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Olympics: Male Boxer Imane Khelif Wins Gold in Female Boxing Welterweight Division

Olympics: Male Boxer Imane Khelif Wins Gold in Female Boxing Welterweight Division

When will the world listen?!

Algerian male boxer Imane Khelif defeated Chinese boxer Yang Liu to win the gold medal in the female boxing welterweight division.

Yes.

A male, a person with XY chromosomes, won a gold medal in the female division of a sport.

The International Boxing Association (IBA) disqualified Khelif and Taiwanese male boxer Lin Yu-Ting after two sex tests showed they have XY chromosomes.

Lin fights for the gold in the featherweight division tomorrow.

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Comments

Case in point. The Olympic Games have become a joke.

A heavyweight should just identify as a featherweight.

Bayes’s theorem ought to settle it. If an unusual sexual development lets you beat all the women, then it’s giving you an unfair advantage. You won’t be wrong with that rule very often. It’s too much of a coincidence.

    Concise in reply to rhhardin. | August 9, 2024 at 8:15 pm

    Being born male is an unusual sexual development?

      DaveGinOly in reply to Concise. | August 10, 2024 at 12:03 am

      Khelif was apparently “identified” as female at birth for not having external male genitalia. This forms the basis of his claim to be “female.” This is both the result of “unusual sexual development” and a mistake by the physician who attended his birth. (Kehlif claims to have been subsequently raised as a female. But a human child raised by wolves does not become a wolf, yes?) A cursory and superficial examination of a new born shouldn’t be considered a medical fact nor a definitive scientific conclusion. The IOC was plainly wrong to accept this error as “fact” and to reject the genetic testing that conclusively determined that Khelif is male, no matter his abnormal ontogeny.

        Most infants with AIS look just like any other female infants. Pediatricians and neonatologists don’t typically perform scans on healthy female infants looking for the presence of a uterus, ovaries or vagina. Thus infants with AIS are almost always raised as girls. They live typical “little girl” lives until the age of puberty when the child’s physician performs testing because the girls don’t develop secondary sexual characteristics. Only then are the parents and their daughters given the shocking news of their rare hereditary condition.

        The following is from a link:

        A key cause of hyperandrogenism is androgen insensitivity syndrome (AIS). It occurs when an embryo is born XY (male) but resistant to male hormones, subsequently developing with some or all of the conventional physical traits of a woman. Babies with this presentation are routinely raised as girls and develop into women according to prevailing social norms.

        However, in developed countries there typically comes a point at which they are diagnosed as having AIS, such as by an investigation for the absence of menstruation, or infertility.

        Those with AIS may have different gender identities; should they choose, hormonal treatments can be used to better reflect that disposition. Some may also consider surgery in scenarios where health and psychological outcomes are beneficial.

        Women who have AIS are not “obvious” by way of physical appearance. Many are tall and slim, just as women without the syndrome. Most – like Spanish hurdler Maria Jose Martinez-Patino, who failed a chromosome test in 1986 – had no idea their status as an adult woman was anything but conventional.

        https://theconversation.com/fair-play-at-the-olympics-testosterone-and-female-athletes-60156

          DaveGinOly in reply to bev. | August 10, 2024 at 2:43 pm

          While that’s all true, it doesn’t change the fact that the determination of his sex was mistaken at birth nor does it make of him a biological male. His biological “maleness” remains a fact, before and after the genetic testing that concluded the issue; how he was raised and how regards himself and how others close to him regard him notwithstanding. All the belief in the world doesn’t change facts.

        Concise in reply to DaveGinOly. | August 10, 2024 at 10:19 am

        I suppose that may be possible, but I would question whether it accurately represent the facts. Are there internal manifestations? Or is all just bovine scatology? But I’ll leave the research to someone else. I’m still willing to bet a considerable fortune that this this guy has no ovaries He can’t. Because he is a man. .

    Dimsdale in reply to rhhardin. | August 10, 2024 at 12:40 am

    Male boxer Imane Khelif will return to his job in Algeria, kicking puppies and small children.

    And Algeria is so proud for some reason. Did they win anything at the Olympics before they started letting men beat up women?

      Concise in reply to Dimsdale. | August 10, 2024 at 10:21 am

      The only thing women can do is refuse to compete. Just drop out. Not fair but those in charge are intent on forcing their agenda so all women can do is protest by boycotting these events.

    DaveGinOly in reply to rhhardin. | August 10, 2024 at 2:47 pm

    Yes. Because both having such unusual sexual development and having the talent (nurtured by proper training) to become a champion boxer in your weight class are each so rare, the probability of manifesting both in the same person, without the two circumstances being related, is extremely small.

ThePrimordialOrderedPair | August 9, 2024 at 6:53 pm

It was a fair fight. While he had clear physical advantages, Khelif had to fight the gold medal bout with an erection the entire time.

Grrrrrrl power! 🙄

His coaches know he’s male, his country knows he’s male. They just don’t give a shit because they like the fact he’s allowed to beat on women.

Disgusting

At the beginning of the Olympics, Imane Khelif confidently bragged that he was going to take on the women and defeat them all, and XY did. Maybe in future Olympics it will be possible for an XX chromosome woman to win a gold medal in boxing.

The Paris Olympics seem to have been visualized as a glorification of the guys-make-better-women-than-females theory. They certainly win more boxing bouts. Pretty lucky no woman was seriously hurt. Parisians must be so proud.

ThePrimordialOrderedPair | August 9, 2024 at 8:31 pm

Andy Kaufman is unimpressed.

IOC boss says there’s no solid scientific way to tell who is a woman.

The 4th place men’s basketball team should, next time, become women. What fools for their lack of foresight.

    Funny, race is a construct but they confidently make the distinction when a ‘white’ person gets caught faking a ‘colored’ identity.

      Dimsdale in reply to tbonesays. | August 10, 2024 at 1:00 am

      Well, not until the evidence is overwhelming, e.g. Fauxcohontas Warren, Rachel Dolezal, and Ward Churchill to name a few.

      Funny how they always seem to be Democrats…

    All it would take to stop this nonsense (in this country, at least) would be HS and collegiate jocks at schools across the country to declare themselves “female,” try out for all the girls’/women’s teams, and sideline nearly all the biological females at their schools. The sudden and nearly complete destruction of scholastic sports as a place for female athletes will shock authorities into action as the backlash and anger will be fierce.

healthguyfsu | August 9, 2024 at 8:45 pm

Looks like the “girl” in Rebel Moon

It’s too bad they don’t have the sort of grand entrances for the fighters that they have in professional boxing.

Woulda been great for Yang Liu to enter with Tom Jones’ “She’s A Lady” blasting throughout the arena.

which is why among many reasons
I haven’t watched any of the games.

Taxpayer-funded abortion.

There – that will satisfy American feminists and keep them quiet.

he didn’t ” win ” a damned thing–he scammed the ioc, the judges, the refs, his opponents–just like all the dei frauds in this country albeit with a ” trans ” ribbon–disgusting

Juda only won silver…