Personal journey
Oliver Brown in The Telegraph:
… when I described Blair Hamilton, a transgender goalkeeper signed for Sutton United Women by a transgender manager, as a biological male in these pages last September, the player complained to the Independent Press Standards Organisation (IPSO) that the label constituted a “transphobic dog whistle”. According to this argument, the description disregarded Hamilton’s “lived experience and affirmed gender identity”, not to mention “personal journey as a transgender woman”.
Six months on, the press watchdog has rejected this complaint, instead determining that The Telegraph’s use of the term was “genuinely relevant” to the issues raised by a biologically male goalkeeper competing for a female football team. “The committee did not consider that the term in the context in which it had been used was belittling or demeaning to the complainant, nor insulting in a manner that it considered pejorative or prejudicial,” it added.
Well hallefuckingjulah. At last.
The verdict marks a significant watershed. It can seem sometimes in this debate as if we have passed through the looking glass, with years of pandering to self-ID lobbyists threatening a situation where athletes had to be accepted as whatever sex they purported to be. Somehow, this fallacy reached the highest levels of global sport, with the International Olympic Committee’s former medical director Dr Richard Budgett infamously declaring in 2021: “Everybody accepts that trans women are women.”
Nuh UH. Lots of us don’t. Most of us don’t. And you know why? Because they aren’t.
Welcoming The Telegraph’s vindication, Reem Alsalem, the United Nations special rapporteur on violence against women and girls, said of IPSO’s “genuinely relevant” finding: “Sports encapsulate the relevance in very compelling ways. I still can’t believe that biological sex is considered in many circles to be equivalent to the N-word: heretical, outdated, delusional, irrelevant, and hateful. This in 2025.”
…
The IPSO ruling places the immutable laws of human biology above emotive personal testimony. Hamilton, who in addition to being a goalkeeper in a women’s team is an academic specialising in the impact of gender-affirmative care on the athletic performance of transgender athletes, had appealed for a definition of womanhood “beyond mere anatomy”…
“Mere” anatomy ffs. Ok buster, get rid of all your bones, see how “mere” anatomy is then. Go on, I dare you.
For too long, there has been a form of coerced speech on this subject, where pronouns mattered more than practicalities, where affirmation was prized above accuracy. It is still enraging to recall Thomas Bach, the outgoing IOC president, declaring at the height of last summer’s boxing scandal at the Paris Olympics that womanhood could somehow be validated by an “F” in an athlete’s passport.
Yeah it is. Just ask Angela Carini.
Now journalists should no longer feel cowed into toeing the activists’ line. It is critical that all reporters seeking to report the science are not intimidated into falsifying reality or into fooling their readership. I hope, too, that this IPSO decision has repercussions beyond the industry. I know of academics who have been furiously rebuked within their profession for going down the “biological male” route, even when they are guilty of nothing more than the faithful recording of facts. So, let us throw out the reflexive accusations of transphobia once and for all. This, ultimately, is about honest and transparent reporting of an issue at the heart of fair play. “Transphobic dog whistle”? How about just settling for the truth?
Goddam right. Truth matters.
Hooray! And this will also, I hope, help to suck the wind out of the sails of the right-wing culture wars.
Send him to M. Munigant. (cf Ray Bradbury, “Skeleton”.)
I suppose that’s just lawyerly precaution, but it makes it sound like the term “biological male” can be “pejorative or prejudicial” in some contexts. The only such context that occurs to me is if it’s applied to someone who is, in fact, biologically female. Otherwise, it seems like a simple statement of fact.
A lot of words can be pejorative or belittling, if used that way. “Not too bad, for a GIRL” can be stating a fact, that the person is a girl, but it’s said with a sneer and implications.