Posted on 08/01/2021 7:25:03 PM PDT by SeekAndFind
Laurel Hubbard is set to make history when she competes as the first openly transgender athlete at an Olympic Games.
The New Zealander will take the stage on August 2 for the women's super heavyweight +87kg weightlifting event.
At 43 years old, Hubbard is also set to be the oldest weightlifter competing in the sport at the Tokyo games.
Her father, Dick Hubbard, was a wealthy cereal company magnate and briefly served as Auckland's mayor from 2004 to 2008.
Hubbard revealed she took up "an archetypally male" sport in a bid to feel more masculine.
"I thought perhaps if I tried something that was so masculine perhaps that's what I would become,'' she told Radio New Zealand in 2017. "But sadly, that wasn't the case.... sad in the sense that maybe it would have made some of the darker periods in my life a bit more manageable."
Before that, Hubbard took part in male weightlifting competitions. After transitioning, she began competing in international weightlifting events.
Three years later in 2001, Hubbard withdrew from the sport, explaining that it "became too much to bear ... just the pressure of trying to fit into a world that perhaps wasn't really set up for people like myself."
In 2017, the New Zealander competed internationally as Laurel Hubbard for the first time. She took home the gold medal at the Australian International championships in the heaviest women's division, lifting 123kg in the snatch discipline and 145kg in the clean and jerk
(Excerpt) Read more at msn.com ...
When one lives in a world of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act.
And nobody will explain why!
You go girl.......oh wait, never mind
It wears pink sneakers
In the first place, I thought the use of any hormone by athletes is an automatic disqualification. Trannies have take them by the fistfuls
So what is the REAL difference between this man posing as a woman and Henrich-Dora Ratjen, a man who ran as a woman(with Nazi blessings) in the 1936 Olympics?
I just tried to find out of that was still true for testosterone, but I have timed out on my internet searches without finding a clear answer. My current guess is that the absolute testosterone level matters, not how one acquires that testosterone level. It is now possible for biologically female athletes to be disqualified from the Olympics because they have a too-high testosterone level:
It seems to me that these Namibian women, IF they are biologically female, should be allowed to compete whatever their natural testosterone level, while biological females who take any testosterone should be disqualified. However, I do not think that either rule is currently in effect. Just my guess.
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