This is a difficult one for me. Not really so much in Junior High and High School, as I think as taxpayers for public education we shouldn't view sports at that level as a means of determining who the most superior specimen is at a given sporting activity, but at that level we should be teaching sportsmanship, hard work, working towards a goal, dealing with defeat, being a good winner, etc..
But I'm going to try to stay out of the weeds on this, so I'm not going to get super detailed on what kind of criteria might be appropriate. As someone who never participated in high school level team sports and who has never been a parent of a person who has, I am not very qualified to address specifics on the issue.
What I will talk about is the continuing effort to delegitimize the sincerity of transgender people. This idea that they are playing a trick on us and we have to be smart enough not to fall for it.
I have made lengthy posts about this in the past and those threads ultimately got closed. But this is the essence of the transgender issue in the U.S., it is that people think that transgender people are lying about who they are. It is automatically denied by anti-trans people when put in that context, but they continue to betray the truth. They will always fall back into the idea that transgender identity is a lie, it is illegitimate and that it is important to not be fooled by it. It is the root of almost every anti-trans argument I have ever seen. It is why anti-trans people smugly mis-gender the trans people they are talking about, because they are proving to their fellow anti-trans friends that they will not be fooled and that they are not afraid to say so.
If public school sports are about teaching, in any capacity at all, then within *reason, transgender people should be allowed to play in the sport as the gender they identify as. At that level it should not matter at all if one athletic student is faster, scores higher, or whatever else. Safety should be considered, which is true regardless of transgender athletes.
I don't think college level sports should be considered amature sports or that the athletes should be considered "student athletes." At that level it is a business, money is being made and athletes are maneuvering for lucrative opportunities, not to mention scholarships. I think at that level there should be some kind of standards that account for testosterone levels of transgender athletes and other relevant factors that I'm not really qualified to get into specifics of. I think people using transgender identity specifically for sporting opportunities is EXTREMELY unlikely (anyone who wants me to go on about that aspect, just ask and I'll likely post 500 words about how I feel about that) but I care enough about transgender rights that I'm more than willing to take this issue away from the anti-trans community by placing restrictions on some transgender athletes so that the bigots can STFU unless they want to fully admit their hate and malice towards the trans community in general.
But I'm going to try to stay out of the weeds on this, so I'm not going to get super detailed on what kind of criteria might be appropriate. As someone who never participated in high school level team sports and who has never been a parent of a person who has, I am not very qualified to address specifics on the issue.
What I will talk about is the continuing effort to delegitimize the sincerity of transgender people. This idea that they are playing a trick on us and we have to be smart enough not to fall for it.
I have made lengthy posts about this in the past and those threads ultimately got closed. But this is the essence of the transgender issue in the U.S., it is that people think that transgender people are lying about who they are. It is automatically denied by anti-trans people when put in that context, but they continue to betray the truth. They will always fall back into the idea that transgender identity is a lie, it is illegitimate and that it is important to not be fooled by it. It is the root of almost every anti-trans argument I have ever seen. It is why anti-trans people smugly mis-gender the trans people they are talking about, because they are proving to their fellow anti-trans friends that they will not be fooled and that they are not afraid to say so.
If public school sports are about teaching, in any capacity at all, then within *reason, transgender people should be allowed to play in the sport as the gender they identify as. At that level it should not matter at all if one athletic student is faster, scores higher, or whatever else. Safety should be considered, which is true regardless of transgender athletes.
I don't think college level sports should be considered amature sports or that the athletes should be considered "student athletes." At that level it is a business, money is being made and athletes are maneuvering for lucrative opportunities, not to mention scholarships. I think at that level there should be some kind of standards that account for testosterone levels of transgender athletes and other relevant factors that I'm not really qualified to get into specifics of. I think people using transgender identity specifically for sporting opportunities is EXTREMELY unlikely (anyone who wants me to go on about that aspect, just ask and I'll likely post 500 words about how I feel about that) but I care enough about transgender rights that I'm more than willing to take this issue away from the anti-trans community by placing restrictions on some transgender athletes so that the bigots can STFU unless they want to fully admit their hate and malice towards the trans community in general.