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in guidelines issued ahead of the paris games, the ioc urged media to avoid terms like “biological male,” “born male” or “born female” because these phrases “can be dehumanizing and inaccurate when used to describe transgender sportspeople and athletes with sex variations. a person’s sex category is not assigned based on genetics alone,” the “portrayal guidelines” read, “and aspects of a person’s biology can be altered when they pursue gender-affirming medical care.”
last fall, quebec amateur boxer katia bissonnette withdrew from a quebec regional competition after learning, an hour before stepping into the ring, that her opponent was a transgender woman.
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“i wasn’t able to finish the match. i felt a strong pain to my nose,” she told bbc sport. she worried she had let down both her nation and her father. “but i stopped for myself, because it could have been a match of my lifetime, but i had to preserve my life as well in that moment,” she said.
the controversy has reignited what has become one of the most divisive issues in sport, particularly, though not exclusively, combat sports. research suggests males are more anatomically specialized in the muscular and skeletal traits that propel a punch forward, delivering blows, on average, twice as powerful as women at roughly equal levels of fitness.
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