The article discusses the implications of allowing biological men to compete in women's categories in marathons, particularly highlighting the Boston Marathon's recent regulations. It points out that male qualifying times are significantly faster than female times, and that non-binary classifications use the women's time. The article specifically mentions Riya Suising, a biological man competing in the female division, raising concerns about fairness for female competitors. Ultimately, it questions the integrity of women's sports and the broader implications for gender rights under current legal frameworks.
Allowing male runners in women's races undermines fairness and disadvantages female competitors. It means a man could win every Boston Marathon category - men's, women's and non-binary, too.
In the two years since the non-binary category was introduced, both winners have been biological men, evidence, if we needed it, of the truth of Fact No. 1.
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