Therefore, both men and women teeth It’s different after all. In other news, the Pope is still Catholic and the Earth still revolves around the sun.
A new study published earlier this week by neuroscientists at Stanford University provides the first evidence that men’s and women’s brains work very differently. A team led by Professor Vinod Menon used artificial intelligence (AI) to read multiple MRI brain scans and detect differences based on gender.
The technology can distinguish between men and women with 90 percent accuracy based on activity in neural “hotspot” areas.
Science confirms what many of us have known all along. Men and women are different. It’s neither good nor bad. It doesn’t mean it’s better or worse, but different.
Whatever someone chooses to “identify” with, no one is left in any doubt that a person’s gender is biological, unchanging, and defines both that person’s physical appearance. You shouldn’t. and how their brains work.
A video from a Massachusetts high school shows a transgender player wresting the ball from a girl’s hands, leaving her sprawled on the floor in agony.
And it’s not just our brains. Just this week, a study found that men need to exercise twice as much as women to achieve similar long-term benefits. When I ran my fitness business, I witnessed firsthand the inherent differences between male and female customers from both a physiological and psychological perspective.
Men were generally stronger, while women were often more flexible. Men also responded better to my tough love approach. I would often encourage my clients, lovingly of course, by shouting things like, “Good luck, big lump of lard!” The boys loved it. The girls…well, they couldn’t resist. And that’s not a stereotype, that’s biology.
We’ve been told for years that we shouldn’t stereotype people based on their gender. For example, it is no longer acceptable to suggest that men tend to be more aggressive and enjoy contact sports, or that women are generally more emotional and homely. Now, this new study proves that gender stereotypes are not some imaginary social construct, but the result of very real differences in how men’s and women’s brains work.
It’s also true that people with male brains usually have resolutely male bodies, and vice versa. For example, men tend to have denser bones, larger vital organs, and more muscle mass. Women tend to be shorter, have wider hips, have more fat, and thinner vocal cords.
Now, I don’t care if men want to identify as women. But that doesn’t change the fact that he still has a male body that has gone through male puberty. Sex isn’t fluid. Again, this is a biological reality. Sadly, as we are seeing all too often now, people ignore this important distinction, with disastrous consequences.
Just this week, a girls’ high school basketball game in Massachusetts was canceled after a biological male who identified as a female injured three opposing players. The suspect was over 6 feet tall and had a beard. Footage shared online shows the man roughly ripping the ball out of the girl’s hands, leaving her sprawled on the floor in agony.
Asserting biological differences between men and women does not mean disenfranchising the “weaker” sex. It’s about keeping them safe. When a man competes with a woman in a sport, how long does it take before he goes too far and someone gets seriously injured or–God forbid–dead?
In the past, women had to ignore biological distinctions to get by in the world. Today we have to remind men of our physical superiority simply to keep them from hurting us.
I sincerely hope that this new research highlighting the differences between men and women will help our society wake up from the illusion of gender fluidity. Because promoting theories of sex and gender that directly contradict science is nothing short of a conspiracy. And, as we’re already seeing, from sports stadiums to women’s locker rooms, the impact is truly profound.
And the loser is always a woman.
