Tags
Aktuelle Nachrichten
America
Aus Aller Welt
Breaking News
Canada
DE
Deutsch
Deutschsprechenden
Europa
Europe
Global News
Internationale Nachrichten aus aller Welt
Japan
Japan News
Kanada
Konflikt
Korea
Krieg in der Ukraine
Latest news
Maps
Nachrichten
News
News Japan
Polen
Russischer Überfall auf die Ukraine seit 2022
Science
South Korea
Ukraine
UkraineWarVideoReport
Ukraine War Video Report
Ukrainian Conflict
United Kingdom
United States
United States of America
US
USA
USA Politics
Vereinigte Königreich Großbritannien und Nordirland
Vereinigtes Königreich
Welt
Welt-Nachrichten
Weltnachrichten
Wissenschaft
World
World News
3 Comments
Apparently NOT! I’ve been deep diving into this issue because of the Olympics and did you know that there are people who can have female presenting parts but be genetically male? Apparently conception can get so fucked up you end up with a person with female organs except testes where the ovaries would be so that they get the development and testosterone levels of a male. There’s also a whole thing about large gametes and small gametes and where does XXY and XYY fit in so it is really more complicated than it initially appears.
If you were born with a vagina, should you be allowed to box against women in the Olympics – No questions asked?
Sometimes a child is born with genitalia which cannot be classified as female or male. A genetically female child (i.e., with XX chromosomes) may be born with external genitalia which appear to be those of a normal male. Or, a genetically male child (XY chromosomes) may be born with female-appearing external genitalia. In very rare cases, a child may be born with both female and male genitalia. Because these conditions are in some sense “in-between” the two sexes, they are collectively referred to as intersex.
How common is intersex? In her 1993 essay, biologist Anne Fausto-Sterling acknowledged that “it is extremely difficult to estimate the frequency of intersexuality” (Fausto-Sterling, 1993, p. 21). In this paper we will focus on establishing how often intersexual conditions occur, and what conditions should be considered intersexual.
In her most recent book, Sexing the Body: Gender Politics and the Construction of Sexuality (Fausto-Sterling, 2000), Fausto-Sterling maintains that human sexuality is best understood not as a dichotomy but as a continuum. She bases this assertion on her beliefs regarding intersex conditions. A chapter subtitled “The Sexual Continuum” begins with the case of Levi Suydam, an intersexual living in the 1840s who menstruated regularly but who also had a penis and testicles. Fausto-Sterling writes:
While male and female stand on the extreme ends of a biological con/tinuum, there are many bodies, bodies such as Suydam’s, that evidently mix together anatomical components conventionally attributed to both males and females. The implications of my argument for a sexual continuum are profound. If nature really offers us more than two sexes, then it follows that our current notions of masculinity and femininity are cultural conceits.
… Modern surgical techniques help maintain the two-sex system. Today children who are born “either/or-neither/both”–a fairly common phenomenon–usually disappear from view because doctors “correct” them right away with surgery. (Fausto-Sterling, 2000, p. 31)
Fausto-Sterling asserts that 1.7% of human births are intersex. This figure was widely quoted in the aftermath of the book’s publication. “Instead of viewing intersexuality as a genetic hiccup,” wrote Courtney Weaver for the Washington Post, “[Fausto-Sterling] points out that its frequency mandates a fresher look. In one study, intersexuality typically constitute 1.7% of a community” (Weaver, 2000). The New England Journal of Medicine applauded Fausto-Sterling’s “careful and insightful book…. She [Fausto-Sterling] points out that intersexual newborns are not rare (they may account for 1.7% of births), so a review of our attitudes about these children is overdue …” (Breedlove, 2000). “Most people believe that there are only two sex categories,” went the review in American Scientist. “Yet 17 out of every 1,000 people fail to meet our assumption that everyone is either male or female. This is the approximate incidence of intersexuals: individuals with XY chromosomes and female anatomy, XX chromosomes and male anatomy, or anatomy that is half male and half female.” (Moore, 2000, p. 545)
https://www.leonardsax.com/how-common-is-intersex-a-response-to-anne-fausto-sterling/#:~:text=Or%2C%20a%20genetically%20male%20child,collectively%20referred%20to%20as%20intersex.