Well, we do that all the time in wrestling. We don't allow a 140 lb person who identifies as a 120 lb person to compete in the 120 lb. class. In international figure skating, we don't allow a 22-year-old who is small for her age to compete in junior competitions. We also set drug standards so that someone using PEDs (like anabolic steroids) gets excluded from competition for a long time, partly because those drugs can yield long-term benefits even after they are stopped.Exactly. Everyone's talking about bathrooms/locker rooms but it's not what we should be discussing. Because there's a wide variety (ie binary, trans, transitioning, etc), it's much harder to set the standards. How can we judge by their hormones? By their bodies? I believe we should let them decide which class to compete in and let their skating speaks for itself. There really aren't enough to create a third catch-all class, and at the same time, excluding them from skating just because of how they appear is just ???
I agree with you on the locker room issue. I grew up in an era where you had to use group changing rooms and shower rooms after PE classes. I find it just a little funny that when I go to a pool today, it is mostly the old ladies and little children getting dressed/undressed in the open locker room and many/most of the younger women decamp to the cubicles for dressing/undressing.