Funny kind of human rights act

Another win for the cheaters.

A settlement has been finalised in trans powerlifter JayCee Cooper’s case against USA Powerlifting after the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled the organisation violated the Minnesota Human Rights Act by barring her from women’s competitions.

But Cooper is not of course a trans powerlifter, he’s a trans woman, i.e. a man. How is it a violation of human rights to bar a man from women’s competitions? How is it not a violation of women’s rights to force them to compete against men?

The settlement was announced on 28 April by the Legal Director at Gender Justice, which represented Cooper, as per CBS News. They said: “We celebrate this victory, but we also remain vigilant and ready to take action to ensure that all Minnesotans, including transgender Minnesotans, can participate in sports, schools, employment, and health care without facing discrimination because of who they are.”

But male transgender Minnesotans could compete against their own (stronger/faster) sex instead of insisting on competing against the other, not as strong or fast sex. They don’t have to compete against women; they want to, whether because they will win or because it’s fun to be shitty to women or both.

The dispute started when Cooper, a transgender woman, was barred from entering two women’s powerlifting competitions back in 2018.

A transgender woman is a man, therefore he should not be entering women’s competitions. End of story.

She sued, arguing that it was discrimination under Minnesota law. USA Powerlifting claimed its approach was based on what it described as “strength advantages” related to sex assigned at birth, rather than Cooper being transgender.

Yes, strength advantages, not “related to” but rooted in sex at birth (and until death). Those advantages are real. They’re not something that belongs in scare quotes.

Comments

One response to “Funny kind of human rights act”

  1. Mike Haubrich Avatar
    Mike Haubrich

    I don’t understand the victory, from an actual athletic viewpoint. People tell me that men are weakened when they take the hormones, so that makes it fair. But, I counter that the athlete needs to make a choice between taking the hormones and competing with their own sex.

    Women worked hard to lobby, sue, and demonstrate their ability to compete in collegiate and athletic sports and draw fans because they were excluded from athletics forever and the excuse was that they were not strong enough or athletic enough to compete against men. Now that the women’s sports are proving that they are drawing fans, these men want to just drop in and play and expect it to be considered a “right.”

    This is an area where some of the “trans rights” activists tell me in private that they think is an injustice against women, but don’t feel free to say so out loud for fear of being attacked as transphobic.

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