Share on Email
New study suggests testosterone blockers dont weaken muscle strength
For the second year in a row, a male professor who identifies as female has won the gold medal in the Masters Track Cycling World Championship for the womens division, ages 35-39.
Tenured philosopher Rachel McKinnon of the College of Charleston also set a new world best time in qualifying, Cycling Weekly reports.
McKinnon has not been shy in responding to criticism from biologically female athletes who claim the transgender professor has an unfair advantage by virtue of a male body.
When tennis great Martina Navratilova called for the exclusion of biological men from womens sports, McKinnon responded that it would be the same as excluding black women.
Before the race, former Masters womens champion Victoria Hood told Sky News that the science is there and it says that it is unfair for biological men to compete in womens sports:
The male body, which has been through male puberty, still retains its advantage, that doesnt go away.
I have sympathy with [transgender athletes]. They have a right to do sport but not a right to go into any category they want.
McKinnon issued a press release in a pinned tweet Saturday denouncing Hood for arguing against the rights of transgender women to full and equal treatment under British law the competition was held in England as well as international sport and the cycling organization that runs the Masters.
It said that Hood provided no evidence that she had ever raced McKinnon, as Hood claims, and noted that Hood was in a different age bracket than McKinnon, so the two would not have directly competed at Saturdays championship. (Hood didnt participate in any category.)
Ms. Hood has expressed an irrational fear of trans women. An irrational fear of trans women is the dictionary definition of transphobia. Transphobia has no place in sport, the release says.
In a Sunday tweet after winning the race, McKinnon called women who object to competing against biological men loser[s].