HomeWomenFemale Safety

10 Ways Faux Concern About Cheek Swabs in Sports Does Not Protect Black Women—It Exploits Us

There’s been a growing outcry that cheek swabs to confirm male and female categories in sports will harm Black women. On the surface, it sounds like

Sex Matters in Sport: Fact Briefing
Unveiling the Hidden Danger of Enmeshment: Its Role in Perpetuating Male Violence
Own the Narrative: The Power of Storytelling Against Epistemicide

A woman is jogging up a set of stairs in an urban park surrounded by trees and a city skyline. The morning light creates a serene atmosphere as she maintains her pace.

There’s been a growing outcry that cheek swabs to confirm male and female categories in sports will harm Black women. On the surface, it sounds like a protective stance. But peel back the layers, and you’ll find something else entirely:

Faux concern.
Performative protection.
Weaponized empathy with no real love.

Because when Black women are actually being harmed? The silence is deafening.

When you say, “This will harm Black women,”
But you do nothing when Black women are harmed,
You reveal your true priority:
Not us. Just your argument.

We will not be your scapegoat.
We will not be your rhetorical trick.
We will not be used to erase the very boundaries that keep girls and women safe.

Here are 10 reasons why this argument is not rooted in love for Black women—but in using us to deflect from other agendas:

You weaponize racism only when it suits your argument.

Some of the same people crying racism over cheek swabs have never stood with Black women when we are stereotyped, dehumanized, overpoliced, or actually harmed in medical or athletic spaces.

You’re not listening to Black women—you’re using us.

Black women have been clear: we want fair, safe competition. We want our womanhood respected. We want to protect girls’ sports. What we don’t want is to be used as shields in a debate that often erases us entirely.

You say it’s about “all women,” but only mention Black women to derail accountability.

The selective invocation of Black women to stop a conversation about fairness is dishonest. If you only bring us up to silence others—but not to protect us in real life—you’re not for us.

 You’re not talking about how over 60% of Black girls drop out of sports before age 14.

If you cared about our wellness in sports, you’d be fighting for resources, funding, protection from abuse, and inclusion. Not deflecting attention to manufactured fears.

You don’t address the erasure of Black girls when boundaries around girlhood are removed.

When sports categories blur beyond recognition, the first girls pushed aside are often poor, dark-skinned, and Black. We lose scholarships, spots, safety, and space. That’s not inclusion. That’s erasure.

You don’t call out the industries profiting from silencing and sexualizing Black women athletes.

Corporations, federations, and sponsors profit while Black women are hypersexualized, policed, or discarded. Faux concern doesn’t touch those billion-dollar machines. Why not?

You’ve never once protected Black women’s right to define our own bodies and boundaries.

In every era, Black women have had to fight to define our own womanhood. You weren’t there to help us claim it—but now you want to tell us we’re hurting ourselves by defending it? That’s not allyship. That’s manipulation.

Athletic woman posing with volleyball on an outdoor court under sunlight in Ferizaj.You center theoretical harm over real, documented, generational harm.

You’re panicked over possible harm from a non-invasive test, while ignoring the real, generational trauma of being constantly surveilled, disbelieved, and dismissed. That tells us all we need to know.

You’re not calling for an end to performance-enhancing drugs or unfair advantages—only for an end to fair boundaries.

Cheek swabs don’t test for race. They test for sex. And boundaries aren’t inherently harmful. Erasing the category of womanhood while claiming to protect us is not protection—it’s gaslighting.

You ignore the history of Black women being erased or sidelined when we do excel.

When we win, we’re often accused of being “too strong,” “too masculine,” or somehow not real women. This is a form of misogynoir that needs real attention. But instead of challenging those systems, this faux concern reinforces them.

 

Cheek swabs are less invasive than the actual treatment Black women face in medicine and sports.

Let’s be honest—Black women have endured far worse in hospitals, at the hands of coaches, and in locker rooms. A cheek swab isn’t the problem. Systemic dehumanization is.

This argument ignores the voices of Black women athletes who support fair boundaries in women’s sports.

Many Black women—former athletes, coaches, mothers, doctors—have spoken up for clear sex-based sports categories. Yet their voices are dismissed as if they are confused, manipulated, or irrelevant.

Protecting Black women starts with listening to us—especially when we’re telling you that your concern isn’t care. It’s control.

Close-up of an African American woman holding a yoga mat outdoors, promoting active lifestyle.

 Stop Using Black Women as a Shield

If you’re not fighting for our safety when we’re harassed, abused, silenced, underpaid, or forced out of sports—
If you’re not defending our right to excel without being dehumanized—
If you’re not showing up when it’s hard, painful, or unpopular—

Then please stop invoking us when it suits your argument.

We are not your deflection.
We are not your loophole.
We are not your rhetorical shield.

We are women. And we deserve better.

Author

Spread the love
Verified by MonsterInsights