Former Kentucky swimmer Riley Gaines was among more than a dozen college athletes who filed a lawsuit against the NCAA on Thursday, accusing it of violating their Title IX rights by allowing transgender woman Lia Thomas to compete at the national championships in 2022.

The lawsuit, filed in U.S. District Court in Atlanta, details the shock Gaines and other swimmers felt when they learned they would have to share a locker room with Thomas at the championships in Atlanta. It documents a number of races they swam in with Thomas, including the 200-yard final in which Thomas and Gaines tied for fifth but Thomas, not Gaines, was handed the fifth-place trophy.

Thomas swam for Pennsylvania. She competed for the men’s team at Penn before her gender transition.

Thomas was the first openly transgender athlete to win a Division I title in any sport, finishing in front of three Olympic medalists for the championship. By not making the final, the lawsuit mentions that Florida swimmer Tylor Mathieu, who was not a plaintiff, was denied first-team All-American honors in that event.

Other plaintiffs included athletes from volleyball and track.

      • Cogency@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        That’s not reasonable it’s just a new form of segregation. Stating that we (trans women) are both equal to women but seperate which has been ruled unconstitutional and discriminatory.

      • ShareMySims@sh.itjust.works
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        8 months ago

        The short version is that gender may be fluid, but biological sex isn’t.

        It literally is (since people change sex everyday), and even if we pretend it isn’t, it’s blatantly not binary either, but a spectrum, and a socially constructed one at that.

        All this “perfectly reasonable” solution is, is more of the same old ignorant transphobia, with some added misogyny for good measure.

    • gmtom@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Men tend to have a physical advantage, and that is just biology.

      But the problem with thus line of thinking is it opens a massive can of worms. Like for example all of the best long distance runners in the world come from a handful of tribes in Kenya, where they have thinner calves and ankles than other people. And this is statistically a much bigger advantage than the advantage trans women get. So should we ban Kenyans from competing since they have a biological advantage too?

      Or even simpler stuff like height. Tall people have advantages in so many sports. So if you’re only 150cm because of your biology, you’re never going to be a pro basketball player for example. Does that mean we need to do something about this, since it’s so unfair?

      • sailingbythelee@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        I think you’ve nailed it here. There is so much focus on the genetic advantage a trans woman has in women’s sports, but at the elite level genetics already plays a determinative role. It’s in every sport. I saw a video the other day on powerlifting. Sure, we all know that weight classes are important, but this video was about femur length. The guy with the world record for squat, in his weight class, has very short femurs, and the video showed the physics of how this gives him a purely genetic advantage in the squat over others who have trained just as hard and are just as strong. At the elite level where everyone is training hard and has good diet and coaching, the difference between winning and losing often comes down to genetic variation. It’s not just purely physical advantages either. At the elite level, psychological fitness is also critical to success and psychology is also profoundly influenced by both genetics and early childhood development, which are not under the individual athlete’s control. On top of that there are economic disparities. On average, a person from a very poor family is much less likely to end up as an elite level skier or hockey player.

        There are so many genetic and social factors that contribute to success in elite sports that I don’t think the women who are complaining about trans athletes have much credibility.

    • bostonbananarama@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      I have no clue how to resolve this

      I think the first step needs to be asking why we do this and what we want. We have women’s sports because (cis) women generally cannot compete sufficiently with (cis) men. But what are we trying to accomplish? I would say in middle school and high school our goal should be inclusivity. So trans men and women should be able to compete in their identified genders.

      On the other hand in college and the Olympics inclusivity is probably not as important for adults competing at some of the highest levels. So I am more willing to accept some limits, but I’m certainly not well versed enough to know where to draw that line.

      • Cogency@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        It’s very easy to resolve, most kids that participate in sports are themselves (shockingly) also kids and will not have gained any advantage if allowed to transition early enough. Even a year or two of puberty is going to shed away very quickly.

        (And leave us older trans people who are no longer teenagers who might have gone through a full puberty to have that advantage not participate in sports, and leave kids alone to transition and participate in their chosen gender.)

        Either way this is a problem that resolves itself if trans people are allowed to accept and be themselves when they figure it out, which would be a lot more possible if people actually took the time to understand us.

        Also genetic advantages like Micheal Phelp’s lungs and body have always been a part of sports. So if we happen to want to play sports we’re still women playing sports with a genetic disadvantage in every way that matters to us like having babies. (sports are the last thing on most of our minds)

        Either way stop making trans people the center of your political battles. We just want to live without you fucking up our lives. We aren’t anything that matters to the vast majority of instances. We are the rare exception. Go figure out that they’d rather you argue about us than about the actual issues like health care, abortion, union rights, civil rights, etc.

        • NoIWontPickAName@kbin.earth
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          8 months ago

          But the thing is, it’s the actual athletes that make up the league that have a problem with this.

          You’re only looking at it from your side and not from theirs

          • Cogency@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            The vast majority of women don’t mind. And you don’t speak for us or get to decide if women and trans women are on different sides about anything. Because we literally are women.

            • NoIWontPickAName@kbin.earth
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              8 months ago

              I agree the vast majority don’t.

              These ones do, the problem could be solved easily enough with separate locker rooms.

              And I’m not trying to speak for anyone, so watch your fucking self it’s right there in the article.

              • Cogency@lemmy.world
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                8 months ago

                But why seperate, why differentiate just to alienate a kid trying to live out their lives?

                • NoIWontPickAName@kbin.earth
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                  8 months ago

                  First of all, the person in question was in their 20’s at the time. She is 25 now and it happened 2 years ago.

                  Secondly, I never said to alienate anyone. Give the women that are uncomfortable their own locker room.

                  I do not see the issue here.

                  The only place would not be allowed is that locker room and that does not affect her in any meaningful way.

                  Yes, she has to deal with the fact that those people are uncomfortable around her, but that is just part of life.

                  Let’s try this another way, if the way to make the problem go away is just to allow someone else to have another locker room and not share it, why shouldn’t we do that with how easy it is?

                  • bufalo1973@lemmy.ml
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                    8 months ago

                    I buy that if it’s not a “trans locker” but a “TERF locker”. Women that don’t have a problem can go to the “normal” women locker.

                  • Cogency@lemmy.world
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                    8 months ago

                    Because it’s insisting on a distinction when there is none. Anatomy doesn’t make the woman dude.

              • bufalo1973@lemmy.ml
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                8 months ago

                If tomorrow the separate locker was build then it would be another thing. It’s not about seeing a penis (and maybe not even that) but “that is not a woman”. And that is the only problem. In their minds a trans woman is not a woman.

                • NoIWontPickAName@kbin.earth
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                  8 months ago

                  There is already another room. The men’s locker room.

                  How often are men and women competing at the same time, so that might change something.

                  Maybe just use shifts then?

                  I don’t care about what the reason is.

                  The people asking for it are the ones isolating themselves, and honestly I just see that as a good thing.

                  Our lives would all be way better if bigots isolated themselves.

                  Edit: better gots to bigots

    • jordanlund@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      It’s not that they shouldn’t be allowed to compete, I think there needs to be a greater restriction on who and how they compete.

      This whole thing started because of Lia Thomas who was a competetive male swimmer from the age of 5 until they completed hormone treatment at the age of 22.

      They had the benefit of male puberty and trained as a male. That’s going to make a difference.

      Now if you take a child who has not yet hit puberty, put them on blockers, then allow them to transition with hormones and surgery, you’re going to end up with a completely different athelete.

      It’s good that the sports organization recognizes that trans atheletes need to be on hormones for a set period of time before being allowed to compete, but there needs to be a policy addressing WHEN they started the hormone treatment.

      Starting after puberty has completed should be a non-starter, or at the very least a different category of competition.

      • bufalo1973@lemmy.ml
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        8 months ago

        I have a name you should look up: Caster Semenya. She has too much natural strogens but she was born a girl. And the same kind of claims were made against her. “She is not a real woman”, “she is actually a man”, …

    • Revonult@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      My understanding is that if the athlete is correctly undergoing Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) the biological advantage is significantly reduced if not removed. I am sure there are exceptions though.

      Edit: Everything below

      After looking through some studies it seems like Trans fem athletes do maintain some advantage, or atleast the current wait time is not enough for the edge to be eliminated.

      Best example I could find https://www.bmj.com/company/newsroom/current-treatment-period-may-be-too-short-to-remove-competitive-advantage-of-transgender-athletes/

      • nfh@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        I mean, the question is what’s fair both to trans women and cis women. Competing against competitors with an advantage and being excluded are both unfair. Absolutely eliminating advantage isn’t the standard that minimizes unfairness, it’s a balancing act between competing interests.

        I’m not sure sports have found exactly the perfect balance, and it may vary a bit by sport, but it doesn’t seem to be wildly off in favor of trans women.

    • Gladaed@feddit.de
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      8 months ago

      The issue to me is, that trans woman do not perform sufficiently well to displace people from the Sport in the high level. If you are shit at the sport and lose to a trans woman you may rage at her for being not “normal” but that’s a you issue.