Common Sense on Gender and Sex from a Mixed Martial Arts Fighter
Sometimes the person on the street has more wisdom than the cultural elites. Thatβs because the person on the street is dealing with everyday life while the cultural elites are often dealing with abstract theory. Never has this been truer than with the subject of males who identify as females competing in womenβs sports.
Once, while serving as a visiting professor at a leading evangelical seminary, I spent time with a Korean American pastor who had earned his doctorate in Buddhist studies. His doctoral thesis analyzed different methods of evangelizing Buddhists and proposed what he felt would be the most effective method.
I asked him with real interest, βWhat success have you found using your method?β
He replied, βI donβt know. I havenβt met a Buddhist yet.β
I kid you not.
Academic theory, not fleshed out in real-life experience, only goes so far.
When Academic Theory Did Nothing to Help Bud Light
Just ask Alissa Heinerscheid, vice president of marketing for Bud Light, who took a leave of absence following the massive and costly boycott of the brand after the disastrous Dylan Mulvaney ad campaign.
As noted by Amanda Holpuch for the New York Times:
Before the boycott, Alissa Heinerscheid … said in an interview that the brand needed to be more inclusive.
“The brand is in decline,” Ms. Heinerscheid said on the βMake Yourself at Homeβ podcast in March. “Itβs been in decline for a really long time. And if we do not attract young drinkers to come and drink this brand, there will be no future for Bud Light.”
This was spoken before the disastrous campaign.
So much for what Wharton and Harvard, from which Heinerscheid graduated, know about beer sales.
Ask the Women Who Face Male Competitors
As for men who identify as women competing against other women, after a male golfer who identifies as a woman won a tournament, Martina Navratilova, herself a lesbian, said, βThis needs to end, male bodies do not belong in women’s sports.β
What could be clearer than that?
An athlete can make a far better decision on issues like this than some βenlightenedβ bureaucrat sitting in an ivory tower.
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It is even worse when those charged with making decisions about βtranswomenβ competing against biological females havenβt even studied the issues.
This came to the fore during a recent Senate investigation when Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) questioned NCAA President Charlie Baker:
Sen. Lee: Has the NCAA assessed the physical, emotional, psychological harm of its transgender inclusion policy on female athletes? If so, what are the findings? If not, why not?
Pres. Baker: The NCAA has not conducted any research related to the current transgender policy.
Seriously? How can this possibly be, especially given the massive resources that the NCAA has at its fingertips? They havenβt even studied the ramifications of their foolhardy policy?
Ask an MMA Fighter
Thatβs why, in cases like this, itβs best to talk to the competitors themselves, the people in the trenches, the man (or woman) on the street in the world of sports.
Sometimes, in their often blunt manner of speech, without any concern for being politically correct, they can present the strongest case of all.
Thatβs exactly what mixed martial arts fighter Julian Erosa did last Saturday night after defeating his opponent. (For those not familiar with MMA, while it requires tremendous athleticism, multiple skill sets, and lots of courage, it is an exceptionally violent sport.)
Erosa said:
I donβt know how you guys feel about this whole situation, but I donβt like cheaters and so I wanted to call out Lia Thomas [who was not a strong athlete as a male swimmer but became a record-setting champion when competing against women]. I wanted to encourage him to transition from womenβs swimming into womenβs MMA and then Iβll transition into becoming a woman, and Iβm gonna beat that dudeβs a**. Thatβs what I wanted to say because itβs all about getting a little bit of shock value.
But I mean in the world that weβre living in, thereβs no common sense anymore. Itβs becoming a bit ridiculous and obviously thatβs one of the big things thatβs kind of going on now. And I just donβt agree with men in womenβs sports, you know even the whole Fallon Fox thing [a biological male who competed against women in MMA], guys that are fighting in womenβs MMA and knocking them out. Itβs a bad look.
Thankfully, even though, to quote Erosa, βthereβs no common sense anymore,β plenty of people do resonate with common sense when they hear it, especially from the man (or woman) on the street.
Well said, Mr. Erosa. At some point, sanity will prevail.
Dr. Michael Brown is the host of the nationally syndicated Line of Fire radio program. He is the author of more than 40 books, including Can You be Gay and Christian?; Our Hands Are Stained With Blood; and Seize the Moment: How to Fuel the Fires of Revival. You can connect with him on Facebook, X, or YouTube.