Pa. House passes bill banning transgender females from competing in women’s sports
(www.pennlive.com)
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I think most if not all of the "women" swimmers on the NCAA team are secretly trans. If you want look up pictures of the team or watch the races to see they have very masculine bone structure, muscle development, faces, and they're all flat chested other than normal athletic male pecks. They have some of the widest shoulders I've ever seen on a man or a woman, and they all have masculine looking hips. Some women will have shoulders wider than the hips but it won't nearly be this drastic of a ratio as these swimmers have.
This video is good if you want to see their bone structure before the race, they all have very similar looking bodies to Lia. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=thtX33M2nrM
For those of you who can't see what I'm talking about check out this guy's video about openly trans models so you can get an idea of what MTF's (Male to Females) can look like, and how passable they can be. These swimmers are a lot more obvious in my opinion than these models are. https://odysee.com/@MrE_Collection:e/2017.10.24---MrE---Playboy-Comes-Out-of-the-Closet:a
Idk, swimming has that effect on bodies. The upper body workout is insane, and D1 level college athletes are probably born and develop with physical attributes that give you an edge.
Not all women are dainty. I had a friend, bless her heart, who was large boned and couldn't fit in traditional lady's shoe sizes. She had to special order drag queen shoes (like the movie Kinky Boots) whenever she wanted heels, otherwise she was stuck wearing men's shoes.
Pullleze do your homework!
I have been around swimmers for the past 30+ years. My female kid was one of them. She had large shoulders and arms from the training. In fact from the back she looked like a guy. So much so that she needed to wear bigger jackets when in training (which was pretty much all year) so she wouldn't tear the seams when she moved.
The training of swimmers causes them to build that kind of muscle especially in the shoulders, arms, and upper back. Most female swimmers wear the tightest suit they can wear to push down their boobs to eliminate drag. But those who aren't well endowed may get that way from being in training prior to puberty and from being lean.
The best swimmers are long, tall, and lean with larger shoulders compared to their hips. This allows for what we call a great streamline in the water which is what you want especially for sprinters. Unlike the sprinters, distance swimmers can be shorter and built like bullets. They are lighter in the water if they weigh less but they often have a different ability than sprinters for endurance. Janet Evans was known to have a metabolic condition that allowed her to swim without building up lactic acid. That allowed her to beat others she competed against even though her strokes weren't the best.
Oh and none of them look all that feminine in goggles and caps.
I could get into the differences in body types for each individual stroke, but ALL of them have muscles in their upper back, arm and shoulders.