Photo courtesy of AP Photo
If you were on social media around the time of the Olympics this year, you probably saw the name Imane Khelif in your feed. Khelif is an Algerian boxer who was heavily scrutinized under the pretense of being a transgender woman. This assumption, however, was false. Khelif is a cisgender woman who was assigned female at birth and continues to identify as such. Why is Khelif, the victim of this controversy, still the subject of public ire? Simple, because she’s not “woman enough” to meet the demands of some people.
Being perceived as “woman enough” often depends on presenting a certain way or having enough of a connection to womanhood to be considered a woman. Womanhood, however, is an intangible idea and a moveable goalpost that has been used to attack anyone and everyone who people don’t like for any one reason. Khelif’s birth certificate confirms she was born a woman, yet she was denied her womanhood when transgender suspicions were cast on her for dominating a boxing match against another woman.
Gender is not limited to one expression. A woman who wears dresses, heels and heavy makeup is just as much of a woman as one who wears suits and flats, just as a man who wears flannel is as much of a man as one who wears V-necks. The concept that people, women especially, must look and behave a certain way is one that feminists have been fighting for a long time. Time and time again, people have used this idea to ridicule people who don’t conform to their preconceived notion.
While done with the claimed intent of “protecting women,” this “transvestigation,” as it has been dubbed on X, results in a slap in the face to women worldwide. When a woman is accused of being a man because she is too strong, too smart or too fast, all it does is hammer in the sexist idea that women cannot be as strong as men and that women are biologically inferior to men. These sexist expectations affect the daily lives of countless women.
In Texas in 2016, a man followed a woman into a bathroom because she didn’t “look like a woman.” She was wearing a baseball cap and had short hair. In 2023, Michelle Peacock was murdered outside her apartment building because her neighbor suspected she was “a male acting like a woman.” Similarly to Khelif, these women were villainized and harassed for not fitting the stereotype of what a “woman” should be.
The main reason many women in the athletic field are accused of being transgender is due to having higher levels of testosterone than the average woman. However, this claim has no weight, as testosterone levels naturally vary in women. Additionally, many women have higher testosterone levels due to a condition called polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS).
This condition affects approximately 8-13% of women, according to the World Health Organization, with 70% of cases being undiagnosed. For those with PCOS, the ovary glands produce too many androgens (sex hormones), including testosterone. Some women take medicine to help regulate it, but as most cases are undiagnosed, many women don’t know they have it. Having PCOS doesn’t make anyone less of a woman, it simply makes them a woman with a medical condition.
The truth is, it wouldn’t really matter whether these women were transgender. Transgender people don’t transition to gain an athletic advantage, they do it to fulfill their gender identity.
They deserve to play the same sport that they played prior to their transition. Plenty of transgender athletes who start out as mediocre in their old league remain mediocre in their new one.
If you truly believe that men and women are of equal ability and equal opportunity, there should be no issue with a transgender athlete playing in a league with cisgender athletes.
No single experience can define womanhood, just as no single experience can define manhood. Gender and personhood are concepts that vary between individuals. The misogynistic and transphobic notion that people must appear and behave in a way that fits the popular perception of their assigned gender is harmful to us all.
It’s best for everyone to let people do what fulfills them rather than wasting time and energy policing them on their own experiences.
TCW • Sep 27, 2024 at 3:50 pm
It’s a scientific fact that the abilities of men and women are different. So, I don’t believe that “if you truly believe that men and women are of equal ability and equal opportunity, there should be no issue with a transgender athlete playing in a league with cisgender athletes.”
Slipping ‘opportunity’ into the argument is a cheap and disingenuous trick. It has nothing to do with sport. Ability does. And Serena Williams – arguably and statistically the greatest female tennis player of all time said herself – she wouldn’t even rank if she played in the mens leauges.
If you were born a man but later identify as a woman. That doesn’t change the fundamental building blocks of your makeup. How you identify, the way you want to be treated, your self perception, the relationships you have – have absolutely nothing to do with entering into a physically competitive competition. Society and sport are two separate entities that people have decided to merge and argue have overlapping social issues.
Trangender people have to come to terms with the fact that they exist on this spectrum of sexuality that is outside of the ‘average’ or ‘norm’. Saying nothing about whether it’s right or wrong. They wanted a flag, a set of letters to group themselves into, they want a pride festival to differentiate themselves from standard genders. But then. throw all of that recognition out the window when it comes to sport.
Saying ,then, that you are no different and place the emphasis of oppression on anyone who questions that is again, disingenuous and moving the goalposts of rationality.
I DO NOT CARE who you want to be, how you want to be seen. If it makes you feel better being seen as male or female, contradictory to your gender at birth. Fine. There are no consequences and it’s no issue to me. But when other people are involved, in a competitive situation that hinges on physical ability – then your DNA determines your ability.
As an average male Tennis player, if I chose to say that I am now a woman, slap on some eyeliner and painted nails and force my way into a female tournament. I have a natural advantage. It’s not fair.
This isn’t or shouldn’t be an ongoing argument. Tran-people when entering a competition hinging on physical ability should be defined by their DNA and Chromosomes. i.e. Their birth gender.
I’ll call you ‘she/her/him/he’ if it makes you more comfortable. But don’t claim that huge upper body strength advantage your genes afford, don’t make a difference.