Do we know the total number of women in the women's league and the total number ofmen in the men's league?
How have we proven that men preform better when we can literally see that women can play at the same level as men?
Yes, thanks for the correction, although I need to correct your correction: it should be "men in the open league"."men and women in the open league"
Yes, thanks for the correction, although I need to correct your correction: it should be "men in the open league".
The question I'm trying to address is: Given that men outnumber women (by 100 to 1?) at the highest rating levels, do they outnumber them to a similar degree in the number playing in the sport?
If we transfer that thinking to any other sport, say, middle distance running, the 20th ranked female should be a competitive match with the 20th ranked male. Lets test that
20th ranked male in the 1,500m is Timothy Cheruiyot of Kenya.
Performance ranking points: 1286
Personal best 3:28.28 (Monaco 2021)
20th ranked female is in the 1,500m Josette Andrews of the USA
Performance ranking points: 1282
Personal Best time: 3:59.72
According to the ranking system these two should quite competitive in a race. The reality is that, at the moment Timothy is breaking the tape at the finish line, Josette is still running down the back straight, yet to enter the final turn.
So 1 woman in the Top 100 (at No 59, no less) counts as "playing at the same level"? Colour me skeptical.
I meant to address this earlier and just forgot. The problem with this example is that the video I posted earlier demonstrated that the ratings for one group was roughly equivalent in the other, by using players who have ratings in both leagues. The above example doesn't do that. We don't know what the mapping between the two sets of "ranking points" are. (And honestly, I don't even know what "ranking points" represents. Whereas the pool ratings are a calculation based on, as I understand it, the ratings that players have played against and who won.
Without that critical step, this is not an analogous comparison.
He uses two players, actually: one at the 700 range and one at the 500 range. The two who play the most in both leagues, from the way he puts it, and got consistent results.The problem for the video uploader is that his "critical step" relies on just ONE player,
The only way to do this properly is for ALL of the men and ALL of the women to play in a regular, combined league, where every player plays against every other player in the league, multiple times.
Another reason to suspect that the sex segregation in pool is not misogynist is that it runs counter to the established pattern of feminist activism.
[snip]
It would be a very unexpected result, if sex segregation in pool turned out to be sexist, if women just somehow hadn't noticed that they were being unfairly discriminated against in this one thing.
He uses two players, actually: one at the 700 range and one at the 500 range. The two who play the most in both leagues, from the way he puts it, and got consistent results.
This is the God of the Gaps approach; if we don’t have ALL transitional fossils, then must be God.
I agree that more mapping points would be more convincing, but requiring ALL players to play against ALL other players, isn’t possible. Also, apparently, there are few cross-over players with enough games to be statistically significant. In proper GOTG form, if there are two players who don’t, you can claim that it STILL isn’t enough evidence.
Megan Rapinoe doesn't want to play on the men's team.
Stilll not good enough
Oh rubbish!!
Finding all transitional fossils is unachievable, that why theists use it
A fully open, combined league is achievable if the impetus is there. In fact some sports have already achieved it.
And we have all seen why that might be, haven't we..
Soccer Football
Dallas Under 16 School team 5
USA National Womens Team 0
Yeah, but pool is different. Pool isn't aphysicalactivity. /s
There are currently approximately 300,000 players in the Fargo system across 130 countries. Even if distance was no issue, every player would have to average a little less than 1,000 games a day for an entire year to get the sample size you’re asking for, before requiring each player have multiple games with every other player. And all that assumes the pool of players remains static, which I’ve have no expectations that it would.
No, what you’re asking for is just as unachievable.
ETA: I did a google search for average game length, which the smallest value given is 8 minutes. It would take a person at least 4.5 years of play time to play all 300,000 players once.
That’s what I was said, only without the unnecessary ad-homsThat is plain ridiculous,
and not at all what I was suggesting (and it’s very disingenuous of you to claim that I was).
The problem for the video uploader is that his "critical step" relies on just ONE player, Karen Corr, as a link between the two leagues, and then he tries to extrapolate this out to apply to all players in both leagues. This is never going to work as it is based on one-off games between Karen Corr and some men.
The only way to do this properly is for ALL of the men and ALL of the women to play in a regular, combined league, where every player plays against every other player in the league, multiple times.
That’s what I was said, only without the unnecessary ad-homs
It is literally what you suggested:
You said absolutely nothing about a “combined league(s) separated by region. It may have been what you meant, but it isn’t what you said. I’m no mind-reader. That’s why I said it wasn’t possible, and I meant what I said.
He uses two players, actually: one at the 700 range and one at the 500 range. The two who play the most in both leagues, from the way he puts it, and got consistent results.
This is the God of the Gaps approach; if we don’t have ALL transitional fossils, then must be God. I agree that more mapping points would be more convincing, but requiring ALL players to play against ALL other players, isn’t possible. Also, apparently, there are few cross-over players with enough games to be statistically significant. In proper GOTG form, if there are two players who don’t, you can claim that it STILL isn’t enough evidence.
I wonder if women would agree that that men refusing to compete with women is the only form that sexism in a tournament could take.
Guys he literally can't help it because, and here's the core problem HE DOESN'T UNDERSTAND IT. It doesn't make sense to him either, he just got told "this is what you have to think if you want to be a liberal/progressive" and that's it.
Well I'm a liberal/progressive, and I promise you, no ****** tells me what to think!
I would be tempted to think that anyone who claimed that was trolling, but I suppose if they have only ever seen it on tv and never played a tournament they might actually believe it.Yeah, but pool is different. Pool isn't a physical activity. /s
The problem for the video uploader is that his "critical step" relies on just ONE player, Karen Corr, as a link between the two leagues, and then he tries to extrapolate this out to apply to all players in both leagues. This is never going to work as it is based on one-off games between Karen Corr and some men.
The only way to do this properly is for ALL of the men and ALL of the women to play in a regular, combined league, where every player plays against every other player in the league, multiple times. If we end up with players like Kelly Fisher, Chieh-Yu Chou, Allison Fisher, Kristina Zlateva, Jasmin Ouschan and Wang Wan-Ling spread evenly throughout the rankings there might be a point to be had. If they all end up lower down the rankings (which is what I think you happen) then the claim would be dismissed.
https://wingsoverscotland.com/the-safest-people-on-earth/#comments
Well, I read this and thought I'd share it here. According to the Rev's latest investigation, being trans is actually several times safer than being not-trans! Interesting findings.
It's not just about the words, man.