Third wave feminists were dealt of huge blow last month. Science won over their false belief system.
Track and field's world governing body limited entry into women's events to athletes who have testosterone levels that are capable of being produced solely by ovaries, according to a story in the NYTimes.
The article was written by Doriane Lambelet Coleman, who competed in track and field internationally during the 1980s and is now a professor of law at Duke Law School.
Notice the difficulty she has in verbally navigating through the feminist mine field of false beliefs, a minefield and belief system currently run by faculty in higher education:
"Understanding the rules and why they make sense is hard. They are based in biology people don't know or don't like to talk about and, let's be honest, at least in some circles, they're politically incorrect.
"They force us to talk about women's bodies when it is increasingly taboo to do so, and they run counter to the movement that seeks to include transgender and intersex people in social institutions based on their gender identity rather than their biology."
She goes on to explain what every scientist knows, that males have ten times the testosterone as the normal female, and that accounts for why men can and do easily surpass women in track and field.
"Each year, the world's best time in the women's marathon is surpassed by hundreds of men.....in 2017 36 boys ran faster than Florence Griffith Joyner's seemingly unassailable 100-meter record of 10.49."
The alternative, she says, is to have biological males who identify as females win all the races. Plus a few women with CAH, a disorder where a woman has high testosterone.
Connecting the dots, CAH is also the condition resulting in a woman have high spatial ability similar to males.
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