We need to be asking, fair to whom?
The Nation for some reason decided to publish an article by a they/them called Frankie de la Cretaz who has nothing but contempt and hostility for women.
In 2021, the Department of Education announced a formal review of the way Title IX was enforced. The goal was ostensibly to come up with an interpretation of the law that protects transgender students from discrimination.
The proposal unveiled on Thursday, to put it mildly, does not meet that goal. Instead, under the cover of a ban on what it calls “one-size-fits-all” anti-trans policies, it makes explicit allowances for restrictions on trans participation in sports to ensure what it describes as “fairness in competition” and “preventing sports-related injury.” Even observers inclined to be generous to the Biden administration about the proposal acknowledge that it would allow for targeted bans against trans students, particularly in high school.
Male trans students, they means but of course doesn’t say. It always always always has to be concealed that the people being championed in these polemics are male people who want to displace and cheat women.
…it’s important to understand these terms for what they are: transphobic talking points that have been honed and weaponized by anti-trans groups. They sound reasonable but they are incredibly insidious—and now they are being used by a supposedly trans-friendly administration to justify its endorsement of anti-trans policies.
Yes it’s just so incredibly insidious to try to protect women’s sports and the women who play them. The not insidious thing to do would be to sit back and watch cheerfully as men destroy women sports and injure the women who play them.
Title IX, because of the way it is written, allows for this kind of discrimination against transgender athletes, and transgender girls and women, in particular. That’s because when Title IX was passed, the need for its existence relied on arguments that there were biological differences between girls and boys, which created a need for separate divisions.
Ah yes those silly obsolete arguments of yesteryear that there are biological differences between girls and boys. Isn’t it glorious to live now, when we know so much better??
It made the definition of “girlhood” reliant on a body, rather than on a concept of gender. These arguments, built into the very fabric of Title IX itself, allow for the protection of cisgender girls to be maintained at the expense of transgender girls.
At the expense of. We’re so rude, so greedy, so callous, so heartless, protecting girls at the expense of boys.
Let’s examine the two concepts the DOE leaned on to justify the discrimination against trans kids. The first is “fairness in sports.” This is a red herring, an elusive and unattainable concept. Sports are inherently unfair.
…
When anti-trans groups harp on the issue of fairness, they are framing the issue in a misleading way. We need to be asking, fair to whom? When we think about fairness we should think about justice, which requires centering the most marginalized people in the room—and that is transgender women and girls. It is that group that we should be most concerned about including, rather than making rules at their expense.
Men who claim to be women are the most marginalized people in the room. Women who are mere women however are the least marginalized people in this particular room. Men are at the mercy of all-powerful women. Who knew?
The rule’s second anti-trans loophole, the supposed prevention of sports-related injury, implies that transgender women and girls are inherently bigger and stronger than cisgender girls, and that cisgender girls will be harmed if trans girls are allowed to compete. There is no evidence to support this. All sports come with the risk of injury and a cis girl is just as likely to be injured by a larger cis girl than she is by a trans girl on the field.
A girl is just as likely to be injured by a larger girl as she is by a man on the field? No. That’s just a lie.
The Biden administration has capitulated to well-worn anti-trans talking points, ones which transgender advocates have spent years trying to dismantle. These arguments, which transphobic groups frame as “protecting girls,” actually put our most vulnerable girls at risk by harming trans girls. If you want to protect women and girls, you need to be protecting all women and girls, not just the ones you deem worthy of protection, and not at the expense of the group of people most likely to be the victims of discrimination and violence.
If you want to protect workers, you need to be protecting all workers, not just the ones who work in factories and meatpacking plants, and not at the expense of the group of people who make the rules and pay their workers as little as they can.
The Nation should be embarrassed to publish this dreck.
While it is true that some ‘girls’ are larger than others, that is not the only thing that gives males an advantage. (I don’t have to say that here, I’m sure, but I need to vent.) There are so many ways it is unfair, dangerous, and insulting.
I wonder if anyone has realized that the reason they have had to take so long to dismantle our arguments is that our arguments are too solid to be dismantled using cooked spaghetti as your tool? Maybe if you had a hammer and chisel, you could dismantle our arguments.
That the Biden administration added to their Title IX policy announcement that schools could discriminate on grounds of ensuring fairness in women’s sport gives the game away, as well as passing the buck to schools to actually do it. That the TWAW brayers aren’t satisfied with this is not surprising in the least. What Biden obviously wants here is to neither alienate women who aren’t happy with what trans activists want or upset younger progressive voters who are presently sympathetic to transgenderism and vote Democratic. It might work until the 2024 election, it might not, but it’s the path of least resistance for now politically.
Cool, then they can accept that T blocking will result in a loss of performance against their male peers with good grace. Right?
No. (Un)fairness is a one way street, and women are the ones that have to wear it:
I think here again the distinction between “disproportionate advantage” and “category advantage”, as described by Jon Pike in his recent paper, become important. We don’t look at individual adults to see if they are within the skill capabilities of children before deciding whether these particular adults are allowed to participate in children’s sports, we have separate categories for children based on the idea that children have abilities and needs different from adults, and beyond that we don’t test any further. Age grouping is a category advantage. Sex grouping is also a category advantage.
NPR recently interviewed an endocrinologist (why not a sports physiologist?) who basically shrugged his shoulders and said “We simply don’t know” regarding trans athletes having an advantage against “cis” athletes, again missing the point. We do know that men have significant advantages against women, and we have sex grouping in sports partly (partly!!!) for that reason. It isn’t “trans versus cis”, but “men versus women”. They are arguing that men should be allowed to compete in the women’s division, but only those extra-special men who claim to be women, not other men. Some people are explicitly arguing that all sex divisions should go away, but most do not seem to realize that’s what they are arguing, ultimately.
I know, that’s why I said “Male trans students, they means but of course doesn’t say. It always always always has to be concealed that the people being championed in these polemics are male people who want to displace and cheat women.” They ALWAYS do that and I ALWAYS correct it. It’s so sneaky and dishonest. It drives me crazy.
[…] a comment by Sackbut on We need to be asking “fair to […]
In 2016 Britni de la Cretaz described herself as ‘a freelance writer’ and ‘feminist momma’. At a roundtable posted on a feminist website she mentioned that she had been a gymnast when she was a child; she said that she had had ‘a ton of internalized misogyny’. Britni had a blog; in 2016 her strapline was ‘I believe in shattering stigma and changing the world through the power of storytelling. I write on the intersections of feminism, sports, addiction, and parenting.’ By mid-2017 she was introducing herself on her ‘about’ page as ‘Britni (she/her); she continued to refer to herself as a feminist. By mid-2020 she seems to have ceased to describe herself as a feminist, but she referred to herself in the third person by feminine pronouns. By March 2021 she had become a ‘they’. And a year later Britni became Frankie. Who has now turned her internalized misogyny outwards, protesting against rules that as she admits, ‘allow for the protection of cisgender girls’ in sports. A sad and troubling story.
So that ton of internalized misogyny is still there. Oy.
This is a gift. This article makes clear how irrational TRAs’ claims are. And how misogynistic; transwomen and girls are the most marginalized, who cares about transmen and boys. Leaping from fairness to justice is a failed attempt at sleight of hand to hide that what they want isn’t fair. If it was, they could just talk about fairness and if there were no meaningful physical difference between men and women, they could argue fairness instead of having to appeal to justice. The vast majority of people on the street will laugh in your face if you say that there is no physical difference between males and females.
Has anyone found stories of transgirls being assaulted by their male teammates, any more than gay and straight teammates are? Any evidence that transwomen are unsafe in men’s locker rooms and athletic fields? Transpires being injured or hospitalized playindcon male teams? I haven’t heard of any.
“All sports come with the risk of injury and a cis girl is just as likely to be injured by a larger cis girl than she is by a trans girl on the field.”
Farkin’ Hell! That’s at least two lies folded into one sentence.
First, of course, it ignores that allowing trans girls “on the field” mean that the girl in question is more likely to face an opponent who is larger and stronger than she is. So it’s a subtle misdirection, there.
And at the same time, it’s also a goddamned straight-up lie. We’ve got studies that show that even if you balance out for weight and height, girls’ bones tend to be smaller and break more easily, than their male peers–and that this is as true of trans girls as it is of guys who never once considered donning a bit of make-up.
Ophelia @#8
Yes, she still hates women. A lot. But she doesn’t have to hate herself for being a woman any more, because she has changed her ‘identity’. Or maybe she imagines she has discovered her ‘true identity’. Hey presto! – escape from the stigma of womanhood.
Why do I have that old oompa-loompa song running through my head? Perhaps because I can’t stop speculating on how much abuse she must have suffered as a child to make her hate her own sex so much. What kind of family did she come from? Why does she write about becoming a drunk at 17, about sleeping with men for drugs, but not about mommy and daddy?
https://www.cosmopolitan.com/author/12721/britni-de-la-cretaz/
Perhaps we should just say it’s all part of her Gender Journey.
https://medium.com/the-millennial-freelancer/britni-de-la-cretaz-23df8efcc6d9
So I guess if a straight white woman wants to write about marginalized communities, because social justice, she has to marginalize herself. The easiest way to do that is to self-identify into the imaginary marginalized community, the only one for which inclusion is entirely subjective.
Queer. What does it mean? Does it mean “unhappy, so I want to say I’m marginalized?”
https://jezebel.com/writing-my-book-about-women-football-players-helped-me-1848296808
The Gender Journey took a stop at the bank.
https://www.autostraddle.com/my-gender-is-maximalism/
I’m glad I grew up before the internet did. It must be exhausting to have no self-concept that isn’t reliant on other people you only know from their pictures.
It seems so desperate to live your life for show. I get compliments on how I’ve decorated my house, but I haven’t posted any pictures of it online. I guess if I did, I’d have to be “queer” to get enough clicks to make it worth it.
So why in hell did the Nation publish this horrific piece by this confused woman-hating fanatic?
@Ophelia #`13, because that kind of flapdoodle is very popular among lefties these days. That’s all of it. No further reason required. Clicks get bucks, so give the people what they want. Manufactured outrage for made-up oppression of luxury beliefs.
Do you have a subscription to The Nation? I don’t. I have a subscription to The Economist.
https://www.economist.com/weeklyedition/2023-04-08
But the Nation isn’t your average go for the bucks type magazine. If it were it would be a very different kind of magazine.
I imagine at least some of the editors have bought into the “more progressive than thou, more marginalized than thou” story. I imagine they honestly believe they are doing “feminism” by supporting “transwomen” over women. I imagine the rest of the editorial staff is just willing to go along.
Katha Pollitt has other ideas, though. She’s a gem.