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Sufeitzy's avatar

Comprehensive, and a good read.

Title IX requires:

Requires institutions to provide equivalent resources, facilities, and support to programs for men and women.

Prohibits discrimination based on sex, including practices that would limit participation or access to opportunities.

Mandates institutions to prevent and respond to sexual harassment, violence, and other forms of misconduct.

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Denying a woman a place on the women’s team by giving the opportunity to a man seems to be in plain English a violation of title IX

Granting a scholarship to a man over a women for a women’s athletic scholarship program seems in plain English a violation of title IX

A male indicating he is female for the purpose of scholarship or participation is simple fraud, no different than reporting false educational or financial records for gain.

Placing a male in a women’s locker who exposes his genitals to women, or may observe theirs is unwanted sexual conduct. It creates a sexually hostile atmosphere and is one of the simplest versions of sexual harassment under title IX in civil rights, and constitutes a violation of many EEOC relevant employment statues for the staff.

I’m surprised harassment lawyers and others haven’t crawled all over these. Either my sexual harassment training is false (doubtful) or there is also a conspiracy to coerce these women with punitive threats to not pursue self-protective civil rights actions, which itself is illegal, and has severe consequences because it can escalate into whistleblower type federal suit, as well as collusion or conspiracy to commit a crime, or conspiracy to deny civil rights.

I go back to DSM-5 and other psychiatric medical reference literature that a delusion disorder is a mental state consisting of a persistent denial of reality, or holding false beliefs which are resistant to reason or evidence. Daily functioning may not be impaired, and behavior may appear normal aside from the delusion.

Treatment recommendation is clear: don’t affirm the delusion is real, affirm that the feelings consequent to the delusion are real and help the person manage their life with those feelings.

One you affirm the delusion, you risk leading the patient and those around them to harm, sometimes of a violent nature.

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Mary O'Connor, MD's avatar

Thank you Sarah for another great column. So well written. Happy Thanksgiving!

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