My argument would be that this person obviously does not have a significant advantage over other women. I don't know whether she really has a developmental condition - I've only seen speculation.
I was responding to your suggestion that she is akin to male fighter. Her fighting record suggests otherwise
The science is unequivocal that she has a natural advantage from being biologically male and undergoing male puberty.
Whether she is better overall is impacted by skill levels too. A non elite male can be an elite female.
She was fighting for a world championship.
The other fighter with DSD condition is a multiple world champion.
I’m not sure how much better they need to get before it becomes relevant to consider the risk factor.
But basing the rules on whether any individual is “too good” makes no sense.
If you are interested, this is a leading expert who has been involved in creating safety rules for world rugby and was also involved in the Caster Semenya case.
He explains the science behind it, and later on explains how people with DSD assigned female at birth and raised female can actually be biologically male. This is not to say they are pretending or deliberately cheating, just that a medical condition has not been identified.
From around 7 mins in for 5 or so minutes if you don’t want to listen to the whole thing.
Controversy in Paris as biological males compete in women's boxing and football. We explore the issues
shows.acast.com