then it must be a weird genetic anomaly. I don't yet have an opinion on this, yet...

      But having run track for 8 or so years- I can with all confidence say that it is NOT fair to have the physical equivalent of a guy running with females. There are amazing female athletes, but the performance scale is not equal. And to have women compete with men (as many /.ers are recommending) would shadow the amazing accomplishments of some insanely talented women.

    18. Re:Medical advantage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but she isn't a woman if what is suspected turns out to be true, so she's competeing in the wrong races. if she is indeed in possession of a pair of nuts then the advantage she is getting is like getting steriod injections. there are plenty of cases of people being born with female genitals that infact have an internal set of male genitals which are the dominate gender setting pair. If she shaves like a man, has chest nuscles like a man and runs like a man how the fuck can you sit there and say investigating it is bullshit?

      think of all the other female atheletes who have worked hard for years, are you honestly saying it's ok for them to have to compete against a man, and have all their hardwork count for nothing?

    19. Re:Medical advantage by ukyoCE · · Score: 1

      Does that mean every male runner should get a sex change operation (reroll female) and join the women's competition for an easy win?

      What you're suggesting is that the olympics should ignore sex entirely. It would certainly solve the grey areas between male and female, but it would also completely eliminate competition for the (roughly) half of the population of the "lesser" sex for that particular sport.

    20. Re:Medical advantage by timmarhy · · Score: 1

      your missing the point. taking 25 seconds off a world record like that indicates more then being born with a good pair of legs. shaving, chest muscles and her bone structure indicate "she" may indeed be a man with female genitals in addition to her testicales. you can try muddy the waters all you want, but if you've got a pair of nuts, your not female.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    21. Re:Medical advantage by timmarhy · · Score: 1

      i think you mean .01 of a second champ, and that compared to this "chick" who bettered the 1500m record by 25 whole seconds, is nothing.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    22. Re:Medical advantage by g2devi · · Score: 1

      Personally, I think the problem is that we have Male and Female sports in the Olympics. If all sexes competed in all events there wouldn't be an issue. Of course, that would mean that some sports are dominated by some sexes. Big deal. That's life. Go into any university and walk into a sociology lecture, then walk into an engineering lecture and you'll see these extremes. To inclusive of both sexes, the trick is not to segregate sports, but to ensure that enough variety of sports that half the sports are dominated by men and half by women.

      The bigger issue has to deal with genetic modification and doping. I think the core of the problem is that a good Olympic sport really would be about skill, not mechanics. Take running or weight lifting. If you win, what have you proved? Only that you've been gifted with a good body and have trained it or "enhanced" it enough to win. Now look at something like gymnastics or rock climbing. If you win, what have you proved? You've proved that you've trained your body to master a skill. In these sports, genetic modification and doping may help, but by far, your skill is what causes you to win. If the Olympics moved towards these sorts of competitions, they'd be a lot better off.

    23. Re:Medical advantage by laurielaptop · · Score: 1

      "she may have a rare medical condition that gives her an unfair advantage.' "

      What kind of bullshit is this? Your genetics are 80% of the winning. Personally, I was born with messed up feet so I have always known that I wouldn't be the sprinting world champion. The fact that this woman(because that's what she is) has the better genetic profile to win these kinds of races is to her advantage and the people who didn't win are to accept that or play another game.

      Absolutely correct.

    24. Re:Medical advantage by radtea · · Score: 2, Insightful

      So genetics is really not the issue here.

      Huh?

      For people who don't take hormones, where do you think they come from?

      That's right: our genes tell our cells to manufacture them! Some women manufacture more testosterone than others (so do some men) as well as other hormones, and these genetic differences in hormone production are a significant factor in athletic performance.

      All top-ranked athletes are genetic freaks. This one is just more-so, and to arbitrarily rule her out of competition is silly.

      All categories are artificial, the result of lines we draw between similar things to allow us to think easily about concepts rather than individuals. However, all the lines we draw are created for a given purpose, and they may not be adequate for other purposes. This is a case when a line-of-convenience has been drawn between men and women that happens to lump together things like developed breasts, lack of facial hair, and female genitalia. She hast the last characteristic, but not the former two, so the line breaks down.

      The solution to this kind of extremely common problem is to create a new category that covers the intermediate region. For example, we have areas of the Earth that are covered by deep water, and we call them "oceans". We have areas of the Earth that are pretty much dry, and we call them "land". But we also have areas in between that we call "beaches" that contain pretty much arbitrary mixes of land and water at different times.

      Only a flaming idiot would suggest either that "land" and "water" aren't useful categories because there are regions that can't be adequately put into one or the other, and only a flaming idiot would suggest that "beach" isn't a valid category because "land" and "water" are "real" categories and "beach" is some kind of weird made-up thing that falls in between them. All categories are made up--the only question is, "Are they useful or not?" (note that the way the world actually is puts significant constraints on what categories are useful, but does not in any way determine them uniquely, which frustrates innumerate philosophers.)

      In the present case, we only have one instance of the potential new category, which isn't an adequate basis for creating it, and the rough, crude and approximate division into "male" and "female" has a whole lot of social machinery of sport built around it, so adding a new category for this person isn't an option.

      What is an option is to let her compete in the category she most closely resembles: genetically freakish women of the kind who make great athletes, which is happily the company she finds herself in if she is permitted to compete as a woman.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    25. Re:Medical advantage by Sasha-Whitefur · · Score: 1

      "she may have a rare medical condition that gives her an unfair advantage.' "

      What kind of bullshit is this? Your genetics are 80% of the winning. Personally, I was born with messed up feet so I have always known that I wouldn't be the sprinting world champion. The fact that this woman(because that's what she is) has the better genetic profile to win these kinds of races is to her advantage and the people who didn't win are to accept that or play another game.

      By their logic, every athlete in the world would be banned. The "genetic advantage", is what makes them athletes.

    26. Re:Medical advantage by StreetStealth · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Over the course of this young century, the case you make will become all the more apparent to everyone else. I don't know what will happen in the middle of it, but by the end of the century, the Olympics, if they are still practiced, will be more akin to F1 racing than Hellenistic sport -- there will be a single human who pilots her body, but that body will bear the labor of a whole team of skilled engineers.

      --
      Your mind is clear / The things that you fear / Will fade with how much you / Believe what you hear
    27. Re:Medical advantage by noidentity · · Score: 1

      To expand on what you said, if she's banned or pulled back because of her genetic condition, then you can probably expect your gold medal in the mail any day now. Treating people differently for their genetics has a very bad history so far, and sets a bad precedent for the future.

      Most sports already exclude people based on genes. For example, a male baseball team excludes any organism that doesn't have human male genes. This means human females, male and female equines, canines, felines, etc.

    28. Re:Medical advantage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's going to be unpopular here but I'll say it. That woman is the manliest looking 15 year old female on god's good earth. She walks like a man, talks like a man, has muscles like a man, and the general countenance of a man.

      People here are treating her case as if she were clearly a female and so are giving her a lot of leeway to be whatever gender she wants.

      Uh, I'd say that the contents of her shorts has a lot to do with people believing she is "clearly a female". The provided equipment is a fairly accepted test of gender (despite other external traits like the ones you listed). This has nothing to do with what she "wants". I have no idea where you got the gender favoritism from... That said, I do see discrimination... from people like you. Because she doesn't look feminine and can win races, she must be a guy?

      At most, they might detect some rare condition in which her body has a genetic makeup or hormonal balance that is more commonly considered male. There won't be a huge outcry unless it was deliberately induced or deliberately withheld.

      Now, I wouldn't call myself a "crusader for her cause", but yes, I do think this is uncalled for. And yes, I have thought about her competitors and fairness. As others have pointed out, this is a slippery slope. Most of the top athletes have some kind of genetic advantage. Usain Bolt is a fine example. Sure training has a lot to do with being a good runner, but the way he smashes records makes it obvious that it is not just that he trains harder than anyone else. Are you going to tell him that he can't compete because it isn't fair to everyone else?

    29. Re:Medical advantage by girlintraining · · Score: 1

      Over the course of this young century, the case you make will become all the more apparent to everyone else. I don't know what will happen in the middle of it, but by the end of the century, the Olympics, if they are still practiced, will be more akin to F1 racing than Hellenistic sport -- there will be a single human who pilots her body, but that body will bear the labor of a whole team of skilled engineers.

      The greatest advances of this century won't be in science or technology, but in an expanding definition of what it means to be human. I suppose it's only logical when realizing that human beings have spent most of its brief history on this planet trying to bend the environment to its will. It will be the pinacle of our achievements when we can manipulate not only our environment, but our mortal bodies as well. And I'm scared for the day that comes. We are social creatures. We're supposed to care about (and for) each other. I worry that in the future, such guilty and shameful feelings that hold us back will be recognized as such and surgically removed, and by our own material improvement we will have all but eliminated the most salient characteristic of an individual human being: The capacity for love, which is dependent on the ability to feel guilt for our own actions.

      Even now, in this little microcosm... Not one person in all the voices on this forum has anyone asked "Well, how does she feel about this?" It's a sign of things to come.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    30. Re:Medical advantage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even now, in this little microcosm... Not one person in all the voices on this forum has anyone asked "Well, how does she feel about this?" It's a sign of things to come.

      That may be because half TFA was devoted to that issue, where we were told that she's hurt by it, yet stoic, yet losing her patience with the system. I think it's also pretty obvious that she'd prefer that her victories continue to be honored and that she continues to be allowed to compete. What more is there? How she'll feel if genetic testing reveals her to be some kind of "freak" who can compete against neither women nor men? That, too, is rather obvious. According to the article, her whole life has revolved around athletic competition and she's clearly extremely good at it. To be suddenly denied that because she's some kind of quasi-human freak? She'd be crushed. Anyone would be.

    31. Re:Medical advantage by steelfood · · Score: 1

      That woman is the manliest looking 15 year old female on god's good earth.

      I'll bet you'd still do her if she offered.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    32. Re:Medical advantage by Msdose · · Score: 1

      Yeah, Most people see that, but a picture in the paper showed that her mother looked pretty much the same.

    33. Re:Medical advantage by SetupWeasel · · Score: 1

      If you are going to enforce arbitrary criteria for competition, then you can't cry about it when it doesn't go your way. If she was born a woman or even a transsexual that meets the IOC standards to compete as a woman, let her compete as a woman and deal with the consequences of the rules we have made. It isn't fair to her otherwise. Her competition should take their hats off to her as a person with greater talent.

    34. Re:Medical advantage by owlstead · · Score: 1

      She has been treated as a girl from right at birth. She has been checked all her life when she was competing as *IT SAYS RIGHT IN TFA*. Who are we to say she isn't one when she starts to be competitive at the highest level?

      She never had any choice in this, as you suggest.

      All the other athletes are already using their own "unfair" advantages to be competitive. Now they meet someone who's got that double.

    35. Re:Medical advantage by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      we've got demonstrated proof that certain clusters of genes lead to better physical performance -- and that almost without fail, the athletes in the top 0.01% of their sport have some or all of those genetic markers.

      [italics added]

      You mean: some of those top athletes do not have these genetic markers?

    36. Re:Medical advantage by Joe+Tie. · · Score: 1

      Seriously, if she's pulled I really do want a gold medal for simply being alive. If what's important is effort, not results, than I'm easily at olympic level just from the fact that I still walk on these pathetic pieces of rot I used to call legs.

      --
      Everything will be taken away from you.
    37. Re:Medical advantage by Joe+Tie. · · Score: 1

      The capacity for love, which is dependent on the ability to feel guilt for our own actions.

      That seems like a pretty big assumption. Are you basing this on neurology or just guessing?

      --
      Everything will be taken away from you.
    38. Re:Medical advantage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "she may have a rare medical condition that gives her an unfair advantage.' "

      What kind of bullshit is this? Your genetics are 80% of the winning. Personally, I was born with messed up feet so I have always known that I wouldn't be the sprinting world champion. The fact that this woman(because that's what she is) has the better genetic profile to win these kinds of races is to her advantage and the people who didn't win are to accept that or play another game.

      Q: What do you call a woman with good genes?
      A: A man.

      (Sorry, couldn't help it... )

    39. Re:Medical advantage by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Transgendered women often have a disadvantage, in fact, once their previous muscles go away.

      People don't realize this, because they learned it in abbreviated health classes in high school, but men and women both have testosterone produced by their gonads.

      They just, obviously, have different amounts. Men produce 40-60 times as much testosterone as women. (Although, actually, women turn some of that testosterone into estrogens.)

      (This also applies to other, less famous, androgens, and is true, in reverse, for female estrogens, which men make some of, but I am trying to simplify here.)

      During male-to-female SRS, the former males, obviously, have their gonads removed, and then start on female hormones, some sort of synthetic estrogen. But they usually don't take the small amounts of testosterone and other androgens that genetic women have. All of which are steroids, and all of which build muscle mass.

      As a result, they lose muscle mass past where they'd end up if they were genetically female and had ovaries producing tiny amounts of testosterone.(1) In some ways, this is 'good' in that it makes them look more female, faster, and reduces hair in places it shouldn't be, but it's really sucky if they are an athlete.

      And even if such minute amounts of synthetic testosterone were produced and prescribed commonly for SRS, I have to wonder if they would be legal in this competition.

      1) Incidentally, as someone mentioned above, XY chromosome people with CAIS, which means their androgen receptors don't work, so they are genetically male but physically female, have the same problem, being weaker because they have no testosterone at all, or, actually, they do, but it has no effect on their body. As would people who are XX but have CAIS, who are almost never detected. (As they are genetically and physically female.)

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    40. Re:Medical advantage by LaskoVortex · · Score: 1

      There MUST be more going on here than has been released.

      I've been in discussion with one of the world's foremost reproductive endocrinologists about this person. We currently have developed this hypothesis: 5-ARD

      --
      Just callin' it like I see it.
    41. Re:Medical advantage by LaskoVortex · · Score: 1

      I'll bet you'd still do her if she offered.

      Speak for yourself.

      --
      Just callin' it like I see it.
    42. Re:Medical advantage by LaskoVortex · · Score: 1

      Uh, I'd say that the contents of her shorts has a lot to do with people believing she is "clearly a female". The provided equipment is a fairly accepted test of gender (despite other external traits like the ones you listed). This has nothing to do with what she "wants". I have no idea where you got the gender favoritism from... That said, I do see discrimination... from people like you. Because she doesn't look feminine and can win races, she must be a guy?

      Yes. Testes make the man. I'm saying she has testes. I think they haven't descended. See 5-ARD. Her testes give her a massive anabolic advantage over women. It would not be fair to true women to let her compete with them.

      It's funny how /.ers say you are a sexist when your motivation is to see fairness for women.

      --
      Just callin' it like I see it.
    43. Re:Medical advantage by theshowmecanuck · · Score: 1

      Usain Bolt's extraordinary world championships continued as he broke his own 200m world record, running in a time of 19.19sec that slashed 0.11sec off the time he set in Beijing last year. Earlier this week he ran a time of 9.58sec to break his own 100m world record by exactly the same margin.

      We were both wrong. :) My local news station misreported it, is where I got my figure. I should have verified it. Ah well.

      --
      -- I ignore anonymous replies to my comments and postings.
    44. Re:Medical advantage by VanessaE · · Score: 1
      To be accurate, female hormones are taken well in advance of SRS, sometimes many years ahead, since the person in question needs to live full time as their target sex *before* surgery is authorized (a time period referred to as "real life test" or "real life experience". One needs to feminize the body in order to do this successfully.

      Assuming the patient has received the proper dosages of their meds the entire time, their body will have been under the influence of the hormones long enough that the surgery doesn't change much. The patient can stop taking testosterone blockers (usually Spironolactone, sometimes Cyproterone Acetate), but they must continue taking estrogen. Sometimes the patient can reduce their estrogen intake somewhat.

    45. Re:Medical advantage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But now the IAAF claim that they want to conduct further tests to see if 'Usain Bolt may have long legs, a physical condition that gives him an unfair advantage.'

    46. Re:Medical advantage by Rogerborg · · Score: 1
      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    47. Re:Medical advantage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's easy to tell if a person is a female. Try living with it for 5 years. If it takes half your stuff, and bad mouths you to your family and friends, it's female.

  8. Genetic Advantage by masmullin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Everyone competing in IAAF competitions should be fat, lazy, nonathletic, slobs. Otherwise its unfair to all the fat, lazy, nonathletic slobs who just cant compete.

    1. Re:Genetic Advantage by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Unless they have a TV-remote competition.

    2. Re:Genetic Advantage by LaskoVortex · · Score: 1

      Everyone competing in IAAF competitions should be fat, lazy, nonathletic, slobs.

      Yes, it's about jealousy and has nothing to do with fairness in competition.

      Your irony is not lost on me. Let me continue in your ironic spirit:

      ...In fact, Everyone competing in IAAF or any sort of athletics or competition whatsoever should completely give up on audits for fairness of any sort. I therefore propose these changes:

      1. Linemen should be able to bring function chainsaws to football games.
      2. Steroids and HGH should be mandatory.
      3. Mortocycles should be allowed at track events.
      4. Fire arms will now be required for all competitors. Automatic fire arms are encouraged.
      5. If you can, burn down your competitors' houses while they are sleeping in them. If you can prove you had a sporting event coming up, any related charges will be dropped.
      6. Bribe everyone you can afford to bribe. It's legal now.

      So, in case you missed the point: audit of athletes is necessary to some extent. The 15 year old female in question is very, very, very masculine. It may be unfortunate to her, but being an extreme case, she might have to face an audit of her eligibility. If she passes audit of her gender, then she deserves her victories over other females.

      --
      Just callin' it like I see it.
    3. Re:Genetic Advantage by SnEptUne · · Score: 1

      However, in this case, she is only facing audit because she win. If being born masculine isn't qualified, why on earth can she participle in the first place? If it is about fairness, let the test be conducted before the game, not afterward.

    4. Re:Genetic Advantage by Kaptain+Kruton · · Score: 1

      Everyone competing in IAAF competitions should be fat, lazy, nonathletic, slobs.

      But I don't think anybody on Slashdot wants to compete.

    5. Re:Genetic Advantage by selven · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I like this. Instead of countries picking their athletes, we could randomly pick people to go. Would be much more interesting.

  9. Awesome by WiiVault · · Score: 2, Insightful

    One reason I would never hope to be rich and in the spot light is stuff like this. Ask Richard Gere how long shit like this can follow you. If it its true it is a pretty personal outting.

    1. Re:Awesome by Gulthek · · Score: 1

      I honestly have no idea what Richard Gere did, or even that he did something besides have an acting career.

    2. Re:Awesome by pHus10n · · Score: 1

      Tube. Hamster. Lots of press.

    3. Re:Awesome by earthbound+kid · · Score: 2, Informative
    4. Re:Awesome by Artifakt · · Score: 2, Informative

      You're better off. Richard Gere didn't do anything. A person who looked (sort of) like him was admitted to a mid-western hospital with an embarrassing situation, and a rumor got started that it was Richard himself. That rumor has followed the poor man for over 20 years, despite being traced to its origin. That's probably what will happen in this case. The sports officials will run tests until they get to some sort of conclusion, and the rumors will fly until nobody knows what the decision actually was.

      --
      Who is John Cabal?
    5. Re:Awesome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I was reading Chuck Palahniuk's Pygmy the other week, and this line had me busting out laughing on the subway. BTW, the entire book is written in this pidgen English.

      Field marshal exclaim how American devils no squeamish of any possible genital acts. Forever tunneling rodents inserted rectums even top famous movie actors.

    6. Re:Awesome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would expect the amount of lube to be more important than how hard you press.

  10. I can do the opposite by oldhack · · Score: 2, Funny

    If you ever posted here, you know you are not a REAL female. You may even look like one, but you know, deep inside, you have big question mark lingering. Don't you!

    --
    Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
    1. Re:I can do the opposite by girlintraining · · Score: 4, Funny

      If you ever posted here, you know you are not a REAL female. You may even look like one, but you know, deep inside, you have big question mark lingering. Don't you!

      Nope. Still got tits. I think the problem is on your end.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    2. Re:I can do the opposite by oldhack · · Score: 1

      What kinda tits? How many?

      --
      Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
    3. Re:I can do the opposite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you ever posted here, you know you are not a REAL female. You may even look like one, but you know, deep inside, you have big question mark lingering. Don't you!

      hum.... then if some not REAL females posted in here, tell them that i'm , deep inside, gay for them...

    4. Re:I can do the opposite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because if I were a real female I would take the lesson intended by the frequent expressions of misogyny on this site and get back to the kitchen where I belong. Is that it?

    5. Re:I can do the opposite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've got tits too, and I am not a woman. Whats your point?

    6. Re:I can do the opposite by oldhack · · Score: 1

      My stupid post must have touched a nerve, eh.

      --
      Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
    7. Re:I can do the opposite by Macgrrl · · Score: 1

      LOL. Yep, looks down, tits still there. :)

      --
      Sara
      Designer, Gamer, Macgrrl in an XP World
    8. Re:I can do the opposite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My stupid post must have touched a nerve, eh.

      If you are going to mock Canadians, at least have the decency to post your mockery in both English and French!:p

    9. Re:I can do the opposite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Aren't you a lesbian?

    10. Re:I can do the opposite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That comment has a high chance of application here regardless of whether you're male or female.

  11. I vote we settle this 4chan style... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "PICS OR IT'S NOT TRUE!"

    1. Re:I vote we settle this 4chan style... by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Stop it! You're asking for goatse, you know.

    2. Re:I vote we settle this 4chan style... by w00d · · Score: 0, Redundant

      It's a trap.

  12. Simple Test: by Tablizer · · Score: 2, Funny

    Kick them in the nuts really hard. If they don't fold over in pain and whimper an octave higher, they're female.

    1. Re:Simple Test: by girlintraining · · Score: 1

      Kick them in the nuts really hard. If they don't fold over in pain and whimper an octave higher, they're female.

      Hey, getting kicked in the crotch hurts us girls too. Although we're not usually crying, screaming, and curled up in a little ball for four hours after like the last guy who tried that test...

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    2. Re:Simple Test: by BlueParrot · · Score: 2, Informative

      Kick them in the nuts really hard. If they don't fold over in pain and whimper an octave higher, they're female.

      As a transsexual I can inform you that destroying/removing the the testicles does not result in your voice going higher in pitch once it has dropped. The larynx grow bigger under influence by testosterone, but it does not shrink again when testosterone is removed, nor does it do so under influence of oestrogen. Furthermore the difference in pitch between men and women is less than a full octave, which is why many transsexuals are still able to achieve a reasonably passable voice through voice training.

    3. Re:Simple Test: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you ever have gotten hit in the glans really hard, you know it hurts as bad as the nuts. Females have some pretty similiar hardware in that region.

    4. Re:Simple Test: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cuntpunting hurts like a bitch too, you know.

    5. Re:Simple Test: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually, no. A kick in the crotch would be painful for a woman too. Dunno about the octave shift.

    6. Re:Simple Test: by Anti_Climax · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think they were referring to the comical voice pitch change done in movies following a kick in the testicles, not a permanent change in voice caused by their destruction/removal.

      --
      Even people that believe in pre-destiny look both ways before crossing the street.
    7. Re:Simple Test: by Mishotaki · · Score: 1

      Kick them in the nuts really hard. If they don't fold over in pain and whimper an octave higher, they're female.

      but a female's nuts is the ovaries... if you manage to kick them hard enough to reach the ovaries, they WILL be folded over in pain and whimper... maybe not an octave higher, but they'll sure be in a lot of pain...

    8. Re:Simple Test: by Mishotaki · · Score: 1

      Kick them in the nuts really hard. If they don't fold over in pain and whimper an octave higher, they're female.

      Hey, getting kicked in the crotch hurts us girls too. Although we're not usually crying, screaming, and curled up in a little ball for four hours after like the last guy who tried that test...

      good luck finding someone who isn't hurt after being kicked though...

    9. Re:Simple Test: by Tablizer · · Score: 1

      Hey, getting kicked in the crotch hurts us girls too.

      Perhaps it's time to find another boyfriend.
         

    10. Re:Simple Test: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok, but his post had nothing to do with modified levels of testosterone. Shrieking when kicked in the nuts has nothing to do with anything you said.

    11. Re:Simple Test: by srmalloy · · Score: 1

      Kick them in the nuts really hard. If they don't fold over in pain and whimper an octave higher, they're female.

      If they don't fold over in pain, they're wearing a cup. Or the female equivalent.

    12. Re:Simple Test: by Mauzl · · Score: 1

      I have several Warner Brothers cartoons that would disagree...

    13. Re:Simple Test: by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Which is just an exaggeration of the fact that attempting to talk after taking a crotch shot will result sometimes result in guys 'whimpering', which is, indeed, high pitched. And is still high pitched when they're trying to talk through it.

      Men are normally missing part of their range, they can do 'normal' or falsetto, but their voice 'cracks' in the middle. And men tend to keep in 'low' end, but whimpering ends up being falsetto.

      Women whimper also while in serious pain, all people do, but it's a lot less noticeable with them, because they speak higher anyway, and have a much larger range.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  13. Gender isn't sex. by girlintraining · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think slashdot should start with the correct definitions, being a technical community and all: Sex is, Gender does. Second, Slashdot of all places should know that the two are correlations, not causations. And lastly, I'd like to believe that as a community that espouses scientific values and intelligent discourse, the answer should be obvious:

    You can't.

    Life is full of delicious ambiguity, and people assume that two polar opposites (male and female) have nothing in between. But life isn't like that. Life is a spectrum, and any place we draw the line is arbitrary -- not natural. Nature has its own laws, which are not the laws of men.

    --
    #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    1. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Planesdragon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And lastly, I'd like to believe that as a community that espouses scientific values and intelligent discourse, the answer should be obvious:...

      Bad girlintrainig! You never, ever, EVER presume that just because someone is smart and intelligent they should agree with you -- or that, just because someone disagrees with you, they're either not smart or not intelligent.

      I'd say it's far more scientific to brand gender and sex as immutable based on your genetics than to relegate it to subjective measurements And on that note...

      Life is full of delicious ambiguity, and people assume that two polar opposites (male and female) have nothing in between. But life isn't like that. Life is a spectrum, and any place we draw the line is arbitrary -- not natural. Nature has its own laws, which are not the laws of men.,

      A female is an organism that can produce an ova to create young during its lifespan. A male is an organism that can create sperm to fertilize said Ova during its lfiespan. This is not arbitrary -- this is the scientific definition from biology. Any organism that can do neither of those two during its lifespan is neuter, and any that can do both is hemaphroditic (sic). ANY OTHER DEFINITION is cultural, subjective, non-scientific crap.

    2. Re:Gender isn't sex. by TeknoHog · · Score: 4, Funny

      Nature has its own laws, which are not the laws of men.

      Exactly, they are the laws of women.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    3. Re:Gender isn't sex. by maxume · · Score: 1

      Well how profound. So onto the real question, if you are going to have a group of contests for women only, how do you go about determining who is eligible for those contests, while being fair to all the participants?

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    4. Re:Gender isn't sex. by girlintraining · · Score: 1, Insightful

      A female is an organism that can produce an ova to create young during its lifespan.

      So women who have their ovaries removed become men? Or what about women born without reproductive organs? Are they not women anymore?

      A male is an organism that can create sperm to fertilize said Ova during its lfiespan.

      So if I chop your nuts off, you become a woman? Do you forget a lifetime of experiences being male? Do you have to change the little 'M' on your driver's license to an 'F'?

      This is not arbitrary -- this is the scientific definition from biology.

      This is an abuse of science when we have clear and documented cases where your definitions are inadequate, yet you continue to insist they are correct. Your definition, your model, is in error. Scientifically speaking -- science takes all available evidence into consideration, not just the parts you agree with.

      Any organism that can do neither of those two during its lifespan is neuter, and any that can do both is hemaphroditic (sic).

      Again, your definition is in error: A hermaphrodite is an organism that has both male and female reproductive organs. Nowhere in that definition is "Ova" or "sperm" included -- it is possible to have both male and female reproductive organs and have either, both, or neither, of those conditions met. Neuter is a an adjective that refers to either a lack of gender (a social construct, not physical), or the lack of reproductive organs.

      ANY OTHER DEFINITION is cultural, subjective, non-scientific crap.

      The very definition of gender is cultural, subjective, and very much not scientific. You're attempting to use science to advance your own religious or personal beliefs about how the world "should be", not how it is. Science is about how things ARE not how they SHOULD be. The moment you start saying "should", you've left the realm of science.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    5. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Binary+Boy · · Score: 1

      So if I'm otherwise a male - have a penis, for instance - but cannot produce sperm at all due to a physical abnormality, I'm not a male?

    6. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Trepidity · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree with most of that, but in:

      Sex is, Gender does. Second, Slashdot of all places should know that the two are correlations, not causations.

      I think it would be hard to argue that there isn't at least some causal effect between sex and gender. Surely it's not merely a coincidental correlation that, in animals having the XY sex-determination system (incl. all mammals), the vast majority of individuals with XX configuration turn out to have primary and secondary sexual characteristics grouped as "female" and play "female" gender roles; and the same with XY and "male"?

    7. Re:Gender isn't sex. by lisany · · Score: 1

      I wish I had mod points to mod you up.

    8. Re:Gender isn't sex. by oldhack · · Score: 1

      You know, if the question comes down to semantic, it's good sign that the premise is out-of-whack.

      --
      Fuck systemd. Fuck Redhat. Fuck Soylent, too. Wait, scratch the last one.
    9. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about a man or woman who is infertile? Had a hysterectomy, tubes cut, lost testicles in an accident etc? Are they then classed as neuter?

    10. Re:Gender isn't sex. by glitch23 · · Score: 0

      Life is full of delicious ambiguity, and people assume that two polar opposites (male and female) have nothing in between. But life isn't like that. Life is a spectrum, and any place we draw the line is arbitrary -- not natural. Nature has its own laws, which are not the laws of men.

      Why do you feel we are exempt from Nature's/God's laws? We live in nature so why would we be exempt? We're human so should that make us exempt from Nature's/God's physical or chemical laws? We're obviously not exempt from those laws or any other for that matter. It is just human to want to add emotion or bias to something which adds ambiguity or shades of gray. In my mind God implemented and gave us our absolutes. In this case we have simply male and female. Why do you feel you must complicate that? There will obviously be variations on those concepts of male and female when put into practice but it doesn't change the fundamentals now matter how much you want it to. Some humans actually want to add shades of gray in the hopes of making the outcome of their particular situation be in their favor. Example: Saying a baby isn't human until it is born is used as the rationalization for women who want to abort their babies because it is convenient for them to do so. If they can convince themselves the baby isn't human then no murder was committed. Point being, don't add ambiguity where there is none. I can understand why you would want to but just because you can doesn't mean you should. It makes situations more complicated.

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    11. Re:Gender isn't sex. by MrWim · · Score: 1

      Even if that were true it is not very useful in this situation. Would you argue that infertile people should not be able to compete in IAAF events?

    12. Re:Gender isn't sex. by MrMista_B · · Score: 1

      This petri-dish full of sperm and eggs is what, then? Female? A woman?

    13. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That ambiguity isn't so delicious when there is a division based on Sex. The competitors have been divided into 2 categories (male and female) with different expectations on performance.

      Note: The male/female division within sports competitions wasn't done for any "scientific" reason. It was done because human beings have odd ideas about what is "fair" and attach an unreasonable amount of importance on arbitrary physical competition. Women frequently underperforming (losing) relative to their male counterparts in physical competitions was found to be emotionally unsatisfactory, so a division was created.

      The truly fair solution for these types of physical competitions is to completely remove the differentiation. The Human who runs 100m the fastest wins. Females (XX) may not perform as well as their male (XY) counterparts in many of these events, but will outperform in others.

      The next best solution, if we are determined to keep the male/female categorizations would be to classify those with -NO- Y chromosome (XX) into the "female category" (or call it something else if that is found offensive) and all other variations (XY, XXY, YXYY, chimeras, etc) into the "male category". I'm sure someone's feelings will be hurt, but it is the most objectively reasonable solution.

      Final solution. Create a 3 category system. XX and XY and "all others". Now I'm sure the "all others" would feel they were being singled out and discriminated against, but yeah. Someone decided an XX and XY categoration was necessary, and now they're adding another category.

      I don't care either way, as I believe that those reaching the peak of human performance in their current physical pursuits are using performance enhancing drugs, investing ridiculous amounts of time and effort, and are primarily there based on being genetic outliers. Not very interesing.

      And for what? So you run the 100m in 9.6s instead of 9.8s? I'm an overweight 40yo desk jockey and I can still pull it in at 13s. Ok, I might pull a hamstring, but there ya go.

    14. Re:Gender isn't sex. by MartinSchou · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So women who have their ovaries removed become men?

      He already said that someone who couldn't produce either is a neuter.

      So if I chop your nuts off, you become a woman?

      He already said that someone who couldn't produce either is a neuter.

      I realise you don't buy into that definition, which is fine, but it is a waste of time asking a stupid question that has nothing to do with what he was saying.

      And even if you were genuinely curious about his answer to those two questions, you'd still need to clarify - after all, when we cut the nuts off a male dog, we say it's been neutered. And at what point is this surgery done? At birth before any eggs or sperm have been produced? Are they adult? You don't care about the answers (neither do I) - you're just engaging in a really silly argument.

      His statement is essentially nine plus nine equals eighteen. And you're arguing that this is incorrect because it's not true if we're using base eight in which neither nine or eighteen exists.

    15. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So women who have their ovaries removed become men?

      Any organism that can do neither of those two during its lifespan is neuter

      It seems perfectly correct to me to describe an organism whose gonads have been removed a "neuter." I'd however say that it's possible to be described as a neuter during only the part of its lifespan where this condition held, and male/female/whatever before.

      very definition of gender is cultural, subjective, and very much not scientific

      Indeed. But there does exist a formal biological definition of "sex," which was described reasonably well (though not 100% completely) by PlanesDragon.

    16. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I espouse the end of bullshit relativism. We only care wether she's physiologically male or female. For most persons it's clear cut. Let test is she's one of the clear cut case before fantasizing about the rare ambiguities. In fact it's even easier for sports, we only care about the amount of testosteone in her blood (not wether she's X XXY or XY with a female phenotype)

    17. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Neuter is the correct term.

    18. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      List to the fucking post... he said that "women who have their ovaries removed" and men with their nuts chopped off are _NEUTER_... apparently you need it spelled out?

    19. Re:Gender isn't sex. by TheMCP · · Score: 1

      What gender is a person born with female genetalia and defective ovaries that do not produce ova?

      How long do you think it will take her to slap you out of your wits when you tell her she's actually neuter?

    20. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a very good discussion of this question here: http://contexts.org/socimages/2009/08/22/the-question-of-caster-semenyas-sex/

    21. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Sique · · Score: 1

      None of them, because neither sperm nor eggs where produced by the petri-dish.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    22. Re:Gender isn't sex. by girlintraining · · Score: 1

      I realise you don't buy into that definition, which is fine, but it is a waste of time asking a stupid question that has nothing to do with what he was saying.

      Maybe I just think a lot of people here would be frightened to learn how many babies are assigned a sex based on a coin flip by a doctor. How sure are YOU that you weren't born intersexed? A lot of people are never told.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    23. Re:Gender isn't sex. by SoupIsGoodFood_42 · · Score: 1

      Why always define things based on genetics? Does neurology not matter? Why is it that any other definition is crap? Crap is a subjective, non-scientific term, you know. Perhaps this subject simply makes you feel uncomfortable?

    24. Re:Gender isn't sex. by cecom · · Score: 1

      That may be so, but has nothing to do with the point.

    25. Re:Gender isn't sex. by noidentity · · Score: 0, Redundant

      A female is an organism that can produce an ova to create young during its lifespan. A male is an organism that can create sperm to fertilize said Ova during its lfiespan. This is not arbitrary -- this is the scientific definition from biology. Any organism that can do neither of those two during its lifespan is neuter, and any that can do both is hemaphroditic (sic). ANY OTHER DEFINITION is cultural, subjective, non-scientific crap.

      So once a woman enters menopause and cannot create any more viable ova, she is not a female anymore? If a man has a vasectomy, he's not a male anymore, but wait, if it's reversed, he's male again? Or if an organism appears male/female in every respect, but you later find that it was sterile, it wasn't a male/female after all?

      The point is that there isn't a single dimension for measuring gender. In science, your definition may be most appropriate, since the most relevant aspect is the ability to reproduce, and which role the organism plays. In the case of the olympics, they should choose a measure that fits in with their somewhat arbitrary system of two different groups of people that cannot compete with each other (men and women). They'll have to more carefully consider why they have those groupings. Sooner or later they'll encounter someone who just does not fit in either category, and have to make a tough decision. This could be one.

    26. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Targen · · Score: 1
      Argh, closed the tab just before submitting. Curse you, /., for your javascript antics. Anyways.

      A female is an organism that can produce an ova to create young during its lifespan.

      So women who have their ovaries removed become men? Or what about women born without reproductive organs? Are they not women anymore?

      A male is an organism that can create sperm to fertilize said Ova during its lfiespan.

      So if I chop your nuts off, you become a woman? Do you forget a lifetime of experiences being male? Do you have to change the little 'M' on your driver's license to an 'F'?

      You're confused. What's being discussed is not the socially-defined categories of "man" and "woman", but the biologically unambiguous categories of "male" and "female". Note there is no dichotomy: the categories are neither mutually exclusive nor complete.

      Any organism that can do neither of those two during its lifespan is neuter, and any that can do both is hemaphroditic (sic).

      Again, your definition is in error: A hermaphrodite is an organism that has both male and female reproductive organs. Nowhere in that definition is "Ova" or "sperm" included -- it is possible to have both male and female reproductive organs and have either, both, or neither, of those conditions met. Neuter is a an adjective that refers to either a lack of gender (a social construct, not physical), or the lack of reproductive organs.

      Except that the precise purpose of gonads is to produce gametes, which happen to be, in humans, precisely either ova or sperm. Just for the sake of clarity: this has nothing to do with external genitalia.

      ANY OTHER DEFINITION is cultural, subjective, non-scientific crap.

      The very definition of gender is cultural, subjective, and very much not scientific. You're attempting to use science to advance your own religious or personal beliefs about how the world "should be", not how it is. Science is about how things ARE not how they SHOULD be. The moment you start saying "should", you've left the realm of science.

      Yes, precisely; indeed the issue of gender is outside the direct scope of science. But this is about sex, not about gender. The issue of sex has absolutely nothing, not a thing, zip to do with anyone's religious or personal beliefs about how the world should be. It has to do with the role of an individual in reproduction. More specifically, it has to do with the relative size of its gametes as compared to those of other members of the species. Granted, "male" is typically associated to all sorts of traits when used in the context of humanity, but this is essentially a simplification that (surprise!) doesn't necessarily apply in the particularily odd situation this story is about.

      Take your activism elsewhere, please. As valid, worthy, respectable, understandable and necessary as it might be, it happens to be off-topic, annoying and childish in this discussion.

    27. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You got an axe to grind here? Educate the poor guy, don't tear his head off in an argument that was only subtly flawed--the issue's complicated enough without emotion.

      If you cut my balls off, I become neutered. Same as if your ovaries get carved out with an icecream scoop. I don't care what society says, what culture says, or whether you think someone should be male or female based on how they're raised. Those are nowhere near close to the accepted definitions--and bringing sociological *crap* into it has no bearing, regardless of what gender studies/issues/genderqueer groups want to be treated like.

      Science also has discovered the less frequent variations...third genders, species that need two 'types' of 'male' to reproduce. Thanks for citing existence without showing an example--it makes you look like a raging religious lunatic. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intersexuality

      Hate to break it to you, but things that originate from philosophy are very much scientific--sometimes they need details filled in the corners.

      The definition I was taught of species required the ability to reproduce -- by that definition, a lot of the "cross" genders aren't even human. I'm sure something isn't quite right with it...but maybe you want to focus on bigger issues first.

    28. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Sique · · Score: 1

      The main problem is that no one really knows what "female" and "male" roles are for humans, except for the purely procreative functions of producing eggs, sperms, getting pregnant and breastfeeding the offspring.
      Any other roles that might have existed are sunk between culturally and cognitively defined roles, and those are subject to cultural and congnitive changes. And those roles are not inherent in our genomics, but a plastic response to the environment we are living in.
      Simple example: Popular opinion likes to attribute an interest in many and often changing sexual partners to male, and less so to female humans. But mathematics tell us, that, if the ratio between males and females in a population is m/f, then the average male has f/m times the number of heterosexual partners of the average female - independent of any personal or sexual traits. If there are more females than males (like after a big war) in a population, males are necessarily more promiscuitive than females. Then even if they are 100 percent faithfull and average 1.0 heterosexual (female) partner per male, it means that some of the females don't get a male partner at all, putting their average below 1.0. If in a population the ratio between males and females is close to 1/1, then the average male has about the same number of female sexual partners than the average female has male sexual partners. I know there are statistics based on interviews, which claim otherwise, but obviously they are in fact statistics about how well the average male or female lies about his or her sexual activity - a purely cognitive issue.

      --
      .sig: Sique *sigh*
    29. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Targen · · Score: 1

      This is not what would typically be said since, in humans, there's an ample range of physiological traits associated to sex. There's also the possibility that you might -have- the physiological traits required for producing sperm but they might simply not be functional; only the strictest (and least useful) definition of sex would leave you out of the "male" category.

    30. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So women who have their ovaries removed become men? Or what about women born without reproductive organs? Are they not women anymore?

      No, you stupid git, they are neuters.

      So if I chop your nuts off, you become a woman? Do you forget a lifetime of experiences being male? Do you have to change the little 'M' on your driver's license to an 'F'?

      Again, no, you stupid fucking git. Maybe you should learn to read if you are so intelligent.

      You are another person who's mind is so open that her brain has fallen out. You are trying to mince words and bend definitions to advance your own agenda, which is, on its face, false.

    31. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Arguments over semantics

    32. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Lost+Race · · Score: 1

      For sporting purposes there's no need for positive definitions of both "male" and "female", creating a third category for those excluded by both definitions. All we need is a definition of "female" to allow females into the less competitive "women's" category, and everyone else goes in the other category (which is called "men's" only for aesthetic reasons, to be symmetric with the "women's" category).

      The simplest and most obvious dividing line is the Y chromosome -- anybody who has them does not qualify for the "women's" category. The number of X chromosomes is irrelevant. (E.g. XXX is female, XXY is male.) Definitions involving sperm, ova, or cultural gender identity are cumbersome, ambiguous, difficult to implement, and lead to absurd results.

      If Caster Semenya has a Y chromosome then she's disqualified from the women's sporting categories. How she looks or acts, and whether she "can" produce ova at some time in her life, is irrelevant.

    33. Re:Gender isn't sex. by girlintraining · · Score: 1

      That may be so, but has nothing to do with the point.

      The point isn't what you think it is. Most of this discussion is based on an irrational fear that if we start questioning what it means to be a man or a woman that social chaos will reign. While we argue about genetics on the surface, deep down what we're really looking for is validation of our own worldviews. We make the decision about whether someone is a man or a woman in the blink of an eye -- and put considerable mental effort into discerning which category to place others when it's ambiguous. It is the first social decision we make about another person -- before we even say hello, preconceptions, values, and scripts are already forming about how to treat this other person. Anything that challenges that automatic response is going to be fought tooth and nail, even by otherwise intelligent and well-meaning people.

      This isn't about science, because science has already proven there are edge cases that existing models and definitions simply cannot account for. And wherever we draw the line, it's certain to leave someone on the wrong side of it. Rather than confront the social consequences of doing so, we're hiding behind technical and medical definitions as a way to soothe our conscience from taking personal responsibility for the pain and anguish that our prejudices cause them when they are placed on the wrong side of that line.

      And this case about an Olympic runner is just the proving grounds, a focal point for all of our unspoken fears and prejudices. And our inability to take responsibility.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    34. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Your.Master · · Score: 1

      Same answer: you can't. Best you can do are heuristics, which are inherently unfair.

      You really have to re-examine the discriminant if your goal is fairness.

      It's already an arbitrary distinction. There are sports where, even if I had trained my whole life and made it my only focus in life, I couldn't ever have competed with others of my sex (men) and age. There are other sports where I could have. In many sports we do men & women to increase the number of people who can realistically compete; in wrestling there are also weight divisions.

      You could say "has xx chromosomes". You'll still get people who were born with testicles and have a hormonal balance conducive to stronger muscles and thicker bones. And you'll exclude people who were born and grew up phenotypically female, with no testosterone advantage. It looks like we had been using "has vagina" and "doesn't have penis" and some are considering that inadequate to what they are imagining.

    35. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking as a medical professional, it's actually relatively easy to tell. Intersexed babies require fairly extensive reconstructive surgery, whch leaves marks. In males, this will be evident in the form of a red line (or lines) running down the penis.It's less obvious in women, but there is often scarring under the pubic hair.

    36. Re:Gender isn't sex. by dissy · · Score: 1

      A female is an organism that can produce an ova to create young during its lifespan.

      So women who have their ovaries removed become men? Or what about women born without reproductive organs? Are they not women anymore?

      A male is an organism that can create sperm to fertilize said Ova during its lfiespan.

      So if I chop your nuts off, you become a woman? Do you forget a lifetime of experiences being male? Do you have to change the little 'M' on your driver's license to an 'F'?

      Since when has a male without testicles been able to produce ova?
      Or equally, since when has a woman with ovaries removed been able to produce sperm?

    37. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Your.Master · · Score: 1

      This being slashdot, I have to take pedantic issue with that common statistical argument without doubting its conclusions.

      For one, it oversimplifies the influence of homosexuals because of, for example, bisexuals. Anybody who swings both ways is going to skew the ratios in a non-linear fashion.
      For another, using the mean average isn't necessarily useful compared to other averages which do not need to hold constant. You could have large numbers of unsuccessful men and very few sexually unsuccessful women, or, you could have females who have a LOT of sex to make up for the undersexed gender.
      Even with the mean average, women could also have a tendency to die after periods of higher sexually activity, removing themselves from the statistical pool. Or virgin men could die young while sexually active men live long.

      ~~~~~

      With all that said I agree that in reality, women and men, probably have the same amount of sex partners on "average", using whatever average you feel is necessary. I do feel that aside from lies caused by ego inflation and culture, there's also differing definitions of "sex" between the male and female subcultures.

    38. Re:Gender isn't sex. by oni · · Score: 1

      I have to tell you, I think your first post was OK, but I think that planesdragon made a better case and I think that your response to him was way off base. You lost this one.

      The very definition of gender is cultural, subjective, and very much not scientific.

      No, I'm afraid not. It takes about twenty words and two seconds to prove that gender (that is to say, sex-correlated behavior) is not entirely cultural or subjective. Oh sure, there are cultural components like "women wear dresses" but it's not all, or even mostly culture.

      You're attempting to use science to advance your own religious or personal beliefs about how the world "should be", not how it is

      The dripping irony here is that you have been told that gender is entirely cultural and subjective. It's your own religious or personal belief about how the world "should be" - and I'm sorry to say, you're wrong.

    39. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Your.Master · · Score: 1

      Your Nature/God very rarely deals in absolutes, especially with regard to biology. Right-handed amino acid chirality in life is one of those rare absolutes. Sexuality and gender is not. People are born intersex. People are gay. Animals are sometimes gay too. People are asexual. People are bisexual.

      There is nothing simple about male and female. For all you know, YOU could have been born intersex and had your phenotype decided by a coin flip in a doctor's office. So could have I.

      As for your anti-choice rant, it's not about whether a fetus (which is NOT a baby yet, don't go trying to exempt it from Nature/God's laws by conflating issues) is human, it's about whether it has a right to life which overrides the mother's right to self-determination.

      By the way, in the stage where the vast majority of fetuses are aborted, they are not yet either male or female.

      Whether it's human is a semantic argument of no real value. If it's about genetics, then of course it is -- and so is a corpse in a cemetery. If it's genetics + still has cells which self-replicate, then so is an adult stem-cell culture. And if you keep going until it includes every human living and every fetus from conception and nothing else, then it's not a useful definition but a circular one. And I think you'll find that the vast majority of fetuses don't live to term or even to the point where the would-be mothers become aware of their existence.

      When you ignore ambiguity that exists before your very eyes you deny Nature/God's law and assert your own made up pigeonholes as supreme. The confounding arrogance allows you to rationalize that everybody who actually seeks to understand the whole of the world is immoral or amoral, and therefore reinforce your own arbitrary views, safe from re-examination.

    40. Re:Gender isn't sex. by maxume · · Score: 1

      It would have been better for me to have said "while being as fair as possible to all participants", I'm not really a wide-eyed idealist (I guess I'm a cynical one). So my point was more that "you can't" is a useless answer when you are working from the premise that you are going to have contests for women only.

      Now, you could just reject the idea of a women only contest, but that isn't something most people are going to want to do (and it is equally as uninteresting to me as "you can't").

      Resolving this particular incident is going to be a bit of a pickle, but having a clear definition of eligibility is possible (of course, that definition may be one that is markedly unfair for a small group...).

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    41. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      technically all women produce all their eggs at birth and release them regularly. now are we talking about release or production of eggs- if release then menopausal women are men, if production, then it least they're still women- but of course they're essentially sterile. So are they a woman still? Same with old men- the sperm are increasingly more deformed and less motile- and are also essentially sterile. Are they women, neuter?

      Even talking about ova and sperm can still get you in murky water.

    42. Re:Gender isn't sex. by suomynonAyletamitlU · · Score: 1

      Life is full of delicious ambiguity, and people assume that two polar opposites (male and female) have nothing in between. But life isn't like that. Life is a spectrum, and any place we draw the line is arbitrary -- not natural. Nature has its own laws, which are not the laws of men.

      I agree entirely. However it brings up (in my mind, which admittedly doesn't function linearly), a simple and obvious question:

      If men and women can't share (public) restrooms, why can straight and gay people?

      I'm not gay-bashing, and it's admittedly not an important issue for most people. However, the need for segregated bathrooms isn't about sex (neglecting urinals) but it is about gender. People don't want to be looked at by anyone who might have ulterior motives. It's just been sort of yeah-well-sorta-assumed that that happened along sex boundaries. Of course, some places refuse to acknowledge those people even exist, but still...

      Personally, I think if men and women dealt with each other's crap more often then maybe they'd be more realistic about the differences in the sexes (as in how little they matter). That's not to say I would want to, so much as it makes more sense to me.

    43. Re:Gender isn't sex. by TerranFury · · Score: 1

      I'd say it's far more scientific to brand gender and sex as immutable based on your genetics

      You are confused about definitions. Nothing to get terribly worked up about though; it's just semantics: Definitions are just things humans make up. That said, these are the definitions in common academic use, so you should understand them for the purpose of communicating effectively and not "talking past" other people.

      "Sex" refers to the biological issues you are concerned about. "Gender" refers to the associated social role. It may well be fair to talk about "sex" in terms of genetics (though I should point out that your definitions refer to phenotype and not genotype). But "gender" is socially-constructed.

      I'm just making a point about what words mean. That done, I'll be on my way...

    44. Re:Gender isn't sex. by cecom · · Score: 1

      No, my point was that Planesdragon gave a pretty clear and rational definition of a "man" or "woman". You may disagree with it, but your far too emotional arguments implied that you did not really try to understand it because apparently you have some some other (sociological?) agenda.

    45. Re:Gender isn't sex. by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      Your definition is not biological, sorry, you failed.

    46. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      PLEASE. The argument here is that SEX is not GENDER.

      Sex is a biological definition. Gender is a social construct.

      http://www.google.com.au/search?q=sex+vs+gender

    47. Re:Gender isn't sex. by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      With the number of people who have it detected as teens and adults, I call bullshit, it's a coin toss.

    48. Re:Gender isn't sex. by easyTree · · Score: 1

      Yah, I know stab the pedant but... eighteen in base eight is "22".

    49. Re:Gender isn't sex. by easyTree · · Score: 1

      If you take his definition of man and woman as depending solely on their demonstrable ability to produce gametes, your question makes no sense for you ask "what about an <organism-which-produces-oocytes-or-sperm> who cannot produce oocytes or sperm, are they then classed as...?"

      Whether you agree with the definition is another matter.

    50. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bias and shenanigans. Gender is sex is gender is sex.

    51. Re:Gender isn't sex. by MartinSchou · · Score: 1

      eighteen in base eight is "22".

      Which was my point. The number 18 does not exist in base 8, because the number 8 isn't in base 8. That it is the equivalent of something in base 8 is different.

      The word "blåøjet" doesn't exist in English either - the equivalent in English is "blue eyed" or "naïve".

    52. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In every female mammal I've heard of, the entire complement of ova are already present at birth. Not sure what you're smoking.

    53. Re:Gender isn't sex. by the_one(2) · · Score: 1

      A female is an organism that can produce an ova to create young during its lifespan.

    54. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The very definition of gender is cultural, subjective, and very much not scientific. You're attempting to use science to advance your own religious or personal beliefs about how the world "should be", not how it is. Science is about how things ARE not how they SHOULD be. The moment you start saying "should", you've left the realm of science.

      And where did you come up with that definition? Right, those sexist anti-science Women Studies classes. In real life, those terms are completely synonymous. You cannot tell someone he's wrong because he[*] uses a term in the same sense as 99.9% of the population instead of how you would like to define it to further your agenda.

      [*] I use 'he' in the same sense it has always had in English, where it can mean 'he or she' when sex isn't explicitly known. I'm just sick of 'he or she'. It is an extremely recent construct of the grammatically-ignorant. Note how grammar is the truly rare instance where gender and sex aren't completely synonymous--yet the usage still disagrees with you.

    55. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're not "hiding behind technical and medical definitions", we're simply using technical definitions to solve a purely technical issue of classification.

      It's not about fears and prejudices; to use a car analogy, it's like defining whether an engine counts as "naturally aspirated". (OTOH, having witnessed some serious turbo-4 vs. big v8 arguments, maybe it is about fear and prejudice after all....)

      I don't deny that freaks (whether by birth or choice) are sometimes treated quite badly in our society, but that's got nothing to do with the issue at hand. Unlike social interactions, which are governed by individual (and often prejudice-driven) choices, competitive sports are governed by strict rules which are ideally completely known to all contestants going in. If a corner case not clearly categorized by the rules is found, the correct response is not to prattle on about "delicious ambiguity", but to amend the rules to remove the ambiguity.

      To be charitable, one might assume you're the one who thinks the point is something it's not. OTOH, perhaps you're deliberately deviating from the issue at hand to ride your hobby-horse issue instead.

    56. Re:Gender isn't sex. by masterzora · · Score: 1

      I have to ask, in your black-and-white world without ambiguities, what do you say about hermaphrodites? That's only the easiest and most basic response to that mistaken notion.

      Of course, your sig isn't much better. Narrowing the gap between classes and increasing the standard of living for lower classes both increase the standard of living (by pretty much any reasonable measure) for everyone in the society, including the wealthy. Of course, even ignoring that, I have to wonder in what world you live that the wealthy having a few extra bucks is more important than the life of a human being who just happened to be dealt a bad hand in life. Are you sure you're a man of God? Because you keep saying that name like it means something to you.

      --
      Remember, open source is free as in speech, not free as in bear.
    57. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is girlintraining a he? I suggest we do a test....now what was this thread about??

    58. Re:Gender isn't sex. by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      You never, ever, EVER presume that just because someone is smart and intelligent they should agree with you -- or that, just because someone disagrees with you, they're either not smart or not intelligent.

      Exactly: You are not intelligent.

      A female is an organism that can produce an ova to create young during its lifespan. A male is an organism that can create sperm to fertilize said Ova during its lfiespan. This is not arbitrary -- this is the scientific definition from biology.

      Ok, so let's try logic. I know that in your case logical reasoning is hopeless because of your lack of intelligence, but I'll go and say it anyways: if a person has no offspring during "its" lifetime, then sex of that person is a pure speculation, biologically speaking? Impotent man is not man then? Etc.

    59. Re:Gender isn't sex. by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      So if I'm otherwise a male - have a penis, for instance - but cannot produce sperm at all due to a physical abnormality, I'm not a male?

      According to the idiotic definition of the GP, the answer is indeed that you're not. Even if somebody has an active sexual life, produces sperm or ovulates, but does not produce an offspring, it's still unclear whether that person is a man or a woman. Definition clearly says that you only need to be able to produce offspring, potentially. Well, exactly this potentiality, which is a metaphysical concept, is problematic--how do speak scientifically about it?

      The only certainty this definition gives is when you have an offspring, and thus in effect passes some of the oldest stereotypes as (biological) science, namely the identification:
      Man = Father, Woman = Mother and Neuter = Offspring without its own offspring = Child.

    60. Re:Gender isn't sex. by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      No, my point was that Planesdragon gave a pretty clear and rational definition of a "man" or "woman".

      What point?

    61. Re:Gender isn't sex. by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      Take your activism elsewhere, please. As valid, worthy, respectable, understandable and necessary as it might be, it happens to be off-topic, annoying and childish in this discussion.

      Indeed! As intelligent grownups, potential Fathers, let's all embrace some retarded definition of sex as Truth, and those who do not agree with us we'll call names and politely ask to leave.

    62. Re:Gender isn't sex. by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Maybe he meant that neither of them caused each other, in which case, he's sorta right.

      Mental gender and physical sex are both caused by a third thing, namely, hormones during development, which are in turn determined by genetics.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    63. Re:Gender isn't sex. by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      Why do you feel we are exempt from Nature's/God's laws?

      You write something like this assuming that your pet two-headed monster called "Nature's/God's laws" is something everybody knows about, and then continue to keep on asking and asking... and answering to your own questions, like:

      We're human so should that make us exempt from Nature's/God's physical or chemical laws? We're obviously not exempt from those laws or any other for that matter.

      Have you ever heard of masturbation?

    64. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This isn't about science, because science...

      Do you know what a contradiction is? You have just proven yourself wrong by reductio ad absurdum.

      Seriously. Whenever someone says 'this isn't about science', what he's saying is 'I don't care about science, because it doesn't help me propagate my dogma'. Science is how you uncover the truth. What you're saying is no different from saying that belief in Jesus is a faith issue. It's an intellectual cop-out.

    65. Re:Gender isn't sex. by m50d · · Score: 1
      I'd say it's far more scientific to brand gender and sex as immutable based on your genetics than to relegate it to subjective measurements

      The whole point of the term "gender" (in this context) is that it refers to the social identity rather than physical matters - otherwise it would be redundant, we'd just always say sex.

      A female is an organism that can produce an ova to create young during its lifespan. A male is an organism that can create sperm to fertilize said Ova during its lfiespan. This is not arbitrary -- this is the scientific definition from biology. Any organism that can do neither of those two during its lifespan is neuter, and any that can do both is hemaphroditic (sic). ANY OTHER DEFINITION is cultural, subjective, non-scientific crap.

      That's not a practical definition to use for athletics competitions - you'd have to either ban infertile women from competing as women (heck, you'd presumably have to ban all women without children, since there's no way to be certain she's capable of producing young if she hasn't done so), or permit infertile men to compete as women.

      --
      I am trolling
    66. Re:Gender isn't sex. by cecom · · Score: 1

      what

    67. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Being a complete pedant here, but nine and eighteen do exist in base eight, they're just written as 11 and 22.

    68. Re:Gender isn't sex. by glitch23 · · Score: 1

      I have to ask, in your black-and-white world without ambiguities, what do you say about hermaphrodites? That's only the easiest and most basic response to that mistaken notion.

      I'm not an expert on hermaphrodites so I can't immediately answer your question. Maybe someone who is an expert can get back to you with a good answer in a timely fashion. Better yet, how about you attempt an answer.

      Of course, your sig isn't much better. Narrowing the gap between classes and increasing the standard of living for lower classes both increase the standard of living (by pretty much any reasonable measure) for everyone in the society, including the wealthy. Of course, even ignoring that, I have to wonder in what world you live that the wealthy having a few extra bucks is more important than the life of a human being who just happened to be dealt a bad hand in life. Are you sure you're a man of God? Because you keep saying that name like it means something to you.

      You fail to make a distinction between the government forcing person A to give money to person B through taxation (force) versus letting person A give money to person B on their own accord which lets person A decide how much money and when to give the money, neither of which is possible when the money is forcefully taken through taxes. That isn't even considering that the money is able to be given directly to person B and is managed better than if the government is a middleman. Slashdot only provides 120 characters for a sig which does not allow me to state that I'm not against charity but I am against the government feeling it must force the wealthy to support the poor. Your "narrowing the gap between classes" assumes incorrectly that the government can take from person A to give to person B and enable the standard of living of both to increase. The math doesn't add up. The rest of your response to my sig assumes I'm against charity, which is not true, so there is no need to address it directly.

      I'm against the government intervening by deciding who should be considered wealthy enough to be able to afford any arbitrary amount the government deems sufficient to give to other people. Allowing government to control and force "charity" is socialism. You can only take so much from those with money before they turn into those who are receiving money. When that occurs you have reached a socialist state where the only rich people are those in power within the government. Both ends of the giving/receiving transaction never end up actually having a standard of living that increases which is the fundamental flaw in your belief system. People are forced to work to make ends meet and are at the whim of the more powerful (compared to a capitalist-based country) government, which coincidentally is made more powerful by the wealth flowing towards them. But then again, some people actually like the government being involved in all aspects of their lives. I, on the other hand, do not need the government's help to run my life and, no sir, I am not rich; I'm just 31, single, have a good job and know how to manage my finances. I work for my money, have no trouble paying for taxes that are used to pay for infrastructure, etc. and will charity to whoever I see fit or, I may not, but that is for me to decide and no one else. For those who are for this type of system I ask you, do you give 10% of your salary to God? If not, why not? If you like the government forcefully taking money from you then you shouldn't have any trouble voluntarily giving it away. I'm sure some of you would use the excuse "I don't believe in God" to rationalize your way out of that conundrum.

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    69. Re:Gender isn't sex. by gmhowell · · Score: 1

      Congratulations! It's not even TTuesday.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    70. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Beezlebub33 · · Score: 1

      Well, yes, biologically speaking you are a neuter, not a male. Is a male dog still male after you remove its testicles? Not really, it's a neuter.

      That's not to say that socially you are not a male. It means that lots and lots of males stop being males when they can no longer produce sperm, have a vascectomy, lose their testicles, etc.

      --
      The more people I meet, the better I like my dog.
    71. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Demonantis · · Score: 1

      Bad girlintrainig! You never, ever, EVER presume that just because someone is smart and intelligent they should agree with you -- or that, just because someone disagrees with you, they're either not smart or not intelligent.

      Actually it has a name. It is called repugnance. You have to be really careful with it because if you argue philosophy it will be the first thing attacked. The only time I have seen a philosophy publish it as an argument was Bush's chair for stem cell research and that has to say a lot.

    72. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Nevyn · · Score: 1

      You fail to make a distinction between the government forcing person A to give money to person B through taxation (force) versus letting person A give money to person B on their own accord which lets person A decide how much money and when to give the money, neither of which is possible when the money is forcefully taken through taxes.

      If you are arguing that a government can run without any taxation, then you should buy enough drugs for everyone and share them around. But you don't seem to be saying that, later on, you say "I ... have no trouble paying for taxes that are used to pay for infrastructure, etc." making some arbitrary distinction between "infrastructure" and whatever it is you feel the government shouldn't be spending "your" money on.

      So here's a clue, as soon as the government taxes anything for any reason it's redistributing wealth. It really doesn't matter if it's doing this by building roads, allowing companies/people to deduct bad investments from profits on good investments, or paying for someone's education/medical-care. All of those could be good usage of government money, and probably all three could be bad (although the later one much less so, IMNSHO).

      --
      ustr: Managed string API with ave. 44% overhead over strdup(), for 0-20B
    73. Re:Gender isn't sex. by glitch23 · · Score: 1

      If you are arguing that a government can run without any taxation, then you should buy enough drugs for everyone and share them around. But you don't seem to be saying that, later on, you say "I ... have no trouble paying for taxes that are used to pay for infrastructure, etc." making some arbitrary distinction between "infrastructure" and whatever it is you feel the government shouldn't be spending "your" money on.

      The government should not be in the mindset of taking money from the rich strictly for giving money to the poor or supporting them in some way. That is purely redistribution of wealth. The poor do not earn that money but the rich do. The poor are going to say the rich can afford it. That type of excuse just shows the poor are jealous of the wealthy people but that doesn't mean the poor people deserve it instead by way of the government.

      So here's a clue, as soon as the government taxes anything for any reason it's redistributing wealth. It really doesn't matter if it's doing this by building roads, allowing companies/people to deduct bad investments from profits on good investments, or paying for someone's education/medical-care. All of those could be good usage of government money, and probably all three could be bad (although the later one much less so, IMNSHO).

      There is a difference between taxing the people and using the money to pay for items like infrastructure that are needed or used by everyone and taxing a certain group of people (i.e. the rich, which is conveniently and arbitrarily defined by a few rich people in Washington) strictly for supporting another group of people (rather than everyone). The latter is simply socialism. And yes, this even means that the welfare system shouldn't be used. Too many people just use that as a crutch to live on and therefore have no incentive to get the maximum out of life. We shouldn't be supporting those people who can actually work but medicare/medicaid for those who really need it is not a bad thing but realize *everyone* contributes to that fund through income taxes and it is an equal (albeit percentage-based) tax as far as I know.

      Just because the government taxes us doesn't mean it is redistributing the wealth because the money is not necessarily given to people, especially for nothing. It is used to buy stuff that needs created (e.g. roads) or services (e.g. contract work or even defense). That is giving money to someone in exchange for goods. That is absolutely needed because the government can't make everything itself or provide everything itself (although it is trying that by starting with health care). But where it is going wrong is with targeting a specific group of people for taxes in order to pay for health care for a separate group of people which is simply taking advantage of the upper class. Why aren't the poor or the unqualified being taxed to pay for their own health care so that everyone else can be left alone? Many people are happy with what they have so why should they be taxed to pay for another's health care? That is the mistake: not using the money *from everyone* on something *everyone* can use regardless of class.

      The poor and under-privileged are always wanting a fair chance in life which is understandable however wanting the rich to be taxed more in order to get what they want out of life is not a fair chance in life by any definition. It is a "chance" that is simply handed to them which would be fine except that the U.S. is a capitalist society and therefore the responsibility of charity rests with the individual, not the government, or at least it is supposed to. Nothing says that if you actually try though that the government can't help out at some level such as with student loans and scholarships for education, and maybe, just maybe, taxing only those who need health insurance and provide it to them in exchange for that tax. If you want to help pay for someone else's health care through taxation then vote for a 50% tax increase for people in your tax bracket. That's fair, right?

      --
      this nation, under God, shall have a new birth of freedom. -- Lincoln, Gettysburg Address
    74. Re:Gender isn't sex. by Nevyn · · Score: 1

      The government should not be in the mindset of taking money from the rich strictly for giving money to the poor or supporting them in some way. [...] Just because the government taxes us doesn't mean it is redistributing the wealth because the money is not necessarily given to people, especially for nothing. It is used to buy stuff that needs created (e.g. roads) or services (e.g. contract work or even defense)

      You take money from X and give it to Y, and that isn't redistributing wealth? You are very confused.

      Why aren't the poor or the unqualified being taxed to pay for their own health care so that everyone else can be left alone?

      Why aren't the rich paying for all of the current economic bailouts, it's hardly the poor or middle classes fault that there was a bubble in RE and the financial sector? Because it would cause too much collateral damage, and in general the government should try to solve systemic problems. The "rich" complaining about universal health care is even more of a joke, because if implemented even half decently everyone's total costs should go down ... the current health care "system" in the US is very expensive (in the same way if everyone decided to build their own roads, and put tolls on them).

      The poor and under-privileged are always wanting a fair chance in life which is understandable however wanting the rich to be taxed more in order to get what they want out of life is not a fair chance in life by any definition.

      I'm sure many factory owners said the same thing about not being able to hire 8 year olds for 6 day work weeks (why should _I_ be deprived for _their_ education). Fortunately the intelligent option (eventually) prevailed and everyone became better off as a result.

      --
      ustr: Managed string API with ave. 44% overhead over strdup(), for 0-20B
  14. Obvious. by Renraku · · Score: 1

    The solution is to genetically test several different spots on their body to make sure it isn't a case of them being a male/female chimera, that is, having both cells that are XX and cells that are XY. Being a chimera would give them an advantage, though, not as much of an advantage as them being male.

    This opens up a whole new can of worms, in terms of sporting events and genetic disorders. Do you let the kid with that genetic disorder that makes him super muscular compete in weightlifting competitions, knowing that he has an unfair genetic advantage to begin with? Would you let a person born with a mermaid tail instead of legs compete in swimming?

    It'll be interesting to see how this plays out, as it could shape the future of competition in sporting events. Personally, I'd like to keep things fair. It's not fair to the other racers if she's female but has a genetic disorder that makes her much more male than the other racers. She's built like a man, looks like a man, runs like a man, and probably has the urge to urinate while standing up like a man. How is this fair in a competition built around females, knowing that males would have an unfair advantage against them?

    --
    Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
    1. Re:Obvious. by hanabal · · Score: 1

      Running is all about genetics though. The fastest runners happened to have the best genes for running. This girl may just happen to have exceptionally good genes. I think it would be unfair to penalise her for that.

    2. Re:Obvious. by Renraku · · Score: 1

      There's a whole host of genes that can make people better athletes, but we have to ask, where do we step in and drop the 'unfair advantage' bomb? That's the question I'm getting at.

      Alright, so you have genes that allow your muscles to be more efficient. You have genes that allow you to store more energy for quick use. Then you have genes that cause your hormone levels to match that of a male. Since the event was specifically designed to make this event fair for women, why let someone that is that close to being male compete with the women?

      --
      Job? I don't have time to get a job! Who will sit around and bitch about being broke and unemployed then?
    3. Re:Obvious. by hanabal · · Score: 1

      So the first step is not to determine if she in in fact a man or a woman, but to define what differentiates a man and a woman. Surely there already is a definition for this that the Athletics people use.

        To change this definition now would be like changing the rules of a game after the game is over. She won under the rules as they were at the time. Maybe for future events the rules can be different, but as long as she fit the rules at the time of the race she should win IMO

    4. Re:Obvious. by kimvette · · Score: 1

      Being a chimera would give them an advantage, though, not as much of an advantage as them being male.

      I have that genetic mosaic "disorder" or "anomoly" or "mutation" as well as CAH and I can tell you with confidence that it is not an advantage in any respect. While I may be stronger than most women, I'm weaker than most men and also have very, very poor endurance due to the salt wasting component of CAH (basically, I don't retain electrolytes very well, and with my hormones being way out of whack, that doesn't help endurance either). In day-to-day activities there is no advantage at all - just disadvantages as my body continues to become more androgynous over time. People can be cruel.

      However, I have been physically accosted and I can tell you that adrenaline rushes and accompanying androgen surges can be a help in defending myself - I have unfortunately found I can take hits without so much as flinching, taking guys by surprise which leaves them not protecting themselves because they don't expect me to a) be able to take a hit and b) deliver crippling blows to defend myself. Fortunately I have not had such "encounters" in over ten years. I try to avoid situations where people might be assholes, or at least bring attention to their asshattery so having witnesses intimidates them and makes them second-guess their motives. What those adrenaline and androgen surges do to my heart though, is another matter. They cause heart pain and it takes a couple of hours for my body to calm down and my heart to stop palpitating. My heart is healthy enough - but with my hormones being so wonky I am at risk of cardiac arrest. Any sort of stress can set my adrenals off - even something as inoccuous for getting pulled over by a police officer when I know a) I've done nothing wrong and b) know I'm getting pulled over because my new car didn't have an inspection sticker yet. Even though I knew everything was legal and I was not going to get any sort of ticket or fine, my body panicked. Trust me - the advantages are more than outweighed by all of the disadvantages and health risks which come with my intersex condition.

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
  15. I know! by FudRucker · · Score: 1

    cut her in half and count the rings

    women do have one more set of rib bones than men do

    --
    Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
    1. Re:I know! by davester666 · · Score: 1

      That only lets you determine how old he/she is...

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    2. Re:I know! by FudRucker · · Score: 1

      damn christian fundamentalists and their FUD! i just checked out the rib count on females and males and they are both the same, my bad, NEVER trust a christian for reliable facts for anything science or biology, or anything that could contradict their belief, thanks to religion you made my life a living hell ;(

      --
      Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
  16. easy by commodoresloat · · Score: 2, Funny

    just ask "asl?"

  17. Assertion failed in gender_assumptions.m by schmidt349 · · Score: 1

    To prove someone is female, you have to define what "female" means first. Is a female human one with breasts and/or a vagina? Two X chromosomes? A certain balance of hormones in the blood? One whose birth certificate reads "GENDER: FEMALE?"

    An athlete may have an "advantage" over other athletes by virtue of an innate genetic difference, whether that difference improves circulation, O2 sats, lactic acid removal, or whatever. You can't call it "unfair" unless the advantage was conferred deliberately in an attempt to boost performance. No one disagrees that A-Rod, Manny, and Ortiz all got an unfair advantage in baseball because they were taking steroids to boost muscle mass. But would you call Jeter or Ellsbury's agility "unfair?" They got it in the same genetic lottery in which we all participate at birth.

    1. Re:Assertion failed in gender_assumptions.m by Culture20 · · Score: 1

      Is a female human one with breasts and/or a vagina?

      Definitely not "or". Man-boobs exist.

    2. Re:Assertion failed in gender_assumptions.m by davester666 · · Score: 1

      And with the ability for parents to select their child's genetic makeup (now, you can test for gender, specific genetic abnormalities, and soon you will be able to specifically change/add specific genetic markers), will you also need to provide genetic samples from your parents to prove you weren't "doctored"?

      Can you be considered 'genetically enhanced' if your parents aborted one or more fetuses with undesirable qualities (male vs female, downs syndrome, etc...)?

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    3. Re:Assertion failed in gender_assumptions.m by Targen · · Score: 1

      Just for the sake of nitpicking, I'd like to note that it isn't much of a lottery (because of the complex mate selection and other reproductive mechanisms that exist for humans at the physiological and social levels) and it isn't precisely at birth (but, to keep things concise, during the entire lives of the relevant progenitors up to the process of conception). And let's not even get into the socioeconomic factors that in one way or another happen to influence gene expression.

  18. always trouble in the gray areas by Trepidity · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Most people have an okay time with "male" and "female" as unproblematic concepts, because for the majority of people all the things that might go into the concepts correlate at least reasonably well. Most females are genetically XX, and have both primary and secondary sexual characteristics typical of females. Most males are XY, and have primary/secondary characteristics typical of males.

    If those things aren't all correlated nicely, though, it makes clear that there isn't really a solid definition that covers all aspects of what we mean. A genetic test for XX vs. XY? (And then what do you do about XXY?) Just an issue of primary sexual traits? (Do secondary sexual traits matter?) A combination of all the above? (And then what do you do if they don't all match up?)

    At some point the distinctions become somewhat arbitrary, and to me at least not all that interesting: there isn't actually any magical "right" answer to the question. Perhaps to get an answer that makes sense in this context we might first answer: what is the purpose of having separate male/female sporting competitions, and which definition of sex or gender would contribute towards that purpose best?

    1. Re:always trouble in the gray areas by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you are XY your sex is male and if you are XX your sex is female. If you are XY but due to some episode of House genetic condition you develop as a female then sorry but your sex is still male and you compete with the other males. Them's the breaks. You and all the weedy kids who had a note to skip PE don't get to be famous athletes. This way you don't have to get into a debate about gender. However if you are tested and turns out you are one of the insanely rare people who have an intermediate sex e.g. XXY then, and only then, get in some medical experts to make a judgement call.

      Simples.

  19. Mutant inqusitions by future+assassin · · Score: 1

    >'she may have a rare medical condition that gives her an unfair advantage

    Have began

    --
    by TheSpoom (715771) Uncaring Linux user here. I have nothing to add to this but please continue. *munches popcorn*
  20. Turing Test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Question:
    Have you gained weight?

    Answers:
    Yeah, I should hit the gym. - Male
    Whaaa... you don't love me anymore! - Female

  21. In related news by gmuslera · · Score: 1

    in a secrete government facility some testing are being done on something that surely must be an alien with shape shifting abilities or a liquid metal robot from the future. It was found looking like a blonde, young and attractive female solving math problems.

  22. Easy! by Kotoku · · Score: 1

    Easy.

    Step 1: Pull Pants down.

    Step 2: Look.

    1. Re:Easy! by karnal · · Score: 1

      In my high school biology class, the teacher asked the class "How can you tell the sex of a fly?"

      Someone responded without raising their hand - "Turn it over!"

      --
      Karnal
  23. Two words: by olsmeister · · Score: 5, Funny

    Driving test.

    1. Re:Two words: by hydromike2 · · Score: 0

      if she gets where shes going without stopping to ask for directions?

    2. Re:Two words: by adamchou · · Score: 1

      my dad is a terrible driver. but then again, he's asian. so i'm not sure if this would test gender or ethnicity.

    3. Re:Two words: by girlintraining · · Score: 1

      Driving test.

      Speeding ticket.

      --
      #fuckbeta #iamslashdot #dicemustdie
    4. Re:Two words: by Krishnoid · · Score: 1
    5. Re:Two words: by amilo100 · · Score: 1

      Asian drivers are brilliant. Drivers in China have mad skills to both create and avoid accidents.

      In the west we just follow the traffic rules - it is much simpler.

    6. Re:Two words: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Driving test.

      ROFLOL...oh man I just about pissed myself!

    7. Re:Two words: by xmvince · · Score: 1

      LOL!! Perfect :) If she hits the garbage can while backing out of the driveway, then she's definitely a female!

  24. Bloody difficult. by El+Jynx · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Considering that there are plenty of creatures which can be hermaphrodites, and that there are rare genetic variations (YXYY, for example) where one is born with e.g. male characteristics while the sexual organs may be female, this is a difficult point. Where do you draw the line? I know of a few lesbians who, except for the chest, could easily pass for male: large arms and hands, low voice, etc.

    The sexual differences are fairly pronounced for "normal" men and women, but there are plenty of in-betweens. Methinks the only thing they can do is make an extensive study of all the differences between men and women, and say that if more than an x number of variables lean towards the one or the other, the person in question must be considered as being of the opposite sex. Either that, or you have to create the Hermaphrodite Olympics. They'll probably still have to investigate each case separately either way.

    --
    A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it well worth the effort.
    1. Re:Bloody difficult. by cob666 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I somewhat agree with you but a 'rare genetic variation' is simply that, RARE. Under normal circumstances, there are genetic markers that distinguish a male from a female and if this particular athlete has a rare variation or abnormality in his/her DNA then that bridge should be crossed when it's come to.

      --
      Do what thou wilt shall be the whole of the Law - Aleister Crowley
    2. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "creatures"?

      I'm going to assume you're not talking about humans who happen to be intersexed, because otherwise that's really. freaking. mean.

    3. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      And yet trans people can compete at an Olympic level if they meet specific requirements by way of medical status.
      So let me ask a bigger question. Why does it matter?

      Keep in mind that I ask as a trans woman myself... Why does it matter what her genotype is?
      There is no way that I could compete at that level with any of those women regardless of my biological history, and after 5 years on hormones and androgen blockers, I'm much closer to the strength of a cis woman than anything else, and I know many who are stronger than I.

      This effect is only enhanced when someone has SRS... testosterone production drops to near zero, and muscle density and power follows it down.

      So... the question is... So What?

      For further perspective, check this article: http://transgriot.blogspot.com/2009/08/black-female-athlete-dominates.html. This is not an isolated incident, this is a common accusation in sports.

    4. Re:Bloody difficult. by ILongForDarkness · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I think they would have to define a man as someone that is XY and a woman as someone that is XX, anything else doesn't qualify or gets removed based on medical grounds. After all people with medical conditions that require them to take drugs to stay healthy aren't allowed to compete because they are "doping" so why not someone that has a medical condition that makes them not normal as far as their genetics go. Sure athletes tend to be genetically odd a bit anyways, but I think there is a difference from having an unusually quick fast twitch response and having an extra chromosome.

      Also I think you have to define it genetically otherwise people that have a sex change could compete as the sex they want to.

    5. Re:Bloody difficult. by INT_QRK · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why obsess over it in the first place? What, in the grad scheme of things, difference does it make? So, what if one or two hermaphrodites, or for that matter impostors, do get away with it? It's just freaking sports. I'd recommend standard diligence and then take any later revelations as and if they come.

    6. Re:Bloody difficult. by tsm_sf · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You know, from my point of view, all of these world-class athletes are genetic abnormalities. It's a little rich for them to point to the best of themselves and yell "SHE'S the freak!"

      --
      Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
    7. Re:Bloody difficult. by Narcocide · · Score: 2, Interesting

      As a trans woman yourself, do you mind if I ask you a serious question?

      Please forgive my ignorance as well as the fact I am going to ask in this same post without permission anyway; Do you think that we are doing the LONG-TERM future of competitive sports an injustice by not just completely removing gender segregation entirely from sports and finding a more fair type of skill stratification based on actual strength and endurance testing rather than naive and sometimes incorrect gender/chromosome-based assumptions?

    8. Re:Bloody difficult. by El+Jynx · · Score: 1

      Seems to me we just ran into that bridge. And it appears to be rather dodgy. I say we build a new one.

      --
      A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it well worth the effort.
    9. Re:Bloody difficult. by Kjella · · Score: 1

      I think they would have to define a man as someone that is XY and a woman as someone that is XX, anything else doesn't qualify or gets removed based on medical grounds.

      In practice I think the male class is the open class, I don't see anyone complaining over an intersex person competing there.

      --
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    10. Re:Bloody difficult. by WillyWanker · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Here's the problem: while she might be genetically female, and have female genitalia, I think there is a very strong likelihood she has some kind of severe hormone imbalance that is pumping extreme amounts of testosterone into her system. This would account for her physique, total lack of breasts, deep voice, facial hair, etc. Most likely she has some kind of tumor on her adrenal glands.

      And therein lies the issue. If her body is producing much more testosterone than it should be, it's ultimately no different than if she were taking steroids -- it gives her an unfair advantage over the competition that have normal levels of testosterone.

      I also understand there is a fine line to be drawn here. It's easy to say "well this is the way she was born, it's not like she's using illegal drugs", but the end result is the same. But it could be a slippery slope. We know that, for example, certain body types are better at swimming than others (tall and lanky, long arms and feet -- basically Michael Phelps). Do we then disqualify athletes that have a "genetic" advantage? Of course that's not right either.

      I think it has to come down to whether a deviation is grossly abnormal or within what would be considered as normal. Michael Phelps, although physically advantaged to swimming, still has normal body proportions. If his arms or feet were grossly and abnormally long, would it still be considered fair?

    11. Re:Bloody difficult. by SupremoMan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So she has a rare genetic makeup, doesn't every world class athlete have a rare genetic makeup? I consider myself ordinary male and I can't do most of the stuff even a female Olympic athlete can.

    12. Re:Bloody difficult. by El+Jynx · · Score: 2, Insightful

      From an evolutionary standpoint, it would be wise to banish gender differences altogether, allow doping, and reward the winners with a show to find 20 women willing to bear their children. It would cause plenty of havoc along the way, but that seems to be the way it works.

      From a more pragmatic standpoint, I think you have to define male and female and discuss each exception separately. There's an inherent problem in questions like this: how far until you cross the line? Each person has an average of 200 mutations compared to the next person, and sometimes they stack; this creates our losers and junkies, athletes and geniuses, average joes, idiot savants and much more. The ultimate problem is that in a universe where everything is unique, you just can't work with laws. And I have no idea of how to tackle THAT problem. ;)

      --
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    13. Re:Bloody difficult. by buchner.johannes · · Score: 1
      --
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    14. Re:Bloody difficult. by Narcocide · · Score: 1

      You're wrong - they're pretty rare but they exist. They however are usually surgically altered early on in childhood and this discussion is entirely irrelevant because it is far more likely (still not very likely) for an individual to still have all-male or all-female genitalia while still having a few distinctly cross-gender genetic traits. Humans (both sexes) are evolving to become tougher. Sports themselves are not immaterial to this process. Deal with it, creationists. /me braces for right-wing wrathful impact

    15. Re:Bloody difficult. by Frater+219 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I think they would have to define a man as someone that is XY and a woman as someone that is XX, anything else doesn't qualify or gets removed based on medical grounds.

      Go read about androgen insensitivity syndrome. A person with complete androgen insensitivity has the external appearance (including external genitals) of a normal female, and usually has been raised with a female identity, and so identifies as a girl or woman. But she has no menstrual period because she has no ovaries or uterus -- she has an XY genotype and undescended internal testes. Androgens (male hormones) create the male external appearance; in the absence of androgens, a fetus develops a female appearance -- and parents and society assign a female identity.

      It seems to me that a reasonable approach to dealing fairly with intersexed people in sports would be to replace sex separation with weight-class separation. Human sex and gender turn out to be complex and fraught with both social and technical problems, and it is unreasonable to deny an athlete the chance to compete just because their genetic curiosity happens to be on the 23rd chromosome.

    16. Re:Bloody difficult. by Narcocide · · Score: 0

      I would mod you +5 insightful if it were allowed.

    17. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, my.

      They are more common then you think. Our world is not black and white. Genders are a gray zone ranging from white to black, often divided into five "zones" (yes, they are enough to actually have five different definitions of them).
      The problem is that most of them in our modern society got their gender choosen depeding on the size of their penis/clitoris. A little operation later and the penis/clitoris are aligned more to a spcific gender, maybe followed up with some hormones depending on how close to the "middle" they are.
      In less "modern" society they either becomes enoch or are just placed out in the forest.

    18. Re:Bloody difficult. by Orion+Blastar · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Well then change how the Olympics and other athletic games are played.

      Have a Men's division for the XY chromosome.

      Have a Women's division for the XX chromosome.

      Have a Others' division for the different genetics that cannot be determined to be a male or female, or maybe be both or some genetic anomaly. Call it the MultiGender class.

      Yeah a simple DNA test, have all applicants submit DNA samples before they are classified to verify for each category. That way there won't be something like hormone therapy or performance boosting drug taken to medically treat the genetic disorder in the Men's and Women's division and the MultiGender class can be the one that that is legal for it as it is a medical condition.

      Either that or make it Andy Kaufman style and change it to the Intergender Olympics and Intergender Athletic and let anyone of any gender compete with each other.

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    19. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What? You're suggesting the world is more complicated than "boys and girls who get married"? That can't be possible, the bible never mentions it!

    20. Re:Bloody difficult. by hemp · · Score: 1

      Not all drugs are banned. The use of some -blockers are not banned by the Olympics..

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    21. Re:Bloody difficult. by tgatliff · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think a better way of looking at this is what is the advantage that a male has.... That is rather obvious.... Anabolic hormones. Meaning, check to see why she is so muscular. It is highly unlikely that high levels of anabolic compounds are coming from her adrenals as they do in some women.

      Meaning, instead of focusing on the genetics, why not focus on why she is beating her female peers.... Chances are they will either find some "extra" glands somewhere or they will find that she is using something she should not be using. My guess is the former...

    22. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes 1% is rare enough.

    23. Re:Bloody difficult. by ukyoCE · · Score: 1

      Nicely summarized. There's a huge grey area, and no easy answers. This is the type of thing that's completely ignored, for instance, in "gay marriage" debates.

    24. Re:Bloody difficult. by zero0ne · · Score: 1

      How can you say an abnormal whatever isn't fair?

      As long as the rules don't specifically disqualify you for having rare GENETIC traits, what is the point?

      If we start going down the road of trying to regulate how a athletes body works, there is really no point to sports anymore.

      The reason person A is faster than person B is and will never be JUST because person A trained harder, there will always be genetic differences between A and B.

       

    25. Re:Bloody difficult. by StikyPad · · Score: 1, Troll

      Either that, or you have to create the Hermaphrodite Olympics.

      Or we could just accept that people are the gender they say they are. There simply are no pure scientific definitions of male or female, and even XX females can have hormonal abnormalities that increase physical abilities. To discriminate beyond that -- even for transgenders, is simply beyond the scope of the Olympic committee, IMO. How many historical athletes could have had similar disabilities? Should we dig them up and strip their accomplishments as well?

      Which brings me to my next point: I don't believe that "performance enhancing substances" should be banned either. Should a scientist be disqualified from winning a Nobel because he takes medicine for ADHD? Of course not. The accomplishments are no less real, even if he has improved his attention beyond a "normal" individual's level (which isn't uncommon -- just like some people with glasses or contacts can see better than 20/20). Yes, there are negative consequences to taking some substances, especially in quantity, but people should be in control of their own destinies. If they're willing to risk heart disease down the road for the sake of physical performance, then so be it. There are people engaging in other activities that carry equal or greater risks for much less noble purposes.

    26. Re:Bloody difficult. by SL+Baur · · Score: 0

      Do you think that we are doing the LONG-TERM future of competitive sports an injustice by not just completely removing gender segregation entirely from sports and finding a more fair type of skill stratification based on actual strength and endurance testing rather than naive and sometimes incorrect gender/chromosome-based assumptions?

      I'm not the tranny AC, but I have an answer for that, writing as someone who lived through the early days of Title IX http://bailiwick.lib.uiowa.edu/ge/aboutRE.html

      I think segregation in sports *is* doing women a disservice. Competition Is Good. I could beat all the female track & field high school records when I was a Sophomore and by my Senior year, I could not.

      I know from marriage that women are extremely competitive. Perhaps they should be given a chance.

    27. Re:Bloody difficult. by this+great+guy · · Score: 5, Informative

      "Someone who is XY or XX" is also not well-defined. Mosaicism is a condition where an individual has some XY cells, and others XX. Where do you draw the line for the individual to be a male? Does "he" have to have 50+% XY cells, 90+%, 99+% ?

      And what about the XYY syndrome? Some question whether the term "syndrome" is even appropriate because most individuals with XYY cells don't even know it as they appear to be regular healthy males. They don't have to take drugs, which defeats your first argument. Given that 1 in 1000 boys have this syndrome, it is probable that some athletes who won "male" competition have this syndrome. If we were to have these persons genetically tested today, would you retroactively strip them from their titles?

      This whole male/female question is not as trivial as it looks like.

    28. Re:Bloody difficult. by xwizbt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Perhaps as technology allows us to modify our bodies further, even down to a genetic level, such views will be considered as narrow, and even the idea of splitting athletic achievements into such primitive divisions as 'male' or 'female' will start to look silly.

      Some questions: Can men race against women? Are effeminate men allowed to race against burly men's men? What about butch women, with gruff voices and hairy legs - can they compete against delicate, perfumed counterparts? Can homosexuals race alongside straight men, and would they both refuse to try to out-race a bisexual? Does skin colour affect your ability to jump, and is it really possible to be pretty fly for a white guy? Why, finally getting to the point, do some of those questions seem ridiculous, but others don't?

    29. Re:Bloody difficult. by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      Also not the AC

      I don't really care either way, though I would not be surprised that if sports are desegregated and if most women don't make it past the 85th percentile in the rankings, women's lib groups might start ranting about how the sport itself is biased or something.

    30. Re:Bloody difficult. by Junior+J.+Junior+III · · Score: 1

      Either that, or you have to create the Hermaphrodite Olympics.

      I'll buy that for a dollar.

      --
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    31. Re:Bloody difficult. by eldepeche · · Score: 3, Funny

      Right? Look at any NBA center. Shaq, for example, has a rare genetic condition causing him to be a fucking giant and giving him an unfair advantage over me, a 6'1" 190 lb. dude. Should he be allowed to play professional basketball? Of course.

    32. Re:Bloody difficult. by Rei · · Score: 1

      To me, I think the test should be simplified down to, "Does she have an unnatural advantage?". I think they need to develop a test to determine not simply level of androgens in her bloodstream, but *androgen activation in her muscles*. It's not only the amount of androgens, but how sensitive you are to them. So I think they need to study gene activation of her muscle tissue at her serum androgen levels. Of course, that'd probably be a pretty intrusive test; I'd think they'd have to biopsy at least some kind of muscle tissue. But perhaps there's a less intrusive way.

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    33. Re:Bloody difficult. by NotBornYesterday · · Score: 5, Insightful

      If your body, for whatever reason, allows you to outperform others without the interference of artificial performance-enhancing substances, congratulations. You win.

      What this whole argument has thus far ignored is the fact that athletes need at least as much if not more mental strength and inherent talent than physical strength. What she has accomplished has at least as much to do with her mind as her body.

      --
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    34. Re:Bloody difficult. by Rei · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes, in fact, women with AIS tend to be *less* masculinized than normal women. They're XY, and yet athletically disadvantaged compared to your average XX woman.

      And an XX man who has a migrated SRY on one of his X chromosomes, in the GP's system, would be competing against women. Testosterone and penis and all.

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    35. Re:Bloody difficult. by Rei · · Score: 1

      Or she may just genetically overexpress the genes to produce androgens. Or -- and here's something you didn't consider -- she might not overproduce androgens at all, but her androgen receptors may be overactive.

      Honestly, I feel really, really sorry for this woman. No matter what the board says, there's going to be an question mark hanging over everything she does for the rest of her life. Imagine what this will do to her in relationships, too, having her gender publicly questioned in the press. Must be horrible.

      --
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    36. Re:Bloody difficult. by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yeah... There are very few sports where women would be competitive. The record difference in the 100m dash between men and women is almost a second, that's a _long_ time in the 100m dash. Any kind of boxing/weightlifting would be a joke. You'd have to go back to the 50's to find a time when the best female marathon runner of today could be the best man. Seriously I said "very few", but is there _any_ sport requiring strength, agility, or endurance where women are competitive with men?

      Sports are segregated for a reason.

    37. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think my wife said it best.
      Some people are born stronger - and some are not. If she was born with female genitalia - then she's female, FULL STOP.

      My transation.... get over it. Many guys are stronger than I am - and they have a natural advantage. This woman has a natural advantage of her own. Do we target swimmers with big feet and long fingers?

      Now let's move on to something that's actually meaningful and will benefit life...
      AC

    38. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously, just test for Barr bodies. It's not a matter of male or female characteristics, it's a matter of how many and what type of chromosomes you have. That's why it is a genetic problem, and not the fact that she likes to play man sports and wear pants.

    39. Re:Bloody difficult. by DudeTheMath · · Score: 1

      Michael Phelps, although physically advantaged to swimming, still has normal body proportions. If his arms or feet were grossly and abnormally long, would it still be considered fair?

      What do you consider "grossly" long? His arm span is 3" longer than his height (6'7" vs. 6'4"), about 4% greater than his height (definitely higher than normal). That's pretty far out the bell curve, I guess (a Google search doesn't seem to reveal the standard deviation for that ratio but a paper in "Annals of Human Biology" says a change from 2% to 4% between groups of different ages is "significant"). But I had a birth defect that disturbed the growth plates in my lower back and legs, resulting in a 9% deviation (6' vs. 5'6"), much farther out, so far out as to truly be considered abnormal. Does that make it not "fair" to other swimmers? Very few swimmers are competitive in Individual Medley (I was the only boy at our club, a lifetime ago in junior high--although to call me "competitive" was quite a stretch) like Phelps, because of the odd physique that lends itself to success in all four strokes. No one ever asked to have me disqualified because of that.

      I'm not sure what to make of Ms. Semenya, but if she's been female all her life, who are we to argue? When she fathers a child, go ahead and strip her of her titles and records. But until then, remember it's all about the bell curve.

      --
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    40. Re:Bloody difficult. by soconn · · Score: 0

      So you are saying that all world class athletes are freaks? If you look to nature, super fit athletes are the norm and obese, slow moving waddlers are the genetic abnormalities (or otherwise known as an easy lunch). I think you are confusing an unhealthy, sedentary lifestyle with normality.

    41. Re:Bloody difficult. by blindseer · · Score: 1

      Yes, in fact, women with AIS tend to be *less* masculinized than normal women. They're XY, and yet athletically disadvantaged compared to your average XX woman.

      I'm not so sure that an XY woman with AIS would always be disadvantaged. It might depend on the sport as well. I'm having difficulty finding the reference now but one of the articles about Caster Semenya pointed out a case of a very successful female athlete that was found to have complete AIS only after an autopsy performed after her death. She was shot in a robbery or something.

      The Wikipedia article on Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome indicates that people with the syndrome would grow taller than the average female. In most sports the increased height would be advantageous. There was nothing in the Wikipedia article that would indicate a person with AIS would have reduced strength (or increased strength either), or other conditions detrimental to athleticism.

      --
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    42. Re:Bloody difficult. by tomhudson · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If we start going down the road of trying to regulate how a athletes body works, there is really no point to sports anymore.

      News flash - these "sporting events" miss the entire point of sports - which is to get your obese butt off the couch and have some fun doing something more physical than popping the top off a King Can. Sports shouldn't be a "spectator sport". Just like boxing shouldn't be a sport, period - not when the goal is to beat the other person senseless. Then again, most people can't even be arsed to spend more than 15 minutes a day doing anything more strenuous than walking to the fridge.

    43. Re:Bloody difficult. by WillyWanker · · Score: 1

      Like I said, there are no easy answers. I think each case needs to be evaluated individually. In her particular case, if it's proven she does have abnormally high levels of testosterone and they can pinpoint the cause (such as a tumor), then it's clear that she has an unfair advantage.

      I mean, let's say they find this out and do nothing. Can you imagine the backlash from the other side? She essentially has a tumor that is producing steroids, which she is using to her advantage in athletic competition. How would this be any different than someone who injects steroids to accomplish the same thing? How can you say it's ok for one to use, but not the other? That's not fair either.

      The primary reason for banning steroids in athletics is specifically for that reason -- to keep everyone on a level playing field.

      This situation really hinges on this, because she happens to have an abnormality that in any other circumstance would be considered verboten. You can't say ok to one without saying ok to the other.

      But this is not to say that this should be the rule for all abnormalities. I think each case needs to be judged individually. The sticky part is who gets to decide what's acceptable and what's abnormal?

      And I do have quite a bit of empathy for her. I completely agree that a hormone imbalance in and of itself is not enough to get where she is. She has worked very very hard. And so have all the other athletes against whom she competes. It's sad that she could be disqualified for being "too good". But at the same time the other athletes who work just as hard, or even harder, and who don't have a hormone imbalance, deserve a fair fight.

    44. Re:Bloody difficult. by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      It's just freaking sports.

      As an example: the Olympics started in 776 B.C.
      Now it's a multi-billion dollar industry.

      Not to mention the extremely long tradition of fairness in "just" sports.
      Calling track & field events "just freaking sports" doesn't begin to encompass the subject.

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    45. Re:Bloody difficult. by Estragib · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Your source disagrees with you. You probably cite this:

      According to the ISNA definition above, 1 percent of live births exhibit some degree of sexual ambiguity.

      But we're talking about this:

      Between 0.1% and 0.2% of live births are ambiguous enough to become the subject of specialist medical attention, including surgery to disguise their sexual ambiguity.

      [...]

      According to Leonard Sax the prevalence of intersex "restricted to those conditions in which chromosomal sex is inconsistent with phenotypic sex, or in which the phenotype is not classifiable as either male or female" is about 0.018%.

    46. Re:Bloody difficult. by swillden · · Score: 5, Funny

      Right? Look at any NBA center. Shaq, for example, has a rare genetic condition causing him to be a fucking giant and giving him an unfair advantage over me, a 6'1" 190 lb. dude. Should he be allowed to play professional basketball? Of course.

      The NBA considered denying him permission to play, but the decision fell apart when it was realized that no one had the balls to tell Shaq about it.

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    47. Re:Bloody difficult. by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      that's not the way it is, look at people still living in primitive conditions and nomadic people,huge amounts of muscle mass are NOT the norm

    48. Re:Bloody difficult. by WillyWanker · · Score: 1

      Well hell, I don't know the standard deviation either, so I'm certainly not qualified to say what constitutes a grossly abnormal arm or foot length. But I must think I'd know it when I see it (such as having one's arms come down to their knees, or being 6'4" tall and a size 24 foot).

      What if a competitive swimmer had extra large hands/feet with webbed fingers/toes? Would that be acceptable? I would think not, but until such a case arises who knows how it'll go. Remember, it only becomes an issue when you *win*.

      And standard deviation covers only 66% of the general populace (e.g., the median IQ of Americans is 100 with a standard deviation of 15, meaning 66% of Americans have an IQ between 85 and 115). I think to be considered grossly abnormal you'd have to be well outside that range.

    49. Re:Bloody difficult. by sjames · · Score: 1

      Actually, XY women are already allowed to compete as women in the Olympics. It happens when a genetic variation renders their androgen receptors entirely insensitive to testosterone. Their external anatomic development is entirely female. They actually can't use steroids to gain an illegal advantage, they won't have any effect.

      From the standpoint of sports performance, an XY woman will be best matched with other women, both in typical muscular development, body mass distribution and overall performance.

      IIRC, the Olympics also allow trans gender competitors to compete as their assigned gender provided they have been on hormones for at least 2 years.

      Clearly, if it's based on anything other than the gender the athlete identifies as, it's going to be DEEPLY insulting and offensive. "I'm sorry Ms. Jones, but as far as we're concerned, you're a man". Or "I'm soryy Mr. Smith, but as far as we're concerned you're a woman". Of course, some might lie about their gender identity to gain an unfair advantage. Basing it on external genitalia will at least avoid horribly insulting someone out of the blue and can be objectively verified.

      I can't help remembering Crocodile Dundee.

    50. Re:Bloody difficult. by soconn · · Score: 0

      Yes they look like distance runners, lean and skinny... not all elite athletes have huge muscle mass.

    51. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Don't flatter yourself, I expect the ordinary male cant do ANY of the stuff female Olympic athletes can.

    52. Re:Bloody difficult. by Linuxmonger · · Score: 1

      I think 99% of us would call 1% rare!

    53. Re:Bloody difficult. by jamesh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      If your body, for whatever reason, allows you to outperform others without the interference of artificial performance-enhancing substances, congratulations. You win.

      Not so fast there Mr/Ms everything-is-either-black-or-white. The whole point is that we separate mens and womens competitions so that each body type can compete on a (more) level playing field. If her body type better belongs in the mens competitions (genetics aside) then she really should be competing there instead.

    54. Re:Bloody difficult. by Planesdragon · · Score: 1

      Our world is not black and white. Genders are a gray zone ranging from white to black, often divided into five "zones" (yes, they are enough to actually have five different definitions of them).

      *ahem*

      LGBT advocates will say they want five genders, because they are biased and want to dillute what gender means. A good number of those asking for it are likely trying for the "ask for a cadillcac when you want a chevrolet" reasoning. That is, they don't really beleive there are five genders -- they just want "other" or "n/a" as an option between "M' and "F".

      Gender is 99.9% black and white, with a teeny tiny grey line between the two.

    55. Re:Bloody difficult. by Rei · · Score: 1

      I oversimplified. There's many variants of AIS. I should have said "CAIS" (Complete Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome), which is what most people think of when they refer to AIS (even though it's one of the less common form) -- that's where the person appears fully female. Yes, people with CAIS tend to be taller than average women, but they tend to have weaker bones and lack the skeletal muscle advantage of even the low-levels of androgens normally present in women (Sheffield-Moore, 2000). Also, those without CAIS but with Kennedy's Disease can have significant muscle mass loss (although more often then not they have a male presentation, so not applicable here).

      --
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    56. Re:Bloody difficult. by tgatliff · · Score: 1

      The androgen side could certainly provide some "aggression" edge for her, but she does not appear to be overly masculine in look. Meaning, no square jaw type features as you would expect.... It would appear that the affects are more anabolic in nature. Hence, larger muscles.... Yes, I understand that androgens can be

    57. Re:Bloody difficult. by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      ORLY - Way to show your ignorance. Gender is black and white to you doesn't make it true. That stuff doesn't come from LGBT advocates, but from medical researchers in Germany who considered there had to be around 5 to 10 different genders.

    58. Re:Bloody difficult. by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      It's also going to be pretty hard to explain the day they get a trans man wiping the floor at women's events on the basis that "oh, the admins decided he had to compete with the girls because of his second X sexual chromosome"

    59. Re:Bloody difficult. by Lord+Byron+Eee+PC · · Score: 0

      I'm so glad I'm in the sciences. When I make a discovery, nobody cares if I'm a male or a female, or if I was on drugs when I did it, or if I have a rare gene that makes me smarter than everyone else. My accomplishments stand on their own and I like it that way.

    60. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Someone who is XY or XX" is also not well-defined. Mosaicism is a condition where an individual has some XY cells, and others XX. Where do you draw the line for the individual to be a male? Does "he" have to have 50+% XY cells, 90+%, 99+% ?

      XY/XX Mosaicism in humans is not documented to exist. Try again

    61. Re:Bloody difficult. by easyTree · · Score: 1

      And I have no idea of how to tackle THAT problem

      A quick "hello" from outside-the-box ..

      How about we just quit this whole 'competing against each other' bs? Problem tackled. Let's find some other way of bringing the people of different nations together that doesn't rely on division. Whilst we're at it, why don't we approach the assessment of someone's educational 'worth' similarly ?

      Come on ppl. There's plenty of space outside the box...

    62. Re:Bloody difficult. by localman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I agree that there are certainly enough ambiguous gender cases to make the whole male/female sports separation to be a poor idea.

      I don't know enough about male/female performance and sports to know if weight classes would be fair enough? Is it true that generally speaking women and men of similar weight perform similarly? Is the only advantage men have the ability to grow more muscle tissue? Or is it more complex than that? If the weight thing would allow world class women (and intersexed people) to compete fairly against others in their weight class, that seems like the ideal and inevitable solution to this kind of thing.

      Cheers.

    63. Re:Bloody difficult. by muridae · · Score: 1

      The problem is, it's not all that rare. The rarity is in testing people, or telling them about what was discovered at birth. Research by Doctor Money (I kid you not, that was his name) made doctors think that the best thing for kids born with any apparent gender defect was to fix it and not even tell the parents if they could avoid it. And never, ever, tell the kid.

      Are stories like this just this years 'shark attack' headlines, or is there a trend going on in the detection of these various genetic disorders? We've been hearing for years about hormones in the water supply, but premarin was one of the worst and has been on the decline for the last decade. And we hear about how those hormones in water might affect developed children. I figure someone is looking into the effect of long term exposure, in women who are hitting child bearing age now. That is going to be some scary data.

    64. Re:Bloody difficult. by muridae · · Score: 1

      The gray line is much larger than 0.1% by an order of magnitude or more. Intersex conditions affect upward of 1% alone, and that is only physically manifesting conditions.

      Just because, thus far, everyone has been shoe-horned into two genders does not mean it is beneficial to continue doing so.

    65. Re:Bloody difficult. by Wooky_linuxer · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Says who? Then all men who perform worse than (pro-)women should compete in women's competitions? Should short and weaker men be allowed in women's baskteball? The rules said that the division is based on genre. There will be people who perform exceptionally well, and sometimes genetics will play a part. Having exceptions is normal. Should we forbid every baskteball player taller than a certain amount over the average to compete since their genetics give them an unfair advantage? That's just nuts.

      --
      Where is that guy who'd die defending what I had to say when I need him?
    66. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think thats the way of the future for sports. Theyre gonne use them anyways so just legalise the use of drugs and we'll really see some entertainment (since that really all sport it). Like has been said before, someone being born huge and playing basketball give them the same (if not more) unfair advantage than one person out of a group of similarly skilled sports people taking drugs.
      In the 21st century parents may soon "breed" their children to have heightened sports abilites and expecting everyone (well within the male/female division) to compete as equals is no different. Lets bring down all divisions and see how fast we can "really" go.

    67. Re:Bloody difficult. by kimvette · · Score: 1

      Intersexed people are not as uncommon as you would think. XX/XY and salt-wasting congenital adrenal hyperplasia here. :)

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    68. Re:Bloody difficult. by ozbird · · Score: 1

      It's just freak sports.

      Fixed that for you.

    69. Re:Bloody difficult. by kimvette · · Score: 1

      That is why I am against government involvement in marriage at all. Under current "gay marriage ban" or "marriage amendment" proposals, as-written, I can't legally marry anyone. Being intersexed with XX/XY genes, I am either both (so I can't marry either) or I am neither (so I cannot marry either). I wish government would get out of marriage and leave it in the hands of the church where it belongs (since it's a religious covenant ANYWAY), and only issue "civil unions" for anyone who wants to "marry" in the eyes of the state.

      $.02

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    70. Re:Bloody difficult. by itwerx · · Score: 1

      > You call 1% rare?
      Yes

    71. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if it is a natural development, then it is fair game. end of discussion. it is an advantage, yes. but it is not unfair. each other contestant had the same chance of developing this condition. that by definition is fair.

    72. Re:Bloody difficult. by quickOnTheUptake · · Score: 1

      Completely OT but an honest question, what is the grey area in the gay marriage debate you make reference to?

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    73. Re:Bloody difficult. by ukyoCE · · Score: 1

      Pretty on-topic IMO :)

      The grey area is the fact that "banning" gay marriage is essentially a farce. There are no clear cut "male" and "female" designations being used presently to control marriage.

      Any normal gay couple out there, for instance, can have one of the couple get a sex change and/or take some hormones (depending on the state) and get married as a Male+Female couple already. Even if both of the couple are 100% XY male in every way imaginable.

      On the other hand, there are hermaphrodites and transgenders who biologically (whether genetic or hormonal) are a different gender than the sex listed on their birth certificate and driver's license. They can not enter a legally binding relationship (marriage or civil union) with the opposite gender.

      (I've tried to be careful to use "sex" to refer to genetic+legal sex, and gender to refer to hormonal gender self-identity, which may or may not match the individual's sex)

      All of this grey area corresponds pretty precisely between marriage and competitive sports. Both involve an organization attempting to segregate based on binary values for sex. Which unfortunately, is not how humans work. Regardless of what is or isn't covered in various religious texts.

    74. Re:Bloody difficult. by jps25 · · Score: 1

      I know I'm late to the game, but, uh, you're an idiot.
      I don't care to google all that much, but here are a couple names you might want to check up on:
      Renne Richards
      Balian Buschbaum
      Michelle Dumaresq
      Parinya Charoenphol

    75. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shaq's rare genetic condition is called "Taking HGH and steriods."

    76. Re:Bloody difficult. by TrekkieGod · · Score: 2, Insightful

      News flash - these "sporting events" miss the entire point of sports - which is to get your obese butt off the couch and have some fun doing something more physical than popping the top off a King Can. Sports shouldn't be a "spectator sport". Just like boxing shouldn't be a sport, period - not when the goal is to beat the other person senseless. Then again, most people can't even be arsed to spend more than 15 minutes a day doing anything more strenuous than walking to the fridge.

      I would say that's a bit close-minded. Sure, the points of you participating in sports is to do something fun that is physical. The point of spectator sports is that some humans, not all, can achieve a level of performance that the majority of us can't (regardless of how much we were to train). It can be very enjoyable to watch a competition between the absolute best of our race in a particular event.

      As for boxing, the goal isn't simply to beat the other person senseless. It's to avoid letting the other person beat you senseless. If you participate, you accept to take on the same risks as your opponent. You know what those risks are and you're willing to take them on. I believe consenting adults can do whatever the hell they want, and it doesn't cease to be a sport just because it seems tasteless to you. That's fine, and it's great that you value human life to that extent, but all that it means is that it's not a sport you're interested in participating or spectating. That's fine and there's nothing wrong with that, but it's not a problem with the sport itself, it's just your personal preference due to your personal beliefs.

      --

      Warning: Opinions known to be heavily biased.

    77. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >If your body, for whatever reason, allows you to outperform others without
      >the interference of artificial performance-enhancing substances, congratulations.
      > You win.

      Pretty soon people will be implanting themselves with a tumor to inflate their testosterone levels?

    78. Re:Bloody difficult. by mqduck · · Score: 1

      That's one of the most insightful comments I've yet seen in this discussion. If only it led us closer to an answer to the problem. :-/

      --
      Property is theft.
    79. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      A case of true hermaphroditism with 46, XX/46, XY karyotype is reported. The propositus, reared as a male, showed ambiguous external genitalia with perineoscrotal hypospadias, and internal genitalia represented by bilateral ovotestes, normal uterus and tubes. Periodic menstrual bleedings appeared at puberty. The endocrinologic data demonstrated the secretory activity of both the ovarian and the testicular tissue. The analysis of red cell, lymphocyte and serum markers, done on the propositus and on his parents, failed to show any evidence of double fertilization. On this basis, the origin of the XX/XY condition (mosaicism versus chimerism) and its developmental consequences are discussed.

      From http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/991437

    80. Re:Bloody difficult. by steelfood · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Have you even looked at female athletes, especially swimmers and weight-lifters? They have no breasts. They lack body fat, and hence lack breasts. On top of that, they actually work out so much their hormones are out of whack. If they stop working out, things go back to normal, but while they're training, they're physically a lot like men, with the exception of the genitals.

      If her body is producing an abnormal amount of testosterone, that's perfectly fine. It's not artificial. It's not unnatural. It's genetically superior. Which is, in a way, what competitions are about. It's seven parts training, and three parts genetic. If you weren't born a runner, you're not going to even come close to Usain Bolt. If you're not born a swimmer, you won't come close to Michael Phelps. That's just how it is. Things are no different just because their sex doesn't give them a head start.

      Don't ever mistake that just because somebody is born genetically superior, that they'll automatically win. Nobody can sit on their ass 364 days a year and still be superior enough to be a world-class athlete. Genetic superiority just means that given the same amount of training, the person with better genes will more likely win. But that means both competitors have to train equally as hard. And believe you me, if you knew your genetics weren't ideal for what you're competing in, you'll train extra hard to make up for the difference. And in order for your genetically superior opponent to beat you, that person would have to train just as hard as you.

      --
      "If a nation expects to be ignorant and free in a state of civilization, it expects what never was and never will be."
    81. Re:Bloody difficult. by fyrewulff · · Score: 1

      Or instead of gender, classify by weight and power (I guess how much force someone can extert with their arms or legs).

      That way in the 100m dash, we can have the Featherweight class, the Welterweight class, the Heavyweight class and the Usain Bolt class (which only has Usain Bolt in it).

      --
      "We need to get over this notion, that, for Apple to win... Microsoft must lose." - Steve Jobs, 1997
    82. Re:Bloody difficult. by KahabutDieDrake · · Score: 1

      What you see in primitive conditions is optimization for efficiency. They have low body fat, low muscle mass. The outcome is it takes very little fuel to run their bodies, which is a side effect of living on subsidence rather than abundance.

      I imagine GP was referring to the Kenyan runners and other extreme examples of tribal "athletes". In which case you are talking about generations of breeding and training culminating in an entire sub-species of people capable of running fast for a very long time. Even still, those people are the outliers among their own kind.

    83. Re:Bloody difficult. by Miamicanes · · Score: 1

      > is there _any_ sport requiring strength, agility, or endurance where women are competitive with men?

      MMA? (Mixed Martial Arts)

      I'm not aware of any female heavyweights, but in the lighter weight classes, more than a few guys have ended up tapping out and losing by submission before they knew what happened. And, more often than not, if it's a public fight, had their MMA careers extinguished as a result (intellectually, everyone knows a man and woman of equal skill in the same weight class are more or less an even match at mixed martial arts, but culturally and emotionally, few things carry more stigma than getting your ass totally kicked by a girl...

    84. Re:Bloody difficult. by pjt33 · · Score: 1

      Why do nearly all world class sprinters come from certain West African tribes? Why do nearly all world class long distance runners come from certain East African tribes? Is it just possible that there are unusual genes in play?

      Also, do you not think the term "freak" might be applicable to the top 0.00001% of a population in any attribute, including speed, strength, and obesity?

    85. Re:Bloody difficult. by KahabutDieDrake · · Score: 1

      The extremely long tradition of what? Did you say fairness? You keep using that word, I don't think it means what you think it means.

      Sports, especially professional sports has NEVER been about fairness. OK, maybe back in 776BC, but certainly not in any modern iteration. As with anything else, once you put the incentives on the side of "winning" rather than "competing with honor" you've already lost any shred of fairness you might have had. I'm not going to outright say that all professional athletes are cheating, but it's not unreasonable to say they take every advantage they can get. Often including advantages that are outside the rules of their given sport. Genetic advantages not withstanding. We just haven't reached the level where genetic rules have been put in place, clearly though we are on the way.

      I respect professional athletes that do compete with honor. However, I'm never surprised to find out when it turns out they aren't.

    86. Re:Bloody difficult. by WillyWanker · · Score: 1

      Tumors are not normal. If an adrenal tumor is producing extreme levels of testosterone, I don't think anyone would consider that normal or natural.

      Now if she proves to have higher than normal levels of testosterone and there is *no determinable cause*, then that's a different story. But that is HIGHLY unlikely. For her to look and sound like she does we're not talking a little extra testosterone, we're talking a whole lot more.

    87. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then why can't men participate in that particular race?

    88. Re:Bloody difficult. by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But if the condition is congenital, it may be an advantage, but not an unnatural one.

    89. Re:Bloody difficult. by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 1

      Even .1% is a hell of a lot more common than "rare." That's 1 in 1000 people. Which mean over 6 million people. The "unclassifiable phenotype" percentage gives us about 1.2 million people.

    90. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If your body, for whatever reason, allows you to outperform others without the interference of artificial performance-enhancing substances, congratulations. You win.

      It doesn't need to, though. If your body gives you only mildly above-average performance, but it happens to do so despite you being , you can still compete and win in a competition limited to .

      The fact that male/female is a fluid distinction, as so many other posters have pointed out, raises the question - why are we trying to separate the competition along that particular line? Should we also be dividing it according to other aspects of one's genetic makeup? Is it any fairer for me to compete against someone with a lucky coincidence of a dozen fitness-related genes than for a women to compete with men at weight-lifting?

    91. Re:Bloody difficult. by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      I somewhat agree with you but a 'rare genetic variation' is simply that, RARE. Under normal circumstances, there are genetic markers that distinguish a male from a female and if this particular athlete has a rare variation or abnormality in his/her DNA then that bridge should be crossed when it's come to.

      Athletes are rare, although perhaps not as rare as some of these genetic conditions. I'm not sure if elite, world-class athletes are more rare than these genetic conditions, but I would be unsurprised to find that they're more rare than genetic anomalies.
      It's like saying people with lungs that have a greater capacity are rare. Not so rare among alpine dwellers. When you look at unusual individuals, don't be surprised to find out that they are, in fact, unusual.

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
    92. Re:Bloody difficult. by Stuart+Gibson · · Score: 1

      I wish people would stop insisting marriage is a church thing. The church had no interest in marriage until the Council of Trent in the mid sixteenth century where they suddenly realised that by deciding a marriage couldn't be recognised unless it was sanctioned and carried out by the church they could turn what had previously been a mostly business proposal into a nice little money spinner.

      --
      It's all fun and games until a 200' robot dinosaur shows up and trashes Neo-Tokyo... Again
    93. Re:Bloody difficult. by ILongForDarkness · · Score: 1

      reward the winners with a show to find 20 women willing to bear their children.

      Or 20 men I presume. That would be "unnatural selection". I guess humans have somewhat come to that point anyways what with life saving techniques that let people with diseases that otherwise would kill them before they had children survive long enough to have children themselves. But, your suggestion would have serious consequences. After all in nature it isn't the fastest Gazelle that lives to see another day but all the ones that are faster than the slowest.

      By selecting for the freaks in one area you'd make it less likely that the freakishly gifted in other areas would survive. To "solve" this you'd probably have to result to eugenics. I can just imagine a Department of Breeding officer saying "we need you to breed, oh you too, nope you can't breed we already have enough like you".

    94. Re:Bloody difficult. by ILongForDarkness · · Score: 1

      Let's find some other way of bringing the people of different nations together that doesn't rely on division.

      What you mean something like the UN?

      Seriously though in that sense the problem is that nations exist not that they compete. Once you have the concept of "this is our land, and these are the people that belong here" you are going to have competition. After all if you are poor and your neighbor rich you might get invaded or they just might dominate regional politics to the point were you don't have much of a choice.

    95. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hope you'll eat your words when "she" turns out to be a "he".

    96. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But what if she's just a male? Let's just test that first, then maybe the whole discussion about syndromes becomes redundant.

    97. Re:Bloody difficult. by scum-e-bag · · Score: 1

      Either that, or you have to create the Hermaphrodite Olympics.

      http://www.gaygames.com/

      --
      Does it go on forever?
    98. Re:Bloody difficult. by jonbryce · · Score: 1

      She's clearly not a normal woman, but normal people don't win world athletics championships, so where are you going to draw the line.

    99. Re:Bloody difficult. by owlstead · · Score: 1

      "I think it has to come down to whether a deviation is grossly abnormal or within what would be considered as normal."

      Well, if it is "grossly" abnormal, then good for her.

      "Michael Phelps, although physically advantaged to swimming, still has normal body proportions. If his arms or feet were grossly and abnormally long, would it still be considered fair?"

      Yes. As long as he is considered human.

    100. Re:Bloody difficult. by owlstead · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but if you go and put each genetic difference in another league, you would end up with 6 billion leagues. It's bad enough that we require two groups (for the obvious differences would mean that no woman could ever win a physical competition). It's not like it is a huge problem when one "advanced" woman comes a long and messes up only the top spot. Woman still can win and will have a great time trying to break the previous record set by this "abnormal" person.

    101. Re:Bloody difficult. by Mauvaisours · · Score: 1

      Hey, I can tie my shoes myself, probably even better than they do.

    102. Re:Bloody difficult. by Nichole_knc · · Score: 1

      RARE????? The birth rate of intersexed abnormalities is 1 in 2000 births and that is not RARE... The average world birth rate is around 357000 a day that is 178.5 intersexed children born a day. There are other conditions that present less than this yet are considered mainstream conditions for research. Couple of examples: Cerebral Palsy; 1/4000, Cystic Fibrosis; 1/2500

    103. Re:Bloody difficult. by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      Have you even looked at female athletes, especially swimmers and weight-lifters? They have no breasts.

      I've looked, and can testify that they do have breasts. I can't even imagine someone without breasts.

      If you weren't born a runner, you're not going to even come close to Usain Bolt.

      Except he's not born runner: he's too tall to be sprinter, for starters.

    104. Re:Bloody difficult. by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      Michael Phelps, although physically advantaged to swimming, still has normal body proportions. If his arms or feet were grossly and abnormally long, would it still be considered fair?

      Actually in interviews during and after the Olympics, people (including Phelps) made reference to the fact that he is physically disfigured in a way that makes him a better swimmer. His wingspan is literally out of proportion, his torso is abnormally long, and his feet are abnormally large. 60 Minutes talked about this in an interview with him.

    105. Re:Bloody difficult. by rackeer · · Score: 1

      I think it would be completely wrong to only allow people to compete who are sufficiently similar to some standard (or average). The better we understand genetic differences the more problematic this issue will become. It's evident that some people have to fight more, some less to become top-class athletes. I predict that as a mediation athletes will compete in different groups of genetic characteristics, similar to the groups at the paralympics. This will make the competition more fair, because within these groups variance will be much smaller than in the big groups (male/female).
      I think it is important to see that nobody is predetermined to become a top athlete. It takes a lot of discipline and social support to become an athlete. It is in the interest of humanity to advance physically and mentally, so why not use the competition to our advantage to distinguish the best?

    106. Re:Bloody difficult. by TheoMurpse · · Score: 1

      Except for Slashdot's pretty hardcore dismissal of sports in general, I would expect a community of geeks to appreciate attempts at handling corner cases.

    107. Re:Bloody difficult. by easyTree · · Score: 1

      What you mean something like the UN?

      No, I was thinking that it could be something entirely similar to the olympic games with an exception; rather than people participate in something subtractive, they participate in something additive. Some kind of group event where the individuals are working towards a common goal.

      Admittedly, I can't really picture what that might be, being a child of a world where all around is conflict and competition but perhaps such a thing exists, just as four-dimensional objects exist yet are challenging to imagine.

    108. Re:Bloody difficult. by easyTree · · Score: 1

      As an afterthough, I'd like to see nations merge; the physical boundaries such as oceans being seen as a mere inconvenience rather than a factor defining division.

      Why not? Surely, it's inevitable, sooner or later? Why not pretend we have some kind of collective intelligence and act as such? Aren't *you*, reader, tired of the way things are?

    109. Re:Bloody difficult. by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      I feel bad for all the guys going up against Bolt. They work their whole lives to become the fastest they can possibly be, and this this guy comes along with a rare genetic condition which makes him literally superhumanly fast and their chances of getting gold become zero.

      The way he tells it, he doesn't even try that hard. When he set the 100m world record at the Olympics he got up a bit late, ate some chicken nuggets, watched a bit of TV and wondered down to the track. He even started to slow down towards the end of the race when he noticed he was far ahead for everyone else.

      In the end, you can go a long way by working hard and preparing yourself mentally, but there is always a chance someone with an inherent genetic advantage will simply be better than you no matter what. It sucks but it is none-the-less true.

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    110. Re:Bloody difficult. by 4D6963 · · Score: 1

      Oh, so you're an average untrained man and you can't beat highly skilled and trained female athletes? Shame on you! You're a disgrace to the otherwise physically ever-superior sex.

      Or maybe women aren't inherently physically inferior to us after all... Nah fuck that, you're just a disgrace.

      --
      You just got troll'd!
    111. Re:Bloody difficult. by extrasolar · · Score: 1

      This is why I don't like the "unfair advantage" argument against using steroids in sports, because it really is a slippery slope, as nearly any advantage can be construed as being "unfair" (since not everyone has access to such advantage). My problem with steroids has always been that the advantage comes at a health cost, or at least a health risk; a risk that athletes shouldn't have to take to do well in their sport. If this lady has a natural hormonal imbalance that gives her an advantage, then I have nothing against it, especially if it doesn't harm her.

      Name one sport where the winners aren't determined by "unfair advantages"?

    112. Re:Bloody difficult. by Lumpy · · Score: 1

      NO. you reassign him to a different sport to even the playing field.

      Shaq would make an excellent jockey, gymnastics, or soccer.

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    113. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it is a result of her genes, and requires an intrusive study of gene activation to find, how is it 'unnatural'?

    114. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What she has accomplished has at least as much to do with her mind as her body.

      And what makes you think that her brain and mind aren't part of her body?

    115. Re:Bloody difficult. by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Then all men who perform worse than (pro-)women should compete in women's competitions? Should short and weaker men be allowed in women's baskteball?

      No no no, you're missing the point. The point is that what your body can do is important, not what gender you are. Under this principle, there should be no women's basketball. Just basketball.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    116. Re:Bloody difficult. by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Careful, he knows Shaq-fu.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    117. Re:Bloody difficult. by DoninIN · · Score: 1

      Yeah! This! I thought that's what sports IS? Who can run fastest jump highest etc? If it's original equipment she's legal and a woman for sports purposes as far as I'm concerned. Otherwise we'll have to handicap track and field and let judges decide who "tried the hardest" and I'll be out there competing for 100M gold in 4 years with my 100 M time of 32.8, but I'll be trying like crazy!

    118. Re:Bloody difficult. by soconn · · Score: 1

      Genes are most definitely at play, they dictate the amount of fast twitch (explosive speed) and slow switch (endurance) muscle fibers an individual is gifted with. What I object to is the characterization that these people are "freaks", good genes will take you only so far. Many people are given similar abilities but, like any walk of life, success is achieved by those who work at it. These people devote their lives to training their bodies - using the word freaks dismisses their huge perseverance and mental strength.

    119. Re:Bloody difficult. by apoc.famine · · Score: 1

      I'm still waiting for the Freaklympics, where there is no testing done on anyone, ever, and there are no disqualifications.
       
      It'd be awesome - people with 8 gallons of steroids pumped into them, high on crack, lifting heavy things until they broke themselves. Prosthetic cheater-springs on peoples' legs, exoskeletons, etc.
       
      Now that'd be fucking entertaining!

      --
      Velociraptor = Distiraptor / Timeraptor
    120. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rare amongst the general public is not the same thing as rare amongst world-class athletes. Not all of these conditions are reflected in the chromosomes, either - so we don't know whether we've come to that bridge unless we cross it...

    121. Re:Bloody difficult. by tsm_sf · · Score: 1

      [...]good genes will take you only so far. Many people are given similar abilities but, like any walk of life, success is achieved by those who work at it. These people devote their lives to training their bodies - using the word freaks dismisses their huge perseverance and mental strength.

      I see this line of reasoning eventually devolving into determinism vs. free will. Let's just agree that it takes both an excellent body and an excellent disposition to become a top athlete.

      --
      Literalism isn't a form of humor, it's you being irritating.
    122. Re:Bloody difficult. by MoreDruid · · Score: 1
      so how do we differentiate this from when people are judged on mental capabilities instead of physical?
      This is mostly a level playing field (business & colleague attitudes aside) so everyone competes with each other, male or female. I've never heard of a separate womens' chess league.

      Still this is hard to judge (if you don't count face value as they did until now). Maybe a psychologic test could yield some results if the woman in question isn't homosexual.

      As to the point if she has a rare condition and has more capabilities as a result, then kudos to her that she found something to benefit from that. If we look at mental abilities this wouldn't even be discussed or being thought strange but smart instead.

      --
      The best weapon of a dictatorship is secrecy, but the best weapon of a democracy should be the weapon of openness.
    123. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From an entirely anecdotal experience: High level athletes have screwy hormone levels. End of story. My girlfriend ran cross country in high school. Although from her description it sounded more like training for a marathon. 5 miles in the morning and another 8-10 at night. Due to her extreme activity level, low body fat and unusually high levels of testosterone - she didn't develop breasts until 3-4 months into her first year of college. Posted AC - she'd be upset if I did otherwise.

    124. Re:Bloody difficult. by coreolyn · · Score: 1

      I really love statistics like this. Most are not tested for chromosomal sex at birth so how the hell are such numbers accurately derived?

    125. Re:Bloody difficult. by Martin+Blank · · Score: 1

      So where do they compete, then? I realize that they may not have a right to compete in any specific event, especially those privately financed, but if you set aside competitions for those with genetic abnormalities, you risk reducing it to a freak show. The Special Olympics had to be very careful in how they approached competition for the disabled to avoid that, but I suspect this would be even more difficult.

      Almost by definition, athletes capable of qualifying for competitions like this are exceptional human specimens. It's not just their focused training regimen that allows them to get to this level, but I expect in most cases some very good genetics are assisting.

      --
      You can never go home again... but I guess you can shop there.
    126. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My rare genetic makeup allows me to not care about track and field sports.

    127. Re:Bloody difficult. by NotBornYesterday · · Score: 1

      I think the problem is that the sports world will have to define more precisely what qualifies as male or female for the purposes of competition.

      As a separate issue, this topic reminds me of a joke I heard once.

      After twenty years of marriage, a wife sits her husband down and tells him she has a confession to make. He steels himself for what he thinks he is about to hear, but instead of admitting an affair, she tells him that she was originally born male, and had gender reassignment surgery before they met.

      Visibly shaken, the husband stares at his wife, trying to comprehend the magnitude of what she has confessed.

      "So," he says, "all these years ... "
      "Yes, she says, "I meant to tell you before now, I was just so afraid that you would be angry with me and leave me" she sobbed.
      "Angry? Of course I'm angry" he snapped. "This is the deepest betrayal possible. All these years, and you've been hitting from the women's tees."

      --
      I prefer rogues to imbeciles because they sometimes take a rest.
    128. Re:Bloody difficult. by NotBornYesterday · · Score: 1

      Don't tell that to the PGA. Boys don't always like playing against girls, because there is a chance they could lose to a girl. Remember all the male golfers who bailed out of some tourney because Anika Sorrenstam (I think) decided to enter? Their big brave egos couldn't handle it.

      I don't think that womens' sports exist simply to give women a level playing field. Part of the reason is to stop them from embarrassing guys.

      --
      I prefer rogues to imbeciles because they sometimes take a rest.
    129. Re:Bloody difficult. by NotBornYesterday · · Score: 1

      By "body", I was referring to bones, muscle, tendons, and other mechanical pieces. By "mind", I am referring not just to the gray lump of matter that makes up the brain, but the thoughts it holds, from which flows the dedication, discipline, and other aspects of mental toughness required to compete at any significant level. One could make the argument that it's all just chemistry and electricity up there, but I don't feel that adequately describes the mind.

      --
      I prefer rogues to imbeciles because they sometimes take a rest.
    130. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're like most Slashdot slobs, you probably can't do most of the stuff even an ordinary female can.

    131. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's an idea, how about a fertility test? That is, those wanting to compete as men need to be able to produce viable sperm, and those wanting to compete as females need to produce viable eggs. The thinking behind it is that any genetic mutation that gives them an advantage is okay, so long as they can pass it on to the next generation.

    132. Re:Bloody difficult. by VanessaE · · Score: 0
      I don't get into sports, but I have to sat that, with few exceptions, there doesn't need to *be* a gender divide. Most sports should follow weight/strength classes like wrestling and boxing use, where those traits matter at all. If a 200 pound genetic woman sporting a lot of muscle wants to compete in some sport with a 200 pound genetic man with similar traits, I say let them do so!

      I don't suppose this will work with something like football, but you get the point.

    133. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well the fact she has to lift up her cock to show you her virgina, would have me leaning toward the 'male' category.

    134. Re:Bloody difficult. by Arker · · Score: 1

      Differences between males and females are not so simple that weight-classes would eliminate them. A female's long bones stop growing earlier, and her fat content will be naturally higher, so an average woman facing an average man of the same weight is shorter and less muscular but still slightly heavier.

      That said, it might in all reality be close enough. No matchup is perfectly fair to begin with.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    135. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm just 5'6". So fuck you too.

    136. Re:Bloody difficult. by celtic_hackr · · Score: 1

      So has any one tested that male US swimmer that demolished all the swimming records recently. Does he have some genetic abnormality that gave him an advantage? Did Babe Ruth have some abnormal advantage? Perhaps we should exhume his grave and do some genetic tests on his remains and if he ahd anything beyond what some arbitrary council deems fair He should be stripped of his records? I have yet to see anyone bring up this issue for any male not found to be using illegal steroids. It's ok for any male to have naturally occurring steroids through the roof, but when it happens to a woman, LOOK OUT!

    137. Re:Bloody difficult. by bickerdyke · · Score: 1

      Exactly.. Everyone should get a price. I could imagine a few disiplines with me dominating the "slashdotter-basement-dewlling"-league.

      --
      bickerdyke
    138. Re:Bloody difficult. by camg188 · · Score: 1

      My thoughts exactly. "she may have a rare medical condition that gives her an unfair advantage." Like when basketball player is 7 feet tall and it gives them an unfair advantage?

    139. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However, we segregate competition by sex. Men are not allowed to compete in the women's division, where women can pretty much always compete with men if they are capable (Sorenstam and Wie are examples in an nonathletic sport -- golf). I threw discus in high school and college. If I had competed with the women my "body, for whatever reason, " would have allowed me "to outperform the others without the interference of artificial performance-enhancing substances". Let's face it, this "chick" made herculean improvements that probably indicate that she is not in fact 100% female and thus should be competing in the "open" division.

      It should be that simple -- not 100% female, go play in the open division. Everything else is appeal to emotion, not fairness. It is an appeal to emotion that women have competitive athletics on parity with open athletics at all. Not that I believe we should get rid of women's sports (for unrelated reasons) but that we should have clear categories about who can compete and in which class.

    140. Re:Bloody difficult. by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Utter nonsense. What you say is only true of a highly skilled female and a low skilled or unskilled male of the same weight class. In the upper and even middle echelons I'd be surprised if anyone would even sanction women fighting men. There may be a _very few_ exceptions, but in these cases the women would be considered basically freaks.

      It comes down to muscle mass in the end, and men simply have more. If you have two people equally trained, the stronger and faster one will win.

    141. Re:Bloody difficult. by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      I would say that's a bit close-minded. Sure, the points of you participating in sports is to do something fun that is physical. The point of spectator sports is that some humans, not all, can achieve a level of performance that the majority of us can't (regardless of how much we were to train). It can be very enjoyable to watch a competition between the absolute best of our race in a particular event.

      "Spectator sports" is STILL an oxymoron. the contradiction between people competing, and the fat slobs watching them, IS funny.

      As for boxing, the goal isn't simply to beat the other person senseless. It's to avoid letting the other person beat you senseless.

      You can't win by running away from your opponent - you HAVE to beat the other person up. If you don't lay a glove on them, you lose. The goal IS to beat the other person to the point where they simply can't defend themselves, and that's no more a sport than dog fighting. Both are stupid, and cater to the lowest of the low.

    142. Re:Bloody difficult. by rubycodez · · Score: 1

      nah, if the hunting is good they'll have pot bellies when they get "old" (which might be 30s). been there, seen it.

    143. Re:Bloody difficult. by soconn · · Score: 1

      Nah, I've been there too and maybe you saw the tourist attraction tribe but Africans living off the land do more exercise in a day than most Westerners see all month. Leanness and being fit are a response to a lifestyle we evolved for, diabetes and obesity is the Western response... we just like to label athletes as freakish to avoid the fact we have become lazy.

    144. Re:Bloody difficult. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what about the XYY syndrome? [...] Given that 1 in 1000 boys have this syndrome, it is probable that some athletes who won "male" competition have this syndrome. If we were to have these persons genetically tested today, would you retroactively strip them from their titles?

      Pointless argument. The whole idea is that if you are female you're unable to compete on equal terms "in the real race" and have the "option" to race with other people with the same "problem". The winners of the "male" competitions did in fact win "the real competitions" and not the "fake" ones.

    145. Re:Bloody difficult. by TrekkieGod · · Score: 1

      "Spectator sports" is STILL an oxymoron. the contradiction between people competing, and the fat slobs watching them, IS funny.

      In what way is it an oxymoron? There are people competing in physical activity. Check. There are people watching or "spectating" the participants. Check.

      As a rule, there are quite a few extremely well conditioned people who enjoy watching sports. In fact, most people who like participating in a sport like watching it. And there are many others like me: I have no interest in either watching nor participating in sports, so I'm way out of shape. There's no correlation, man.

      The goal IS to beat the other person to the point where they simply can't defend themselves, and that's no more a sport than dog fighting. Both are stupid, and cater to the lowest of the low.

      There's one fundamental difference: dogs didn't consent to that lifestyle (nor are they capable of doing so). It's only cruelty when you force someone into that situation. If you go out into the streets, find some random guy and start beating him up, you're committing assault. If you force children into a fight, that's child abuse. If two people choose to step into a ring to fight for money or for fun (and there are people who do it just for fun, no money involved), it's their choice, and it's not wrong.

      What makes our opinion on any of this worth more than the opinion of people who actually enjoy those activities? I don't like sports, I don't watch them. You don't like boxing, don't watch it or participate in it. I like doing other activities many people probably think of as stupid, and they're free to think that all they want and not participate, but it doesn't mean that I should be doing something else. I found something I enjoy doing and that's all that matters.

      --

      Warning: Opinions known to be heavily biased.

    146. Re:Bloody difficult. by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      If two people choose to step into a ring to fight for money or for fun (and there are people who do it just for fun, no money involved), it's their choice, and it's not wrong.

      How does getting into a ring change it? If they did it outside the ring, even though it was completely voluntary, it would be illegal. Same as other completely voluntary crimes, such as dueling, or snuff films.

      Because it's "a sport" when it's in the ring, and not when it's outside? Even though you have the same situation - spectators, bets, a winner and a loser?

      That's fucked up. But back to the main thread - Caster Semenya was shown to have the same testosterone levels as a man. Either it's doping, or a cyst on the adrenals. One of Caster's former coaches was the same guy who doped the East German olympic teams with so much testosterone that one of them had to get a sex change.

      If your testosterone levels are the same as a man, you have no right to compete as a woman, no matter what the cause. The precedent was set with transsexual male-to-female athletes. the criteria are 2 years post-op and on female hormones. Testosterone from the adrenals only, and at normal genetic female levels. So either way, Caster is not considered a woman for sport competition.

    147. Re:Bloody difficult. by jockeys · · Score: 1

      not even close. these are the official results from last years world championships of the IPF (governing body of powerlifting)
      http://www.powerlifting-ipf.com/fileadmin/data/WC_Canada_2008/men/scoresheet.htm
      http://www.powerlifting-ipf.com/fileadmin/data/WC_Canada_2008/women/scoresheet.htm

      you can see that women in a given weight class are usually at least 25% weaker than men in the same class, even for squats which is more about legs and back than pure upper body strength.

      --

      In Soviet Russia jokes are formulaic and decidedly non-humorous.
  25. Daily Mash by ilikejam · · Score: 1
    --
    C-x C-s C-x k
  26. It all comes down to inadequate definitions by ZorbaTHut · · Score: 1

    What's she competing in? Well, she's competing in the "female division". What does "female" mean? Turns out they never bothered defining that.

    Is it fair that she be allowed to compete?

    Who the hell knows? They've already tossed in an "unfairness" by removing half of humanity. Is it a justified unfairness? Probably. But there's no objective answer to where they should draw the line - they could restrict it by weight class, by height, by age, by whatever the hell they wanted to.

    Even assuming we discover there's something wacky about her genetics, the problem isn't her genetics - the problem is that nobody sat down and scientifically described what "female" meant, and now they're going to end up in the middle of a shitstorm because everyone defines it slightly differently without realizing it.

    --
    Breaking Into the Industry - A development log about starting a game studio.
  27. Mod Parent Up by Maddog+Batty · · Score: 1

    Totally agree with you. Science has shown us that there is no easy answer to this question.

    --
    wot no sig
  28. Yes, but should they be in sports is the question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sports records, competitions, etc. aren't divided between genders for social reasons (or well, in a way they are but you know what I mean) but for physical ones. Males with equal amount of practice can get much better results, etc... And officially sports are supposed to give more weight to practice, dicipline, etc. than genetical aspects.

    So is she physically closer to "the most fit female in the world" or "male in very good shape". I think that looking at testosterone levels or something is probably the key.

    (Personally though, I think this is all bullshit and they should either put all human is one series or then begin giving penalties for extraordinarily good genes.)

  29. What is "Fair" competition anyway by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think everyone would agree that putting any 5 year old up against michael jordan in a one-on-one basketball game would be "unfair". But two NBA stars are considered fair game, even if one of them is Michael Jordan-- who was way better than other players.

    Some sports add handicaps, extra points, compensatory rules, etc. to make competition with one stronger player seem fairer, but it seems that what we REALLY mean by fair depends on context and opinion. Fair competition could mean:

    1. Competition with a level playing field. So that all players are close-to-equal in their abilities to win. The level playing field could be determined by categorization (weight class, male vs. female, etc.) or by systematic elimination (poker tournaments)...

    2. Competition where the winner cannot be easily determined. May have asymmetric competitors (different fighting styles for example), but we don't know who's going to win. Or as long as the teams "look fair" or are statistically close in terms of performance, we call this fair.

    Then again, Sometimes all we want from a competition is to enjoy the spectacle and we don't really care if it's fair..

    A competition is, in a way, an experiment to determine how unfairly matched the competitors are. So I guess it's kind of arbitrary.

  30. Simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't segregate based on sexist ideas. Everyone competes against everyone because women and men should be treated as equals because they are equal.

    1. Re:Simple solution by dougmc · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Sounds good, but then women would almost never win in most sports. They may be equal under the law, but they're certainly not physically equal.

  31. Nerds? by Dunbal · · Score: 1

    Any biologist will tell you what a karyotype is.

    If it's XX, it's female. If it's XY, it's male. Pediatricians do this all the time in cases of genital ambiguity.

    --
    Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    1. Re:Nerds? by Targen · · Score: 2, Informative

      No self-respecting biologist would ever so much as suggest it's that simple, especially not in this sort of situation of ambiguity.

    2. Re:Nerds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So what would XXY be?

    3. Re:Nerds? by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      If there's a Y chromosome ANYWHERE then it's male.

      There are all sorts of abnormalities - XO (turner), XXX, etc, but most of them have severe deformities and or chronic non progressive encephalopathy which would preclude them from competing and winning in sporting events (unless we're talking about the special olympics).

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    4. Re:Nerds? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Both!

    5. Re:Nerds? by The_mad_linguist · · Score: 1

      So test for SRY. Present: Male. Not present: Female.

    6. Re:Nerds? by sjames · · Score: 1

      Karyotype is not exactly the same as gender. An XY person with complete androgen insensitivity is generally considered unambiguously female in spite of an XY karyotype.

    7. Re:Nerds? by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      Still not sufficient, medical researchers have suggested about 5-10 sexes possible.

    8. Re:Nerds? by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      An XY person with complete androgen insensitivity is generally considered unambiguously female in spite of an XY karyotype.

            That doesn't apply in this case, as the person in question has fairly male features. You're talking about Jaimie Lee Curtis who has a very unmistakably female body. Apples and oranges.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    9. Re:Nerds? by sjames · · Score: 1

      Actually, I was talking about the general case as an example of why genetic testing isn't fully satisfactory.

    10. Re:Nerds? by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      isn't fully satisfactory.

            Then where do you draw the line? As a physician I have seen a case of mistaken sexuality - a genetic XY male born with genital ambiguity, that spent their entire childhood thinking she was female, was raised by her parents as female, was bought dresses and dolls to play with, etc. Until puberty hit, "she" started to grow a beard and extreme body hair, failed to grow breasts or acquire the female hips and waist, etc. In fact, by looking at "her" it was quite obvious "she" was male.

            It was a very sad case, and the patient in question had attempted suicide several times. I spent quite a few hours talking to her because she was obviously depressed - the average person simply didn't understand her situation and after being mocked and ridiculed by society for so long, she quite obviously thought herself unworthy. Psychologically she considered herself to be female. Her documents said she was female. However the genetic studies we ran said XY - male. As did the obvious secondary sexual characteristics.

            But again, you have to draw the line somewhere. It has nothing to do with compassion, understanding, or the person's feelings. In the case of our patient we treated her as female, interned her in the female ward (despite the looks from the other female patients), since it's what she was accustomed to psychologically. However if you're talking about the rules and regulations of a sporting event, you either have to disqualify a person like this for being such an exceptional case, or decide on an absolute dichotomy that says either MALE or FEMALE. Only chromosomes can do that. A genetic male will have less body fat, more muscle density and mass, and therefore would have an unfair advantage competing against genetic females.

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    11. Re:Nerds? by Dunbal · · Score: 1

      [citation needed]

      --
      Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
    12. Re:Nerds? by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      Summer, lacking access, the first one who suggested it was Magnus Hirschfeld but most of his work was burned by the nazis.

    13. Re:Nerds? by sjames · · Score: 1

      Agreed, it's not clear cut. That's part of the point I've been making. But I note in everything you wrote, you are speaking of an XY patient that you refer to as "her" and "she". Presumably a female patient who could be considered to have a serious hormonal disorder.

      Perhaps it's just too hard to figure that one out. Or perhaps that means we have two classes for competition that just happens to be divided such that > 99% of women fall into one class and >99% of men fall into the other. If that class is determined by distribution of body mass and muscle density, it could be an answer.

      The problem with that is partially that classification goes from something so simple young children generally figure it out by school age to something only medical testing can work out based on rules that are a work in progress.

      The other part is that for over a century we have called it Men's and Women's. Odds are, there will be considerable resistance to changing that.

      I suppose one shorthand that would get it right much of the time would be to look at the effective ratio of testosterone to estrogen. I say effective since insensitivity would have to be accounted for. There is evidence that even if the hormonal levels are artificially altered, the body's mass distribution and muscle density will follow suit given time (within limits, breasts don't just disappear or course, even for a male that stops injecting steroids after developing them).

      Most international sports already test athletes for the relevant hormones as part of their anti-steroid policy.

      On one hand, the easy answer is to just disqualify the corner cases. On the other they have enough problems as it is without being disqualified for being ambiguous. It seems excessively cruel to take the one thing that they truly excel in despite difficulties in many other areas of their lives and tell them they can't have that either. Further, it may be or become illegal to discriminate on that basis.

  32. Easy as 1...2... by Hercules+Peanut · · Score: 1

    Proof of female: Give birth

    Proof of male: You are reading this

  33. No Brainer? by Linker3000 · · Score: 1

    Place subject in bedroom and tell subject you are leaving for an 'evening out' in 10 mins.

    If subject does not emerge from bedroom, ready within the next 20 mins, subject is female.

    --
    AT&ROFLMAO
    1. Re:No Brainer? by a+whoabot · · Score: 1

      "Okay I'm ready."

      "You are?"

      "Yes."

      "Okay I'll be at the door."

      *Five minutes later.*

      "Hey! Are you ready yet?"

      "I told you I was ready!"

      "Ohhhh...kay."

  34. real problem is not enouch choices by gurps_npc · · Score: 1
    While 99.9% of people are clearly male or female, more than one in a thousand can't be easily classified. Some of them are clearly neither, others can be argued are both. There are:

    Chimeras (people composed of cells with two distinct sets of genes).

    People that have an XY chromosome but are 'immune' to testerone, so they are physically female.

    People with XXY, XYY, and even XXX genes.

    People with that are XX but genetically sensitive to testerone so they are physically male

    People that are hermaphrodites (non working)

    People that are hermaphrodites (working - very rare)

    People that looked 'unusual' so doctors 'altered' them when they were a child, surgically and/or pharmaceutically

    People that choose to alter themselves surgically and/or pharmaceutically

    The law needs to recognize that male and female are not the only choices.

    --
    excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    1. Re:real problem is not enouch choices by timmarhy · · Score: 1

      1 in 1000? i think you missed a few zero's on the end of that one.

      --
      If you mod me down, I will become more powerful than you can imagine....
    2. Re:real problem is not enouch choices by gurps_npc · · Score: 1
      Nope. Do your research.

      This website says one in a hundred. news

      Wikipedia says 1% are not totally clear, but only .1 to .2% (one in one thousand - 2 in one thousand) are unclear enough to require medical intervention.

      I stick with my numbers. One in a thousand people is the low end of the estimates.

      --
      excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    3. Re:real problem is not enouch choices by agnosticnixie · · Score: 1

      It's less than 99% and may even be as low as 90, not even including cases where it might be strictly brain/id-side.

    4. Re:real problem is not enouch choices by RockDoctor · · Score: 1

      1 in 1000? i think you missed a few zero's on the end of that one.

      Parent had his numbers correct even before he (presumably a "he" from /. demographics, but not necessarily) went away and got more numbers.
      To put it in context, assuming that 1 in 1000 is correct (and there could quite easily be environmental considerations that would change the exact numbers in different regions and societies), then this sort of abnormality is broadly as common as Trisomy-21 (maternal age dependant), neural tube defects (spina bifida etc), failure to close up the gill slits (a.k.a. orofacial clefts or "cleft palates" ; at least one of those in my close family), hypospadia (your cock-hole not being at the tip of your cock). But it's less common than heart defects (around 1 in 150 live births), and more common than triplet pregnancies (around 1 in 6000, but around 1 in 2000 births).

      I was about to say that it's a dangerous thing being born, but of course these figures refer to it being dangerous to be conceived and to develop. I can't be bothered acquiring figures for deaths in childbirth (both for mother and child), because it's a SEP.

      --
      Birds are not dinosaur descendants;birds are dinosaurs, for all useful meanings of "birds", "are" and "dinosaurs"
  35. The easiest solution by grahamlee · · Score: 1

    Just let everybody race everybody else. No more worrying whether people truly class as male, female, able-bodied or whatever.

    1. Re:The easiest solution by TeknoHog · · Score: 1

      Seconded. Different classes for men and women is like different classes for black and white people.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    2. Re:The easiest solution by 93+Escort+Wagon · · Score: 1

      Just let everybody race everybody else. No more worrying whether people truly class as male, female, able-bodied or whatever.

      Of course, the obvious problem with this is the vast majority of the winners - and competitors, even - in high-level sports competitions will be men. That's not really an acceptable solution, at least not in most of the developed world. Ever hear of Title IX?

      Heck, the problem with this whole thing is there may very well not be a politically acceptable solution.

      --
      #DeleteChrome
    3. Re:The easiest solution by SilverHatHacker · · Score: 1

      Now that you bring it up (and please no one take this as racist), being black is a genetic advantage in running.
      I say this as a white hundred metre sprinter.

      --
      Funny may not give karma, but +5 Informative never made anyone snort coffee out their nose.
    4. Re:The easiest solution by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 1

      We are only equal unless it comes to sports. At that point the old pre 60's standards apply. Sports muscles are different from, for instance, muscles used in the military.

    5. Re:The easiest solution by maxume · · Score: 1

      Really, it's just highly correlated with the genetic advantages.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    6. Re:The easiest solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And no woman will ever win a serious race again.

    7. Re:The easiest solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously, equality in some things is not equality. If women want to be treated equally they should compete equally as well.

      Unless there's some kind of inherient inequality that makes men better at some things than women? Could this be possible?

    8. Re:The easiest solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seconded. Different classes for men and women is like different classes for black and white people.

      I don't entirely agree, the difference between sexes is far greater than the difference between people with different skin pigments.

    9. Re:The easiest solution by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      He's actually competing in the Nude Blinding-Snowstorm Hundred Metre Sprint. Sometimes the officials can't see white people cross the finish line. So skin color really is important.

      Incidentally, they used to have a women's event for this, but decided to unsegregate it when men starting passing as women by showing up a few minutes before they were supposed to line up.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    10. Re:The easiest solution by grahamlee · · Score: 1

      Ever hear of Title IX?

      No. But having just searched for it, I discover it's a shorthand name for a law enacted in the US. I'm not from the US.

  36. plztag: gendertestingispants by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    should be obvious, really.

  37. Seriously? by phmadore · · Score: 1

    Look, "a rare medical condition" wouldn't change anything. Would she then compete with males? No, she couldn't, could she, because she has a cunt and tits? So they're trying to disqualify her from competing at all. This is total bullshit; why can't they just let her have her 15 minutes in the spotlight?

  38. Easy by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

    Genetic tests and genital examination.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
  39. Why is everyone so surprised? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A fair number of lesbians are masculine looking. She's not the first masculine-looking woman.

  40. Two Options. by Upaut · · Score: 1

    Well, the sport in question needs to decide one of either of these simple diagnostic criteria in segregating their sport:

    Either you go by genetic screening, in which case "Y makes the guy". They could have an extra chromosome or two, or even be missing one, but so long as they do not have a "y", they are female.
    "or"
    Its done by respective genitalia, having been born that way, or surgically altered. Basically where do you want transvestites to compete? It's almost purely a PC issue, but the lack of testies is a bit of a handicap in some cases. Though then what about testicular cancer survivors? Brings up a slew of arguments. Maybe the creation of a third catagory is needed in some cases. Though then would it have the player density to be interesting to watch, and would it bring a stigma to those in that catagory? Heck, I know of some female golfers that t off with the men at their t, play with normal clubs, and use pink ladies... (as are the men... Though this reference is a bit dated...) and if they were pro, would preffer to compete in the mens leugue, as they feel it would be more challenging and bring more respect.

    Two options, one with a third ammendment that could be chosen as well. Personally? I would go with genetics. I think it's more fair. And only for sex chromosomes. I could care less about any other genetic condition that could give them an edge. If athletes that lack the ability to feel lactic acid, or have a slew of other enhancements, then cool. It might kill the sport for those without those genes, but then more and more will have these genes in competition. Or not. Who knows what the future holds? Though if you start screening on genes asside from sex, then you drive out these "super athletes". The you get a question for if "they" should have their own league? And if others without these enhancements bred onto them can compete for greater glory? And soon all these complications add together to really make ones head hurt, and detract from the sports in question.

    Then again, I only watch curling, play a little golf, and generally ignore the rest.... So I might not be the best opinion on the matter...

    --
    3 degrees of separation from Vladimir Putin
  41. Intelligent discourse? by actionbastard · · Score: 1

    Remember where you are.

    --
    Sig this!
  42. Handicaps by Under_score+1 · · Score: 1

    Each persons genetics should be profiled... and all genetic advantages should be handicapped against. This will make it fair to those whose will and determination in training are trumped by their less optimum genetics.

  43. Lance Armstrong should be tested too.... by thephydes · · Score: 1

    By any measure the man is a physiological freak. Come on! anyone who is at the peak of their sport is a freak compared to mere mortals like 99.9999% of us. Leave her alone and let us enjoy her performances.

  44. Probably not that difficult by mdmkolbe · · Score: 3, Funny

    Considering that there are plenty of creatures which can be hermaphrodites

    We aren't talking about clown fish here. That would be a red herring. (Sorry couldn't resist the pun.)

    there are rare genetic variations ... this is a difficult point. Where do you draw the line?

    An interesting question, but probably not relevant to this particular case. We know we want to draw the line between XX and XY. Test her. If she is XX, then female. If XY, then male. It only needs to be an issue if she turns up as XXY or XYY something else.

    1. Re:Probably not that difficult by DrLang21 · · Score: 1

      Why would XXY be a problem? We already know that a lot of convicted criminals are XYY. Are such people too much man for men's sports? XXY should be viewed with the same shrugged shoulders. There will always be people in sports with genetic advantages (like height).

      --
      I see the glass as full with a FoS of 2.
    2. Re:Probably not that difficult by haystor · · Score: 2, Insightful

      And having the genetic advantage of being male disqualifies those people from women's events. The question is how male does someone have to be in order to be disqualified?

      --
      t
    3. Re:Probably not that difficult by Narcocide · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      No there is another question you can ask instead; How fair is it to disqualify/qualify *humans* based on gender as we evolve as a species towards more mixed-gender traits. It is reasonable to assume that since reproduction includes FUCKING EACH OTHER that the DNA of the resultant pairings would not eventually start to include more and more of the strongest traits of each half of such pairings, right???

      Sure historically there are gender-based assumptions about what is "right"/"wrong" for each gender in society but isn't it equally likely that as society progresses these assumptions will also change?

    4. Re:Probably not that difficult by hjf · · Score: 1

      what's wrong with XXY?

    5. Re:Probably not that difficult by jeff4747 · · Score: 1

      Test her. If she is XX, then female. If XY, then male.

      Except one of the genetic variations results in a "defective" Y. As such, the person would display all the characteristics of a female, including typical female strength/endurance/speed/etc. Such people shouldn't be forced to compete against the men, because they are physically women despite being genetically male.

    6. Re:Probably not that difficult by easyTree · · Score: 1

      Uhh, how is this flamebait? Or.. how do I get my 'I feel lucky' random-moderation button too?

    7. Re:Probably not that difficult by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We know we want to draw the line between XX and XY. Test her. If she is XX, then female. If XY, then male.

      Except that there are people who are genetically XX and phenotypically male, and those who are genetically XY and phenotypically female. So no, it is not clear that we want to draw the line between XX and XY.

  45. Distance Racers by arizwebfoot · · Score: 2, Informative

    I watched the women's 1500m race today and saw not one woman who wasn't flat chested or nearly so.

    I believe (from Mary Decker Slayne) that this is typical of women who train hard and as this young lass is just now 18 it would make sense that her hormonal changes were or are going to happen latter.

    --
    Beer is proof that God loves us and wants us to be happy.
    1. Re:Distance Racers by Volante3192 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, when you work out you burn off fat. Bet these women work out more than the average gym member? What are breasts mostly made of?

      Makes perfect sense.

  46. "Unfair" Advantages by Cassander · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I really hate this idea that people with any kind of advantage aren't allowed to participate in athletic competitions. What's the point, then? How far should we take it? Next thing you know, people will be rejected for the "unfair advantage" of simply having spent their life training for the event. (This actually already happens in the olympics to some extent with their ban on "professional" athletes in events like basketball).

    Our "world records" are quite meaningless when the individuals with the greatest chance of actually setting one aren't allowed on the field. I also think it's inappropriate to ban athletes that have subjected themselves to chemical augmentation. I would suggest keeping separate "augmented" and "non-augmented" records, but ultimately it's impossible to determine where to draw the line between augmentation and things like tailored dietary supplements. But our records are a joke. We have no idea who the fastest human runner on the planet is, because he's not allowed to officially compete.

    Cases like this also illustrate the ridiculousness of gender segregation in athletics. Does anyone with a basic science education actually still believe that there are only two genders? Should we have yet another segregated league for XXY athletes like M. Semenya? If we are going to acknowledge the tendencies for different genders to have different athletic abilities, why not acknowledge the tendencies among different races, age groups, cultures, shoe sizes, etc? I know, let's just put every individual in their own little athletic division and they can set records against themselves all day long. Imagine the profits for Guinness!

    --
    Knowledge != Intelligence
    1. Re:"Unfair" Advantages by maxume · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The professional athletes in basketball thing is no longer the case (the USA has fielded teams composed of NBA players since 1992), and it wasn't necessarily the Olympics making the decision (looking it up, they apparently delegated the decision to FIBA).

      In any case, that was more about sportsmanship than it was about fairness.

      --
      Nerd rage is the funniest rage.
    2. Re:"Unfair" Advantages by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think anyone is suggesting that she isn't allowed to participate in athletic competitions. They're saying that she should participate in the men's category.

    3. Re:"Unfair" Advantages by wagnerrp · · Score: 2, Funny

      I also think it's inappropriate to ban athletes that have subjected themselves to chemical augmentation.

      On that note, we have the All Drug Olympics

  47. Gender equality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Those male, female teams are so outdated, they are based on the sexist view that man are stronger or something. Time to "co-education" in sports, time for gender-neutral sport.

  48. The real problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The real problem is that they've allowed the gender to be either male or female - without specifying what the conditions are for each. I know, I know. You'd think it's obvious, but nobody thought about it apparently or they wouldn't be having this "problem". If it *has* been defined and they're now unhappy and redefining what should be male or female for the scope of those contests, then I'd sooner say they're just bad losers. As somebody else said - winning in these things pretty much is 80% genetic if not more to begin with. Silly people.

  49. Raising the question of the role of sex in sports by Lexible · · Score: 1
    While the article does a good job of raising the question of the fuzziness of the boundary between male and female sexes, it leaves unopened the question of what role sex (or gender) should play in competitive sporting events.

    For a totally hypothetical example, given their population genetic disposition to dimunitive size, should pygmies be granted their own event categories (i.e. pygmy and non-pygmy events)? Should sexual distinctions be eliminated, so that events are unisex, and we simply see asymmetric distributions of performance along gender lines by the type of event? (i.e. females generally under-performing males in strength-burst events, more parity in endurance events, and possibly more over-performance in events entailing a high degree of coordination? Of course transies kick everyone's asses at everything? ;)

    I write as a jock and as a transsexual, so the questions are personal for me (although I tend towards non-spectator and less competitive jockosity).

  50. Try to impregnate it by ZeroNullVoid · · Score: 0

    Try to impregnate it.

    If they have traits of both and  one is not more dominate than the other, and no alterations were made to make that.

    If it can have a child, without medical supplementation (ie embedding someone else's egg the person is female...

    For example, if they were female traited on the outside and had a penis and a vagina, (i know most are sterile), but the penis was able to produce semen capable of spawnning, then they are male.

    Yes there are flaws and loopholes, I don't want to perfect the logic.

  51. All of the best athletes in the world... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    All of the best athletes in the world are have genetic abnormalities that allow them to compete at a higher level than the rest. For example: Lance Armstrong has an incredibly low rate of lactic acid production while working out. This is because he has a genetic abnormality that causes lower production, giving him an advantage. Michael Phelps (is a bag of duesch bag, alcoholic, womanizer) has an abnormally long torso. This genetic abnormality gives him larger lungs that enable him to hold his breath longer. Take away all of the medals, tour wins, money and glory from those people right now! They have better genes than the rest of us! Oh...and FINA rules don't state that its illegal to have a y chromosome in womens competition. Its a genetic abnormality shared by many women. Most of which are able to bare children despite this abnormality. This is really about some jealous bitches that are really bad at losing.

  52. Shaq by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, I want to know if Shaquille O'Neal is a woman also

  53. Hormones & Sex Change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you haven't looked in to the -how- of a sex change, you probably should. It's fascinating.

    Turns out its almost all about the action of estrogen and testosterone on the body. Here's how it works:

    Before birth: genetics (not the action of testosterone or estrogen) drive the construction of male or female genitalia along with testicles, prostate, uterus and ovaries. The bodies otherwise develop pretty much exactly the same.

    Before puberty: still nothing. Get a boy and a girl both five years old, cut their hair the same and dress them in the same clothes. You won't be able to tell which is which. Except for the genitalia, their bodies are virtually identical.

    Puberty: Boys and girls begin producing significant quantities of testosterone or estrogen. Under the action of testosterone, boys gain an extra several inches of height.

    Any time: under the action of testosterone, the voice deepens, facial hair appears, body hair becomes coarse and soft tissues redistribute and redevelop towards the abdomen in particular and towards what's considered to be the male figure in general. Under the action of estrogen, the mammaries develop, body hair becomes soft and soft tissue redistributes towards the thighs and the so-called "hourglass figure." And of course if she actually has a uterus then she begins to menstruate.

    Note that if you artificially introduce testosterone and estrogen before puberty, the changes start early, typically to the detriment of the girl or boy whose body isn't yet ready.

    The appearance of facial hair, the voice drop and the development of the mammaries are permanent features. Skeletal height is also permanent after puberty; you won't add inches by introducing testosterone in your 30s. Once developed these characteristics can only be surgically altered. The soft tissue distribution and body hair character alters under the effect of the two chemicals, so if you change the chemical balance those features will alter.

    Post menopause/ed: in the absence of significant amounts of testosterone and estrogen, body hair and figure tend towards a neutral configuration. That's why grandma and grandpa start to look alike.

    So, someone undergoing a sex change takes two daily pills: one to block the action of the undesired chemical (estrogen or testosterone) and one which provides the missing chemical. Do this for about a year and 90% of the change is accomplished... From a fully clothed perspective you generally can't tell the difference except that the woman is oddly tall or the man oddly short. In fact, given the expense and risk of the final SRS surgery (versus the sub-$50/month cost of the pills), more than a few trans simply stop there, satisfied with an outward appearance and lifestyle that matches their self-image.

    Now apparently the sports officials suspect something more unusual than just tampering with body chemistry is going on here. There's a very rare birth defect in which an individual who is genetically male incorrectly grows female genitalia. They lack ovaries and a uterus. The testicles are still connected but they're up in the abdomen and mostly non-functional. Generally the first time anyone even suspects the individual isn't genetically female is when they reach puberty and the testicles start putting out testosterone. The girl adds 6 inches in a growth spurt, spouts fuzz on her face, loses an octave in her voice and pads her bra. Very embarrassing.

    1. Re:Hormones & Sex Change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From one anonymous coward to another :)

      (If you've been on the receiving end of a frothing_at_the_mouth red-neck's rage, rage at all that is not like âheâ(TM), you'll understand that anonymity is quieter sometimes. )

      Sir, or madam, or either . . .or both. (Who cares? Generally only the ill educated, Iâ(TM)ve found.)

      As a very reluctant gender dysphoric (I didnâ(TM)t have any say in the bloody matter) and a very late-in-life accepter at that, your general and sweeping summary is quite stunning in itâ(TM)s terse summarising of a condition that is hard for most of us to comprehend. If I had read your text 40 years ago, I might have accepted that my unbalanced genetic condition was my lot, it have made my long sadly isolated life (defence mechanisms kick in quickly) totally different, I suspect.

      Your comments will hopefully have an educational influence here in this discussion group, but I intend to âpinchâ(TM) your text and distribute it as widely as possible. Iâ(TM)m too much a virgin at this discussion game to work out how to ask your permission for this, but, given the general rationality of your text, I expect no problem. If you know how to contact me. do so & I will ask formally for your approval.

      And as for the poor girl - the externally evident anger of her demeanour, at what should have been a great moment in her life, shows that she is not enjoying suffering the unwelcome attentions of the general ignorance, brought about for reasons that she probably canâ(TM)t understand, but is angry at having to experience. She is certainly a fighter. And yes, it is unfair for the other non-damage girls, but they can move on easily.

      I hope she can be helped to re-surface, intact, and doesnâ(TM)t have to take the terminal path that approx. 50% of âweâ(TM) people used to take, the only apparent way out of the impossible situation we found ourselves in due to some tiny and yet poorly understood pre-birth malformation having occurred. Thanks to people like you that percentage has been dropping, and a lot of âusâ(TM) are able to accept ourselves, thanks to otherâ(TM)s acceptance.

      Thank you, very, very much.

    2. Re:Hormones & Sex Change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a very rare birth defect in which an individual who is genetically male incorrectly grows female genitalia. They lack ovaries and a uterus. The testicles are still connected but they're up in the abdomen and mostly non-functional. Generally the first time anyone even suspects the individual isn't genetically female is when they reach puberty and the testicles start putting out testosterone. The girl adds 6 inches in a growth spurt, spouts fuzz on her face, loses an octave in her voice and pads her bra. Very embarrassing.

      Except, of course, where testosterone insensitivity results in the genetically male individual being a totally hot chick.

    3. Re:Hormones & Sex Change by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i am a female to male transperson and although i appreciate your writing above its not all accurate(for example AIS is a spectrum disorder so for example testes are not always presen 'up in the abdomen') and the imposition of your value systems on what you have presented as objective fact is quite disturbing for example 'incorrectly grows female genitalia' and 'very embarrasing'.

      What you have done is pathologise into a medical abberation/condition something that to most trans and intersex people is their identity.

  54. Very well said. by Targen · · Score: 1

    Although I can certainly understand the reason this happens, it seems rather difficult to have a public discussion about this sort of issue without anti-transgender trolling or pro-transgender activism. Indeed, this is Slashdot and there is -some- expectation of intelligence in the discussions here (no, I'm not new here; I'm just a silly idealist :-), so it's somewhat annoying to see so much subjective argument of this sort. It's understandable that silly, ignorant people can't talk about this without, one might say, politicizing the discussion. But to see it in here is just sad. Science makes no statement of social or moral agreeability; "scientific values" is a bit of an oxymoron, at least as used by the GP.

    1. Re:Very well said. by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      (no, I'm not new here; I'm just a silly idealist :-)

      Oh, I am so touched by your confession, tears are pouring from my eyes. I am now sure that you are also intelligent, pure, scientist. And objective too... then that cute smiley... Oh you sweetie you!...

  55. Re:The question is philosophical, not genetic. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In my opinion, people with flaws -- like genetic anomalies -- should be disqualified from participating.

    Sieg heil to you too, man.

  56. Re:The question is philosophical, not genetic. by hanabal · · Score: 1

    what if the genetic flaw was to have calf muscles that are 1/4 inch thicker, resulting in more leg power. Should they be disqualified?

  57. They create this problem for themselves. by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 2, Interesting

    *IF* they insist on dividing the competitions between males and females (and I admit that they usually have good reason for doing so), THEN they should strictly stick to their categories. XY for male, XX for female, with no significant genital "abnormalities" that may affect the outcome.

    At the same time, however, maybe they should consider an "other" category. Just so the minority is not left out. The "really special" Olympics, shall we say.

  58. Asks for directions? by Katchu · · Score: 5, Funny

    If Caster stops and asks for directions to the track arena, Caster is a female. If Caster continues to drive around, crossing bridges, running into cul-de-sacs, on and off the freeway, then Caster is a male.

    --
    Keep Doing Good.
    1. Re:Asks for directions? by owlstead · · Score: 1

      Oh, gods, never imagined I needed a sex change. Well, that cleared it right up, I'm off to the doctor.

    2. Re:Asks for directions? by francium+de+neobie · · Score: 1

      You can just buy a GPS instead.

  59. Then... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    by that reasoning, being black gives an unfair genetic disadvantage, as with many running events enreyone starts at the same position and finishes sorted nicely by skin colour. Frankly this is totally ridiculous, as extreme prowess in any sport is largely a combination of genetics (a.k.a. predisposition) combined with the correct training regime. If this lady *does* have some form of genetic makeup thst makes her a good runner, then choosing running as a profession is nothing but a smart move! I wish her well.

  60. BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One could easily argue that talent is a rare medical condition. There's probably not a single person here on slashdot that could surpass Usain Bolt, even through years of training. The same is probably true of other great athletes (and websites).

    This girl is obviously genetically special, but so is everyone else on the track with her. And if she's more special that others, I wouldn't be surprised - winners usually are!

  61. Easy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ask if she uses Slashdot.

  62. FUTURAMA Episode by smcevilly · · Score: 3, Funny

    Reminds me of a futurama episode. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bend_Her Bender a robot sex change is a complex and dangerous procedure. Replacing your testosteroil with Fembot lubricants can cause wild mood swings. And the effects may be irreversible. Well let's get started!

    1. Re:FUTURAMA Episode by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      Hail, hail, Robonia, a land I didn't make up!

  63. Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The solution is simple, we'll just create clones to compete in our athletic events!

  64. Nature doesn't draw lines, why do we? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nature favors diversity, so what sense does it make for us to make distinct categories and force everyone into them?

    There are a great deal of women with XY chromosones who don't respond to testosterone. Their phenotype may be very typically female even though their genotype is said to be typically male. Oversimplifying our makeup to XX vs. XY chromosones, or relying on specific 'typical' sex characteristics is just not accurate.

  65. ACTUALLY this is correct by Narcocide · · Score: 1

    Sorry, but the parent post (probably satirically as well as unwittingly) has suggested the only real way to actually solve all such issues in the long-term. Real gender equality means you gotta compete directly with the men on equal footing, ladies. Sorry but no level of segregation can be entirely fair, ever.

  66. Proof by pengipengi · · Score: 1

    What I've learned in school about proofs is that, if you cant prove something is true, try to prove that the opposite is true instead, and if it is, you know that the first can't be true too.

    Can she/he drive a car?
    yes -> sorry... not a woman.

  67. Condemnation for this behavior... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a human being I find this treatment of Semenya to be nothing short of disgusting. As a doctor I can say for a fact that simply having a "Y" chromosome does not determine anything beyond a person's genetic profile and those who push that idea need a heavy dose of knowledge infusion. Based on a genetic profile the body can either react to the hormones being produced or fail to respond like it does in androgen insensitivity syndrome. There are countless other steps that must go "correctly" (notice the quotes) for a person to be a stereotypical male or female. Simply isolating only one ultimate definition where only one item such as genetics, anatomy, hormonal profile, psychological profile, etc. is not enough. In Semenya's case there will be a multitude of doctors involved from different disciplines to make the final judgment call.

    The saddest part of this series of events is the governing body caved to the complaints of other athletes who showed unsportsmanlike conduct by calling Semenya a man amongst other names after they lost--a tease and a taunt she's gotten all her life. Her parents and her nation stand behind her as a female but I wonder why this conduct still occurs in the 21st century. Will Semenya end up getting her medal stripped like Indian runner Santhi Sounderajan who "failed" a gender test? I certainly hope not. Neither Semenya nor Sounderajan should be liable for the natural course nature took. These athletes did not abuse performance enhancers. Instead they were different. These two athletes have suffered enough public humiliation for being different... do we continue this persecution or put a stop to it here and now? I condemn this sort of public persecution.

  68. Same happend in 1950 with Foekje Dillema by Reemi · · Score: 5, Interesting

    From wiki:
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foekje_Dillema

    "In 1950 Dillema was expelled for life by the Dutch National Athletics Federations. A gynaecologist concluded that Dillema was an intersex."

    "In 2008, a controversial DNA-test on dead cells from her clothing found that she may have been a Genetic Mosaic, having both 46XX (female) and 46XY (male) chromosomes in approximately a 3 to 1 ratio. "

    1. Re:Same happend in 1950 with Foekje Dillema by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 4, Funny

      Her name was Dilemma?

      --

      There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
    2. Re:Same happend in 1950 with Foekje Dillema by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, her name was Fuck-ya Dilemma!

    3. Re:Same happend in 1950 with Foekje Dillema by nicolasmendo · · Score: 1

      Her name was Dilemma?

      That's nothing, the girl from TFA is called Semenya!

  69. one test only by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if you're a man, you have XY chromosome pair, if female, XX chromosome pair. just test the person's chromosomal pair. the problem comes when there is a chromosome flaw such as XXY, XYY, and XXX which is possible. With such a flaw what is the person's sex should then be determined by other attributes such as if the person has functioning female reproductive organs.

    1. Re:one test only by Lennie · · Score: 1

      What do you consider functional ? And how do you test that ? Do you need them to have kids ? Do you want them to have sex in a scan at the hospital to measure the pleasure center in their brain ? What would you consider functional ?

      --
      New things are always on the horizon
  70. Easy by dafradu · · Score: 1

    If someone reads slashdot = male
    Everyone else = female

  71. Now that's just foolish. by El+Jynx · · Score: 1

    What constitutes a flaw? Darwin teaches us that the species most responsive to change is most likely to survive. What if, for example, women are catching up with men in terms of muscle power and stamina?

    Flaw insinuates positive and negative; a very human trait of cognition, and extremely subject to the zeitgeist of our time. Evolution doesn't work that way. $h!t happens, and sometimes it is either productive or at least non-detrimental; the latter will mean an extra notch under the belt when the inevitable change comes on. That is why rats, bats, birds and many other successful organisms have conquered the planet. They've got an edge.

    This may just be the start of a new trend in humanity. It may be latent for a while, but if (extreme example) we get invaded by Martians tomorrow and survive to start an interstellar war, people like her may be of incalculable value. Consider, and consider carefully, the nature of your perception.

    --
    A positive attitude may not solve all your problems, but it will annoy enough people to make it well worth the effort.
    1. Re:Now that's just foolish. by abuelos84 · · Score: 0

      I just love that you chose a Martian-Invasion argument in a Hermaphrodite Runner Dicotomy subject...

      Life is beautiful...

      --
      -- Counting backwards since 1984!
  72. Welcome to numbers by holophrastic · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is pretty rediculous. This is what happens when silly people organize silly things, then orchestrate silly rules to keep the silly things from becoming too silly, then those silly rules forget the initial point.

    The reason men and women don't compete together is because "there will be a disparity between men and women". So they have been seperated. Now someone's saying that this person isn't slow enough to fall into the women's category. Well good news, your whole "split them up by speed" still works.

    There are many "marathons" these days. Just general fitness or charity "start here, move yourself across/around the city, end there". Often, you can walk, jog, or run. Obviously the ones walking don't beat the ones running. No one expects them to -- they are simply slower. But still all three "speeds" compete in the event.

    What's even more rediculous is that the entire concept of the split is purely for the observer. The woman still scored a 6, and the man still scored a 5. It really doesn't matter how the other women and men scored. That women is better than that man. Why is this a problem.

    Throw them all into the same pool. Let the faster ones finish first, and let the slower ones finish last. When all ten women are slower than all ten men, every observer watching from the stands or on TV will say that the best women came "first in her class" -- just like in auto-racing with multiple classes of cars. Hell, put stock cars, formula-1 cars, bicycles, men, women, teenagers, toddlers, infants, and embryos on the same track. I'll expect the formula-1 cars to be faster tha the embryos, it's ok, I can split them up into classes all on my own -- from the results.

    It's like I always say to servers in a restaurant who ask my party if we want seperate bills: "thanks, but I can divide a $20 lunch all by myself".

    So quit the grouping for no reason -- it's not like they're competing with each-other directly, it's only their scores that compete. When there's a large gap between number 6 and number 7 in the standings, I'll put my group seperation there. And when there isn't, I won't.

    1. Re:Welcome to numbers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also; Your spelling of ridiculous is pretty ridiculous too.

    2. Re:Welcome to numbers by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      Wow, I made a lot of spelling mistakes! Well, meh, that's what you get at 100 words-per-second when distracted by someone else. Not bad I guess.

    3. Re:Welcome to numbers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well Caster Semnaya is an 800m runner. In the world champs she had to go through two separate heats (a qualifying set of 5 heats and then a semi final) just to get into the race she would ultimately win the medal in, with her running as a female, male or otherwise, he entry into the final rightly or wrongly keeps another athlete out of the final, her entry thereby means one other person will never even have a chance to race her for the medal. While it is great to say that the division of time works, and probably does for LONG distance events (i.e. marathon racing). Once we get into athletics especially the 5000m on down, everything is run through heats where placement and time dictate where you are placed in the finals and the presence of one athlete in the field means there are about 10-15 athletes who went to Berlin who won't even toe the line for a chance at the medal (Case in point, Mens 5000m at Berlin had 39 people entered in the first heats and only 15 actually raced at a chance for a medal). This is just the way athletics takes to determining who has the right to actually compete for a medal and thereby why the sex question is so important, because in the end of the day, if she has an advantage she is keeping another athlete from even getting a chance to compete.

    4. Re:Welcome to numbers by holophrastic · · Score: 1

      "has an advantage" == "I run faster than you".

      These are running races. No one that she displaced would say that she didn't run faster. No rocket was strapped to her back. She ran faster.

      Suck it up, you lost. If you want to make the finals, you get to run faster than everyone you meet.

      Now, if you're saying that men are faster runners than women, and for the sake of this discussion, let's say that every man is faster than every woman, then you get to look at your life much closer.

      Why would anyone want to watch women running, if they are never faster? It's a race, you watch to see people running fast. Why would you intentionally watch to see the slower people?

      Now if you're saying that women have different strengths, then maybe you should compose a race that benefits from those strengths.

      Or hey, here's a novel idea. Why not compose a race with both sets of strengths, and let men and women compete on equal ground -- you know, like a decathalon.

      But in the end, if you're saying that women simply suck, then no one needs to watch them compete at all.

      And what about this particular athlete? So she's too good to be a women, and not good enough to be a man? So you just refuse her the right to compete at all? Because she's better than some?

      And what if five years from now, we discover a way to raise women to be more masculine. Nothing outrageous, just a life-style choice, like not playing with dolls. Do you then not allow female competitors unlessthey played with dolls? Or do you create a third class of athlete? Do you make it illegal for women to not play with dolls? "Sorry, if you want to race, if can't develop your skills beyond this certain point."

      Do you do that with men too? What if muscles are found to grow twice as fast with a simple technique of, oh who cares, meditation? Do you not allow athletes to meditate?

      This quickly becomes absurd. What if large quantities of bananas improves muscles strength. Sorry, you cannot eat more than three bananas per day?

      The whole point of athletic competitions in general is to learn to improve yourself. To tehn limit those improvements is just stupid.

      And hey, hten you get to look at something like Tiger Woods, who for the longest time was crazy better than everyone else. Not because he took drugs, and not because he's really an alien in disguise, but simply because he practiced way more than anyone else.

      Did anyone say "you're not allowed to practice that much, because it's unfair to everyone else?"

  73. WTF? Sour grapes by Ritz_Just_Ritz · · Score: 4, Interesting

    For fook sake...if someone is born with a vagina and they haven't taken drugs or gotten surgery to get there, they are a woman.

    To try to weed someone out of the athletic process because God (or whatever you believe in) has given them "a little extra" is absurd.

    Are we going to treat the Olympics like a dog show and start delving into genetics and "quality of their coat" and all the other BS nitpicks that people use to judge dogs in order to allow people to compete in sports? Absent an obvious attempt at cheating, I find this whole line of "testing" to be repulsive.

  74. Ask her to report... by Deadstick · · Score: 0, Redundant

    ...to a nonexistent address and see if she asks for directions.

    rj

  75. Just an interesting tidbit in determining gender by WSOGMM · · Score: 1

    Male index fingers are shorter than their ring fingers, and females have the opposite. Sometimes they can get close, but that's one way you can distinguish someone's gender.

  76. Antiquity by cybereal · · Score: 1

    The division by gender in athletics is somewhat of an antiquity. I'm surprised more anti-sexists don't decry it. Find a new way to categorize athletic performance for fair contests than gender and this problem goes away.

    --
    I read the script, and I think it would help my character's motivation if he was on fire. -Bender
  77. Phelps. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Michael Phelps has unusually long arms. We'll conduct tests to see if he's actually an amphibian hybrid." Is what they'd say.

  78. My Rule by b1ng0 · · Score: 1

    1) Ask them, are you a girl?
    2) Have you always been a girl?
    3) If not, can you keep a secret?

    Works for me ;)

  79. Malformed assertion check by mdmkolbe · · Score: 1

    To prove someone is female, you have to define what "female" means first.

    Not really. I can't exactly define "chair", but I know that this is a chair. In the same way, being uniformly XX or XY is a sufficient but not necessary condition for being proven female or proven male. That is to say "XX -> female" but not "XX
    Only once she has been shown to not XX or XY, do things get fuzzy. Until that happens (and I've not seen any indication that it will), it would be inappropriate to use this woman's situation as a soap box for pushing political agendas.

  80. Talk? by Hunter761 · · Score: 0

    Does she talk too much? If yes, it's a real woman.

  81. Not so damn easy by BlueParrot · · Score: 3, Informative

    I suspect there will be a bunch of posts suggesting a simple genetic test will determine somebody's gender, but these tests were abandoned precisely because there are numerous cases where they fail. To mention a few examples:

    Complete Androgen Insensitivity:
    There's a number of people with XY chromosome genotype for which teh cells don't respond to testosterone. These individuals develop as women, and because they don't even respond to the very slight amount of testosterone women have they can actually be more feminine in physical terms than XX women. Many don't even know about their condition especially sicne the sign that usually reveals it ( lack of menstruation ) is easily mistaken as being caused by the exercise many athletes undergo.

    Chromosome variations:
    Not all peopel are XY or XX in chromosomes. There's Klinefelter ( XXY ) , Mosaics ( where some cells have one chromosome setup and some another ), and chimeras ( where different cells not only had different chromosome setups but the entire genotype can vary from cell to cell ).

    Hormonal Variation:
    Genetics is only part of what determines your sex. Even if you have XY chromosomes that only really affects the pre-puberty development of your genitals. The other sex differences ( secondary sex characteristics ) are down to hormonal influences. This is why transsexuals that go on hormone replacement therapy and have their gonads removed through sex reassignment surgery develop characteristics similar to tehri desired sex ( breast development in Male-to-female transsexuals, facial hair and muscle growth in Female-to-male transsexuals etc... ). This of course brings me to the next point...

    Transsexualism:
    Just like people can develop ambiguous genitals or chromosomes, some people develop a psychological gender similar to the opposite biological sex. It's not known exactly why this occurs, but it is currently believed to be neurological in origin ( i.e you could have people with a male brain in a female body or the other way around ). Often these individuals will undergo hormone replacement therapy in order to make their bodies more congruent with their psychological gender ( the only known effective treatment, attempting to resolve the situation with psychotherapy typically fails and has frequently resulted in suicides ). Male to female transsexuals tend to lose upper body strength while on hormones, female to male ones gain it. Thus classifying these individuals on the basis of genetics rather than their hormonal status would stick people with male muscle development among female competitors and vice versa.

    Essentially your performance in sports is more closely linked to hormonal factors ( and how your body respond to them ) than genetics, and thus a karyotype test is a rally poor way to classify competitors. Believe it or not but you get people with XX chromosomes that have more testosterone than the average man, and conversely XY individuals with female Oestrogen and progesterone levels. What is more is that in some cases the individual in question is not even aware of their genotype and it has happened before that female athletes have been shocked to find out they have Y chromosomes.

    1. Re:Not so damn easy by myowntrueself · · Score: 0, Troll

      Just like people can develop ambiguous genitals or chromosomes, some people develop a psychological gender similar to the opposite biological sex..

      That would be a neurosis.

      If they are taking hormones to support their neurosis then that'd likely count as 'doping' and they'd be banned for being a 'drug cheat'.

      Otherwise they should enter events based on what you'd see when looking at their nuclei under the microscope.

      --
      In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
    2. Re:Not so damn easy by BlueParrot · · Score: 1

      That would be a neurosis.

      If they are taking hormones to support their neurosis then that'd likely count as 'doping' and they'd be banned for being a 'drug cheat'.

      Otherwise they should enter events based on what you'd see when looking at their nuclei under the microscope.

      From wikipedia:

      Once a common psychiatric diagnosis, the term is no longer part of mainstream psychiatric terminology in the United States, though it continues to be employed in psychoanalytic theory and practice, and in various other theoretical disciplines.

      Again, it's not that damn simple. Even if you start excluding anybody on HRT what about intersex individuals where you literally can't tell if they are biologically male or female. People who have dual chromosome sets, ambiguous genitalia and "in between" hormone levels ? You can try to call us ill or deviant or whatever you like but at teh end of the day sex is very much a grayscale and even those who insist it should be binary don't agree on HOW to do the split.

  82. My Definition by 7-Vodka · · Score: 1

    Male and female sexes are a strategy evolved for reproduction. Therefore my definition would be: Is the person capable of bearing children? Do they have the right chromosomes (xx) and organs, IE. ovaries, uterus etc.

    Men cannot bear children. Women can. End of story.

    --

    Liberty.

    1. Re:My Definition by brad3378 · · Score: 1

      Some women are sterile.

      --

  83. How To Prove Someone Is Female? by Gearoid_Murphy · · Score: 1

    slashdot seems the perfect place to ask this question, I'd a like a solution requiring the use of measuring tapes, callipers, several badgers and a laser interferometer

    --
    prepare the survey weasels.
    1. Re:How To Prove Someone Is Female? by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      several badgers

      Badgers? Badgers? We don't need no stinkin' badgers.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
  84. Necessary and sufficient condition by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ask her to read *any* slashdot article fully, all the comments included (even this article would suffice)

    If she manages it...then she is not a "she"

  85. The truth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If I can stick my dick in it, it's female. If not, it's male.

  86. A sticky issue by Helldesk+Hound · · Score: 1

    Oh dear. A woman has done some work and is now noticeably better than other women.

    Frankly, the whole idea of segregating sports based on sex is, well, sexist and therefore is contradictory to human rights.

    Female athletes should quit being so bitchy about other women and just get on with enjoying their sports otherwise we might just bite the bullet and unify the currently sex-segregated teams.

    The whole concept of what is female and what is male is a difficult issue especially when you get down to the fact that some persons are chimeras (constituted of parts with different genetic makeup)

    Best just to keep to inspecting genitals to see if "she" lacks a penis and balls, and/or checking to see if "she" has a prostate gland.

  87. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  88. sexist, racist, whatever else-ist by City+AnG3lu5 · · Score: 1

    Ok I don't think anyone has said this yet which is weird but also expected considering this is slashdot.
    But One: This, while perhaps necessary, is actually a really stupid move, PR wise. I mean on what planet did they think this would not be controversial, and reflect badly on them. Any good PR person would hv said this was the single worst move they could make.

    And two: this is, or at the very least will be percieved to be, very sexist and racist. People will say it is because she is South African and doesn't look like a woman and that they are being racist.

    It is therefore a very stupid move. Don't think anyone's said that so thought I would just post this long random speculation.

    1. Re:sexist, racist, whatever else-ist by tuxedobob · · Score: 1

      If you have a man who gets a sex change and becomes a woman, is it fair for that person to compete in the women's events?

    2. Re:sexist, racist, whatever else-ist by brantondaveperson · · Score: 1

      ....very sexist and racist.

      Or, very sexy and racy.

  89. Test for femmzoil! by naturjunge · · Score: 1

    Little clues like testosteroil and the presence of an item should be sure signs of maleness.

  90. A handicapping system? by meburke · · Score: 1, Insightful

    A slightly different topic from "gender determination" would be "normalizing characteristics". Since each person has a different but similar physiology, maybe we should test for things like normal hinge points (tendon attachments) and chromosome/hormone levels and then determine the probable advantage/disadvantage for each sport adjusted from the median. We could then create a handicap rating so that the only important variables are training and motivation. Everyone starts out even.

    --
    "The mind works quicker than you think!"
  91. Y-Chromosome tells it all... by Annorax · · Score: 1

    .. unless you've got multiple X-Chromosomes instead of just one.

    Seriously. A simple DNA test will very likely answer the question pretty easily.

    1. Re:Y-Chromosome tells it all... by Lennie · · Score: 1

      OK, where do you draw the line ?:

      "...having both 46XX (female) and 46XY (male) chromosomes in approximately a three-to-one ratio."

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foekje_Dillema

      --
      New things are always on the horizon
  92. Okay by CougMerrik · · Score: 1

    Genetic testing. If Y is found, then male. If hermaphrodism is diagnosed, do a random sample from various parts of the body. If more than 50% return as male, the subject is male. Otherwise, the subject is female. If exactly 50% or within margin of error return male, subject is allowed to declare their own legal sex. These outliers are too rare to disrupt the system and start claiming more than 2 sexes.

  93. What makes a man? by dogganos · · Score: 1

    ?

    so that I don't get blocked by " Filter error: You can type more than that for your comment."

  94. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  95. The definition issue by Antony-Kyre · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Shouldn't these track and field events be a place where we humans can come together and show how far we're able to push our natural limitations without body modification?

    Without body modification, I mean without introducing drugs or mechanical advantages into our bodies. To show how far we can go "naturally".

    Rules are rules, and the sport has their own governing authority deciding what is and isn't okay.

    1. Logically, if she had a sex change, this would be a modification to her body. How is this any different from doping?

    2. Logically, if she was born that way, without any drug inducements, the question is, is she considered male or female?

    As someone pointed out, males tend to be thought of producing sperm, and females producing ova. But, where does that leave those who don't fit that definition?

    Look at one's chromosomes, and whether one's body is producing the hormones that tend to make one male or female. Is she an underdeveloped male, or is she an underveloped female? This may be an oversimplification, but don't males have more testosterone that estrogen, and females more estrogen than testosterone?

    All in all, it comes down to how the governing authority of the sport defines it.

    1. Re:The definition issue by mqduck · · Score: 1

      You perhaps accidentally bring up an interesting question, namely: Why can't there be a competition between humans where they're allowed to use every possible means to enhance themselves athletically? Why not compete to see who can be the most athletically fit human being by whatever means?

      --
      Property is theft.
    2. Re:The definition issue by rainmaestro · · Score: 1

      Every time I picture this, it ends up evolving into transhuman Battlebots. Sure, when it first begins, you have guys replacing legs with carbon fiber prosthetics, but then someone goes and mounts a jet engine on their torso, or a long jumper with pneumatic springs for legs. In the fighting competitions, we'll first see guys with weighted hands for added power, but then we evolve that into implanting Wolverine claws and armor plating.

      Not that I'm saying I wouldn't watch =)

  96. Three words: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sharpie in pooper

  97. The Non-Sexist Games by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1

    Lots of suggestions above.

    Or you could quit considering gender, which is a crutch anyway for the weaker members of the race, and just say that the fastest or strongest human wins regardless of apparent gender. "Men" would win some events easily, while "Women" would likely do well on other events.

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
  98. Wrong by imsabbel · · Score: 1

    In that certain area.
    Because otherwise, no woman would _ever_ have won an olympic medal in any track and field competition...
    (dont nail me on it, some disciplines are close, where the woman gold metal winner might have made the podium in the male competition, but just take a look at the results this time around...)

    --
    HI O WISE PRINCE. WHT TOOK U SO DAM LONG?
  99. Pretty simple test by atli_04 · · Score: 4, Funny
    What does her car look like after backing in to a parking slot?

    Does she go to the bathroom alone or with two friends?

    How much time does she spend in the shoe store?

    Does the battery of her mobile phone last more than a day?

  100. Re:Raising the question of the role of sex in spor by myowntrueself · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ok for crying out loud...

    why do we still have rules that tell sports teams that they have to be all male or all female?

    I mean, for some sports I can understand that the team might want all male, rugby or gridiron come to mind.

    But cricket? Baseball? pffft.

    It should be up to the coach who they field, man woman or whatever. At the end of the day it should be their call and on their heads does it fall if the team loses because of it.

    Its as bad as paying a woman less than a man for doing the same job.

    --
    In the free world the media isn't government run; the government is media run.
  101. How should we know? by SL+Baur · · Score: 1

    I'm curious what the Slashdot community thinks: what can be considered proof of someone being male or female?

    I trust I am speaking for the whole /. community. How should we know? Is there life outside Mother's basement?

    And, oh yes, what's a female?

  102. Change the Men's category to Open or Unrestricted by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    We probably need to change the Men's divisions to Open or Unrestricted divisions. These divisions are open to anyone regardless of gender but in reality will be almost entirely standard definition men with the occasional high-testosterone non-male. The Women's divisions will only be for those with the standard XX genetic configuration.

  103. Why, oh why... by CrashandDie · · Score: 1

    ... is the structure of my chromosomes.

  104. Stupidity by Nekomusume · · Score: 0, Troll

    "she may have a rare medical condition that gives her an unfair advantage."

    If it's a medical condition, it's fair. Deal with it.

  105. This is mostly stupid by Runaway1956 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Gender is largely determined by our genes. But there are a number of articles on the web which demonstrate that hormones present in the womb can alter the initial determination of gender. Short of outright hermaphroditism, a female may have a lot of masculine characteristics, and a male can have a lot of feminine characteristics. Actually, it didn't require a lot of research to figure this out - people everywhere exhibit varying degrees of both masculine and feminine characteristics.

    "Prove you're a girl"??? WTF??? PROVE IT??? Give us all a break. Are we going to start demanding DNA and ultrasound analysis of every little leaguer? The kid either grows up thinking that he's a he, or that she's a she. That's good enough for almost anything. And, it should be good enough for the olympics. One shouldn't have to submit to what amounts to sexual molestation. Maybe a blood test. But, the blood test will be little more conclusive than looking at a person. He/she has hormone levels that are outside the norm? Big fucking deal.

    This world is getting to damned demanding. No one has a right to demand that I prove my sexuality - NO ONE. Not even if I'm competing on the world stage. This young lady has been researched to death. Her Mama and her Daddy vouch for her, and her birth certificate says "Female".

    Drop it, everyone.

    The only people who will ever have a legitimate interest in her genitalia are those who find her attractive enough to want to share her bed. And, those people will keep those details private unless they are total jerks.

    --
    "Windows is like the faint smell of piss in a subway: it's there, and there's nothing you can do about it." - Charlie Br
    1. Re:This is mostly stupid by Incadenza · · Score: 1

      One shouldn't have to submit to what amounts to sexual molestation.

      Please read the sad story of Foukje Dillema, who wasn't seen outside her house for a year, after she had been confronted with such a test - in 1950!!!
      Only two years ago (after her death) the Dutch athletic union apologized for the whole ordeal and re-entered her times in the Dutch list of national athletic records.

      The Dutch version of the article is a lot more detailed, but I am not sure if it will survive a google translation.

  106. Dr. Ray Davies, MD, JD, here (legally + medically) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I met her in a club down in old Soho
    Where you drink champagne and it tastes just like Coca-Cola
    C-O-L-A cola
    She walked up to me and she asked me to dance
    I asked her her name and in a DARK BROWN voice she said Lola
    L-O-L-A Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola

    Well I'm not the world's most physical guy
    But when she squeezed me tight she nearly broke my spine
    Oh my Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola
    Well I'm not dumb but I can't understand
    Why she walked like a woman and talked like a man
    Oh my Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola

    Well we drank champagne and danced all night
    Under electric candlelight
    She picked me up and sat me on her knee
    And said little boy won't you come home with me
    Well I'm not the world's most passionate guy
    But when I looked in her eyes well I almost fell for my Lola
    Lo-lo-lo-lo Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola
    Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola

    I pushed her away
    I walked to the door
    I fell to the floor
    I got down on my knees
    Well I looked at her and she at me

    Well that's the way that I want it to stay
    And I'll always want it to be that way for my Lola
    Lo-lo-lo-lo Lola
    Girls will be boys and boys will be girls
    It's a mixed up muddled up shook up world except for Lola
    Lo-lo-lo-lo Lola

    Well I'd left home just a week before
    And I'd never ever kissed a woman before
    But Lola smiled and took me by the hand
    And said little boy I'm gonna make you a man

    Well I'm not the world's most masculine man
    But I know what I am and IN BED I'm a man
    And so is Lola
    Lo-lo-lo-lo Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola
    Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola lo-lo-lo-lo Lola

  107. Agreed! by Narcocide · · Score: 1

    I agree with you. The long-term solution is to grade everyone on a level playing field. As a society we are a long way from this but I feel that we also are actively inhibiting fair competition between genders simply because of historical stereotypes based on genetic profiling that was never expected to change but is now obviously changing rapidly.
     

  108. I had hope this was to be funny by AnAdventurer · · Score: 1

    Isn't an XY test pretty easy?

    --
    6.8SPC TR of 550, l xwind at 6, drift rt at 26" drops 77". AT has 503 ft-lbs at 1403 fps. FT 0.86
  109. Consult the hardware compatibilty list by Mipsalawishus · · Score: 1

    If it has ovaries, fallopian tubes, etc and the rest of the hardware needed to birth a child then it is considered female. If said person contains both sets of parts normally found in the respective sexes, then said person should be considered neither sex by whatever committee is deciding eligibility based on certain advantages to be had over either sex by the other. In this instance, this would only be fair to the other athletes. Fairness in this case is determined not by the exception, but the norm. Like mother nature, sometimes life's a bitch.

  110. RIP FloJo by SL+Baur · · Score: 0

    You know, from my point of view, all of these world-class athletes are genetic abnormalities. It's a little rich for them to point to the best of themselves and yell "SHE'S the freak!"

    I lost all interest in "world class" athletes when FloJo died of a heart attack due to steroid abuse at a young age. She was my hero!

    1. Re:RIP FloJo by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      She didn't die of steroid abuse. People blame steroids for all kinds of shit. Lyle Alzado died of a fucking brain tumor and he blamed steroids.

    2. Re:RIP FloJo by mouseblue · · Score: 4, Informative

      I lost all interest in "world class" athletes when FloJo died of a heart attack due to steroid abuse at a young age.

      Are you sure it was a heart attack? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Florence_Griffith-Joyner#Death

    3. Re:RIP FloJo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The story you link to says

      died in her sleep on Monday of an apparent heart attack

      [emphasis mine] and does not even imply that the supposed heart attack was caused by drug use. The article was written the day after she died, i.e. before the autopsy which found that Flo-Jo's death had nothing to do with drugs.

  111. Rare Advantage? by PvtVoid · · Score: 1

    Shit, every elite athelete has a "rare medical or genetic advantage". Are we going to start disqualifying people because they are unusually talented? That'll sure make sports fun.

  112. Tread lightly, please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    In case people hadn't noticed, this thread is full of gossip about a very personal, very intimate part of a person's life. A real, living, breathing person.

    This woman has had her entire life, her entire identity turned in to an international freak show. How would you feel if this was you? Your Mom? Your sister?

    - somebody who has been there

  113. Gender is identity. by GryMor · · Score: 0

    Physical gender is not binary, it isn't even a spectrum, it's a high dimensional construct that gets weirder, more complex (and more interesting) the more you look at it. Trying to force individuals into manufactured ideas of binary gender has done a lot of harm to a lot of people. The only meaningful definition of what gender someone is is the gender they believe they are, and that belief can not be objectively wrong.

    --
    Realities just a bunch of bits.
    1. Re:Gender is identity. by tuxedobob · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If I believe I am a turtle, does that make me a turtle?

    2. Re:Gender is identity. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If your brain has the size, shape and functions of a turtle, then I'd say yes, you're a turtle.

    3. Re:Gender is identity. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Nope, but being a turtles often makes you believe you're a turtle.

    4. Re:Gender is identity. by Ronelyn · · Score: 1

      Show me some credible developmental process of genetics, neurology or hormones that makes you think you're a turtle AND demonstrate that there's no treatment that will return you to awareness that you're a human being, and THEN show me that you can have some hormone treatments and surgery and live out your life happily and without further maladjustment as a turtle, and sure, I'll drive you to the vet myself. That's the case with transgender and intersex, so I think that's a fair yardstick.

      --
      I'm one! Ask me!
    5. Re:Gender is identity. by tuxedobob · · Score: 1

      A yardstick that works only and specifically for the case you're trying to prove hardly seems fair.

  114. Nuts by Attila+the+Bun · · Score: 1

    you can try muddy the waters all you want, but if you've got a pair of nuts, your not female.

    Eh? I don't think you read my post.

    Running shorts don't hide much, and I don't see any "nuts". Urine tests are given under supervision and without shorts, and still nobody saw any "nuts". If the authorities still have any doubt, they should be doing their tests before talking to the press. Whatever the outcome, the current fiasco is likely doing real harm to Semenya, and does nothing for the credibility of the sport. That's nuts.

  115. Anonymous Coward by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Simple enough, really.
    Those officiating in fact deemed the individual capable of participating in the event. In light of this, it stands to reason that should the individual excel beyond the performance of the other competitors the individual would be rightly declared the winner.
    To deem said individual incapable of competing only after the event is taken place brings into question the officials not the athlete.
    If they wish to reconsider the criteria for eligibility to compete next year or next event or whatever then so be it. But this event stands as is, period. To disallow the victory is decidedly lacking in sportsmanship and ethics on several levels.
    This was something to be determined prior to leaving the starting gate and has no bearing on the result at the finish line.
    If the victory is disallowed I personally hope the lawyers make mincemeat of the entire disorganization of the sporting federation or whatever title they bestow upon their silly group.
    Considering the amount of time and effort one would likely need to put into training, it should add up to a nice compensation for just wasting the individuals time let alone the dashed hopes and emotional anguish.
    I consider sports to be fun among friends and beyond that nothing more than an entertainment industry like Hollywood or Nashville is.

  116. No clear definition... by Tekoneiric · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The thing is that there isn't a clear line between female and male. Being Female or male isn't an absolute thing, it's extreme opposite ends of human sexuality with subtle variations in between. Many people don't realize but there are many people that are in between but it's generally hushed up by the doctors, their family and society in general. Not only are there physical ambiguities of the genitalia and body but also various hormone and neurological variations, all caused by chromosomal, genetic and developmental conditions that would put someone in between the gender extremes. Being physically intersexed, transsexual, bisexual, lesbian, gay, dynamically gendered (changing gender expression with moods), transgendered, a butch straight woman, a feminine straight man, etc are really just part of being in between the gender extremes.

    Just like boxing weight divisions break up by weight, I think a better choice is to break up the people based on size, performance and endurance tests. Have high performers compete in one category, mid-range and low range in others. I've seen women that could beat most men in a physical competition, men that wouldn't have a chance when physically competing with other men and many women. If you say one person had a genetic advantage over others why not have them compete with people at their same level of performance. Hell, why not take it a step farther. If people want to use safe forms of performance enhancing drugs, let them as long as they do it against people with their same level of performance. The drug companies could sponsor them.

    --
    *It's not what you can do for the Dark Side but what the Dark Side can do for you!*
  117. Hmmm. by laurielaptop · · Score: 1

    I detect a thread of racist jealousy here .... obviously she can't be that good AND be female. Get over it, she's just a better athlete than you.

    1. Re:Hmmm. by tuxedobob · · Score: 1

      Uhh.... how is that racist?

  118. Three Stooges. by Commander+Doofus · · Score: 1

    Show her a Three Stooges DVD. If she shakes her head and tsk-tsks through the whole thing, she's fine. If she laughs uproariously--at any point--stop play and say "you, sir, are running with the fellas."

    --
    Want to improve your life? This guy will show you how!
  119. ME by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am pretty sure Crocodile Dundee has a foil proof way of determining a gender.

  120. The only reason... by HikingStick · · Score: 1

    The only reason this is an issue right now--regardless of the jump in performance--is that her looks appear predominately male to the average observer. It goes far beyond just being muscular, trim, and having an athletic female bosom. The set of her shoulders and her facial characteristics would likely cause a casual observer to assume she was male. I thought my wife was reading about a male runner when I first saw her picture, before I knew about the controversy.

    I know that there are many of each gender whose characteristics might cause them to be misidentified at first. Take this initial misidentification in conjunction with the recent exceptional results, and it is easy to see why some might wonder. I don't know that calling for such testing is necessary. I assume she already has a physician or trainer who can make an attestation.

    If it does come down to a genetic test, then it should be strictly XY vs. XX and it should be a standard test for all competitors. Otherwise, they'll only be testing those whose physical traits suggest they might be different gendered. Those whose physical traits already closer match the other gender would go without suspicion.

    --
    I use irony whenever I can, but my shirts are still wrinkled...
    1. Re:The only reason... by GryMor · · Score: 1

      So, what do you class people with AIS women as, men?

      What do you class those with alternate chromosomal patterns as?

      --
      Realities just a bunch of bits.
    2. Re:The only reason... by HikingStick · · Score: 1

      The incidence of such genetic anomalies is such that cases are very rare. With AIS, the medical field appears to define them as female. Clearly, with any test, there must be an appeals process to account for atypical gender mutations.

      The point of my post was that it was easy to understand why some would look at the runner and question her gender. I presented my simplistic view of testing to make it clear that whatever test is presented, it must be required of all, and not just targeted at this woman, or others in similar situations in the future.

      --
      I use irony whenever I can, but my shirts are still wrinkled...
  121. Asking about "females" on Slashdot? by cbraescu1 · · Score: 1

    I mean, you don't really expect us to have any real experience with that, right?

    --
    Catalin Braescu
    Ofaly.com
  122. anthropology by binaryseraph · · Score: 1

    If you have ever taking an forensic (or biological) anthropology course you find that there are some physical charecteristics, beyond sexual organs, which help to determine the gender of a set of bones. This is known as sexual dimorphism (the systematic difference in form between individuals of different sex in the same species). There are 3 easy ways to identify (though, genetic mutations can fool this- althrough RARE for all three).

    1: On the back of the skull down towards the spine, there is a protuberance called the External Occipital Protuberance- This exists on the back of a male skull though is none (or very small) existant in women (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/External_occipital_protuberance- it is a small outgrowth of the back of the skull (if you are a male feel for it- if there is a female that will let you touch them, you will notice they are missing this protuberance).

    2:The angle of the jaw in males is approximately 90 Degrees, the angle of the jaw in women is typically over 125 degrees.

    3 (this would require x-rays):The Sciatic notch (part of the pelvis) is much larger in women- notably for child burth- also (extra point)the Subpubic angle is significantly larger in women than in menLhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Subpubic_angle This angle would explain why those with a trained eye for runners whould see 'her' run in more of a masculine fashion.

    . Yes there are cases of Genetic mutations that cause for criss crosses of sexual organs (holding on the Michael Jackson joke here). Many times, however, the doctor solves that problem at birth (nip, or tuck).

    As for a view of this in the sports world (I really could care less here, but I think it is an interesting subject), running is broken into main classes, male and female. If you have traits of both, this would disqualify you as you do not adequately meet only one criteria, without meeting all the other criteria. As an example: a transgender male would not be allowed to run in a womens division, no matter how much estrogen, or how many operations they had.

  123. stupid question, easy answer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just get her pregnant.

  124. sport categories by Odinlake · · Score: 1

    I see people suggest we should introduce some kind of "miscellanous" category alongside male/female. I would instead ask: how long until we have to make away with male/female categories alltogether?

    1. Re:sport categories by Tomfrh · · Score: 1

      A very long time I would think. Consider race for example. It's far blurrier than gender, some argue in fact that it's arbitrary, yet we still have race firmly embedded in our laws and customs.

    2. Re:sport categories by Odinlake · · Score: 1

      A very long time I would think. Consider race for example. It's far blurrier than gender, some argue in fact that it's arbitrary, yet we still have race firmly embedded in our laws and customs.

      Really? I'm no lawyer but it seems to me most legal systems take care to emphasize that race (per ce) is not an issue.

      However, my point was not cultural but (this is /.) that with gene-manipulation, medecine, bionics etc. advancing (rapidly) I think that we will get such a diverse range of individuals that it defies attempts to make any relevant categorizations. Already some people "breed" with particular sports in mind for their children.

  125. Ikea Test by piltdownman84 · · Score: 1, Troll

    Give her an Ikea desk in box, if she reads the instructions she is a woman, if not he is a man.

  126. Hmm by unforkable · · Score: 1

    By looking under her skirt..

  127. keep the current method by kbdd · · Score: 1

    If you look at it closely, I will bet that all top level athletes have a genetic advantage. I am not saying a genetic deficiency, but a genetic makeup that makes them perform at a higher level than other people. If we start screening athletes based on genetic makeup, we will never stop until only the most average people are allowed to compete. I would like to be a top level athlete too, and if we can find a way to disqualify all the guys who run faster than me, I might make it. Is that what we want? The alternative, which allows most everyone to compete in one of two categories, is the current system: genital configuration, assuming it was not obtained via surgery.

  128. Huh? by Das+Auge · · Score: 1

    He "died of a...brain tumor" and then "blamed steroids."

    I think he/shes are the least of our worries.

  129. Genetic discrimination is not all bad by davidwr · · Score: 1

    If it weren't for genetic discrimination, there would be very few women with NCAA athletic scholarships, as they would be forced to compete for slots on nominally mixed-gender teams based purely on ability. In sports like basketball, baseball, golf, and other high-strength or high-endurance sports, most women wouldn't make the cut. In the pros it would be almost a lost cause, with only the rarest exceptions.

    There are other cases where genetic discrimination, or rather, genetic segregation, keeps people at ease due to cultural issues. This is neither inherently right nor inherently wrong, although it can have negative side-effects. Separate "women only" train cars and buses are the norm in some cultures, and separate men's and women's restrooms are the norm in the United States. This is all fine until you lose out on a promotion because your opposite-sex peer had an important impromptu discussion with your boss in the restroom, an opportunity you were denied because of gender segregation.

    For individual sports like racing, I would like to see men and women race against each other or simply against the clock, but in sports where gender makes a profound difference, rank people by gender like they do today so women have a chance. In games like golf, eliminate the "women's tee" and have men and women play the same course on the same weekends, maybe even in the same foursomes. So what if the women gain 10 or 20 strokes? The best women will still be the best women, and we'll know just how much or how little a difference gender really makes on a given golf course.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
    1. Re:Genetic discrimination is not all bad by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      If it weren't for genetic discrimination, there would be very few women with NCAA athletic scholarships, as they would be forced to compete for slots on nominally mixed-gender teams based purely on ability.

      Perhaps, but this got me thinking - sports where women do have an advantage (or are at least neutral) still seem female dominated. I can hardly think of any female racing drivers, and even horse racing is male dominated even though women typically have an advantage.

    2. Re:Genetic discrimination is not all bad by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Well indeed - it makes sense to have a "male" and "female" division in many sports, as otherwise it would all be dominated by men.

      But the point is: if someone doesn't fit into that model, then the model is wrong. Either fix the model, or let her play whatever. The answer is not to assume that the person is wrong, let alone to subject her to humiliation and harrassment. I don't think all of sporting is going to fall apart just because one woman has a "genetic advantage", as that applies to many people with different genetics. One woman isn't going to stop all other women from competing.

      Maybe I should whine that there ought to be a sporting category for "people with unfit bodies that are crap at sports", so I have a chance of winning...

  130. Just look under the hood. by zippthorne · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I mean, even if she does have a rare disorder that gives her an advantage in female competition, she's still at a disadvantage in "everyone" i.e. male competition. So where should she compete? Why do we have to make this so complicated?

    What's the point of "women's leagues" anyway, if not to give non-men a chance in athletic competitions?

    Or have we decided that what we really want are the "everybody" league, where athletic excellence is all that matters and a "porny" league, where everyone has to have a score of 8.5 or better on hotornot

    --
    Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  131. Multiple Sex Chromosomes by VocationalZero · · Score: 1

    for ( i=0, chromosome23.length() >i, i++)
    if ( chromosome23[i]=='x')
    numX++;

    if ( numX>1)
    division=female;
    else
    division=male;

  132. Two other words by davidwr · · Score: 1

    Navigation test. If you pass, even^H^H^H^Hespecially if you actually stop and ask for directions, you are a woman.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  133. Let them dope, let them do whatever by Loconut1389 · · Score: 1

    I say differentiate by external sex organs, let them dope, wear the crazy new swimsuits, let them do whatever they want. Get some really ridiculous records set, and start taking the emphasis off the time and start putting it back on the sport- having fun, maybe winning the race, but trying your best.

    Maybe that's nuts as you may not ever win against the dopers, but by god at least all this scam and stress (lance armstrong?) can go away and people can truly enjoy what they do. At the end of the day, records are what the human body is capable of- naturally or otherwise, and the sport should be about trying your best. Are you after records and your name in a book, or are you after being known as the best in your time, or are you just after the thrill of the sport?

  134. Oh gosh, like Stileproject criticizing 4Chan posts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll go ask the fine people of /h/ on their views of masculine women, and I'll be sure to receive a bunch of women with vaginas and 8-inch clits while Stileproject would only post a bunch of nutsacked shemales.

    Go Team 4Chan!

  135. Back the train up by direwulf · · Score: 1

    Before we get into proving how someone is female, can we first all agree on what female means? Even with a Y chromosome, I seem to recall that nonfunctional hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase can result in a fully reproductively capable female who looks the part. What sort of female do you need to be to qualify for women's athletics? XX? Functioning ovaries? Sure, we can probably come to a consensus over a test with some deliberation. But what exactly should the criteria be?

    1. Re:Back the train up by funwithBSD · · Score: 1

      First question:

      Do you have a Slashdot account?

      --
      Never answer an anonymous letter. - Yogi Berra
  136. Use the crocodile dundee technique by code4fun · · Score: 1

    Take your hand and feel it up to see if its a Sheila

  137. Simple... by Belial6 · · Score: 1

    Since it is well established that 'Womens' events are specifically there because they are expected to be 'inferior' to the athletes in the 'Mens" events and thus cannot compete directly, the answer is simple. Just call one the 'inferior' event and one the superior event, and let anybody play in any event they want. If this athlete is actually a man, but in is running in the 'Womens' event because he wants to compete against 'inferior' athletes because he cannot compete against the 'superior' athletes', then big deal. Just note what his is doing.

    On the other hand, if this athlete is a woman, and is only winning races because she is running against an 'inferior' set of athletes, she should step up and compete against the 'superior' set of athletes. I know I would rather be 2nd best (or even 300th best) at something than be #1 of the group that has no chance of competing against the best.

  138. Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just stop the damn segregation and let the all compete in the same events, one 100m , one marathn , ect ..

  139. Gender is Not Binary by localman · · Score: 1, Insightful

    People are born with ambiguous genitals quite often. People can have a complete mismatch between their apparent gender and their chromosomal gender. Even if those match, there can be gender identity conflict with appearance, chromosomes, or both. Heck, some people even get romantically and sexually attracted to their own sex. Oh the humanity.

    Though it is true that the vast majority of people fall very close to the ends of the gender spectrum, the fact is, that gender is not strictly binary. We've built a world that revolves largely around this notion, but we're seeing more and more signs of ambiguity as we become a more open society.

    Personally I don't find it scary at all. No more so than when I learned a person doesn't have to be black or white, but can in fact be a mix of both. People like to be able to make distinct categories. Gray areas bother most folks, but they exist and you eventually have to get used to them or spend your life being very frustrated. Gender ambiguity seems to be the one that bothers people the most on a visceral level, though. It'll be a while before we start dealing with it in a healthy way as a society.

    As to this runner -- I don't know if she's male or female or something in between. But whatever the case, they're a damn good runner.

    Cheers.

  140. it matters quite a bit by mpapet · · Score: 1

    he/she didn't just blow up the fastest woman's time in two events, she redefined 'fast.'

    The continuity and in some respects the legitimacy of all previous records are now null-and-void.

    It is impossible to describe how gifted these people are, even without the drugs.(Marion Jones was doping since she was a teenager and never got caught.) Unfortunately, people just don't get the opportunity to be right on the track to get a sense of the speed.

    I know it doesn't matter to you, but for many it is very important.

    --
    http://www.maxineudall.com/2010/02/should-economists-be-sued-for-malpractice.html
  141. Take away the money by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    Even better - if you take away all the corporate sponsorship and money floating around athletics not only will the drug/hormone/... problems go away, or at least be reduced, but so will all the silliness about high tech swimsuits, hinged skates, running shoes etc.

    If we are going to let the money stay then at least remove all the doping rules and lets see how fast a drugged up human really can run before their heart explodes.

    1. Re:Take away the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, we need have a Male, Female and lastly a anything goes category. If people want to push themselves to death then so be. If for entertainment and scientific purpose then even better!

    2. Re:Take away the money by Plunky · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes, we need have a Male, Female and lastly a anything goes category. If people want to push themselves to death then so be. If for entertainment and scientific purpose then even better!

      There is a problem with this. Back when East Germany took young children to athletics camps and raised them on cocktails of steroids so they would grow up better it was wrong, and in the modern world when "some other regime" who cares more for their country winning than the effects on the athletes does the same thing with genetic selection or genetic engineering it will still be wrong

      Do you suppose that already there is not some party official who has seen Usain Bolts leg measurements and thought to check the leg measurements of all the young children in order to select future winners for special training? What about when that official sees that yes indeed, longer legs means faster sprinters and orders tests done to find an undetectable method of increasing leg lengths while the child is growing? Sure, some will grow too much and live a life of misery (or just get put in the meat grinder with the other failures) but the ones who come out perfect will be winners and nobody will ever know.

      The problem is that it is not "people" that want to push themselves to death, it is "people" who want to push others to their deaths and that is not something I want to sponsor. How do we protect against it when we clearly can't detect the causes? The only way is to have a range of norms and only allow those inside that range to compete.

      Unfortunatley for her, it seems that Caster does in fact fall outside of the range of normal (just look at the pictures, she is not normal even when compared to other female runners), and for me the question is not whether we allow her to compete or not but what will happen if we do? I assert that that party official will be trawling orphanages immediately looking for other genetic deformities that can be exploited similarly. Won't somebody please think of the children?

    3. Re:Take away the money by samuX · · Score: 1

      None is coming to your house and getting your children to make them the next super hero of that sport, it's always parents who are obsessed about making their children famous and don't care if they're ruining his life or not. And when the athlete has grown up he can always decide to give up and do less training or if there's a big pressure he can quit and go do something else.

    4. Re:Take away the money by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      In the Little League, sure, but on the international stage it is not soccer moms who are pushing their little sweeties to success. You need to get out more..

    5. Re:Take away the money by Moryath · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Olympic cheating is a sport of its own.

      The Russians and East Germans sent more bearded "ladies" through the system than I care to count.

      Greek weightlifters managed to get to Beijing despite 11 of their 14-man team being caught on steroids.

      The Chinese out-and-out lied and presented forged documents to the Olympic committee and IFG about the age of their gymnast girls and got away with it scot-free. North Korea wasn't so lucky since their star girl was still losing her baby teeth at the time.

      Marion Jones.

      And on and on... try a basic google search on Olympic Cheating.

      It used to be that people went to the Olympics as true amateurs to represent their countries and sports. Now? Let's face it, the Olympics have outlived their usefulness. Countries themselves compete, not just athletes. Professional athletes play in half the sports. And the two-year schedule has robbed the games of their scarcity, so much so that 90% of people don't even notice they are happening.

      The "Olympics" have become a joke, nothing more.

    6. Re:Take away the money by dimeglio · · Score: 1

      They should have, No-so-sure-it-is-a-woman Olympics and the They-are-likely-doped-up Olympics. I would leave Jacques Rogue to decide for himself which are female be Women. I believe he is French and probably has a fairly clear definition of what a Woman is.

      --
      Views expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the author.
    7. Re:Take away the money by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      None is coming to your house and getting your children to make them the next super hero of that sport, it's always parents who are obsessed about making their children famous and don't care if they're ruining his life or not.

      Not in the US, they're not. China, however....

    8. Re:Take away the money by Sethumme · · Score: 1
      That was one of the more truly insightful comments I have read on /. in a while.

      It all comes down to people identifying a clear goal and then trying their hardest to bust past it.

    9. Re:Take away the money by Arker · · Score: 1

      It used to be that people went to the Olympics as true amateurs to represent their countries and sports.

      Actually, it used to be that only the idle rich could compete in the Olympics. The rules against "professional" athletes were aimed to ensure that the upper crust "amateurs" would not have to risk losing to a "social inferior."

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
  142. Wikipedia have made up their mind by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caster_Semenya

    'He'

    Thats a bit harsh!

  143. Simple Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Run these contests without regard to gender. Then the no-longer-competitive athletes can get on with their lives and we with ours.

  144. Manswers says.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    check her fingers. A dude's index finger is shorter than his ring finger. Hers is the opposite.

    http://www.spike.com/video/how-can-you-tell-if/3050374

  145. female genitalia NOT proof by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "... what can be considered proof of someone being male or female?"

    It's certainly not a case of having the "right" genitalia.

    I once met a woman whom I could tell just wasn't "right", and she alluded to a past that usually only men would have participated in, and eventually I correctly surmised that she was once a he.

    When I mentioned that to her, she freaked out and then calmed down a few days later and told me her story.

    Shortly after that she stuck a "before" photo in front of me, and yup, she sure used to be a man, no doubt about it.

    And she so much wanted to show me her new female genitalia, I repeatedly declined, but eventually that photo was shown to me unexpectedly (Surprise!) .

    Anyhow, from my personal experience, having the so called "correct" genitalia doesn't actually prove birth sex at all.

  146. By Neruos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If his/her primary sexual characteristics are female, then he/she is female. Secondary sexual characteristics do not decide gender except at birth, many people are born with the wrong gender assigned, this is part of the follow up process after 6 months, 1 year in developed nations that is. The test is very simple, does she have a uterus? if not, does the connecting tissue exist in some form for the uterus? if not, does she have a neo vagina, which has been created and does end thru surgical means? if not, she is a women.

    Their are transexuals that appear 100% female, until you get them under a trained medical eye, then you can spot the differences and alterations.

  147. Essence of Competition by zippthorne · · Score: 1

    Is it will we're testing, or athletic performance, in an athletic competition? If it's simply pure will, then where is Olympic Used Car Negotiating, or National Championship "Sticking your arm in a bucket of ice water"? International Staring Contests?

    If it's not simply will, then why are you looking for ways to mitigate the other factors?

    --
    Can you be Even More Awesome?!
  148. Surest way to tell by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Just tell her the outfit makes her look fat. If she shrugs, dude. If she bites your head off she's a woman. You could also try blindfolding her and wave a credit card under her nose. You're risking a nasty bite or worse yet a maxed out credit card but it is a way to confirm gender.

    1. Re:Surest way to tell by AlgorithMan · · Score: 1

      or give her a map and tell her to go to some location. if she finds it, she's a dude...

      --
      The MAFIAA is a bunch of mindless jerks who will be the first up against the wall when the revolution comes
  149. Re:Change the Men's category to Open or Unrestrict by izomiac · · Score: 1

    That's what I was thinking, although the definition for "Woman" would probably need to be fairly sophisticated. E.g. a three year history of androgen levels + sensitivity below some threshold. Or have one unrestricted category, then various other categories that pit people with equal handicaps against each other (low androgen levels/female, don't have the bone structure of a fish, physical disabilities, hasn't spent their whole life training for the one event, etc.).

  150. Re:Easy...not by lpq · · Score: 1

    Dunno why, but that was banned some number a years ago.
    They used to do it.
    Started with some masculine looking women from old-USSR...
    But somehow it was an invasion of privacy....

    But genital viewing is not? *shrug*.

  151. Reasons behind gender segregation in athletic comp by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This question should be placed in the context of rationales behind segregating athletic competitions into two gender leagues. Why is it not discrimination to ban a man from participating in women competitions? The answers should be examined against this case and vice versa.

  152. Special Olympics? by hadleyburg · · Score: 1

    If she were excluded from the World Athletics Championship (and presumably the Olympic Games) on such grounds, would she thereby qualify for a place in the Special Olympics?

  153. Why do we care? by erroneus · · Score: 1

    You know? We hear about "women can do anything men can do... and better" all day long but we know men are generally stronger and blah blah blah... I don't care. I'm sick of women being handicapped and compensated for at every turn. And when there is a woman that can actually compete against men, people have to question whether or not she is a she and attack her by using manipulative new "definitions" of what male and female are?

    I only care about me doing the best I can. If someone else does better, good for them. If someone else doesn't, well, I'm sorry... keep trying or give up and find something else to do. Women want equality and if I were a woman, I would want equality too. But because I am a man, my sense of equality says "X == Y" and "Y == X". So if women are equal, then stop putting them in their own classifications. Because if separating the sexes in sports is okay, then shouldn't it also be okay to separate the sexes in the work place? And if it's okay to separate the sexes in sports, why not separate the ethnicities in sports too?

    1. Re:Why do we care? by schnikies79 · · Score: 1

      Fuck you nigsausage.

      --
      Gone!
    2. Re:Why do we care? by schnikies79 · · Score: 1

      Haha. Seriously though, while we can demand equality in most everything. Females and males are physically different when it comes to strength and abilities. I have a good friend that plays D1 women's college basketball and while she could beat the pants of me (football guy myself), she wouldn't stand a chance with a D2 men's team.

      I don't know where to draw the line really and I guess it should be up to the players. I've always thought that women should be required to sign up for selective services and should be able fight in combat positions.

      --
      Gone!
    3. Re:Why do we care? by erroneus · · Score: 1

      You seem to have forgotten to post anonymous coward...

    4. Re:Why do we care? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fuck you nigsausage

  154. !Easy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is ./
    90 percent of people here have boobs.

  155. gender neutral gender test. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    go up to someone and say " you're looking fat today".

    if they say "so", "STFU", or "whatta you gay or sumtin"- they are mentally male.

    if they scream, cry, deny, or get real mean- they are mentally female.

    you determine the sex of their BRAIN, not genitals.
    copyright March

  156. Genetic Advantage? by aceofspades1217 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Don't most athletes who are at the Olympic level have some sort of athletic advantage. Obviously it's about determination and perseverance in training but its also about have really good genes. An average joe/jane will never ever be able to go to the Olympics no matter how hard they train.

  157. The brave new world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    See the reason this is so complicated is, we are quite happy to discriminate against Males and Females. We obviously consider females to be different from male in terms of fairness. That's why they are separated from competing against one another. But now we seam to be faced with a problem of how to choose who competes in what class (male or female). i see the simplest solution is to open up the competition to all people. so we will have 1 800m's and that will be the fastest person (hopefully we can agree on what is human). If we still want to give men/women a chance at winning different events (because i am pretty sure there are events that one sex is better than the other) then we are just going to have to determine what is male, and what is a female and possibly make people with more advantage (genetically) than the weaker sex have to compete against the other.

  158. Slashdot poll by j33px0r · · Score: 1

    Simple really. Create a slashdot poll with the following tidbits/requirements. 1. TFA 2. Pics of breasteses What else do you need? All information will be examined thoroughly and responses will be made with the highest of standards

  159. Re:Just an interesting tidbit in determining gende by fluffy99 · · Score: 1

    On average this is true that higher male or female hormone levels are correlated with differing finger lengths as you described. Ssomething like 75% of the time as I recall from the study which also happened to try to correlate it with intelligence (of course a sample size of 100 white people is hardly definitive). Of course, in general having a penis means you're male too, but if you've been paying attention you'll have noticed that isn't a 100% indicator either. In fact checking for sex organs is far more reliable than looking at the comparative length of someones fingers.

  160. Re:Change the Men's category to Open or Unrestrict by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Solution: Height categories!

    • Usain Bolt is 1.96m tall. He ran the 200m in 19.19 seconds the other day. 200m/19.19s/1.96m = 5.32/s.
    • Michael Johnson is 1.85m tall. He ran the 200m in 19.32 seconds in 1996. 200m/19.32s/1.85m = 5.60/s.
    • Ato Boldon is 1.76m tall. He won the bronze medal in the race where Johnson set the world record in 1996, and then he later ran 19.77 in 1997. 200m/1.76/19.77 = 5.75/s.
    • Florence Griffith-Joyner was 1.69m tall. She ran the 200m in 21.34 seconds in 1988. 200m/21.34s/1.69m = 5.55/s.

    Wake me up when Usain Bolt runs the 200m in 17.75s (equivalent to Ato Boldon's distance/time/height). It's not fair for any of those people to run against one another; they should all be 200m world record holders in their respective height divisions.

    1.6m-1.69m = Flo Jo (1.69m) @ 21.34s
    1.7m-1.79m = Ato Boldon (1.76m) @ 19.77s
    1.8m-1.89m = Michael Johnson (1.85m) @ 19.32s
    1.9m-1.99m = Usain Bolt (1.96m) @ 19.19s

    p.s. I quit running after my second year in high school. Back then my 2nd half 200m was clocked just under 10 seconds (roughly on par with Michael Johnson running his second half in 9.2 seconds), but I still couldn't compete with all the 1.8m+ guys around me. If I had stayed with it, I'm sure I could have gone under 21 seconds, but I did the math and decided that it was probably physically impossible for me to go under 20.5, so I knew there was no way I could compete at the national level. (Hint: I'm about 2.5cm taller than Flo Jo.)

  161. Re:WTF? Sour grapes by noidentity · · Score: 1

    For fook sake...if someone is born with a vagina and they haven't taken drugs or gotten surgery to get there, they are a woman. To try to weed someone out of the athletic process because God (or whatever you believe in) has given them "a little extra" is absurd.

    But the point of dividing people based on sex in sports is not for reproductive reasons, it's for physical ability reasons. Thus having a vagina is not relevant to physical ability (even though for most people, it is an accurate predictor of one's general physical performance range). Since sports are based on physical ability, the distinction would best be based on genes which control it and are usually correlated with sex. If the distinction seems somewhat absurd, that's probably because it is. The idea is to eliminate people who will very likely beat you every time, but not eliminate people who might not, even though in most cases it's due to the genes each of you were born with.

  162. Sexuality is bimodal, not absolute by jdreyer · · Score: 1

    Human sexuality is bimodal, not absolute: most of us are quite obviously male or female but some of us aren't. There is no sharp dividing line in nature; anybody who wants a sharp line will have to invent one.

  163. This is just a distraction. by Oktober+Sunset · · Score: 1

    What about the REAL issue?

    They should be testing Usain Bolt, cos we all know he is really a cheetah in a man suit.

  164. Genetic Advantage? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Would that be something like 25% more lung capacity in a certain swimmer?
    Or maybe a high jumper who is 100 millimeters taller than the rest of the field?

    If we start banning athletes because of genetic advantages, does that mean that I get to be on an Olympic basketball team?

    And what does this mean for the Special Olympics?

  165. Anagram by brackishboy · · Score: 1

    It's a strange coincidence, but "Caster Semenya" is an anagram of "Yes, a secret man".

  166. Kindergarten Cop by masmullin · · Score: 1

    Did none of you watch Kindergarten Cop? Boys have a penis, girls have a vagina.

    It's not a tumor!

  167. Genetic advantage ... rofl! by fadir · · Score: 1

    Every single of those "athlets" are there because of their genetic advantages or those of there pharmacists, usually both. A Joe/Joeline Average, no matter how hard he trains, will never stand the slightest chance in such a competition simple because he/she is lacking the little bit of extra juice that decides between being just sportive or being world class.

    I stopped watching sports a couple of years ago because it's no fun anymore. I was more busy following who has been caught cheating in various ways than seeing real sports.

  168. equality by smash · · Score: 1

    In the post-feminist revolution 2000s, we shouldn't care, and give females the equality they have been demanding. get rid of male/female events and the whole checking thing isn't a problem.

    --
    I run: Windows, OS X, Linux, FreeBSD. Just because you have a hammer, doesn't mean everything is a nail.
  169. Sexism vs Racism by kripkenstein · · Score: 1

    That wont work because it would completely eliminate women from being competitive in a wide range of sports.

    So what if it would?

    Black people dominate several areas of sports. Should we have separate black and non-black events just so non-black people can be competitive in them? I'd say of course no, and my point is that this is exactly the same as having separate male and female events.

  170. Simple by cmseagle · · Score: 1

    Is s/he good at math?

  171. The earlier sex test excluded people it shouldn't by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Oddly enough an athlete that failed a sex test some years ago later gave birth to children. In my opinion that mean the sex test was flawed and it was the pointless termination of an athletic career just because she had XXY chromosomes. I also agree that if you are born with the genetic ability to run like a gazelle on speed then that's just who you are and you should be allowed to compete within whatever division your genitals indicate.

  172. It's Easy by b4upoo · · Score: 0

    If she was born with female organs she is a female. Some females may be more feminine than others but so what. Some men are more masculin than other men.

  173. Why do we have a "female" category in sports? by rew · · Score: 1

    Why do we have a "female" category in sports?

    It is because about 50% of the population has a genetic advantage. So we have an "open" category, and a category for the 50% of the population that wants to compete among the others that don't posess this genetic advantage.

    Now the question is: How do you prove you don't have this genetic advantage. Apparently there are some cases where you don't have the genetic advantage (commonly called "being male"), but still have some of the exterior symptoms of the genetic disadvantage.

    This has happened before.
    Ewa Klobukowska ... in Dutch (better article)
    Foekje Dillema
    Stella Walsh

    So apparently in '67 they had the "Barr body" test to see if someone is female.

  174. woman = !man by SpaghettiPattern · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I find this whole matter and how it is dealt with by IAAF utterly discomforting. Apparently the issue isn't whether ms. Semenya is or isn't a woman but whether she's got unfair advantages. Resolving the gender question is easy and boils down to whether ms. Semenya ever has been a man or not. I take that's fairly easy to test.

    But the unfair advantages isn't. What if ms. Semenya has a different hormone levels than found in most women? Would that make her an IAAF man? Or would she have to compete in the paralympics? And what about Usain Bolt? If you dig long enough you'll find that he has very clear advantages over other competitors. But marking these as unfair simply would simply be a step towards mediocrity, where the middle field is allowed to compete and the rest not.

    Hell, if the medics would go about my body I'm sure they would find that I have unfair disadvantages and that therefor -inevitably- I'm a girl and should be allowed to compete against women. And loose nevertheless, but that's beside the point.

    --

    I hadn't the slightest objection to his spending his time planning massacres for the bourgeoisie... (P.G. Wodehouse)
  175. Problem Solved. by lalanotlistening · · Score: 1

    Human Pat = new Human(testicle,ovary); int mRank = Pat.jumpHurdles(men); int fRank = Pat.jumpHurdles(women); float rank = ((float)mRank + (float)fRank) /2 ;

  176. Hiding from the real issue by OrangeTide · · Score: 1

    We should eliminate Women's sports. Not try and carefully categorize every athlete and have massive debates when an athlete defies our categorization.

    --
    “Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
  177. Discrimination? by dpastern · · Score: 1

    She could be a hermaphrodite - both male *and* female. So, she would be a female in that case. To remove her wins because of that would be tantamount to a gross violation of human rights and discrimination to boot.

    Dave

    --
    Our lives begin to end the day we become silent about things that matter. --Martin Luther King Jr.
  178. It's not a choice for us "trannies" either by Myria · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Even more important: unlike trannies (no offense intended to any TG folk reading this), we intersexed people do not choose to be in the situation we are in.

    I have persistent thoughts of hoping I die because I feel very strongly that I need to be a woman. I shy away from mirrors in self-disgust. I have to avoid seeing women in general or I will start to get jealous of them. I hate my life.

    Why would i choose this?

    --
    "Screw Sun, cross-platform will never work. Let's move on and steal the Java language." - Visual J++ Product Manager
    1. Re:It's not a choice for us "trannies" either by misexistentialist · · Score: 0

      I feel very strongly that I need to be a woman

      This seems to me to involve conscious decision. Most of the women I see are wearing pants, a quarter of the men I see are of beautiful appearance. Butch women, metro-sexual men are everywhere. None of them feel the need to alter their bodies. Self-disgust and wishing you had tits are completely normal!

    2. Re:It's not a choice for us "trannies" either by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow I didn't know there were so many tranies on slashdot. Is there some real women on here?

    3. Re:It's not a choice for us "trannies" either by Manmademan · · Score: 1

      This is the Internet! Where the men are men, The women are also men, and the children are FBI Agents

    4. Re:It's not a choice for us "trannies" either by SuperBanana · · Score: 1

      Why would i choose this?

      Because like many people who choose self-destructive behavior or thoughts- you have serious mental health issues and need to urgently seek treatment, and treatment does not mean surgery, talking to friends, "support groups", or making deeply personal postings on slashdot. Treatment means professional psychiatric treatment. IMPORTANT: I did NOT say OR imply (nor do I believe) that being GLBT is a mental illness or can be "treated" to make you "normal".

      I would say this to anyone who is expressing borderline-suicidal thoughts on a public forum to complete strangers. That is a separate problem to your gender identity. There are many PEOPLE who look at other PEOPLE and are jealous not of their sexual identity, but of their perceived better physical attributes, relatonships, wealth, talent, etc. Jealousy is a normal emotion to some degree, but if it (like any emotion) becomes so extreme that you are obsessed with it or "hoping to die", you need to seek immediate help. After you address the suicidal/will-to-live issues, then consider your gender identity.

    5. Re:It's not a choice for us "trannies" either by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking as a trannie here on slashdot....we're just as real as any genetic female, thank you very much. My genetic makeup does not dictate who and what I am - it only dictates what my physical form looks like. We're born like this, and for the majority of is, IT SUCKS.

    6. Re:It's not a choice for us "trannies" either by RJFerret · · Score: 1

      Wow I didn't know there were so many tranies on slashdot. Is there some real women on here?

      You forgot "Are there 'real'' men here?" Transgender goes in both directions. A couple said they identify as female, but others may identify as male. It's kind of a shame that current society doesn't recognize there are more than two obvious genders. Native American societies had roles for other genders.

      Meanwhile, you probably also don't realize how many transgendered/transvestite/cross-dressing people you know in general. Just as most people simply interact with others as they are, most people don't go around announcing their gender or gender dysphoria after all!

  179. mnindwa by mnindwa · · Score: 1

    Caster Semenya was a female when she qualified to partake in the 2009 IAAF, she was a female in the first round qualifiers, a female in the quaterfinals, a female in the semis, a female at the start of the final and now that she obliterated the competition she is not female. Bunch of hypocrites. Winning in sports or in life is all about your genetic advantages. Einstein had a genetic advantage over his peers, Issac Netwon, Galileo, Socrates et. al. Proudly South African !

  180. not the first by krikkew · · Score: 1

    (S)he reminds me of Chech runner Jarmila Kratochvilova, whom I saw in the Helsinki championships 1983. (S)he won both 400m and 800m easily and now has the oldest world record, 800m from that year. The Finnish crowd used to chant "Jarmo-Jarmo-Jarmo", Jarmo being a Finnish boys' name. There wasn't much feminine about the hulk, and still isn't, according to a recent Finnish newspaper interview with her. But so what? Can't make these Kratochvilovas and Semenyas compete in the mens' events either.

    1. Re:not the first by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      IMO, Jarmila Kratochvilova today looks like a perfectly normal female specimen of her age. If they expected a beauty contest winner, I understand their disappointment, though. :-)

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
  181. Should Women Compete Separately At All? by adrenaline_junky · · Score: 5, Insightful

    To answer the question of whether or not she should be allowed to compete as a female if she is not 100% female, one must first consider the question of whether women should be competing in a separate class at all.

    Let's avoid the underlying moral and philosophical issues and just stick with the practical reason for setting things up so women compete separately: approximately 50% of the population is female, so it is a political necessity. You can argue all sorts of other reasons, but when it really comes down to it, that is the crux of it.

    And if you really think about it, we don't actually have women competing against women in one group and men competing against men in another group. What we REALLY have is women competing against women in one group, and EVERYONE ELSE competing in another group. Men are not set up as a protected class, it is only women who are set up as a protected class. If a sufficiently gifted female runner wanted to compete against men, I very much suspect that she'd be allowed to do so.

    Once you realize the reality that female sports are basically a protected class based on a political reality, the answer to the other question becomes pretty simple: anyone who is not 100% female is not part of the "protected class" and should therefore compete in the "everyone else" category.

    Is it fair? Maybe not. But how is having women compete separately "fair" in the first place? It is just for political expediency, and personally I don't see anything wrong with it if it keeps 50% of the population happier and more fulfilled than they otherwise would be without causing any undue hardship on a significant part of the population.

    1. Re:Should Women Compete Separately At All? by twitchingbug · · Score: 1

      The EVERYONE ELSE class that you talk about _is_ protected. The guy with the prosthetic carbon fiber legs wasn't allowed to compete in the men's sprint events...

    2. Re:Should Women Compete Separately At All? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apples and oranges... prosthetics are more of a gray area, but I'm not allowed to compete in the men's distance events in my car either

    3. Re:Should Women Compete Separately At All? by ioshhdflwuegfh · · Score: 1

      [...]anyone who is not 100% female [...]

      May I propose, not as a matter of philosophical or moral matters which I leave just like you aside, but as a practical matter of common sense and politics, that you be the one who measures amount of femaleness in people? I propose this because you obviously know what you are talking about.

    4. Re:Should Women Compete Separately At All? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clearly women compete within their own gender because genetically they stand little chance again bigger and more powerful men. Kids also compete in their own class, maybe they should also complete again men? It has nothing to do with politics.

    5. Re:Should Women Compete Separately At All? by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Oh he's allowed to compete, he just can't use special equipment.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    6. Re:Should Women Compete Separately At All? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps it is because in most cases the best man can will outperform the best woman athletically.

      Therefore, if women competed with men along the same lines, the odds of a woman winning a medal would be very low.

      This isn't about superiority. It's simply about the way our bodies work.

      I suppose you could check out the stats ( http://www.infoplease.com/ipsa/A0114920.html ) and compile some numbers yourself for results over the last 30 years.

    7. Re:Should Women Compete Separately At All? by twitchingbug · · Score: 1

      Good point. I wonder then... if anyone can think of a sport/competition where missing limbs/parts would be considered advantageous?

      I"m sure there must be, but can't think of anything right now...

      Would they be allowed to compete?

    8. Re:Should Women Compete Separately At All? by celtic_hackr · · Score: 1

      The reason women have their own class for sports is that they have genetically controlled different skeletal, hormonal and muscular differences. If you can't comprehend this you just might be a 500 lb geek that has never seen his own body parts and has never left his basement and interacted with females. Or perhaps one of those males who are threatened by competitive females.Certainly there are some women, capable of competing on the same level as most men, but, there's no way the best woman athlete in any one category is going to be able to match the best male athlete in that event. It's just not ever going to happen shy genetic manipulation or a helluva lot of steroids.

      I can relate to your rant on women getting to play with men and not vice versa. There was a sophomore girl on my HS swim team (girls and boys in separate categories but trained together), who could beat the crap out of me. But she was also on the US Olympic team, and I was just your average sophomore HS athlete. Two years later, I doubt she could have beaten me though (I'd picked up a few more lbs of muscle and a lot of speed, and need for a razor).

    9. Re:Should Women Compete Separately At All? by reiisi · · Score: 1

      I'm thinking more in the line of golf handicaps.

      Or, rather, boxing/wrestling weight divisions.

      Let people compete at their level, and when they graduate from that level, move them up, if they want to continue.

      I'm also thinking that the big deal we make out of professional sports is more the problem than questions of any one person's gender. What is so important about assuming the illusion of being #1 (for game X by rule set Y for year ZZZZ or whatever)?

      --
      Computer memory is just fancy paper, CPUs just fancy pens with fancy erasers; the 'net is just a fancy backyard fence.
    10. Re:Should Women Compete Separately At All? by boef · · Score: 1

      Add to this the "unfair advantage" which would be based in the genetic make-up of the athlete in question. Some top female athletes have a naturally higher testosterone level than "normal" females, and this gives them a slight advantage; if the difference is too much, then of course it could be artificial (read injected) and you could be disqualified / banned.

      Physical characteristics like how tall you are, how quickly your body breaks down muscles that are not used etc. are also down to genetic makeup. Where do you draw the line in what is fair and what is not. I think if you are born (not engineered afterwards) with a defect that gives you an advantage, they should let you compete. So if you are a female but you were born with webbed hands and feet (ok, maybe some gills as well so you don't need to break surface to breathe) and this allows you to swim faster than everyone else... should you be banned to protect Michael Phelps' career? Or just be banned from competing against other woman?

    11. Re:Should Women Compete Separately At All? by Chuq · · Score: 1

      Good point. I wonder then... if anyone can think of a sport/competition where missing limbs/parts would be considered advantageous?

      I"m sure there must be, but can't think of anything right now...

      Missing legs - rowing/canoeing/kayaking - less weight?

      --
      - Chuq
    12. Re:Should Women Compete Separately At All? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lol because their bodies genetically produce 1/20th of the testosterone and only 60% of the muscle mass?
      Thinner skeletons with much shorter overall average height?
      Probably a million other things like catecholamine production...

      Maybe we should rope children in with the men too, while we're at it, champ.
      When a woman can compete with men, it's not sexism or favoritism...it's phenomenal.
      And that's why we let them do it.

  182. People are missing the point by audan · · Score: 1

    The problem is that if a sports regulatory organization is going to organize competitions by gender, then they should clearly define (a) what constitutes being male or female and (b) how a person is tested to see if they fit one one definition or the other. Everyone should then have to be tested. Some people won't be able to compete because they don't fit the definitions, but we are all "regulated out" of various opportunities for various reasons.

  183. Genetic advantage != doping by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think the news poster isn't aware of what doping actually is. It's using a substance above the level present naturally in the organism and/or a synthetic substance that gives you an unfair athletic/psychological advantage over other competitors. That's why it's ok to use codeine, because the natural level vary a lot between different individuals. Also, it wouldn't prevent an extraterrestial being from participating in the olympics. A doping test based on DNA does not test for the human genome, only for the genes that are different between individuals. So in other word, if you had a genetic advantage it wouldn't prevent you from participating in the Olympics (see: Michael Phelps). But competing in the woman competition when you are a men might.

  184. What is TFA doing when I select text? by dotancohen · · Score: 1

    Every time I select text in TFA the Firefox Throbber spins. What is that page doing?

    --
    It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong.
    1. Re:What is TFA doing when I select text? by toddestan · · Score: 1

      I just tried it, and it looks like the page then tried to use some exploit in Firefox to download a fake AV program (named GreenAV) to my computer. I guess word is, beware.

  185. Solution by Msdose · · Score: 1

    The scientific solution would be to simply handicap all competitors who have an advantage. Bigger guys, genetically enhanced guys, doped guys would all wear a heavy shirt when they competed to even up the field. Guys could compete with girls in their 40 pound shirts or whatever.

  186. First define Female... by Genda · · Score: 3, Insightful

    As a number of folks here have already made it abundantly clear that sex is bugger-all hard to define. There's genetic sex (of which there are nearly a dozen), there's congenital development (we all start out female and then it's pretty much a crap shoot), there're even a fair number of folks without any secondary sexual characteristics at all.

    Even if the young lady does or does not have perfectly normal genes, there are dozens of both natural and artificial processes that could give her an unfair advantage. The cost of eliminating all possible ways of cheating (including the unintentional cheating of atypical sexual development) would be prohibitive, and in of itself a form of unfair pandering to vested interests and religious bigots. If you think about it, the extraordinary athlete is often gifted with unusual physical traits (several of the best swimmers had unusual knee joints allowing them to hyper-extend at the knee and get a larger swing in their kicks, and a basketball player under 6 feet is for all intents unheard of.)

    I would simply leave it at, if the person lives as their declared sex, functions socially as that sex, and isn't engaging in the illegal use of performance enhancing drugs... get over it.

  187. I'd Start With... by Greyfox · · Score: 1

    Can she be immediately classified as a male or female. No sense in making it more complicated than it needs to be until you get past that point.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

  188. Eaxctly what division is fair? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well, first of all the division between man and woman in the olympics is to give both male and female a fair chance.(depends on the sport)
    But with every division there are problems.

    A lot of people can't compete even if they want with olympic athletes, due to their genes and how they where raised.
    Exactly what division is fair? Why are we dividing between male and female? Why is this more important than height or weight or nerdness :)

    Depending on the sport other divisions can be made(may be political incorrect, but they have influence):
          height/weight divisions
          bone weight/muscle mass
          religion or culture
          race

    For example if one is born with short legs and a huge intellect, one can't be the worlds greatest runner.
    If one is born in Kenya with long legs, the chance will be much higher

    Each of these divisions have problems. We are first of all humans, we cannot change how we physically are.
    So either way we have all kinds of divisions to give everybody a chance or we have no divisions at all.
    Let everybody who wants compete, let the best human runner win.

    Oke, female's won't stand a chance in some sports, but so do midgets, nerds, people with a handicap, and a lot more!
    In other sports it will be the other way around. If not design new sports.

    This is maybe a bit radical, but at least give it some thought. Exactly what division is Fair?
    And why is the division between man and woman the most important one?

  189. This is not about banning someone entirely by Britz · · Score: 1

    They already divided everyone up into two groups: Male and female. Because they decided that males do have an unfair advantage over females in sports and thus should not compete against each other. If someone is found to be male they are not banned, they are simply asked to compete against males.

    I suppose the summary is a bit off. They don't really want to find out if she has an advantage, but rather if she still fully qualifies for having the distinct disadavantage of being genetically female.

  190. Shunned traditional female activities & clothi by antdah · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...previously preferred playing physical games with boys, and shunned traditional female activities and clothing...

    If my wife has pants, does that make her a man?
    And furthermore, does that make me a homosexual?

    If so, does it work the other way around as well?
    Would a man dressed in womens' clothing qualify as a woman?
    Would that in turn make gay couples were one part dress in womens' clothing heterosexual?

    Sigh, if only Douglas Adams were still around to sort out the logic behind all this...

  191. Re:WTF? Sour grapes by owlstead · · Score: 1

    It's the way genders are tested at birth and we keep treating persons this way. To exclude her from any competition would create a really bad precedent. It's an easy test, and it's fair. Whatever other genetic or hormonal differences there are are given to her at birth. She probably did not have an easy life as she looked so much as a boy. Now she excels at something and only when she starts to compete at the highest level we are going to say, sorry, but your life as an athlete has ended, since you are not one of us?

    Just take her physics into account when you remember the records. And stop taking those lists too seriously. Watch the races and enjoy.

  192. Genetic advantage, the core of sports ? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If, in sports, you were to consider a "genetic advantage" cheating, there would be no sport... Most of the competition is based on this advantage, as everybody trains quite the same way.
    I'm short and skinny, and certainly wouldn't have a chance in any physical competition because of those "genetic disadvantages", should I only compete with people with the same genes?

    And anyways, she's a women, but she runs faster than any man on /. so, does gender matter?

  193. And race... by chrb · · Score: 1

    I had a thought along similar lines the other day - no white man has ever run the 100m in less than 10 seconds. The 10 second barrier has been broken hundreds of times by black athletes. How come there is no call for racial segregation in the 100m? We already have sexual segregation. Why is one a good thing for society, and the other the complete opposite? If it can be shown that white men (or black men) are at a particular disadvantage in certain sports, would that mean segregated competition would be okay? Would it suddenly be a good thing, meaning that the "disadvantaged" athletes would have a league of their own to compete within?

    1. Re:And race... by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      It's about changing rooms. And toilets.

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    2. Re:And race... by kimvette · · Score: 1

      It would be termed racist. However when you look at the situation isn't it likely that black men are better-built physically due to forced selective breeding by slave "owners" back in the day? Slave "owners" would want to maximize their "investment" in slaves, so why not force "ideal" black men and women to maximize strength and child-bearing features? While the reason for it is quite disgusting (treating people as mere cattle) the results are pretty remarkable, if horrifying (horrifying in the sense that people could be "owned" and forced to mate). This would be micro-evolution at work. Is this actually what occurred? I'm not familiar enough with the history of slavery to know the answer, but I do know of african-Americans in the Boston area (who told one of my friends of this theory) who believe this is the case.

      Just food for thought. And believe me, I do not intend to offend anyone with this post.

      As far as what is fair: it's not fair that I can't do strenuous exercise for long periods before my muscles cramp up (salt wasting). Should I demand to be allowed to compete since I am a very fast runner, and be given a handicap or other concession for my lack of endurance? Of course not. Athletic competitions have always centered around two things: physical fitness (usually by conforming to "ideal" physical structure) and skill. When it comes to running there is some skill involved but it's more about what one's physique is technically capable of.

      If that selective breeding theory holds any water, is it any wonder that black people outperform white people on a consistent basis? Would it be fair to segregate competitions by races? To me that would not seem fair. If white people really see a disparity and are angry about it, nothing is stopping them from marrying based solely on athletic ability and hope that those desirable characteristics follow in the next generation. However, I do not think eugenics can be considered to be justifiable under any moral standard.

      --
      The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
    3. Re:And race... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A lot of the top black athletes are from Africa not the US and are not the descendants of slaves. SO i don't think your theory holds water.

    4. Re:And race... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      A lot of these black athletes are from bloodlines that have never been plantation slaves -- many are native Africans. And slaveowners certainly didn't breed for "running fast" nor did they have enough generations to make a real difference (it takes about four generations in dogs just to start a serious shift in a fairly homogenous gene pool, and dogs are highly maleable compared to humans, and have a much shorter generational span). Even with such a selection pressure, there have been more generations of non-slaves who bred as they pleased since, than there ever were of selectively-bred slaves, so whatever effect it had has doubtless long since been diluted beyond notice.

      However, if you look broadly at sports (which does not give a damn what race/colour you are, if you can help the team win), "arm positions" tend to be white, while "leg positions" tend to be black. Historically (and speaking very broadly), white/European cultures have tended to be riding cultures that used close-contact weapons, while black/African/Australian cultures have tended to be walking/running cultures that used throwing weapons (which require less sheer muscle mass to be effective). Successful dominant (read: many progeny) males tended to fit their culture's "ideals" in terms of selection. So there was long-term pressure, over thousands of years, for upper-body vs lower-body, driven by the way the environment shaped broad swaths of human cultures. Differences in food-production methods probably also helped drive the selection process; agriculture (much more prevalent in Europe than in Africa) is more of an arm-and-back thing, while hunting sans horses bushman-style is of necessity a leg thing.

      So it should come as no surprise that yeah, the preponderance of really good runners are of strong African descent.

      Every human type has its advantages, or it wouldn't have developed and survived in our ancestors' far more primitive environments. Sports might be considered a re-creation of a "primitive selection environment".

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    5. Re:And race... by droptone · · Score: 1
      --
      Every post I make begins with the assumption P=~P.
    6. Re:And race... by bickerdyke · · Score: 1

      OTOH, there's weight segregation in boxing.

      --
      bickerdyke
    7. Re:And race... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because Olympic stadiums can't afford two changing rooms and two sets of toilets?

  194. siimple test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Give the person something to eat.
    If SHE ate the thing it's a woman, and if HE ate the thing - it's a man.

  195. Logical Fallacy time by allcaps · · Score: 1

    This is a simple case of "Missing the Point". This occurrence is clearly an argument that we shouldn't have ANY sexism anywhere. period. If there were a law that said "No one can have abortions", instead of "No woman can have an abortion", then anyone who claims to be male who wants to have an abortion can't have one. Whereas, a law that specifies and discriminates against one gender or another cannot have this kind of power. Separating men and women on any empirical basis has almost no use whatsoever.

  196. Re:WTF? Sour grapes by fastest+fascist · · Score: 1

    OTOH, the genitals as such have very little to do with athletic performance, whereas hormonal makeup has a lot to do with it. Sports aren't split into men's and women's events because they have different bits between their legs, it's because one gender, on average, has a large advantage over the other in athletic performance.

    I'm sure transgender folks are happy for whatever public exposure this gives to the ambiguous nature of gender in some people. It's a complex and confusing issue, especially if you don't clearly define what you mean by gender and for what purposes that discrimination is made. I'm sure there will be no really satisfactory way to put these issues to rest in the sporting world, but perhaps these cases will do some good by providing a little insight into the complexities and varieties of human gender and sexuality.

  197. Not possible by vimbuza · · Score: 1

    I really don't think it's possible for anyone to be "a women" unless they have a rare genetic disorder that allows them to be several people at one time.

  198. See if she likes Slashdot by shervinemami · · Score: 1

    simple.

  199. Govts provide enues and super-trademarks by tepples · · Score: 1

    Who said it's the government?

    Governments pitch in to fund venues for some leading athletic competitions. Governments enact and enforce "super-trademarks", which have a broader scope than ordinary trademarks, on names and symbols of some leading athletic competitions. For example, you can't use any mark remotely resembling "OLYMPIC" for your product in the United States, even if the product is completely unrelated to sports, unless the mark has been in continuous use since before 1950.

  200. Why... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...are you posting a question about sports to Slashdot? Maybe if her supposed genetic structure had had some potential special benefit in World of Warcraft, your question would make sense.

  201. Accused of infringement by tepples · · Score: 1

    There's a difference between business and government, you freely associate with a business, you don't freely associate with a government.

    If a business tries to enforce a copyright, patent, or trademark against me, I never "freely associate[d] with" it, especially if my alleged infringement was an accident. I am forced by the government to associate with it.

    Plenty of tests are on a computer at one point or another, and many medical practices take steps to ensure private test results can never be traced back to the patient. HIV tests are a good example of this, though as a matter of public health those are reported to the government in some jurisdictions.

    The protest appears to be against a perceived expansion of this alleged "matter of public health".

    1. Re:Accused of infringement by andymadigan · · Score: 1

      Who said the government would get the DNA sequence? For that matter, why would they get the results of any medical test? No, the protest is against "oh noes, she has to be tested! The EVIL gubmint must be behind it!".

      The inability to tell the difference between a corporation and a government on the part of so many just proves and anarcho-capitalism would never work.

      --
      The right to protest the State is more sacred than the State.
    2. Re:Accused of infringement by andymadigan · · Score: 1

      And if you poison the groundwater in an area you could be sued by a lot of people you didn't freely associate with, yes. But in that case, the company cannot force you to do anything without obtaining a court order. For instance, if you decide to start selling a Linux distro under the brand "Windows XP" Microsoft will sue you. They can't get a DNA test in that lawsuit, since the court would laugh out any such request. In fact, since anything you do is by court order in that case, you are in fact being controlled by the government, an entity which you do not freely associate.

      --
      The right to protest the State is more sacred than the State.
  202. Nor are doctors hired by the FDA/AMA by tepples · · Score: 1

    athletes aren't hired by the sport's governing body

    Nor are doctors hired by the Food and Drug Administration or the American Medical Association. But athletes are hired by organizations accredited by the sport's governing body, and if the sport's governing body requires a test, it will decline to accredit any organization that does not likewise require it.

    1. Re:Nor are doctors hired by the FDA/AMA by Hognoxious · · Score: 1

      But athletes are hired by organizations accredited by the sport's governing body,

      Not only irrelevant but also a load of bullshit. Who employs Usain Bolt? Or how about Serena Williams?

      --
      Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
    2. Re:Nor are doctors hired by the FDA/AMA by tepples · · Score: 1

      Who employs Usain Bolt? Or how about Serena Williams?

      Athletes not on a team are independent contractors and thus employ themselves, just as family physicians often have their own practices. But they still have to get accredited by the sport's governing body. I was only making the point that relationships other than employment can exist between a governing body and a player.

  203. Michael Phelps genetic advantage by Netrogo · · Score: 1

    I just have one thing to add to this. If being genetically different/superior exempts you from competition, then should Michael Phelps be stripped of all his gold from the Olympics? I don't know how many of them were true but I remember hearing people saying he has slightly webbed fingers and toes, unusual shoulder joints which give him better strokes, his body is more aerodynamically shaped, etc... Would all those genetic advantages be a no no too?

  204. Re:WTF? Sour grapes by weicco · · Score: 1

    This reminds me of the days when I used to play Counter Strike "OMG you must be cheating! No one can shoot like that!" and I wasn't even very good at it. I just happened to have quicker reflexes and 10 years more experience in mouse using than "the enemy", maybe even lower latency.

    And who the heck cares? It's sports and everyone is using something! (My educated opinion of course)

    --
    You don't know what you don't know.
  205. Nagging by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The definitive test is how well [s]he nags. If she can drive a man to drinking with her constant nagging she's a she.

  206. Gender is a genetic condition by Jeppe+Salvesen · · Score: 1

    So, co-ed sports now?

    --

    Stop the brainwash

  207. Send them out to buy a jar of pickles by Snaller · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    If they get lost first and then can't open the jar - its a girl!

    --
    If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
    1. Re:Send them out to buy a jar of pickles by Snaller · · Score: 1

      "If they get lost first and then can't open the jar - its a girl!"

      Hey asshole moderator, that is called a joke! Not flamebait!

      Its idiots like you who cause terrorism.

      --
      If Google really cared they would fix Android Chrome to reflow text, instead of discriminating
  208. As my grandmother used to say... by decep · · Score: 1

    Check behind the ears.

  209. Daily Fail by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

    I agree, and consider if it was the other way round: if a man didn't fit neatly into the stereotypical assumption of what men should be like, would they then be allowed to compete as a woman (and hence win more easily?) I doubt it!

    On that note, I have to despair that TFS refers to "press reports" and links to the Daily Fail. For non-UK readers, this is a bigoted tabloid, that has a history of both xenophobia and transphobia. I mean for heaven's sake, has anyone actually read the article? Their answer to the question of one's sex is "Wouldn't wear dresses and sounds like a man on the phone". My god, according to them large numbers of women aren't actually women.

    The irony is that if a man liked to wear dresses and therefore demanded he should compete as a woman, the Daily Mail would be first in line to criticise that decision too! (Even when it comes to transsexuals, they have ran stories criticising m2f transwomen).

  210. Secretions video by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Parent is totally right, check proof here if you dare: (WMP stream, play with VLC, starts at 16:30, Dutch only sorry) http://cgi.omroep.nl/legacy/babel?/ceres/eo/rest/2009/EO_101150834/bb.20090417.asf

    It's about a village doctor having a patient that complains of secretions of his nipples - sounds ugly. It is, actually ....

    They never did found out why he was getting it though, and he was clearly not taking any estrogen...

  211. Transsexualism and choice by zoeblade · · Score: 1

    Perhaps they don't choose their feelings, but surely surgery is a choice?

    Oh, yes, hormone therapy, sex reassignment surgery, hair removal, voice exercises are all choices. But it's not like we have a relaxed attitude about it, like it's equivalent to a career choice or migrating or something like that. The transsexual suicide rate is apparently about 31%, which I believe is the highest amongst a minority group. (Please, someone correct me if I'm wrong here.) It's a serious medical condition.

    1. Re:Transsexualism and choice by Tavor · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure which is greater, but suicide rates among transsexuals are closely rivaled by suicide rates among (American) Indians, specifically the age group of my generation (as opposed to the older folk.)

      --
      Windows has detected an undetectable error.
  212. Period = chick by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I reckon the best test is to see if she has a period.

    No period, not a chick. (nor a whining one either).

  213. LOL by Lost+Penguin · · Score: 0, Redundant

    It is not that hard to tell, what equipment were they born with?

    --
    I am the unwilling control for my Origin.
  214. I _know_ this girl by mary_will_grow · · Score: 1

    According to the many press reports, she's believed to shave, is flat chested, has a very masculine physique, previously preferred playing physical games with boys, and shunned traditional female activities and clothing ...
    Its your sister!

    --
    Why stick up for big business?
  215. DDR vs. Estrogen... FIGHT! by eca212 · · Score: 1

    In my experience, hormones have a lot more to do with athletics than do chromosomes.

    I'm a transsexual woman who was born male (with XY chromosomes and all that usually entails). I competed in statewide Dance Dance Revolution tournaments and did well. Then, around age 24 when I started transitioning to female and taking estrogen and androgen blockers, my stamina decreased drastically, my muscle mass decreased and my body fat ratio increased. I was once able to play for 7.5 hours straight, and soon after transitioning I could only play for a couple of hours without getting exhausted. 10-footer songs that I used to be able to pass without much trouble, I couldn't make it all the way through anymore. I've been training to build up my stamina, and I'm getting stronger and more fit, but I'm still not at the level I was back when my hormonal balance was completely different.

    It's not surprising that hormones are the most influential factor, because what are steroids, after all? Testosterone.

    --
    For idealists who want to change the world and are looking for a path with heart. http://connection-revolution.com
  216. If there's a Y involved by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As was suggested several times on the public comments of the athlete in question...

    If there's a Y involved in any of the genetic test results, you run as male.
    If there's no Y involved in any of the genetic test results, you fun as female.

    It doesn't matter what the person "thinks" or "feels". Just set the rule and run with it. Pun intended.

    1. Re:If there's a Y involved by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a lot more complicated than that... Take a woman with CAIS, for example. Genetically, they are 46XY, but they are COMPLETELY unresponsive to testosterone. You could give them testosterone all day long, and they'll still be "feminine" in body, mind, and emotion. No big muscles, no putative male-style performance enhancements, no putative male-style aggression, no acne, little body hair. Chromosomes don't define a person in every way. Still want to make a woman like that run against males? That doesn't seem even. Shoot, on a gross physical strength comparison, I think they'd even suffer a little compared to "typical" 46XX women, who can respond to testosterone if it's in their body in sufficient concentration.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Complete_androgen_insensitivity

  217. irrelevant by crmarvin42 · · Score: 1

    which is a form of SRY silencing. The gene is being expressed, but ignored due to an inability of the receptor to bind to the relevant gene products. Ultimately it comes down to the same thing. Insensitivity to testosterone is the functional equivalent of not being male.

    If anything I would expect testosterone insensitivity to put her at a disadvantage because normal females do have testosterone and functional testosterone receptors. Testosterone is a anabolic steroid in both sexes. Fetal development and level of testosterone production differ between the sexes but an insensitivity to an anabolic steroid would make her less competitive in physical activities.

    Phenotype is what matters here ultimately. If this woman is genetically male, but some how the machinery involved in developing the male phenotype is not functioning properly, then she will have no competitive advantage over the other contestants based on her "maleness".

    My main point is that the genetics are irrelevant, unless she's undergone sex reassignment surgery in which case she was at one point phenotypically male and simply chopped it off to compete with the girls.

    --
    Bureaucracy expands to meet the needs of the expanding bureaucracy.-Oscar Wilde
    1. Re:irrelevant by p-k4 · · Score: 1

      which is a form of SRY silencing. The gene is being expressed, but ignored due to an inability of the receptor to bind to the relevant gene products.

      So by your own admission the SRY gene is working great, doing exactly what it should be doing, and while a totally different gene is damaged you are going to call that "SRY silencing?" Sorry, no.

      The SRY gene isn't silenced, it is talking just fine. The androgen receptor isn't listening. They are not the same thing and can present very differently depending on the level of insensitivity. Total insensitivity will look very much like a SRY defect while partial insensitivity won't.

      My main point is that the genetics are irrelevant, unless she's undergone sex reassignment surgery in which case she was at one point phenotypically male and simply chopped it off to compete with the girls.

      I'll play along. In AIS (androgen insensitivity syndrome) which occurs in 1 in 20,000 live births it is possible to have normal appearing female genitals yet have cryptic (hidden) testicles. (Reference - Before We Were Born by Moore, Persaud, 7th ed, page 184.)

      Is a 46 XY person with a vagina and testicles phenotypically male or female?

      --
      Dean's Rule #45. The truth hurts for a moment. A lie hurts for a long time.
    2. Re:irrelevant by crmarvin42 · · Score: 1

      female, because she is lacking in the full development of any male sexual characteristics outside of cryptic and nonfunctioning testicles. The fetus is female until the actions of an SRY gene and all of the requisite cascades successfully masculinize the fetus. Since she was only marginally masculinized (developed testicles where her ovaries should be and a vagina) as a fetus she is female.

      --
      Bureaucracy expands to meet the needs of the expanding bureaucracy.-Oscar Wilde
    3. Re:irrelevant by CTachyon · · Score: 2, Informative

      The SRY gene is responsible for only a small proportion of direct masculinization: it causes the gonads to develop as testicles, it causes production of anti-Müllerian hormone, it causes production of androgens (i.e. testosterone), and it causes some tiny changes in the brain. All the remaining primary and secondary characteristics are the result of either AMH or testosterone.

      Supposing a 46-XY subject with CAIS (Complete Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome), note that AMH is still effective at de-feminizing the internal genitalia by triggering the reabsorption of the Müllerian ducts: no fallopian tubes, uterus, cervix, or upper vagina. However, because the androgen signal cannot be received, Wolffian ducts do not form: no efferent ducts, epididymis, vas deferens, or seminal vesicle. Also, the brain is not fully masculinized, as the bulk of brain masculinization is androgen-induced, not SRY-induced.

      The final CAIS result is external female genitalia, a shallow vagina, active testes producing male gametes, male-normal androgen levels, and no internal genitalia (male or female) beyond the testes and vagina. The testes may remain undescended, or may descend into the labia majora (homologous to the scrotum) where they are easily palpable. Gender identity is most frequently female, due to largely absent masculinization of the brain. Secondary sexual characteristics are frequently hyper-feminine: in contrast to a CAIS individual, a typical woman express some androgen-induced characteristics (albeit vastly reduced from the same in a typical man). In particular, CAIS individuals frequently have little to no body/pubic hair, and highly feminine facial bone structure. For this reason, there is a disproportionate positive correlation between CAIS and supermodels.

      PAIS (Partial Androgen Insensitivity Syndrome) is much less sharply defined, as it runs the gamut from nearly-CAIS-woman to man-with-micropenis, including everything between the two (depending on how badly impaired the androgen receptors are).

      Note that the athlete in the article clearly does not have androgen insensitivity, either complete or partial, so this line of discussion is irrelevant to that topic. My best guess (as a well-educated layperson) is 46-XX, absence of SRY, with abnormally high testosterone production. The facial bone structure suggests high androgen exposure during puberty, which for reasons of exposure consistency would tend to rule out steroids or an androgenic endocrine tumor, and the female gender identity and (presumed) presence of external female genitalia rules out fetal androgen exposure from testicular tissue (e.g. chimeric absorption of a 46-XY twin brother). Perhaps some genetic disruption of the regulatory regions involved in testosterone production (more likely), or an abnormally strong response to female-typical androgen levels (less likely). My conclusion: in essence, an unusually butch woman.

      --
      Range Voting: preference intensity matters
  218. My 2 cents by Draeconix · · Score: 1

    This is ridiculous. This is the same thing as a story i once heard. If someone can tell me where it came from I would appreciate it. Anyway, there was a lawsuit in the future about a person who wanted to play baseball. The only problem was that he had ocular implants that gave him incredible vision (think Jordi LeForge). MLB was trying to say that he couldn't play because he had an unfair advantage. The catch was however that without the implants he was almost blind. This is of course an extreme case and is more superficial than Caster Semenya's but the concept is the same. Should we ban everyone from playing a sport on medical conditions. "Oh, I'm sorry you had the cold once so you can't ski." Just because this woman may have a medical condition that gives her improved athleticism doesn't mean she should compete. Take any major sports star that hasn't admitted to using steroids and see if any of them were tested for being abnormal. Nope. I think we look too much at making the games fair that we forget that they are supposed to be fun as well. As for determination of whether she is or is not a female, I think it is pretty much linked to the genitalia. Chromosomes only tell you so much.

  219. Not Easy by flajann · · Score: 1

    DNA is not the sole determinant in someone's Gender. The issues are rather more complex than that.

  220. Re:Just an interesting tidbit in determining gende by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    That isn't even slightly true. People's ring and their index fingers are generally the same length, and any variation has nothing to do with gender.

    Hell, even if it did, it would just be due to hormones, and if you want to know what hormones were flowing around a person's body during their development, an easier method is to pull their pants down.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  221. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  222. The Crocodile Dundee Crotch-Grab by gemada · · Score: 1

    is the most sure-fire technique

  223. Life outside the binary exists. by coreolyn · · Score: 1

    I just went through the majority of responses to this post. As a trans woman I make no claim that I am a 'man' or 'woman' by the classical definitions. I am 'me' just like everyone else. The neurotic clinging to a clarity of the definition to which is which only shows the struggle I am forced to deal with living life within a world that thinks it's all black and white.

    It's not. Accept it. Deal with it. Realize there is life outside the binary and celebrate humanity in all its forms.

  224. one in 200 are "intersex" by peter303 · · Score: 1

    Intersex applies to 50-some conditions where genetics disagrees with biology or the biology itself is ambiguious. Primate males start with appearance of females in the womb and are converted in males. Many things can prevent this.

  225. OT: How did that go again? by Estragib · · Score: 1

    Right. IIRC, 34% of statistics are exhaustingly specific answers to surprisingly misleading questions, 22% are imposingly far-reaching conjecture on ridiculously small sample sizes, 44% are just made up on the spot, and the remaining 15% are conducted by people who can't even add up to 100?

  226. Not really. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For some people, maybe, just like some people who get cancer or some other illness choose to not get treatment. But for some transmen and transwomen, the majority I'd say, SOME form of treatment (hormones, name changes, surgery, etc) is necessary to feel comfortable and live a happy life.

    And that's really what it comes down to, I would think. Even if getting surgery and all that is a choice, who cares? Would people seriously rather have transsexuals be miserable and stuck in a body they find wrong when they could do something about it, just because they think it's somehow morally offensive? Or would it be fair to say that whatever the reason, helping (or simply emotionally supporting) someone with a very real condition become happy with their lives and comfortable in their own skin is more ethical?

    I would hope that some people, at least, would vote for the latter.

    Tl;dr version: Transsexuality is not a choice. Treating it IS a choice, but more often than not, is completely necessary.

    -Will, who is too tired to make an account right now.

  227. If you wanna know by Philip+K+Dickhead · · Score: 1

    If she's a Girl fo' sho'
    It's in her kiss!

    --
    "Speaking the Truth in times of universal deceit is a revolutionary act." -- George Orwell
  228. Looks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    She looks like a man.

  229. Re:Just an interesting tidbit in determining gende by WSOGMM · · Score: 1

    That isn't even slightly true. People's ring and their index fingers are generally the same length, and any variation has nothing to do with gender.

    Hell, even if it did, it would just be due to hormones, and if you want to know what hormones were flowing around a person's body during their development, an easier method is to pull their pants down.

    http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/695142.stm

    While it may not be true 100% of the time, this study has shown otherwise. There is a difference, and there are correlations that actually show a difference in gay and lesbian finger sizes.

    Now, that's not to say that finger size is the end all way to look at gender... I just said it was an interesting tidbit. I suppose it could even be used as a factor, because it's a tad rare to have a surgery to shorten your fingers.

  230. Simple test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a simple test for this. What is herein termed "the Would You Do Her? test", or WYDH test for short. Quite simply, a number of the known male population is surveyed as to whether they would 'do' the subject in question. If the majority would, the subject is female. My friends and I use this procedure on a regular basis and have found it to be unfailing. This is a much cheaper and more accurate method than any testing for X and Y chromosomes. In fact, I am in the process of patenting it.

  231. Genetic discrimination? by MikeFM · · Score: 1

    I agree - why should gender matter? Women want equality so give it to them. If they can't compete then that's their problem. If they can then they deserve to compete against the best (male, female, or other). I can't imagine something much more hurtful than someone attacking you or gender. You take a woman that probably got teased a lot and overlooked by men because she is a bit manly and then you publicly accuse her of not being a woman? That's just mean.

    I think designer babies is something we'll have to deal with in the not to distant future. Genetically modified people designed to be stronger, faster, etc. Are we going to allow them? But then are we going to exclude people whose whole family tree is full of professional athletes for having naturally received the same benefits?

    Keep it simple and classify people based on how well they play and have them compete with other players in their own class?

    --
    At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
  232. Re:WTF? Sour grapes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For fook sake...if someone is born with a vagina and they haven't taken drugs or gotten surgery to get there, they are a woman.

    I got to agree with this one, You would be hard pressed to accuse a buddy of being gay if he got drunk at the bar and picked up a girl, who has had a vagina since birth. Now you could question his standards, if she looked like the subject in question, but using the, while drunk any hole will do metric, he would be acquitted on any count of man love. If those metrics are good enough for the discerning drunk in the court of his buddies opinion, they should be good enough for athletic competition. After all your buddy has to live with the memory of what he experienced. I am sure it comparable to the agony of defeat that the other women experience.

  233. The question is wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The question is not whether the person in question is female or not- it is whether we can speak of an unfair advantage.

    This person did not have a sex change or use chemical enhancers- which could be considered unfair; rather, she was born female ("Congratulations, you have a daughter!" - this has been the acceptable definition for being female since the dawn of mankind) and happens to have a passion for sports. She did not have a choice to be born the way she was, so it is simply bad sportsmanship ('unfair') to exclude this person from competing.

  234. ...or not. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You ARE aware of just how invasive a procedure it is to extract an egg from a human being, right?

    Not to mention the fact that your test would by definition exclude those who have gone through menopause or have some other medical difficulty with reproducing. Sheesh.

  235. Does it... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does it matter?

  236. The bicycle test. by Optimus6128 · · Score: 1

    I once was chatting with a programmer about female programmers.

    He told me (and we were actually having a joke about it) about the bicycle test. If you ask a girl to draw a bicycle, it doesn't matter if artistically it's lame, usually (he said) women will draw a bicycle that mechanically it can't work (the chain will be missing or connected to the wrong part). They will design a piece that it will fail to function (they are missing the details). But most men will draw one that works in the details (petals, chain, right placed). I don't know if it's true but we were joking once about it.

    As for programming girls, even if I don't want to spread stereotypes I will tell you my statistics. I once was quite obsessed discovering girls (especially in the demoscene) who can code and I was the creator of some stupid site called "The Female computer entities" (which make me feel silly when I think about it). From all the sample, most of the ones who actually made some good stuff or could even code assembly had something odd happening with their gender. The ones that were more "feminine" were writting the bad stuff and few of them argued that some people don't like their code because they are female (which was not true, I mean about the code stuff not the female stuff). It's like I could guess whether a female has a more male brain by her quality of work at code. Although exceptions might arise. I don't want to spread a stereotype but just to discuss from my experiences.

    And thinking about that when a geek friend dreams of an ubercoder girlfriend we tell him to be carefull, joking of course :)

    --
    The "H-Word" has died for me.
  237. Easy test by JustNiz · · Score: 1

    Simple. Check his/her phone usage, shopping habits and car parking abilites.

  238. Elite sport is pointless. by u64 · · Score: 1

    But first. There dont exist any clear line between men and women. We're all different.

    Many sports have wight-classes. Why dont all sports have that. Why are 100kg people
    not allowed to compete against each other in high-jump??! (and so on)

    Sport is only healthy upto a point. After that we get money and cheating and people hurting themselfs. That's why i've stopped watching elite sports.

    We should all stop attend/watch (pay) these events that put result before well-beeing.

    Bolt just runs as fast as he can. Nothing special at all. So do we all when we run 100m.

    (gotta stop now bfore i'm too far off topic)

  239. so... by hitmark · · Score: 1

    nature pulled the same trick that the soviet block came up?

    i think there is more then one half-joke about female east-german hammer throw athletes growing a mustache...

    --
    comment first, facts later. http://chem.tufts.edu/AnswersInScience/RelativityofWrong.htm
  240. Fair is fair by fugue · · Score: 1

    Anyone who stands any significant chance of winning should be banned. If you don't do this, it's unfair to everyone else. Nondiscrimination means that athletes should be awarded medals based only on random number generation.

    --
    "The biggest problem with communication is the illusion that it has taken place."
  241. What model would you suggest? by davidwr · · Score: 1

    What model would you suggest for the highest levels of competition?

    How about a model that allows women, or anyone claiming to be a woman who is not clearly a man, to compete with men voluntarily, and one that requires women who consistently rank near the best in their field AND who would occasionally medal against men be required to compete only in men's divisions, in essence saying "Tes, you are a woman, but we all know the sporting world gives women the handicap of not having to compete against men, you are good enough you don't need that handicap. Congratulations."

    Maybe I should whine that there ought to be a sporting category for "people with unfit bodies that are crap at sports", so I have a chance of winning...

    Actually, this works well in recreational leagues. Many recreational leagues divide people by ability. You can "move up" on request if you don't mind being humiliated or you deliberately want to be schooled, but you can't "move down" below your natural ability and you can be "forced up" if you are too good.

    Some recreational leagues are co-ed and specify the numbers of men and women on each team. This works well for team sports but not individual sports.

    Marathons are usually run with all genders mixed together, but there is usually a "best male" and "best female" gold, silver, and bronze.

    --
    Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
  242. You're asking us?? by Bai+jie · · Score: 1

    Seems like we here at Shashdot wouldn't be very good at determining how to tell if a person is female. Seeing as we never get to see them.

  243. Re:Testosterone is what would matter... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    She has female genitalia, and her horomone tests were normal for female. (which is when some brilliant person decided her coach must have figured out how to artificially lower her testosterone for the tests...) The pictures of Semenya with her hair down and dressed in regular clothes look like a teenaged girl, too bad the media aren't flinging those photos around as much. There's a lovely birther-esque conspiracy "proof" that she's male: her name is an anagram for "Yes, a secret man." I lost it when I first read that.

  244. Just redefine the categories by sam_vilain · · Score: 1

    It seems tempting to define "male" as "testosterone enhanced" and female as "not testosterone enhanced". Of course the long-lasting effects of testosterone lasting some time, those thinking to have a sex change to get into the easier category would be excluded right there. It would also mean that women like this would get to compete against men, and given they are not disadvantaged by hormones, possibly win. Now that would be interesting.

    --

  245. Crocodile Dundee by lsolano · · Score: 1

    I do not know why people here are talking about so unnecessary things like chromosomes, and related 'I'm too smart' stuff when back in '86 Crocodile Dundee showed us all how to know if someone is a woman, in case of doubt.

  246. Wait... what about the girly men? by bronney · · Score: 1

    Hang on a sec.. I am sure there're girly men that lost some track titles. What about them??

  247. Can she have children? by Sinn3d · · Score: 1

    They should just check the bloody plumbing, if its all there == female.
    Having some genetic edge isn't a reason to be disqualified. What do they call that again...

    Oh yeah, Evolution...

  248. Do the right thing... by elFisico · · Score: 1

    Instead of putting athletes into two groups named "male" and "female", put them into multiple groups based on hormone levels, muscle mass, body proportions and intellectual capabilities. And then merge "normal" olympics with special olympics an paralympics...

  249. oh, hahahaha by Velex · · Score: 1

    This is great. As a male to female transsexual, I must say it's absolutely great to see a genetic girl get clocked. Hahahaha. Good luck folks.

    --
    Join the Slashcott! Stay away entirely Feb 10 thru Feb 17! Close all tabs to prevent autorefresh!
  250. Why test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For the love of God, simply stop trying to make things "fair" for woman by letting them compete seperately. Equal rights should be letting everyone compete in the same arena, if woman can't keep up, that's not us discriminating, it's God/Nature/Buddah or whatever, but not us.

  251. Classic by renan.adasilva · · Score: 1

    Boys have penis, girls have vagina.

  252. No estrogen? by way2trivial · · Score: 1

    ever hear of witches milk?
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witch's_milk

    --
    every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
  253. Easy.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Bring a slashdotter to the person in question. Girls would move away from the slashdotter.

  254. Easy to test.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can she read a map?

  255. Marathon by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Paula Radcliffe would have competed successfully against most men (as would many top women runners). Venus and Serena Williams serve in average faster than Roger Federer and Rafael Nadal.

    In many sports the differentiation is based on misogynistic views of what women can achieve.

    Yes, there is a clear difference in performance, and perhaps women would rarely, if at all win, if competing against men, but that does not mean they could not compete with distinction.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:Marathon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      [obvious troll]
      Exactly, like how Annika Sorenstam, arguably the best woman golfer in history, missed the cut when she competed with the boys in 2003.
      [/obvious troll]

  256. If he/she is reading this thread.... by motherpusbucket · · Score: 1

    he's probably male.

    --
    "You can't really dust for vomit" --Nigel Tufnel
  257. Nope, it would mean no women winning. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Which is not the same.

    Women running marathons and other endurance sports would regularly find themselves competing favourably against many men, reaching good positions, but certainly they will rarely win.

    You just have to check times to come to this simple realization.

    Having said that times are roughly 50 years behind those of men, which is roughly the amount of time that women's sports were kept out of the mainstream (Olympics mostly).

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:Nope, it would mean no women winning. by russotto · · Score: 1

      Women running marathons and other endurance sports would regularly find themselves competing favourably against many men, reaching good positions, but certainly they will rarely win.

      I stand by my previous position. There would be no women at the top levels of competition in most sports. That includes marathons, as a look at the Boston Marathon results shows. Over 50 men placed ahead of the first woman.

  258. Nonsense by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    You can have all the genetic advantages you want, if you don't put up the work you will not be a world class athlete.

    The history of sports is littered with the names of people that achieved more than what they were supposed to achieve but that succeeded thanks to their determination.

    What makes you a world class athlete is hard graft, what makes you a legend is having a lucky genetic make up on top of your hard work.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:Nonsense by Yvanhoe · · Score: 1

      My point exactly : what makes you a top class athlete is hard work. What makes you #1 is unfair genetic advantages.

      --
      The Wise adapts himself to the world. The Fool adapts the world to himself. Therefore, all progress depends on the Fool.
  259. What is "messed up feet"? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    There are sports people who overcame disadvantages that made "obivous" they will not make it.,

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  260. Female Male performance parity by bodland · · Score: 1

    The performance of female athletes has been on a exponential increase for some time and is expected to catch male performance levels in many sports in the next century.

    Part of the reason why is because many countries stopped enslaving all females for procreation, sex and domestic maintenance. So girls can play like boys now. Woman can become athletes rather birthing children until they are empty worn out husks

    African continent still has lots of issues facing women's equality but some barriers have been lifted and we will see more than one gifted unique athlete come out of the woodwork.

    Someday...there probably will no longer be the need for gender categorizations for some elite sports.

  261. EO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    WTF?!?

    Do they seriously care that much about it?

    It is easy to tell. First off, look for any plastic surgery marks on her hands, specifically near her fingers. Why? You may ask.

    The human male's index finger is shorter than their "ring" finger, and for women, it is the other way around. That is why you look for plastic surgery marks on her hands to see if surgery has taken place to mess that up. It is seriously that easy.

    Also, I agree about the bringing everybody together. Whether we like it or not, some people will be "bred" as a human athlete. There is no way to get rid of that.

    Have men and women play all sports together. How many times do women complain about not getting the same treatment as men? So, let's treat everybody the same, the way it should be. No "special" leagues for women. If you can't cut it, well, you can't cut it. You get to find out what it means to not make the cut just like many men who might be very athletic.

    You can't just beg equal rights so that you can only have the equal positives. If we are looking for true equality, women should get to equally fail just like many men do. In sports, think of how many men try out for pro teams and get rejected. If a women can't do it, she can't do it. Honestly, I bet there are many women out there that can, but the fear of many women in current sports not being able to make it is one of the reasons for separating the sports.

    I thought we were done separating people after we abolished slavery, but apparently not. What is so wrong with men that women are not allowed to play? Women are already allowed to play in sports along with the men in high school and college. There are women wrestlers, women football players, and I am sure the list gets bigger, those are just the ones I know off of the top of my head.

    Besides, WNBA is so f'ing boring. Make those women play against Shaq and see what happens.

    Don't worry, we will keep it even. We will make the men play against Serena and Venus in Tennis and also make the men play against the women in volleyball and such.

    Why would we keep it separated? If you think it would not be fair to make women try out for NBA positions or positions in track and field, think about this, men have to do it. You want to be equal, you get to feel what it is like to not make the cut just like men. You want to make it equal, you can get turned down for that raise from your boss because your chest is not big enough (we have all seen it before).

    I personally lost a costume contest to a girl one halloween and she gave me the prize later on because she said that I should have won, and that she even told me that she only won because she was a girl (she was dressed as Leia from SW in the bikini from Jabba's Palace, but really she was just walking around all night in a gold bikini saying that was what she was). Even she knew and told me later on that she was going from bar to bar in a gold bikini winning contests, but she said my costume was awesome and gave me the award. See, now she was being equal. Maybe I should walk around in a speedo or something and I will get some awesome treatment as well.

    You want equal, have her run against Usain Bolt. Better yet, have all women run against him, ALL WOMEN. Don't worry, the men will do it too. You want equal, do equal. You want to give women treatment that is not equal, but better than the way we treat men, then you are the ones who are breaking the deal (you know, we let you vote so don't try to take advantage, which you clearly have done).

    1. Re:EO by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny...and true. Why not have a football team with 9 men and 2 burly women if that's how it works out? Why not have toothless women on a hockey team too? Most men are stronger than most women, but maybe the women want to see very uncommon women outperforming common men in sports. Dunno, that just seems kind of depressing: "the best of us can't beat the best of you, but they can darn sure beat the typical ones!"

  262. Bullshit by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    "All top-ranked athletes are genetic freaks".

    Kenyans have an excellent development athletics program. They used to figure only in distance running but now they are beginning to compete in 800m.

    Jamaicans ditto, but they have concentrated in sprints.

    The common factor is how hard these athletes work.

    Asafa Powell, the Jamaican athlete pointed out that British sprinters are simply lazy ( http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/athletics/8166011.stm ).

    Kenyans running and training elsewhere have similar histories about local athletes simply now wanting to train more in order to improve their performance (I am familiar with the situation in Mexico, in interviews I have read the Kenyans point to the lack of commitment from local athletes. Many Mexicans live in similar high altitude conditions to those found in Kenya, and when good training has been provided Mexican runners have won important Marathons and one held the 10000m record, so clearly genetics is not playing part on this).

    In Mexico we had 2 good 400m runners for a few years. Funnily enough we found some more that were impulsed by these examples, prompting Mexico to field credibly teams in the distance for the first time ever.

    At the end hard work is the most important determinant, genetics may come into play only in exceptional situations.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
    1. Re:Bullshit by radtea · · Score: 1

      The common factor is how hard these athletes work.

      Huh? Is this like International Nonsequitur Day and I missed it?

      I'm talking about individuals, and for some reason you're responding by talking about national training programs. Obviously an genetically freakish Kenyan will benefit (enormously) from a well-funded development program. But as individuals the top athletes in any country are still genetic freaks.

      I'm assuming you are not suggesting that everyone in Kenya who has partaken in the development program and worked equally hard has achieved the same level of athletic capability!

      If you have data that actually measures how hard athletes work, rather than some weird collectivist notion of indirect inference from national training programs, then please do point to it. Otherwise, you're just making stuff up.

      I have no doubt that British sprinters are lazy, but I equally have no doubt that if British sprinters all worked harder the ones who came out on top would be the genetic freaks: the ones whose bodies are optimized structurally and physiologically for sprinting, and which respond most readily to training.

      It's all about individuals, see, not national averages. Human beings, not vaguely defined groups.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
  263. Poor sod. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    So will you use such sensitive language when telling a female familiar that has lost both ovaries to cancer?

    No you are a neuter! Freak!

    I can actually picture you acting like that....

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  264. Asking stupid questions.... by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    ... is normally prompted by making stupid statement.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  265. wheres ackbar when you need him... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "ITS A TRAP !!!11!!"

  266. IOC rules by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The question is not the formal one of which abstract binary gender concept best contains her, but instead the practical one of whether her genetic/hormonal advantages are the sorts of advantages that males have and proceed from the same sources as those of males.

    The main reason we segregate females from males in athletic competition is because testosterone affords males at elite levels of most sports a tremendous physical advantage over females; alternatively, estrogen creates a significant disadvantage. It's the same reason we ban steroids.

    The IOC has already confronted this issue and determined that it is primarily the effects of testosterone on body fat and muscle tissue that creates the sex-based advantage for males.

    Hence, they ruled that post-pubescent male-to-female transsexuals, for example (who are genetically XY), may compete in the Olympics so long as they have been irrevocably (ie had surgery) and biochemically (ie took hormones) female for at least two years prior to their event. This rule is entirely reasonable because it levels the playing field.

    Not really that difficult an issue here!

    Pasted from http://www.genderlife.com/forum/ubbthreads.php/topics/320181/Re_The_IAAF_and_IOC_rules_on_t.html:

    "C. Sex Reassignmentâ"IOC Consensus Statement
    The IAAF Medical /Anti-Doping Commission has adopted the IOC Medical
    Commissionâ(TM)s statement on sports participation for athletes who have undergone sex
    reassignment.
    1. Before Puberty
    âoeIndividuals undergoing sex reassignment of male to female before puberty
    should be regarded as girls and women.â Similarly, this also applies to female to
    male reassignment, and they should be regarded as boys or men.
    2. After Puberty
    Individuals undergoing sex reassignment from male to female, or the reverse,
    after puberty are eligible to participate in their reassigned gender under the following
    conditions:
    a. Surgical anatomic changes have been completed, including external
    genitalia changes and gonadectomy.
    b. Legal recognition of their assigned sex has been conferred by the
    appropriate official authorities.
    c. Hormonal therapy appropriate for the assigned sex has been administered
    in a verifiable manner and for sufficient length of time to minimise
    gender-related advantages in sport competitions.
    Further guidelines:
    a. Eligibility should begin no sooner than two years after gonadectomy.
    b. A confidential case-by-case evaluation will occur.
    c. In the event that the gender of a competing athlete is questioned, the
    medical delegate (or equivalent) of the relevant sporting body shall
    have the authority to take all appropriate measures for the determination
    of the gender of a competitor."

    1. Re:IOC rules by ILongForDarkness · · Score: 1
      How do you verify that they had the hormone therapy in sufficient quantity for the two years? I'm not sure if the doctors inject these people each time they need it or if they do it themselves. If they miss a estrogen pill/injection once in a while on purpose then it could leave some maleness in them.

      I had a girlfriend that had a growth hormone insufficiency and was given the drugs to inject herself when she was 10 or so, so I suspect the same would be true for a fully grown transgender person.

  267. Wait a sec... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Men built like women are able to compete in events. Look at Tiger Woods.

  268. Two other words: Monty Python by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What do we know about women?
    1. Witches are women
    2. Witches float
    3. Another thing that floats is a duck

    So, weigh her against a duck!

    ...no, wait that'll only prove that she is a woman... dang!

    - Peder

  269. The issue is not her gender/sex by ktjamm · · Score: 1

    The issue is that women compete separately from men. As long as you separate the sexes, they cannot be equal. The fact that we compete separately is in itself sexist. All arguments beyond this would be simply arguing the degree of sexism.

  270. If we can't define this for sports... by BobMcD · · Score: 1

    ...then what does that do to the whole 'gay and lesbian' marriage situation? I mean, if we're not able to sort people with 100% certainty into different sporting event categories, then how are we able to determine that 'marriage is between one man and one woman'? We can't even seem to agree on the difference between the genders. What if there isn't any difference any more?

    This is definitely food for thought for me.

  271. A specific muscle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is a muscle called the bulbospongious which is split in women and a single muscle in men.

  272. only one thing to say by Nyder · · Score: 1

    TITS or GTFO!!!

    --
    Be seeing you...
  273. oh,this is ridiculous by mythandros · · Score: 1

    The ancient greeks are rolling in their graves right now. If she's got two X chromosomes, just drop it. Hell, if it were up to the ancient greeks, they'd just want to know that she didn't have a prong in her trousers.

  274. Re:Doping by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What do you want to bet that the cancer in Lance Armstrong's testicle elevated his testosterone levels ( at least until it was removed ). Or maybe naturally elevated testosterone levels made him especially prone to testicular cancer or some other 'link'. If you have female genitals and were born with them, and do not have male genitals, then you're a female. Your chromasomes have no bearing on this. Whatever shape the chomasomes have - XX, XY, XZ, the phenotype they produced is female. In the case of those with both sets of genitals, they should get to choose.

    Moreover, women's sports are stupid. Sports should not be segregated based on sex. If the best women can't compete at the highest levels with the best men in sports so what? There are things that women do much better. And some games don't have medals and it isn't obvious they are being played. In some games subtlety is key.

  275. Maybe someday we will all be equal! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a wonderful world that would be. http://instruct.westvalley.edu/lafave/hb.html

  276. Ask 'em. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ask them how they prefer to be addressed and treated.

    And then respect their wishes according to the respect they offer you.

    And stop giving people millions of dollars for playing infantile games. That's the stupidity here, that we have made the stakes so high that it's worth arguing about. This confusion over gender identity is a symptom of a problem and not a source of a problem. People shouldn't be forced into pigeonholes so that professional athletes can earn so much money that it destroys them.

    Affluent children play games all day. Adults work to make their world a better place, though they may play games at times for relaxation or for the sheer fun of it. Professional sports players are people who would have been useful, functional adults if we hadn't rewarded them for staying infantile. They are typically quite gifted, at least physically and often in other ways. It's shameful how our culture wastes their talent on childishness.

    Apologies for the lousy grammar.

  277. Rare genetic engin... sorry, disorder by Grail · · Score: 1

    See how our swimmer has her nose on the back of her head, yeah that's a rare genetic disorder.

  278. Top 3 Signs you're not feminine by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    3) You dress like a man
    2) You shave your flat chest
    1) After showing them your vagina, they still don't believe you're a woman