There is a really, really good reason why women’s sports are separate from men’s sports. In virtually every team sport, if men and women had co-ed teams there would be zero women playing on those teams. And in most individual sports women would never get close to making the cut, never mind medaling or getting a scholarship or a decent paycheck. Men are simply on average so much bigger, faster and stronger than women, that even the very best women athletes cannot compete.
This is not even debatable.
I regularly play pickup basketball with a couple different groups of guys aged 18 to 60, with most of them in the age range of 30 to 40. I would wager that my twelve best pick-up players could hold their own against the professional Women’s National Basketball Association championship team.
Really? Yes, really.
The best college and professional women’s teams recruit squads of men — mostly former high school players — to practice against. The expectation is that practicing against bigger, stronger and faster men will challenge them to develop their skills so that playing against women will be easier.
The U.S. Soccer Women’s National Team (USWNT) regularly dominates other women in international play. But in a practice game in 2017 they lost 5-2 to the FC Dallas U-15 boys soccer team. That’s right, a group of boys aged 15 and younger beat the world’s best professional women’s soccer team. After the game, the USWNT players attributed the loss to the fact that the U-15 boys were “bigger, stronger, faster.”
In professional tennis, the Williams sisters — widely regarded as two of the best women to ever play the sport — boasted that they could beat any professional male tennis player ranked below 200 in the world. German player Karsten Braasch, at the time ranked #203, accepted their challenge. He beat each of them decisively in two back-to-back single-set matches, with scores of 6-2 and 6-1.
The bottom line is that women must have their own separate sports leagues if they ever want to win a trophy, get a decent paycheck, or even see the field.
Now that we’ve established the necessity of separate women’s sports, it follows that biological males shouldn’t be allowed in women’s sports because it is fundamentally unfair for a man to occupy a roster spot on a women’s team, or to deprive a woman of a medal or trophy in a women’s competition. Unfortunately, such blatant unfairness is not rare. A U.N. report found that nearly 900 medals have already been stolen by biological males in women’s competitions. Hardly a day goes by without a news article about a biological male that is playing on a woman’s sports team.
Not only is it unfair to individual women, but any team or institution that puts forward a biological male to compete in a woman’s sporting event is cheating. This is true even if the biological male is not good enough to compete successfully against men, which is generally the case. They are still usually good enough to win against women, and to elevate the cheating team over teams that aren’t cheating.
Fielding biological men against women is not only unfair and a form of cheating, but it is also dangerous. There are already many documented cases of males competing against females in a women’s sport where females have been injured by the biological male. Pitting bigger and stronger men against women inevitably leads to injuries that would not have happened otherwise.
Some argue that biological males who start taking dangerous body chemistry-altering drugs (puberty blockers and hormones) at a young age should be allowed to compete against women. No way. It is a reprehensible crime — a horrific form of child abuse — to put a gender-confused child on such drugs. Therefore, biological males should never be chemically castrated and should never compete in women’s sports based on such deplorable criteria.
Changing gender is a biologic impossibility. And it is beyond barbaric to chemically castrate or mutilate children when their undeveloped brains and easily swayed psyches experience gender confusion.
It is way past time to stop the insanity. We owe it to vulnerable children and to women everywhere to stand against gender insanity and against men cheating women in women’s sports.