I think it's a metaphor.
So anything that happens to a woman that is negative, even if that thing had nothing to do with her gender is a metaphor? Or is there something specific about this?
I think it's a metaphor.
I knew the concept of metaphors would trip you up.So anything that happens to a woman that is negative, even if that thing had nothing to do with her gender is a metaphor? Or is there something specific about this?
Slow pokes move outta the way, let her keep moving. Article says she finished 74th, sounds like they broke her groove.
I knew the concept of metaphors would trip you up.
You're never gonna pass a Turing test at this rate.
That to me is the biggest issue. A person that is a competitor was handicapped because of a mistake of the organizers. I feel for her in that way. What I don't see is sexism or gender bias.
It is pretty normal in biking for those who break out early to finish way back. I wonder if she was hoping to catch the men's peleton and then ride with it, that would've given her a massive advantage to way out in front and still have the aerodynamics of a peleton and since they stopped her she got burned out without any benefit.Slow pokes move outta the way, let her keep moving. Article says she finished 74th, sounds like they broke her groove.
The race organizers probably honestly never expected anyone to catch up. Then they simply handled it wrong imho.
But you see how it can be construed in that way, correct? Maybe next year just one combined race, as it's my understanding this was a men's race followed by a women's race.
If the men are to slow and women to fast, scrap it and make it one race.
No, I can't. Any sort of logic applied should get one to see it was not about gender. If someone looks at this and sees a gender issue, then it's beyond me. Something happening to a woman is not the same as something happening because she is a woman no?
No, I can't. Any sort of logic applied should get one to see it was not about gender. If someone looks at this and sees a gender issue, then it's beyond me. Something happening to a woman is not the same as something happening because she is a woman no?
But you see how it can be construed in that way, correct? Maybe next year just one combined race, as it's my understanding this was a men's race followed by a women's race.
If the men are to slow and women to fast, scrap it and make it one race.
It has been fun watching how the SJWs blew this all up into a men vs women thing when that has nothing to do with it.
Doesn't sound as if it's "the men are too slow and the women too fast". Sounds more as if "the fastest of the women is a bit faster than the slowest of the men, at least on the initial part, though likely not over the whole race".
And the logical solution is to have a much bigger gap between the two starts. It does not seem to me to be a gender politics issue.
(Racing remains an intrinsically pointless activity, though. The lot of them ought to find something more constructive to do. Like campaigning for safer cycle routes and for restrictions on cars!)
From my view it's the other way around; I see people who want to stir up crap posting about this as if something nefarious is going on just to get a rise. Everyone who has been angry about what happened settles down once they understand the truth of the matter.
BTW, if you want to see real SJWs in action just pay attention to the conservative whining on this forum and elsewhere.
How many men were registered for the women's race?
But "any sort of logic" isn't applied by everyone. I agree with him that the optics of it are bad, even though I highly doubt they stalled her because of gender related embarrassment.
Next time I assume they won't screw up the gapping and hence no need for more bad optics.
For what it is worth, here are some stats about men's and women's records in the Olympics:
https://www.theatlantic.com/technol...ens-world-records-compare-with-womens/260758/
Men simply have a natural advantage when it comes to strength and stamina. This gives men an advantage in physical competition. Maybe the answer is to rectify this by adding affirmative action scores and multipliers to women's scores while preaching equality.
I disagree. In ultra long races women seem to have the advantage. It has been speculated it is because of the thin layer of fat under the skin they have that men do not have.
And I think it was the mentality that women are not equal to men that kept them from not training as hard.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4309798/
In an evolving world where performance differences between sexes in daily life (eg, education and work) are fading in first world countries, women are challenging men more and more in sports activities. The discussion about whether women will eventually outpace men in running or ultrarunning has been going on for decades and is still ongoing.1–5 In the last few years, more cases of women outperforming men have been made public.6–8 For example, Ann Trason won the 1989 US 24-Hour Championship in Flushing Meadow Park and was the first woman ever to win a National Championship in the United States.6 In 2002 and 2003, Pamela Reed won the Badwater ultramarathon by surpassing all men.
I disagree. In ultra long races women seem to have the advantage. It has been speculated it is because of the thin layer of fat under the skin they have that men do not have.
And I think it was the mentality that women are not equal to men that kept them from not training as hard.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4309798/
In an evolving world where performance differences between sexes in daily life (eg, education and work) are fading in first world countries, women are challenging men more and more in sports activities. The discussion about whether women will eventually outpace men in running or ultrarunning has been going on for decades and is still ongoing.1–5 In the last few years, more cases of women outperforming men have been made public.6–8 For example, Ann Trason won the 1989 US 24-Hour Championship in Flushing Meadow Park and was the first woman ever to win a National Championship in the United States.6 In 2002 and 2003, Pamela Reed won the Badwater ultramarathon by surpassing all men.
It's only a gender issue in terms of how the races are still separate, even though it's seems women can compete with men.
I agree, make the gap bigger. I also think letting women register for the men's, or vice versa is fine as well. Maybe more of a "how fast are you" registration.
Racing is fine, I don't disagree with campaigning for safer routes etc....but I'm not gonna knock competition either
Instead of men and women maybe a group A and group B, based on ranking/time. The best women (whatever) are definitely better than the worst men.