@Mark19735
Really, it's so fucking obvious that tall people cannot compete fairly against small people. That's what genuine recognition that eg height plays a fairly fundamental role in rowing ability would really entail.
Height confers an advantage in many sports, but is not overwhelming. Rowers tend to be very tall because long levers (arms and legs) are advantageous. Weight confers a more significant advantage in sport generally, which is why rowing, alongside other sports like boxing, weightlifting and grappling sports like wrestling and judo, has weight categories. There is also the consideration of safety as well as fairness in contact sports.
FTFY
What does FTFY mean?
Perhaps a genuinely inclusionary policy would have height classes for rowers (a bit like weight divisions for boxers) ... crews could compete in divisions according to their height and then no-one need ever worry about what any competitors are packing in their shorts ... would that be "fair" enough? Or does it always have to be discriminating by sex first and other criteria second? If so, why?
Height classification for rowing is unnecessary, as explained above. In virtually all sports, participation is segregated by sex, age and disability. Of these factors, sex confers the single biggest advantage of all. Male performance advantage is huge. In sport it varies from 10% in sprinting and swimming to 30% in weightlifting.
Reflect on this - the 1.5 legged Jonnie Peacock won a gold medal in the men's T44 100m race at the 2016 Olympics in a time of 10.81 seconds, which was faster than the able-bodied silver medallist Torie Bowie in the women's 100m final at the same games. (For comparison, the winning time in the T44 women's 100m was 13.02 seconds.)
Laurel Hubbard, an average weightlifter in men's competition, came out of retirement at 43, having been on hormones for a couple of years and was able to out-lift women half his age, and qualify for the 2021 Tokyo Olympics. Weightlifters in the lowest weight class of men are competitive with women in the heaviest weight class. So sex matters in sport, more than any other factor. Identity claims do not.
We segregate first and foremost by sex in order to include women and girls. If sports were not segregated by sex, every sport with a very few exceptions (rhythmic gymnastics, equestrian events) would have only male winners - and at any level of competition, only male participants. Abandoning sex segregation discriminates against women. We are uniquely adversely affected. Males will be able to dominate women's sport and push us out, we will not be able to move in men's sport.
Women fought for and carved out female-only sport to give ourselves a chance to shine, working with the bodies that we have. Bodies whose athletic performance is compromised by the requirements of the super-power which is the ability to gestate babies. We also do not benefit from the turbo-charging effects of male puberty (obviously).
And before you bring up Michael Phelps' hands, all his records have now been broken. Also, he won races by fractions of a second, not the several seconds gaps that exist between elite male and female records.