A century ago, eugenics, the science of
breeding "better" humans, was considered the "queen of the sciences."
Then came the Holocaust, in which millions of Jews, LGBT+ people, people
with disabilities, "Gypsies" and others were murdered by the Germans in the name of purifying the Aryan race.
The first to be sent to the gas chambers were those deemed "lives not
worth living": people with disabilities and "deformities."
Germany lost WW II, and afterwards, eugenics was abandoned in the polite
sciences, and replaced with genetics. No longer was it considered
ethical to speak of breeding better humans by eliminating
"undesirables;" instead, genetics was to improve life by addressing
itself to pure science or to curing medical suffering.
But
eugenics never really went away, and it's operating today through
various reproductive technologies such as selective implantation of
embryos, and, quite commonly, through prenatal screening for
"disorders," which are then "treated" via "therapeutic abortion." Among
those characteristics that can been screened for and eliminated are
those forms of intersexuality with a genetic origin.
Our
medical ethicists today state that selective abortion of female embryos
is unacceptable, because there is no medical condition, simply a social
preference. Yet termination of pregnancies involving intersex fetuses
is deemed ethical, because we are deemed disordered. In essence, this
"ethical" position is that it's ok for doctors to select fetuses with
disabilities for termination, as it's rational for us to be considered
"lives not worth living."
OII Australia has submitted the
following comment on guidelines for the use of assisted reproductive
technologies in Australia, which you can find here. It argues that
intersexuality is not a "disorder," but rather a natural variation. It
further argues that medically selecting against intersex pregnancies is
akin to selecting against female pregnancies, being based on social
biases, and should be considered unethical.
I'm all for that,
but I'd go further. I'm pro choice, and believe a pregnant individual
should have the ability to terminate an early pregnancy at will, based
on her assessment of her readiness and ability to carry a pregnancy to
term. But I have grave moral reservations about eugenic abortion--a
termination of a pregnancy based on the characteristics of the fetus as
determined by doctors. Elective abortion at will relates to people's
reproductive autonomy, but eugenic abortion focuses on what types of
people are considered valuable or disposible. And, as someone who is
Jewish, LGBT+, and intersex, I see a clear continuity between my being a
candidate for the gas chamber were I living in Nazi Germany, and my
being a candidate for selective abortion were I conceived today. I
cannot countenance eugenics.
Tuesday, April 29, 2014
Thursday, April 10, 2014
Testosterone and the Sex Policing of Athletes' Bodies
New policies for Olympic and other
international athletes set an upper limit to the amount of testosterone
considered "normal" for a woman, and require those women who have
natural levels of T that are higher than this to have medical interventions
to lower their levels. If the women are found to be intersex, these
interventions include surgical removal of their gonads, and (though this
has NO relation to testosterone production) surgical reduction of their
clitorises if these are deemed "enlarged."
This is just crazy. Some facts: first, levels of testosterone vary a lot. Tests of elite athletes show that about 17% of male athletes have testosterone in the "female range" and 14% of female athletes have testosterone in the "male range." Secondly, there is no direct correlation between levels of T and athletic performance; that's simplistic and nearly magical thinking. And third, it makes no sense to define the range of "normal" T levels for women very narrowly (15 - 70 ng/dL) and for men very broadly (300 -1,000 ng/dL), in essence saying that there's no such thing as a natural level of testosterone too high in a man, but there is such a thing for a woman.
Bodies vary a great deal. Why do we focus obsessively on policing the sexed body of athletes, rather than on other "abnormalities?" Basketball players are abnormally tall, which actually does enhance their performance. Many gymnasts are double-jointed and abnormally flexible. In fact, most any sport rewards people with atypical bodies, and we *celebrate* that. But when it comes to sex variance, a variation that is associated with high performance more in fantasy than in fact is suddenly subject to extreme bodily policing, and that's just wrong.
This is just crazy. Some facts: first, levels of testosterone vary a lot. Tests of elite athletes show that about 17% of male athletes have testosterone in the "female range" and 14% of female athletes have testosterone in the "male range." Secondly, there is no direct correlation between levels of T and athletic performance; that's simplistic and nearly magical thinking. And third, it makes no sense to define the range of "normal" T levels for women very narrowly (15 - 70 ng/dL) and for men very broadly (300 -1,000 ng/dL), in essence saying that there's no such thing as a natural level of testosterone too high in a man, but there is such a thing for a woman.
Bodies vary a great deal. Why do we focus obsessively on policing the sexed body of athletes, rather than on other "abnormalities?" Basketball players are abnormally tall, which actually does enhance their performance. Many gymnasts are double-jointed and abnormally flexible. In fact, most any sport rewards people with atypical bodies, and we *celebrate* that. But when it comes to sex variance, a variation that is associated with high performance more in fantasy than in fact is suddenly subject to extreme bodily policing, and that's just wrong.
Labels:
athlete,
discrimination,
gender,
hormone,
intersex,
medicalization,
normalization,
Olympics,
regulation,
sex,
testosterone
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