The libtards are saying there is no advantage haivng been formerly a man, as if getting your dick chopped off and take a few pills makes you a woman. Socially, yes, cosmetically yes I can call and respect TGs as women, but as physical and contact sport athletes?.. All Fallon has to do really is hold off on testosterone therapy which will allow her to increase power and muscle. Then just go back to the therapy. Men have more fast twitch muscle fibres which allow for more power. Perfect for smashing up women in MMA. In three minutes, against a known powerful MMA female fighter, she smashed her eyesocket, gashed her head open and gave her a concussion #cheatercheateryourbitsareneater
A history of men being **** at sport and getting the chop and being winners in the woman's sport please log in to view this image Lana Lawless Lana Lawless, a 58-year-old man, launched a late-in-life career in women’s professional golf, and immediately became the World Champion in Women’s Long Drive competition. One observer remarked: “Guess what Lawless’ distance was at the 2008 Long Drive Championship? Three hundred thirty five yards. That’s nearly 100 yards longer than Paula Creamer’s average. And Lawless complained that taking the hormones had caused her to become weaker. How far did she hit when she was a he? Apparently not long enough to beat the men. Ms. Lawless has already proven that the Olympic committee is wrong. She has proven with her Long Drive participation that no matter how many hormones she takes, she still is going to have—by birth—more upper body muscle and upper body strength than even the longest hitting women. Even European Tour player Laura Davies doesn’t hit a golf ball 335 yards.” please log in to view this image Robert “Gabrielle” Ludwig Robert “Gabrielle” Ludwig, 52, a wealthy 6 foot 6 inch tall Silicon Valley programmer, launched a late-in-life career in women’s basketball at a Junior College. Not only was Ludwig granted a spot based on the old IOC guidelines, but the two-year play-time limit was waived because his transgendering was deemed to somehow erase his past years as a college player. He became “the leading scorer and rebounder, and this team is somewhat built around [him],” says the women’s team coach. please log in to view this image Michelle Dumaresq Michelle Dumaresq began his women’s downhill cycling career by entering the Bear Mountain event in the “novice” category six years after he transgendered. He not only won the race, but his finish time beat all the women in the elite professional categories by 2.5 seconds. He went on to become the Canadian National Women’s Champion in 2003, 2004, and 2006, after which he retired.