The Tide Has Turned in the Gender War

Harry de Quetteville has written an important piece in the Telegraph about the “end of the beginning” of the gender war. Here’s an excerpt:

Sport, so focused on winning and losing, on rules and competition, can bring a reductive clarity to the complexities of life. Perhaps that is why the judgement this week of the World Athletics Council was so momentous. Put simply, council president Sebastian Coe had to choose between conflicting “rights” and he decided that the right of those born women to compete fairly trumps the desire to be included in elite sport of those who have gone through male puberty but run or jump as women. “We felt,” he said, “that having transgender athletes competing at elite level would actually compromise the integrity of female competition.”

It can seem that there is no more sensitive an issue than trans rights. But sport, with that same reductive clarity, is not so concerned with sensitivities. It is concerned with the irrefutable reality of the stopwatch and winner’s podium. And they starkly reveal the distortions that testosterone and its consequences for muscle, stature, strength and speed wreak on the track and field. Indeed, so stark and inescapable is the judgement of Lord Coe and his organisation that it de-barbs what elsewhere remains one of society’s thorniest issues. All it took was leadership to act. “For the longest time we knew whether you were male or female mattered in sport,” says Fiona McAnena, director of sport at Fair Play for Women. “There is no science to say that changed. So we are in a strange position where they adopted policies that let certain male-born people into women’s sport without any evidence to say that was reasonable. I think this is now a game-changer.”

It may be elsewhere, too. For the transgender rights fissure that opened up in sport echoes that in politics and society more widely. There, faced with increasing public concern, other leaders are increasingly being forced to choose as well. Equivocation is no longer enough. It was oddly fitting, for example, that Lord Coe’s decision in athletics came on the very same day that SNP leader Nicola Sturgeon left office – a titanic, once unassailable figure finally, if not exclusively, propelled into the political void by her support for the Gender Recognition Reform Bill. A leader of long standing who had always seemed so in touch with public sentiment found herself jettisoned, more tone-deaf than deft. For Rishi Sunak in Westminster, the decision to block Sturgeon’s proposed reforms, which would have allowed gender self-identification in those as young as 16, was politically prudent.

That decision did not come in isolation. In fact, it came hard on the heels of the devastating Cass Review which led to the closure of the controversial Tavistock clinic, where children found themselves referred for assessment for puberty-blocking drugs and life-changing surgery without adequate safeguards. And the decision at the end of last year by the charities regulator to launch a statutory inquiry into Mermaids, the transgender campaign group found to be offering harmful breast-binders to girls as young as 13 without their parents’ knowledge. And the announcement a month ago, in the same week that Sturgeon revealed she was stepping down, that the Sandyford clinic – known as “Scotland’s Tavistock” – would be closing its doors to new patients.

For activists on either side of the debate, each of these has represented an ideological battle. Together, however, their outcomes point in one direction. That’s why, in years to come, there is every reason to believe that historians will look back on this week as one in which the battle lines of the trans rights war were redrawn.

Worth reading in full.

Stop Press: Read Michael Deacon on why J.K. Rowling, having brought down Nicola Sturgeon, will also bring down Humza Yousef.

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Dinger64
3 years ago

I’m no fan of Seb Coe but he is absolutely right on this one! If the trans nutters ever got their way with this we’d might as well cancel women’s sports!

NeilParkin
3 years ago

This whole gender mess. All it took was for good people to do nothing. Big clue in that for what we should be doing about the rest. When fantasy meets reality, there can only ever be one winner.

FerdIII
3 years ago

Mental illness, deep psychotic, perverted mental illness.
The war is just starting.
U$1 million in drugs and therapy per mentally ill slavering pervert. Big market.
Lots of money pouring into the deconstruction of the family, normality and heterosexuality.
It will get a lot worse.

CaseyJones
CaseyJones
3 years ago

The main question is why do we have separate men’s and women’s sports? It’s not for locker room shenanigans or socializing with your guy or gal teammates. None of these articles want to come right out and say that women would rarely, if ever, win against men. Men athletes are stronger, bigger, and faster than female athletes and could cause more damage to females in contact sport.

Arum
Arum
3 years ago
Reply to  CaseyJones

Or the even bigger question, what is competitive sport for? The answer to that question might help us with your conundrum.

transmissionofflame
3 years ago
Reply to  Arum

Fun to do, fun to watch. (Funner to do, IMO). I like to do non-competitive sport too, though I am always sort of competing with myself, to do things better. What’s anything for, beyond mere survival? It’s pointless, but life is pointless, IMO. Not meaning that’s it not worth doing, meaning there’s no end goal.

Nearhorburian
Nearhorburian
3 years ago

“Fun to watch”

Not in my experience.

Want to feel immortal? Watch rugby. Subjective aeons pass, but when you look at your watch its only been 2 minutes.

transmissionofflame
3 years ago
Reply to  Nearhorburian

True – often disappointing and overrated. I watch for the aesthetics – more reliable.

transmissionofflame
3 years ago
Reply to  CaseyJones

I guess for contact sports there are safety reasons. Non-contact sports, good question. So women can win? But so few people win at elite sports, or indeed any sport really, at least any individual sport. Things like figure skating they bring a different element, but then that’s more of a performing art than a sport. Men like to watch women play sport because they look attractive, women because they find them inspiring? I dunno. Happy for people to have separate categories of all kinds as long as they don’t expect me to pay for stuff I’m not interested in. I think sport is good for the body and soul, so anything that encourages participation is OK by me.

TheGreenAcres
3 years ago

It’s very simple: a man is a man is a man. Every single cell in his body confirms that basic fact. No amount of pandering will ever change that.

Nearhorburian
Nearhorburian
3 years ago

I sat next to her on a plane to Glasgow -from either Birmingham or East Midlands,can’t remember which -in about 2008!

DevonBlueBoy
DevonBlueBoy
3 years ago
Reply to  Nearhorburian

And……….?

varmint
3 years ago

They either ban biological men from competing with women or women will just refuse to participate.———— I remember Serena Williams being asked by a reporter how she thought she would get on playing Andy Murray. Because the media always like playing the gender card and try to compare men’s and women’s sports, and here was the big powerful woman Serena who surely would do well against the men. ——–Serena Williams replied that it would be no contest and that Andy Murray would beat her 6-0 6-0

WyrdWoman
3 years ago

The conundrum is what are they going to do about all those trans women currently winning in various biological women’s sports: let them win at that level but select the highest scoring biological women to go on to elite levels anyway? Don’t think they’ve thought this through in its entirety!

RTSC
RTSC
3 years ago

Richard Tice, Leader of the Reform Party, gave his Sunday Sermon this morning on the lies which underpin the Gender War.

Worth watching on TalkTV catchup.