Muscle for Life with Mike Matthews - Dr. Greg Brown on the Science of Transgender Women in Sports
Episode Date: April 6, 2020The issue of transgender women competing in women’s sports has become a hot button affair in recent years, mostly because many are blowing biological women out of the water, and in some cases, setti...ng records that no biological woman will likely ever be able to break. Some people argue this isn’t a problem, because men who have transitioned to women and follow official competitive protocols don’t have any advantages over other women. Others argue that the significant physical advantages that men enjoy over women, such as more strength, speed, and power, can’t be eliminated by hormone therapy, and thus, biological men shouldn’t be able to compete against biological women. Who’s right? I invited Dr. Greg Brown onto the podcast to help explain what science has to say on the matter. He’s a professor of Exercise Science at the University of Nebraska Kearney who recently wrote an “expert declaration” on this very subject that examines all of the relevant research currently available. In this interview, Dr. Brown breaks it all down, explaining the physical advantages men enjoy over women, how much they matter in sports, and what happens to them after men transition to become women. Press play and tune in! 5:02 - Who is Gregory Brown and what is his background? 6:14 - Why did you write this controversial expert declaration? 7:17 - What are these inherent advantages that men have compared to women? 12:46 - How do physiological differences affect performance? 15:00 - How does transitioning before puberty affect the body? 19:27 - What are your thoughts on how this could affect women’s sports? 22:50 - If there are physical advantages in transgenders, where should we go from here? Should we ban them from women’s sports? 29:01 - How does your average transgender athlete compare to an elite women athlete? 44:19 - Where can people find you and your work? --- Mentioned on The Show: Dr Gregory Brown’s Declaration: https://img1.wsimg.com/blobby/go/a69528e3-c613-4bcc-9931-258260a4e77f/downloads/2020.01.07%20G%20Brown%20Report%20Executed.pdf?ver=1578668890484 Legion VIP One-on-One Coaching: legionathletics.com/coaching/ --- Want to get my best advice on how to gain muscle and strength and lose fat faster? Sign up for my free newsletter! Click here: www.legionathletics.com/signup/
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hello, and welcome to another glorious episode of Muscle for Life. I'm Mike Matthews, your host,
and this is an episode I'm probably going to get some flack for, but that's okay. That's how you
know you're over the target, right? Or something. Anyway, this episode is on the topic of transgender women competing in women's sports. And this has
become a hot button affair as of the last couple of years, mostly because many transgender women
are just blowing biological women out of the water in a number of different sports ranging from track to weightlifting to handball
MMA, you name it. And in some cases, some of these transgender women are setting records that no
biological woman will likely ever be able to break. Now, some people say that there isn't a problem here and them's the breaks because men
who have transitioned to women and followed the official competitive protocols don't actually have
any physical or biological advantages over other women. They're just better at the sports. Other
people, on the other hand, argue that the significant physical advantages
that men do enjoy over women, such as more strength, speed, and power, cannot be eliminated
by hormone therapy. And thus, biological men, regardless of how they identify, should not
be able to compete against biological women. Who's right? Well, I invited Dr. Greg
Brown onto the podcast to help explain what science has to say on the matter. Now, why Dr.
Brown? Well, he is a professor of exercise science at the University of Nebraska Kearney,
and he also recently wrote an expert declaration on this very subject that
examines all of the relevant research that we currently have available. And in this interview,
Dr. Brown breaks it all down. He explains the physical advantages that men enjoy over women,
how much they matter in sports, and what happens to them biologically after men transition to become
women. Now, before we get to the show, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape of their lives,
please consider checking out my VIP one-on-one coaching service. My team and I have helped people of all ages, circumstances,
and needs. So no matter how complicated or hopeless you might think your situation is,
don't worry. We will figure out how to get you the results you want. Every diet and training
program we create is 100% custom. We provide daily workout logs. We do weekly accountability calls.
Our clients get priority email service as well as discounts on supplements and the list goes on and
on. We basically do everything we can to help you lose fat, gain muscle, and get healthy as quickly
and enjoyably. That's an important point as possible.
So to learn more,
head over to legionathletics.com slash coaching and schedule your free consultation call.
Now there is usually a wait list
and new slots do fill up quickly.
So don't wait,
just head over to legionathletics.com slash coaching,
lock in your free consultation call
and let's see if there's a good
fit. Hey, Greg, thanks for taking the time to come and talk about a controversial issue. I'm
looking forward to talking with you. Well, thank you so much for inviting me to come and talk to
you. I'm excited to talk about this. Yeah, this is something that I have been asked about not too
often because I haven't commented much on it. I've made little side
comments here and there, but I hadn't looked into much of the research. And so this is something I'm
sure you're going to get into. But like, for example, I've had some people send me research
that would suggest that a transgender athlete has no advantage whatsoever. There's no such thing as
a biological component here that, and so long as their testosterone is low enough, or so long
as they started using these drugs at the right time, stuff like that, that essentially it doesn't
matter. But then the results seem to say otherwise, when you have these people who supposedly they
should have no advantage, go from being a mediocre or worse male athlete to a dominant female
athlete, immediately just destroying entire fields of
women. And you go, yeah, I don't know. I think there's more to this story. So that's why we're
here. I would love to hear. I read your paper and really liked it. And so I think quickly,
let's just start with, I usually just kind of get right into the meat of it, but let's just
quickly talk about who you are
and your qualifications, just so if people are wondering, like, all right, why should I listen
to what this guy has to say? Okay. All right. So I'm Greg Brown. I'm a professor of exercise
science at the University of Nebraska at Kearney. I'm a fellow of the American College of Sports
Medicine. I'm a certified exercise physiologist through the American College of Sports Medicine.
Medicine. I'm a certified exercise physiologist through the American College of Sports Medicine.
I've published close to 50 papers on exercise and the effects of exercise and the effects of nutritional supplements on health and exercise, those fields. I've been teaching exercise science
as a professor since 2002. So I teach exercise physiology. I teach sports nutrition. I've taught
anatomy and physiology. And then of course, you know, becoming a professor, you have to have a bachelor's degree and a master's degree and a PhD.
So I've got all the formal education in anatomy and physiology, human physiology, animal physiology,
endocrinology, exercise physiology, a lot of exercise science classes, biomechanics,
those types of things. So I am by all measures of, yes, thank you. Thank you. Yes.
You have all the bona fides that you could possibly have actually at this point, it would
seem. So I think that's just worth saying so people understand where you're coming from and
why they should listen to what you have to say. And why write this expert declaration? I'm curious
because it is a very controversial issue and I'm assuming you're doing it, you care about
principles here. You're not trying to you're doing it, you care about principles here.
You're not trying to just stir the pot, you know?
Yeah, I'm really not trying to stir the pot.
I have seen news reports and other things where people say, well, based on the science, transgender athletes do not have an advantage.
Then I thought, well, what is the science?
And so I started looking into this and started looking into the peer-reviewed research on this and the publications I could find.
And through that, I came across Alliance Defending Freedom and we connected and they asked if I'd be
willing to write this expert declaration summarizing what we know, what is in the
published research regarding the physiologic differences between men and women, the physiologic
differences that happen as somebody undergoes
transgender therapy, and does that influence sports performance? And again, I think it's
very important that we consider there are these physiologic differences between men and women
that definitely give men an advantage in athletics. And let's get into that. So what are
these inherent advantages and what's the physiological basis?
What are these inherent advantages and what's the physiological basis?
All right.
If we start off, I think any of us that have gone through middle school recognize that in puberty, men grow taller than women.
Men tend to develop more muscle mass than women.
Men also develop higher hemoglobin concentrations, higher red blood cell count, which then allows
them to transport more oxygen in their lungs. Men have a larger heart than women, which allows it to pump
blood more efficiently and giving a greater distribution of blood to the active muscles.
A big thing in puberty really is the effects of testosterone. When men hit puberty,
boys hit puberty, huge increase in the amount of testosterone in the body causing all of these
effects, the increased muscle mass, the increased muscle strength that comes along with increased muscle mass, greater bone mineral
density, greater body height.
If we look at it before puberty, there are some differences between boys and girls, but
it's really at puberty we see that differentiation.
And again, because of those effects, men are faster, men are stronger.
They are able to run long distances and short distances faster than women.
They're able to lift more weights.
They're able to jump higher, throw further, all of these things.
And a lot of it comes down to the effects of testosterone during puberty.
And then if we look at what happens with transgender therapy or transitioning particularly from male to female is where I have focused.
If you take a man that has gone through puberty and then you reduce his testosterone concentrations, increase estrogen concentrations.
It doesn't make him shorter.
He doesn't get shorter because of this.
It reduces the bone mineral density, but the bone mineral density is still higher than what you would expect in a comparable woman.
There's a reduction in muscle mass, but still more muscle mass than you would expect in
a woman.
He will develop more body fat, but still less body fat than you would expect in a comparable
woman.
And so based on those things, it also doesn't shrink his heart. He may have a reduced hemoglobin concentration, but still has
more hemoglobin, more red blood cells than a comparable woman would have. So we can see these
physiologic traits that aren't completely reversed by transgender therapy. And so you take a man who
has gone through, let's take your average guy, let's say, right? Average athletic guy who would
go through that
process. How would you say quantitatively in the ways that you've described, how would he compare
to the average female athlete? I can't give an exact number, but how big of an advantage would
you say that man who is now transitioning to be a woman, how does that play out in terms of
his bottom line advantage that he still has now?
You know, it's interesting because there's actually not very much, if any, research that
quantifies if you take an athletic person and measure them before and after transgender
treatment.
Very little to any exists.
What does exist, I hate to say it, is a very dubious scientific quality in terms of peer
review, in terms of methodological things
like that. But if we look at the muscle mass, if we look at the bone mineral density, he's still
going to have 25% more muscle mass, 25% more bone mineral density, still have more muscle mass in
the upper body than that comparable woman. And so, I mean, that alone, it take any sport really. And then just think of what having
that much more, because with more muscle mass also comes more strength and more power and more speed
and 25% is not a small number. No, no, it's absolutely not a great case in point that kind
of helped support this argument. If you look at the case of CC Telfer, who was a division two
winning athlete in the 200 meter. If I remember it the case of CeCe Telfer, who was a Division II winning athlete in the 200
meter, if I remember it as 200 meter last year, male to female transition. After transitioning,
CeCe Telfer won the NCAA championship by one and a half seconds over the second place.
That is how much spread there was between second and eighth place. And, you know, so this transgender individual wins by more seconds
than you would expect to see across the spread of most of the finishers in the race.
And then just something else I thought of just to this point of what happens in puberty.
So you have a few examples I've seen now of one was soccer, right? So it was like 15 year old
soccer players, boys. Was it the U S team? The U S Olympic team got just
humiliated by boys, by boys. Yeah. Yeah. It's interesting in one of the papers in this
legal declaration, it shows, I'm just going to look this up. So in the United States,
just in 2017, 124 boys beat the women's world record at the 100 meter.
High school age boys breaking the world record and no women broke that world record in 2017.
So again, just showing these inherent capabilities that even young boys have over a comparable
well-trained female athlete.
And so then I guess theoretically, if you were, you would have to through hormone therapy and through, I guess that'd be the only thing you
could really do, but through drugs, trying to block things and alter physiology, it's almost
that you would have to undo puberty. It seems if you were going to really roll back the physiological
advantage, if you have 15 yearold boys who can already outperform
top-level female athletes. Am I off in my thinking there?
No, you're correct. You would have to completely reverse puberty, which even still,
it's kind of impossible because it's not going to make these boys shorter. It's not going to
suddenly change their pelvic structure from male to female pelvic structure. It's not suddenly
going to cause their shoulders, which tend to be broader in men to become skinnier like a woman's.
And just for people wondering, why do those factors matter? Like how does that play into
or athletic performance?
Okay. Well, I mean, if we look at a sport like volleyball or basketball, right, you can't coach
height. If you've got a six foot, six inch player, they're six feet, six inches. They're going to
defend much better than a six foot, two inch player. Right. And so a six foot, six inch player, they're six feet six inches, they're going to defend much better than a six foot two inch player, right? And so a six foot six inch man that transitions to woman,
he's still six feet six inches tall. If we look at the bone mineral density, again,
stronger bones, you're less likely to be injured. If we look at the pelvic structure of a woman
compared to a man, there's definite differences. A woman's pelvic structure is more round to allow
childbirth. That changes the angle.
They call it the quadriceps angle or Q angle between the knees and the hips, right?
Because the women basically have a broader pelvis.
Well, that actually makes women more predisposed to ACL injuries.
So now you've got male athletes competing as women that have less likelihood for an ACL injury.
Also, the difference in the Q angle does influence your running biomechanics. And one of the things that they have found is the really elite female athletes have a less severe Q angle
than the less effective female athletes, but it's still different from male Q angle. And so by not
changing the bone structure, you're still having biomechanical advantage. You're still having height
advantages. You know, we think about the broad shoulders, there's also then more
attachment for muscle and corresponding, there's still going to be greater muscle mass unless
somehow you completely reverse that. Yep. I've written and spoken about this in the context of
the potential for natural muscle gain, just the research indicating that total bone mass,
it seems to be a pretty good indicator for how jacked you can get basically for how big and
strong you can get. And you can take a measurement of the circumference of your wrists or really just
one of your wrists and one of your ankles and even extrapolate that forward. It's not going to be
perfectly precise. It's maybe part art, part science, but generally speaking, the people who
can get the biggest and strongest, they have big wrists, they have big ankles, they're just big
people. They have a big skeleton. And so you can't change that. No hormones are going to change that.
Right, right. Yeah. The structure is still there.
My next question for you is just going to be, okay, so just going down the list of,
again, the things I've heard and paying attention from the outside of some of the
conversation that's gone on this matter. So what about somebody, if we have transitioning,
conversation that's gone on this matter. So what about somebody, if we have transitioning now,
I actually don't know how popular or common it is for someone to try to transition at this point,
it'd be parents doing it to their kids, I guess, before puberty versus after.
Yeah. There's not much research on that because of ethical problems.
Of course.
You know, if we look at- It seems to be, it's a newer thing too. I mean, people weren't doing this 30 years ago, as far as I know. Yeah. As far as I know, years
ago, the idea was, well, if you have these tendencies, you've got to wait until you're
an adult to make the decision. And now it seems to be a thing where parents are supporting their
children in that decision. We really don't know for sure what that's going to do. As far as the
puberty blockers, do they completely stop all the effects of puberty? The very limited research I have seen shows that it doesn't completely stop puberty. It
just reduces it quite a bit. I mean, the physiology is so complex to think that we even could somehow
do that is probably presumptuous, I would think. Yeah. Yeah. I would agree with you on that
because what there's 6,500 different
genes in the human body that are coded based on those X, Y, or XX chromosomes. And so to think
that we're going to hit somebody with some hormones and it's going to completely negate
all of those genetic effects. Yeah. I don't think that it's possible at this point in time.
Makes sense. So here's a, another common counter argument that people who maybe don't agree with
you, something you, I'm sure you've heard. Some people will say that there's just a large degree
of variation among individuals. It's often the outliers who win the competition. So they'll say
like, you know, how athletically outstanding can a girl or woman be before we no longer see her
as a female, you know, that there's an Olympic champion caster,
Semenya, I think, has very high testosterone for a woman. So then there was an announcement
that people like her would have to reduce her testosterone levels. You know, that's a really
complicated issue because in that case, we are dealing with someone who is very much an outlier, someone who might have
intersex or might have 5-alpha reductase deficiency or something like that. But generally speaking,
those aren't the people that we're talking about here. We're talking about individuals with no
known genetic or biologic factor that would make us define them as non-male or non-female,
you know, what they're born as. And they have something else where they identify as a different sex than what they were born as. And if we look, again, it's hard to say with those outliers, but if we say overall, again, coming back to the idea of world records, there's about 9,000 men and boys that have run a 100-meter sprint faster than the women's world record.
And so even if we say this amazing performing woman is an outlier, she's still outperformed
by a large number of very good men, but not necessarily elite world record holder men.
They can't all be outliers when you have that many that are doing it. Maybe they're a little
bit on the right side of the curve, but they're not the 1%
at the end of it. Now that makes sense.
Hey, before we continue, if you like what I'm doing here on the podcast and elsewhere,
and if you want to help me help more people get into the best shape of their lives,
please consider checking out my VIP one-on-one coaching service.
Now, my team and I have helped thousands of people of all ages, circumstances, and needs.
So no matter how complicated or maybe even hopeless you might think your situation is,
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is 100% custom. We provide daily workout logs and we do weekly accountability calls. Our clients get
priority email service as well as discounts on supplements and the list goes on and on.
To learn more, just head over to legionathletics.com slash coaching. And if you like what you see, schedule your free consultation call. Now there's normally a wait list to work with our coaches and new slots do fill up very quickly. So if this sounds even remotely interesting to you, head over to legionathletics.com slash coaching now and schedule your free consultation call. And let's see if our program
is a good fit for you. What are your thoughts on how big of an issue is this in the context of
where it could affects that it could have on women's sports? Because some people will say
like, oh, well, maybe some people don't even know. They'll say, oh, well, there are probably a lot of transgender athletes who aren't winning, right? Who just go and then they're not really good and or they're just kind of whatever middle of the pack. And it's kind of ties into female. The other way around wouldn't be, based on everything you said, it wouldn't be a problem. Like women could happily try to transition to a man and go compete in men's sports, but they will get crushed. So we wouldn't even have
the conversation. Right. Well, you know, it's really hard to say how big this is going to be
as far as, you know, looking at sports overall and everything. But I think if we look on an
individual level, if one girl doesn't make the medal stand in high school sports, that's very
meaningful to her. You know, there's only first, second, third place in a lot
of sports. And so if a male to female takes first place, now we've got a girl that should have been
third that now doesn't get a medal. How is that going to influence her possibility of getting a
college scholarship? How is that going to influence just does she even want to compete if she knows
that she doesn't have a chance to compete? Is that going to discourage women and girls from participating in sports? And, you know, if we look at it and we can see
examples in all sorts of sports where women are losing to transgender athletes, and I think it's
very meaningful to those individuals that aren't winning because of that, especially when we look
at how much time people put into sports and how much effort they put into sports.
Right. I mean, it becomes in many cases, their identity. I mean, I understand I grew up playing sports and I was super into it and
knew a lot of people like that. And it becomes almost all consuming. It can be, and it doesn't
even necessarily have to be in an unhealthy way. It's just, you know, something you get really
into. And so what does that mean then when you've put all that time into it and that all means
nothing? Exactly. And we look at a lot of these athletes, you know, how many of our kids, they start practicing for a specific sport at 10 or 11
years old, hoping that when they're a senior in high school, they can get on that medal stand.
And then to not have that happen because of no fault in them for training, but because someone
with known physiologic advantages is given the opportunity to compete and then take their winning spot. And what are some of the, I'm just, this is now where I'm not sure where
the argument goes. Cause usually the argument, the counter arguments that I've seen to the stuff
that you covered in your declaration that we're talking about here has been more on the
physiological, like kind of cherry picking research or misinterpreting things and trying
to make a case that there actually is no advantage. So why are we even talking about it?
So if someone were to acknowledge, okay, Greg, I'll grant you that there very well could be a
physiological advantage, but too bad. Like, you know, you get to this point of, well,
and you were talking about this just before we got on that, you know, people want to be
compassionate and they want to, they want to try to treat people the way that they would want to
be treated. And so they've put
themselves in the shoes of someone who feels like they're stuck in the wrong body. And they would,
you know, go through that whole process. And then now should that person be barred from competing?
Should they be handicapped? Should the transition process be more rigorous? Or should it just be
like, well, that's the way them's the brakes. Like that's how it works. And you know,
if you don't like it, then don't play the game. And that's a really interesting question. And
by and large, I want to leave that question up to the people that make the rules for the sports,
the governing bodies, whether it's the state level or the district level or national level,
they need to make those decisions, but I want them to make it based on the science
that shows there is an advantage. Okay. I'm going to wander off. I want them to make it based on the science that shows there is an
advantage. Okay, I'm going to wander off. I'm trying to get in the weeds here too much, but we
have so many rules in sports to make it fair, right? Whether it's how many PSI the ball is
inflated to, whether it is what type of swimming suit you can wear or what type of footwear you
can wear or something like that to try and make it fair. We have rules that state how many practices
you can have before competitive season, how much contact the athletes can have a coach, how many
hours of practice. In a lot of high school sports, there's districting rules, right? If you live in a
certain area, you have to go to that school and compete on that team, regardless of if it's a good
team or a not good team to try and keep things fair. And so I would ask these people that say,
well, them's the breaks. I would ask, well,
so how is that fair? And if you're going to say, okay, them's the brakes, make it fair.
So I would ask that what is their stand on anabolic steroids? Should we allow everybody then to go ahead and use anabolic steroids, which we know are going to enhance performance?
Should we allow them to take amphetamines? Should we encourage?
Absolutely. Yeah. Yeah. Let's encourage drugging in sport because then it's the brakes.
So then it becomes who has the best biochemist, not who's the best athlete.
Which ironically at the highest level of many sports, that's more accurate than inaccurate,
but, but then, then it's actually the brakes and, you know, then it becomes the human nature
of rule beating, you know, some people that's how they operate and, you know, whatever.
But so what
are your thoughts? And these, these just be your thoughts. I understand that this is maybe not,
it wouldn't be your specialty, so to speak, or maybe you wouldn't feel as qualified to say,
this is what I would do. But what are your thoughts on how it could be made more fair?
You know, I, I've debated this in my mind. I definitely think that we need women's and girls sports, right?
We have Title IX passed in 1972, establishing that there should be women's and girls sports.
We need this opportunity for women and girls to participate in sports.
We need to keep that fair and make sure that, you know, as much as possible, no one is given
an advantage.
I don't know.
Do we need a third class?
Maybe we have male sports.
We have female sports.
We have open class.
And so then if someone, a female is willing to compete against a transgender
athlete, they could go into the open class. That might be a possibility.
And just to say, I mean, somebody would say, oh, well, that basically what you're saying
is a transgender class and that's discrimination. To me, I would say, yeah, okay. So then having
men and women's sports, is that discrimination as well? Like for people who just say, yeah, okay. So then having men and women's sports, is that discrimination as well? Like
for people who just say, yeah, no, I'm a guy, I'm a girl. And that's it. That's the end of the story.
Like that, nobody would say that's discriminatory. It's based on, like you were saying,
it's based on rational thinking and it's based on biology. And there's a reason why those things
have been separated. Yeah. Thousands of years of human experience dictating that men have an athletic advantage over women.
So it doesn't really make sense to let men go for if women don't want to compete with men.
So like, yeah, this game sucks.
Like, I can't win.
I can't do anything.
You know, I'd rather not play this game.
Can we make a game I can play at?
And so the question, I guess, then is, is allowing more and more transgender athletes to compete with biological women. Is that going to ruin the sporting time in. I know I'm never going to win anything and I'm never going to advance. I'm never going to get a scholarship, but I just do it because
I have nothing better to do. You know, and we do see that there's a lot of athletes that you see
going out for sport that knowing they're never going to make varsity unless somebody gets injured
or sick or something. And they keep doing it because they love it. And I don't want to
discourage that in any way. And I hope that it will still happen. But I just can't help but think that there will be a downstream negative result of women, but not good enough to compete against a transgender athlete. And so those are the
ones that I think would be probably hardest hit by this rather than say our average athlete that
just loves the sport. And I find that kind of ironic in the context of our current environment
and how much emphasis is put on women's rights and put on equality between the genders, whether it's along the lines of pay or educational opportunities.
Or it just it seems that this is for the woke folk out there who seem to care so much about social justice.
How can they get this so backward?
Yeah, yeah.
It's a difficult thing, especially when we look at these such well-known
physiological and anatomical differences between men and women, chromosomal genetic differences
between men and women. I'm all for equal work for equal pay. I think that's important. I think there
should be equal opportunities for these types of things. But I think we also need to recognize that
there are differences, especially when it
comes to things like athletics.
A woman can't compete with a man in the vast majority of athletic endeavors when, you know,
again, we're comparing as much as possible apples to apples, elite women to elite men
or average women to average men.
Absolutely.
And you may have already, I mean, you've covered this at least obliquely, but I think it should
just be directly addressed for anybody who might be thinking about it.
this at least obliquely, but I think it should just be directly addressed for anybody who might be thinking about it. So take, again, looking at the data that's available, your average
transgender athlete is, just to make it clear, is performing generally performing at a much
higher level than not just your average female. I mean, that's probably certainly true, I would
assume. How does your average transgender athlete compare to, let's say, your average elite female? I mean, that's probably certainly true, I would assume. How does your average transgender athlete compare to, let's say, your average elite female?
You know, it's hard because I don't know that we have numbers on that. So we have to come back to
some instances where we have case studies or individuals, again, coming back to the idea of
CeCe Telfer in Division II, winning by a second half. We can look, there's a male to female transgender
athlete playing college basketball in California, six foot, six inch center that by and large, wow,
she had the record for the most rebounds in the league. Well, she's six foot, six inches tall,
right? Compared to the tallest women on the team that aren't that, there's not that many six foot,
six inch women. And again, we can see see things whether it's mountain biking or whether it's mixed martial arts things like that take an average man if we look at
it on average men are going to be 10 to 30 percent better at athletics than women generally like 10
11 better in things like running and like 30 percent better in strength so then if we take
transgender athlete with that inherent 10 to 30% advantage and reduce
it, but they still have a 25% advantage over a woman, yeah, they're still going to be much better
than probably even the elite women, or at least competing with the elite women.
Immediately. And so what they can go from being an average male athlete to an outstanding female
athlete over the course of a short period of time. Yeah. Yeah. And again, coming back to the case study, I hate, I should probably stop picking
on CeCe Telfer, but it's the case I'm very familiar with. As a male athlete, CeCe Telfer was
200th in the nation and then becomes a female athlete and is number one. I think we have a
case study right there that helps illustrate that, yeah, there's a big difference between
men and women, even after a man transitions. Yeah. Yeah. That makes sense. Well, I mean, those are the main questions that I had for you. Are
there any other points that we haven't covered that you feel are worth mentioning or any other,
particularly counterpoints? I thought that that would be, that's one of the main reasons I wanted
to talk to you because of how researched you are on this. And I just wanted to take things that
people have thrown at me that I've said, you know, I honestly don't have a good answer for that because I haven't looked into this,
but are there any other counter arguments or other points that you feel are worth covering
just for the sake of thoroughness? Yeah. I think one thing people have maybe said,
well, the reason men and women perform differently is because women haven't had the advantage of the
many dozens or hundreds of years in sports training that men have.
And we can see that up until basically early 1970s, there wasn't many opportunities for women's sports.
And in the early 1970s up until about the mid-80s, there were huge increases in women's record performance as they started training more effectively because they had full-time opportunities and things like that. But by and large, the differences in world records between men and women,
they leveled off about the mid 80s and have stayed the same. And so if we see a new woman's
world record set in something, it's still going to be that 10 to 30% different from the men's
world record. And again, if we look at some of the things like in the marathon, in the 100 meters,
the women's world records were set over 20 years ago
and haven't been broken. And the men's world records have been broken recently. So I don't
think it's a matter of training or nutrition or understanding how the body works anymore that is
making this difference between men and women. It's physiology, it's anatomy, it's inherent
differences between men and women. Yeah, that makes sense for people listening. A lot of people
listening are into weightlifting. It's like the newbie gains that you already get a lot of in the
beginning you're new and your body's very responsive and, and then things slow down.
And so similarly, that makes sense where you go from a period of not much attention and effort
being put into female athletics to getting a lot of attention and effort. And so you see a rapid
increase just through better training, better nutrition,
just people really applying the same probably techniques
where they already knew.
They're like, well, we know what works with guys
and we'll just do it over here.
And look at that.
Hey, they're getting really good.
But then you get into your intermediate
and advanced stage as an individual
and take the gym, for example,
where now you've already got 80% of what's available to you
in terms of muscle and strength.
And now you're working your ass off. You're working twice as hard for like very little return.
And that's just the nature of, you know, whatever. That's the nature of any sort of physical activity like that. Now that's a good point. Are there any other counter arguments or
any other points that are worth addressing? You know, I, I can't think of any right now.
I really can't, I guess I've mentioned this
once before, but I also want to mention that people will come back and say, well, the International
Olympic Committee said such and such. Okay. Well, in 2003, when the International Olympic Committee
said, oh, well, transgender athletes can compete as female athletes if they reduce their testosterone
and they've had two years of treatment and legal and stuff like that. And they said it was based on the best science. But at the time, the best science
was basically four published articles looking at bone mineral density. The IOC came back. Yeah,
the IOC came back to look at this again in 2015. And actually, the IOC loosened up the standards
a little bit. Now you don't have to have two years of transgender therapy and you don't have to have a gonadectomy. You just have to have a year of testosterone suppression and
a sworn statement. There wasn't much change as far as what the research goes. From 2003 to 2015,
there was more studies showing, oh, reduction in bone mineral density, but still more than you
would have in a male. No change in body height. There was maybe four papers looking at things
around athletic performance, such as muscle mass, muscle strength, body height. There was maybe four papers looking at things around athletic
performance, such as muscle mass, muscle strength, muscle density. And those papers showed transgender
athletes still have greater muscle mass, muscle density, muscle strength than a comparable female.
There is research currently underway in some Scandinavian countries to look at athletics in
transgender athletes, looking at how it affects their performance, but those data are still years away from before they're being available and published. So, you
know, people that come back, well, the IOC and the IOC based it on data, I have not been able to find
that data that supports that transgender athletes do not have an advantage. What I find is
transgender athletes still have inherent physiological advantages.
And then somebody might wonder, well, why then?
Why would the, you're saying they're lying?
Like, yeah, yeah, boy, this is going out on a limb here, but I think that it perhaps might
be a situation of individuals putting a social philosophy ahead of objective biological data.
And anyone who thinks that that's not possible, come on,
how naive do you have to be to, especially when the evidence there's very good circumstantial
evidence where you're like, okay, so we have two scenarios here. Either these people did not even
read this research or are incapable of reading and interpreting this research, or there are
misinterpreting the research. There's really kind of only two possibilities here.
Yeah, that's really it.
So it's extreme incompetence or politics.
Yeah, willful negligence.
Right, right.
Yeah, exactly.
No, no, no, no.
It's extreme carelessness.
Remember, that was the key.
It makes me think of, totally separate discussion.
It makes me think of the, in the context of climate change,
the 97% consensus based on a study by Cook et al that was trashed by other researchers later
who dug into the data and were like, no, no, no, no. There's like 0.1% consensus.
What are you talking about? Yet? Nobody cares. They still pay this nine. It's just, it's,
it's an interesting world that we live in.
But no, this has been a great conversation.
Succinct, but very much to the point.
And again, I would say, is there anything else?
I did my best putting together my bullet points
I wanted to talk to you about,
but that's why I'm kind of passing the ball back to you.
If there's anything else that you feel should be mentioned
in the context of everything we've discussed.
You know, the only other thing I could think of, really, I think we've done a good job discussing
the science about it, what's known about it. I would just encourage your listeners and such that
they need to be aware of this because they need to talk to their local sporting commissions. They
talk to their high school athletic administrations, things like that, and say, okay, let's look at this
from a scientific standpoint. Let's look at this from the physiologic,
why we have men's and women's athletics in the first place.
And that takes some courage.
It does, especially given our, again, our social climate today, where people who
say these things are labeled as all sorts of negative terms, but that's not the case. We're
not trying to say these individuals with this transgender issue, we're not trying to discredit them as a
human being. We're not trying to reduce their value to society. Their worth is a wonderful
person. We don't want to say we don't love them, but we also want to acknowledge what does the
science say. And we want our children to have the opportunity for fair competition.
And how does that fit into the spirit of sports, which is fair competition?
And where it is based on the individual's ability to play the sport inherently.
And like you said, not because they have a better bathing suit or a better hockey stick
or something.
And that's why they're a little bit better than everybody else.
Yeah.
Yeah, exactly.
Just to follow up on that point.
And I think it is worth just commenting on the point of it does take some
individual courage and you do have to be willing. And I don't, I mean, you exemplify it in terms of
what, because I don't know if people don't, many people don't understand how academia works. And
if you break with the norm or if you break with expectations, there can be backlash.
If you break with expectations, there can be backlash.
And there always are politics involved in any situation. And so individually, it does take that of standing up and saying, well, let's talk about what's white and wrong.
Let's talk about what's scientific.
Let's talk about the biology.
And people can inform themselves.
Like in the show notes, I'm going to put a link to your paper.
And it's very accessible, which is nice. Like you can show notes, I'm going to put a link to your paper and it's very accessible,
which is nice. Like you can read it and understand it. Sometimes scientific research,
it gets so loaded down with jargon, the layman, even someone like me, it's like, okay, time to
get the fizz books out again. Cause I don't even, I'm having a hard time following what's even being
discussed here and then being willing to stand on it and being willing to be challenged. And
you know, so for people, I just want to
commend people who are willing to do that and yourself included, because it's needed in every
element, every aspect of society. We need people that are willing to stand up and go, hey, I may
not have it all figured out and I may be entirely wrong, but I'm going to lay out my argument and
I'm going to lay it out rationally. And I don't care if it goes against the orthodoxy.
I believe in this and maybe I'll change my mind. Maybe somebody will change my mind,
but this should be said. Oh, well, thank you. Thank you. I'm very fortunate. I'm in the middle
of Nebraska, which is a fairly conservative area. And I've got a good department chair and good
colleagues who are willing to agree with, Hey, this is the science, put the science out there.
And again, they'll disagree with me too, but they're respectful about it.
Right. Those types of discussions, it's just, there are two very different types of discussions
that can be had. And I think this is useful for people listening. So you can have, you could lay
out, okay, here's my argument. And then you can have one type of person who would just say, oh,
And then you can have one type of person who would just say, oh, this is propaganda. You are a bigot and you probably voted for Trump. You're a Nazi. Fuck you. That's one type of person. And then you're like, yeah, okay, cool. So, but is there anything specifically that you disagree with? I said, and it goes nowhere. Or you have somebody, and this is probably more what you've experienced where they go, you know, this is good work, but on this particular point, you mentioned this and I looked at this paper and the data, are you sure you got that right? And so that can be a
productive discussion. Absolutely. And the people that come up with really good what-if scenarios
that we don't have an answer to. Such as? Well, again, coming back to the idea with Caster
Samania, I've probably slaughtered the last name there. But again, that individual appears to be female with some inherent genetic advantages. And that's a good
question. We don't have a really good answer to and a really clear answer to, and I'm willing to
discuss that if we can have it rational discussion, as long as people are willing to recognize,
well, that is the exception. And by and large, that's not what we're discussing in this case.
And what are your thoughts on that in that individual? Because my initial,
like the, what I jumped to is I say, yeah. And how many of those come around?
Exactly.
Oh, right. One in a generation, maybe. I mean, so by that argument, we could say,
well, it's not fair that Tiger Woods was so good at golf. And we don't know why just for that
period when he was so dominant. I mean,
I forget the exact statistic. It was absurd. It was top 10 in 70 something, 70% of tournaments and one like 30 or 40%. I might be getting those. I might be botching those stats. That's what comes
back to me. But he was so dominant. I remember other golfers saying, actually complaining that
they felt like they were playing. If he's in a tournament, they're playing for second place. So then what do we say? We do we say, okay, what we're gonna do
now is we're going to analyze Tiger Woods. We're going to be like, we're going to find his
advantages and we're going to handicap him. That's unfair. No, of course not. But we won't see another
Tiger Woods probably for another a hundred years. Exactly. And you can do that with, you know,
every sport where you find these athletes that are so dominant.
I mean, everybody says, who's the next Michael Jordan?
There was only one Michael Jordan.
Yep.
Right?
Yep.
Or Serena Williams.
You watch her play tennis, especially in her prime.
You're like, even just ball speed and performance
you'd expect from a man.
And you almost feel bad for some of the women
who had to compete with her
because you're like, she is trashing them.
They have no chance.
And okay, it happened. But it still was within the context of the separation between biological men and women and then saying what happens in there like we don't want to micromanage
too much and get too obsessive about equality and everyone needs to be equal because that then that
kills the sport but do we want to enable do we want like 10 more serena williams
now in the next 10 years through this transgender movement is that good for is that good for the
sport exactly exactly that's and that's one of the important questions that we've got to address
yeah well it'll be interesting to see where it goes i mean the the point of having an open class
on the surface seems to make pretty good logical sense, and it would help keep things truly competitive, I think.
I think so, too, but I'm not in charge of those decisions.
We'll see.
Ultimately, what's nice about sports is they need to make money in the end.
If people need to tune in, people need to care.
care. And if people don't care and don't tune in, then the sports decline and then the incentive to make the changes necessary to make people care, you know, become more and more pressing. And so,
you know, in the end, it might be one of those kind of market forces types of situation where
the ideology loses to the economics and you can't force people to change their mind. It never works, right? So
when you have a woman who's watching female sports and she sees other women getting crushed
by transgender women and she just goes, this is lame. Maybe she wouldn't say that ever in public.
She wouldn't tell anybody. She'd be afraid of how she'd be labeled. But if that's how she's going to feel, and I'm sure many women would feel that way,
then she's going to tune out. And eventually the sport just declines and declines and declines. So
it'll be interesting to see how it develops. Yeah. Yeah, it will be. It will be.
Well, thanks a lot for taking the time, Greg, to do this. And usually in the end,
kind of wrap up with where people can find my guests and their work. And so if there's anything that the listeners that you want to let them know, I doubt you have an
Instagram, for example, if you do, then you can, you can let everybody know, but if there's anything
you want to tell people where they can find you and your work, anything that, you know,
maybe even follow up to this, they might find interesting.
Okay. Well, if you make a link to the declaration available, that says where I'm at,
says what institution I'm at and what department
I'm in. So people can just get on the web and find me there. It's got my email address.
Oh, cool. So if people want to reach out, they can ask me if they have follow-up questions,
they can reach out to you?
Absolutely. Absolutely. I'd welcome follow-up questions on that. And again, the legal
declaration, I have to give props to the folks at ADF because they did really help me craft it so that a person
can read it, right? Because I am stuck in the academic world and I'm an exercise physiologist
and I love terminology. So the folks at Alliance Defending Freedom were very, very helpful to help
get this in a document that a person could read it, understand it, follow it, getting some good
graphs and data in there and stuff. So that was very helpful. And I encourage people to be involved
in the conversation.
Let's have a good conversation about it.
Let's be respectful, but yeah, we can exchange viewpoints.
I agree.
We need more of that.
Absolutely.
All right, Greg, thanks again.
Thank you very much.
You have a good rest of the day.
All right, well, that's it for today's episode.
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