In Bejing the Chinesse have set up a clinic to physically exam the genitals of any female athlete excpected of being a transgender. They will also do genetic and chromosomal testing.
Christine Gwynn the trans. doctor was sited in the NY Times article. She commented on how diverse the genetic spectrum really is and how hard it will be to discern if a woman was born a certain way or completely transgender.
The article is in the the wed July 30 New York Times. Maybe someone could find/post it.
Gotta run-
Chilli
Chinese have set up a clinic.
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chilliwilli (imported)
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Re: Chinese have set up a clinic.
This bit of "show me your goodies" might not get them too far, though...
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mrt (imported)
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Re: Chinese have set up a clinic.
Paolo wrote: Fri Aug 01, 2008 5:26 am This bit of "show me your goodies" might not get them too far, though...
Which btw way was my most irrational fear that the MOM event last year would conclude with a "Show us your (lack of) Balls!" Or maybe it was the wooden spoon to the crotch area to test for full membership. Err ahh is that Dismembership?!
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JesusA (imported)
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Re: Chinese have set up a clinic.
An excellent article by one of my favorite bioethicists on this question. Published today. Check out, too, the article from the last link....
Olympic Problems with Sex Testing
BY ALICE DREGER
The Bioethics Forum
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Ah, Beijing, where men are men and women are women until proven otherwise. As reported in the New York Times, Organizers of the Beijing Olympics have set up a sex-determination laboratory to evaluate suspect female athletes. According to the Times, only athletes whose gender has been questioned will be tested in Beijing. This approach betrays fuzzy-headed thinking of well, of Olympic proportions. So Im laying out here my questions to the Olympic officials involved in this business, in the hopes someone on the inside will send them along.
But first, lets get the language straight. These are not gender tests, theyre sex tests. The officials dont need to test for gender, since gender is about social role and self-identification. And the concern of the Olympic testers is not social role or self-identification, its biology. Theyre concerned that some women athletes might really have male anatomy that would give them an unfair advantage. So, heres what I would like to know from those charged with sex policing for the Olympics:
1. If youre so worried about some women athletes really being male, why not test all women athletes? Not doing blanket testing seems to allow sex-suspicion to be used as a way to psychologically undermine opponents. Can you imagine if, as youre competing, youre worried about whether winning also means having Olympic officials declare you a man? (Hey, girlfriend, if you dare to pull ahead me, youll be facing a sex test.) If you know anything about what happened to the Spanish hurdler Maria José Martínez Patino ( http://www.time.com/time/magazine/artic ... 37,00.html), youd be sensible to worry. She never saw coming the claim that she was a man nor should she have, since she wasnt a man, as Olympic officials figured out after they had made her life a living hell ( http://www.medhelp.org/ais/articles/MARIA.HTM).
2. If you think that naturally having, say, a higher level of androgens (masculinizing hormones) gives a woman athlete an unfair advantage, why not also declare athletes who naturally have stronger immune systems to also have an unfair advantage? Might you also consider testing and disqualifying those athletes who process oxygen especially well? Perhaps only allowing clones would solve this problem.
3. How exactly do you plan to decide who does and doesnt count as a female? Could you please state your criteria at the outset so that athletes at least know there is a clear and consistent policy, one which could then be open to scientific criticism? Okay, the New York Times reports that the evaluation will take into account an athletes external appearance, hormones and genes. But lets break these down:
external appearance: I presume here youre referring to genital anatomy, since you surely know from gymnastics that flat-chestedness is not a good diagnostic criteria for sex. So, could you specify how long a clitoris has to be before it arouses suspicion? And are you aware that clitoral length naturally varies substantially in women ( http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15842291)? Maybe you should just re-run the Olympics the way the original ran: naked. Then wed all get to decide who counts as what, and wed get also a good education in how much sex anatomy varies. (Plus, I admit, I might be more inclined to watch the games, especially the mens high jump.)
hormones: Males and females, as you know, both produce androgens (the hormones with which you are concerned); the average female just has less coursing through her body than the average male. So tell us: Where exactly do you plan to socially construct the line of sex appropriateness in terms of androgens? And will you be hormone-testing men athletes to make sure those men who naturally produce far more androgens than their peers are disqualified for being too androgenized to compete in their class?
genes: Well, at least youre no longer talking about sex chromosomes. So youve figured out, I guess, that a person with XX chromosomes can essentially develop as a male (as happens if the SRY gene is translocated onto an X), and that a person with XY chromosomes can essentially develop as a female (for example, if she has complete androgen insensitivity syndrome). But what exactly do you think looking at the genes is going to tell you that will disqualify a woman?
4. If women arent allowed to be naturally too strong, how about sex-testing male athletes for being too graceful in sports where grace counts? Im thinking diving. And figure-skating. If a diver or figure-skater who is a man seems a little too graceful, why not sex-test him to see if hes really a female? That way we can be sure to really police gender in the name of sport.
5. When are you going to figure out you cant fool Mother Nature? You keep trying to catch her and stick all of her offspring into one of two simplistic categories. But shes just more tolerant ( http://www.bioethicsforum.org/20060608adreger.asp) than you of sex variation. [This last link is to an outstanding article on sex and gender variation among humans. HIGHLY recommended! JA]
Give it up, boys. Just let the girls play already. Sex-testing isnt the sport we came to watch.
http://www.bioethicsforum.org/sex-testing-Olympics.asp
Olympic Problems with Sex Testing
BY ALICE DREGER
The Bioethics Forum
Thursday, July 31, 2008
Ah, Beijing, where men are men and women are women until proven otherwise. As reported in the New York Times, Organizers of the Beijing Olympics have set up a sex-determination laboratory to evaluate suspect female athletes. According to the Times, only athletes whose gender has been questioned will be tested in Beijing. This approach betrays fuzzy-headed thinking of well, of Olympic proportions. So Im laying out here my questions to the Olympic officials involved in this business, in the hopes someone on the inside will send them along.
But first, lets get the language straight. These are not gender tests, theyre sex tests. The officials dont need to test for gender, since gender is about social role and self-identification. And the concern of the Olympic testers is not social role or self-identification, its biology. Theyre concerned that some women athletes might really have male anatomy that would give them an unfair advantage. So, heres what I would like to know from those charged with sex policing for the Olympics:
1. If youre so worried about some women athletes really being male, why not test all women athletes? Not doing blanket testing seems to allow sex-suspicion to be used as a way to psychologically undermine opponents. Can you imagine if, as youre competing, youre worried about whether winning also means having Olympic officials declare you a man? (Hey, girlfriend, if you dare to pull ahead me, youll be facing a sex test.) If you know anything about what happened to the Spanish hurdler Maria José Martínez Patino ( http://www.time.com/time/magazine/artic ... 37,00.html), youd be sensible to worry. She never saw coming the claim that she was a man nor should she have, since she wasnt a man, as Olympic officials figured out after they had made her life a living hell ( http://www.medhelp.org/ais/articles/MARIA.HTM).
2. If you think that naturally having, say, a higher level of androgens (masculinizing hormones) gives a woman athlete an unfair advantage, why not also declare athletes who naturally have stronger immune systems to also have an unfair advantage? Might you also consider testing and disqualifying those athletes who process oxygen especially well? Perhaps only allowing clones would solve this problem.
3. How exactly do you plan to decide who does and doesnt count as a female? Could you please state your criteria at the outset so that athletes at least know there is a clear and consistent policy, one which could then be open to scientific criticism? Okay, the New York Times reports that the evaluation will take into account an athletes external appearance, hormones and genes. But lets break these down:
external appearance: I presume here youre referring to genital anatomy, since you surely know from gymnastics that flat-chestedness is not a good diagnostic criteria for sex. So, could you specify how long a clitoris has to be before it arouses suspicion? And are you aware that clitoral length naturally varies substantially in women ( http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15842291)? Maybe you should just re-run the Olympics the way the original ran: naked. Then wed all get to decide who counts as what, and wed get also a good education in how much sex anatomy varies. (Plus, I admit, I might be more inclined to watch the games, especially the mens high jump.)
hormones: Males and females, as you know, both produce androgens (the hormones with which you are concerned); the average female just has less coursing through her body than the average male. So tell us: Where exactly do you plan to socially construct the line of sex appropriateness in terms of androgens? And will you be hormone-testing men athletes to make sure those men who naturally produce far more androgens than their peers are disqualified for being too androgenized to compete in their class?
genes: Well, at least youre no longer talking about sex chromosomes. So youve figured out, I guess, that a person with XX chromosomes can essentially develop as a male (as happens if the SRY gene is translocated onto an X), and that a person with XY chromosomes can essentially develop as a female (for example, if she has complete androgen insensitivity syndrome). But what exactly do you think looking at the genes is going to tell you that will disqualify a woman?
4. If women arent allowed to be naturally too strong, how about sex-testing male athletes for being too graceful in sports where grace counts? Im thinking diving. And figure-skating. If a diver or figure-skater who is a man seems a little too graceful, why not sex-test him to see if hes really a female? That way we can be sure to really police gender in the name of sport.
5. When are you going to figure out you cant fool Mother Nature? You keep trying to catch her and stick all of her offspring into one of two simplistic categories. But shes just more tolerant ( http://www.bioethicsforum.org/20060608adreger.asp) than you of sex variation. [This last link is to an outstanding article on sex and gender variation among humans. HIGHLY recommended! JA]
Give it up, boys. Just let the girls play already. Sex-testing isnt the sport we came to watch.
http://www.bioethicsforum.org/sex-testing-Olympics.asp
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emasculateme (imported)
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Re: Chinese have set up a clinic.
mrt (imported) wrote: Fri Aug 01, 2008 7:59 am Which btw way was my most irrational fear that the MOM event last year would conclude with a "Show us your (lack of) Balls!" Or maybe it was the wooden spoon to the crotch area to test for full membership. Err ahh is that Dismembership?!
who knows what it is...but if you told 'em if they weren't castrated before going they'd be castrated by the time they left...now that would show commitment
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iBorg317 (imported)
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Re: Chinese have set up a clinic.
The linked article may be the best I've read concerning sexual orientation. I have long disagreed with those who argue that homosexuality is a disease that can be cured. I think its less of a choice than its a comfort zone. Depending upon all the bits and pieces that i'll never understand some individuals are more comfortable with one sex or another or in some cases either and then there's some that it's neither. Great article. Working with social justice issues on a college campus, I very well may use it in my work.
iBorg
iBorg