SAHDad
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 15, 2009
- Messages
- 2,343
My local running store has decided to hold a race to celebrate the anniversary of Title IX, which legally ended discrimination by sex in education, which had the effect of increasing women's participation in athletic programs. So far, so good.
So, how do you celebrate 40 years of trying to achieve a level playing field? By having a women-only race, of course.
I can kind of understand it, but on the other hand, since women now dominate the half marathon (and I think the 5k and 10k distances as well), are women really so intimidated at being only 60% or more of the field in any race under 13.1 miles that they still need women-only races?
I used to love running because, at its very core, anyone could go out and participate. Get some shoes, do a lot of training, and you really can run a race at the same time as the best of the best. That's not the case anymore - races have moved from excluding women to being exclusively for women; the egalitarian in me fails to see that as progress.
So, how do you celebrate 40 years of trying to achieve a level playing field? By having a women-only race, of course.
I can kind of understand it, but on the other hand, since women now dominate the half marathon (and I think the 5k and 10k distances as well), are women really so intimidated at being only 60% or more of the field in any race under 13.1 miles that they still need women-only races?
I used to love running because, at its very core, anyone could go out and participate. Get some shoes, do a lot of training, and you really can run a race at the same time as the best of the best. That's not the case anymore - races have moved from excluding women to being exclusively for women; the egalitarian in me fails to see that as progress.