I love watching the track and field, both the men and women. Not much interested in the other stuff.Aliceinbubbleland said:
Lack of interest or is everyone out for the summer. This is one of my prime time favorites every four years.
***** is a dirty word and gets censored but not vagina. What's up with that?Aliceinbubbleland said:
LOL t r a n n y is censored on this absolutely dead conversational board.
Those combinations that you mention are so rare, there is very little chance that they are in the Olympics. Use the chromosome test and it one of those show up, then send it to committee for review.Mr Tulip said:
Sex and gender aren't the same thing. Here, we're talking about a person's sex.
What you have on the outside of your body isn't your genetic sex.
Most of us are familiar with the "XX" or "XY" chromosome pairings (called karyotypes). Those are by far the most common. However, three other "fairly common" karyotypes exist "XXY" "XXXY" and "XYYY". Other combinations are found, but are rare. Most of these combinations will also produce what could be called a "birth defect".
In most instances, these anomalies are wholly unremarkable. However, in sport, they can cause an outwardly appearing "female" (and a person who's comfortable being female, and represents themselves as female) to also have increased muscle fiber and hormones capable of developing that muscle fiber more akin to what a male would have.
Without considering social acceptance, this would be cause to consider competitive balance. The current standard is a testosterone level tests - one that doesn't accuse the athlete of artificially enhancing themselves, but sets a predetermined level of acceptable natural testosterone for competition in the female class.
It isn't an easy question.
NEW: French pole vaulter Anthony Ammirati fails to medal after his "manhood" knocked the bar over.
— Collin Rugg (@CollinRugg) August 3, 2024
Ammiarti was trying to clear the 5.70m bar.
Ammirati had cleared two heights before the unfortunate situation messed him up.
He may have lost the competition, but Ammiarati is… pic.twitter.com/JQdJu1fRqF
Every athlete in the Olympics is "rare". That's why they're there. If the rest of us had a shot, it wouldn't be interesting. It'd be a church social carnival (which, to be fair, can be "interesting" as well).Assassin said:Those combinations that you mention are so rare, there is very little chance that they are in the Olympics. Use the chromosome test and it one of those show up, then send it to committee for review.Mr Tulip said:
Sex and gender aren't the same thing. Here, we're talking about a person's sex.
What you have on the outside of your body isn't your genetic sex.
Most of us are familiar with the "XX" or "XY" chromosome pairings (called karyotypes). Those are by far the most common. However, three other "fairly common" karyotypes exist "XXY" "XXXY" and "XYYY". Other combinations are found, but are rare. Most of these combinations will also produce what could be called a "birth defect".
In most instances, these anomalies are wholly unremarkable. However, in sport, they can cause an outwardly appearing "female" (and a person who's comfortable being female, and represents themselves as female) to also have increased muscle fiber and hormones capable of developing that muscle fiber more akin to what a male would have.
Without considering social acceptance, this would be cause to consider competitive balance. The current standard is a testosterone level tests - one that doesn't accuse the athlete of artificially enhancing themselves, but sets a predetermined level of acceptable natural testosterone for competition in the female class.
It isn't an easy question.
When I was training scuba divers at Texas, we'd obviously be in the presence of the prodigious swim teams. The guys were all built with triangular bodies - large shoulders and narrow waists. When you're wearing a wetsuit, which rolls any fat you have on you (and I had/have plenty) into neat little inner-tube circles around you, it can be intimidating.Aliceinbubbleland said:
My tits are bigger than the female swimmers
I heard one of the Belgians had to drop out due to a case of what the French call "Les Squirts".ScottS said:
Anyone hear about the swimming part of the triathlon?
However it is not fair to the other competitors to include them in the female divisions whatsoever. We just saw what could happen, and did. My hope if that some of these female competitors sue the Olympics for everything that they have. Force this issue.Mr Tulip said:Every athlete in the Olympics is "rare". That's why they're there. If the rest of us had a shot, it wouldn't be interesting. It'd be a church social carnival (which, to be fair, can be "interesting" as well).Assassin said:Those combinations that you mention are so rare, there is very little chance that they are in the Olympics. Use the chromosome test and it one of those show up, then send it to committee for review.Mr Tulip said:
Sex and gender aren't the same thing. Here, we're talking about a person's sex.
What you have on the outside of your body isn't your genetic sex.
Most of us are familiar with the "XX" or "XY" chromosome pairings (called karyotypes). Those are by far the most common. However, three other "fairly common" karyotypes exist "XXY" "XXXY" and "XYYY". Other combinations are found, but are rare. Most of these combinations will also produce what could be called a "birth defect".
In most instances, these anomalies are wholly unremarkable. However, in sport, they can cause an outwardly appearing "female" (and a person who's comfortable being female, and represents themselves as female) to also have increased muscle fiber and hormones capable of developing that muscle fiber more akin to what a male would have.
Without considering social acceptance, this would be cause to consider competitive balance. The current standard is a testosterone level tests - one that doesn't accuse the athlete of artificially enhancing themselves, but sets a predetermined level of acceptable natural testosterone for competition in the female class.
It isn't an easy question.
A "superfemale" (to abuse terms) genetic configuration can give you outward female sex anatomy, but build muscles and hormones like a male. This boxer will meet any non-genetic definition you care to state. I suspect the broader question is whether competitive balance is distorted by including these genetic anomalies in the female category. Since it wouldn't be fair to include them in the male division, it's a rough question.
Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone broke her own world record in the women's 400m hurdles for the SIXTH time 👑 pic.twitter.com/mzuKKd6apo
— ESPN (@espn) August 8, 2024
¡1-2 PARA ESTADOS UNIDOS! 💥🇺🇸
— Telemundo Deportes (@TelemundoSports) August 8, 2024
🥇Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone gana el oro e impone récord mundial en 400m vallas femenino con un tiempo de 50.37, seguida de Anna Cockrell🥈de @TeamUSA.
Femke Bol de Países Bajos 🇳🇱 se queda con bronce🥉#OlimpicosTelemundo #ParisOlympics pic.twitter.com/7uADcLGJaz
US sprinter Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone sets a world record en route to gold for America in the women's 400m hurdles at the Olympics.pic.twitter.com/xgXrfXEEX4
— The American Conservative (@amconmag) August 8, 2024
something I could never do, not for lack of trying. Seemed like my foot was always firmly planted in the middle of the hurdle board. And yes, it could hurt like the dickens when it jumped back off the track and bit ya!Jack Bauer said:
My favorite track athlete - the GOAT does it again! Not even close.¡1-2 PARA ESTADOS UNIDOS! 💥🇺🇸
— Telemundo Deportes (@TelemundoSports) August 8, 2024
🥇Sydney McLaughlin-Levrone gana el oro e impone récord mundial en 400m vallas femenino con un tiempo de 50.37, seguida de Anna Cockrell🥈de @TeamUSA.
Femke Bol de Países Bajos 🇳🇱 se queda con bronce🥉#OlimpicosTelemundo #ParisOlympics pic.twitter.com/7uADcLGJaz
I swear, close your eyes and listen. You'd convince yourself that MICKY MOUSE just won GOLD at @Olympics
— Andrews MemeMania (@Andrew_memes2) August 4, 2024
She's "Femke Bol" Led the Netherlands To a sensational Gold medal in the mixed 4x400m Relay final and Stunned the Team USA at the 2024 Paris Olympics 2024 defeating the… pic.twitter.com/zKqNSQhzNu
I assume she's no relation to Manute Bol....Assassin said:I swear, close your eyes and listen. You'd convince yourself that MICKY MOUSE just won GOLD at @Olympics
— Andrews MemeMania (@Andrew_memes2) August 4, 2024
She's "Femke Bol" Led the Netherlands To a sensational Gold medal in the mixed 4x400m Relay final and Stunned the Team USA at the 2024 Paris Olympics 2024 defeating the… pic.twitter.com/zKqNSQhzNu
"It's not at all what I wanted" - Dutchwoman Femke Bol won bronze in the
— RTÉ Sport (@RTEsport) August 8, 2024
women's 400m hurdles but gave an honest assessment of her performance afterwards to @DavidGillick #RTEsport #Paris2024 pic.twitter.com/pHI9gQbmhR
Femke Bol is UNREAL. 😲
— NBC Olympics & Paralympics (@NBCOlympics) August 3, 2024
She takes GOLD for the Netherlands in the mixed 4x400m relay with a STELLAR 47.93s anchor leg. #ParisOlympics
📺: NBC, USA Network & Peacock pic.twitter.com/44cnSwomUt
Track and Field, man.
— Tim Fritson (@TimFritson) August 27, 2023
The absolute best.
On day one of the World Championships, Femke Bol stumbled and fell face down within 20m of the finish line and lost her country a gold medal.
On the last night, she does this.
Incredible.
https://t.co/GdBArsBcLh
I dont know, they do have some resemblance. Both very tall for their sportswhitetrash said:I assume she's no relation to Manute Bol....Assassin said:I swear, close your eyes and listen. You'd convince yourself that MICKY MOUSE just won GOLD at @Olympics
— Andrews MemeMania (@Andrew_memes2) August 4, 2024
She's "Femke Bol" Led the Netherlands To a sensational Gold medal in the mixed 4x400m Relay final and Stunned the Team USA at the 2024 Paris Olympics 2024 defeating the… pic.twitter.com/zKqNSQhzNu