In other words, France does not allow free speech. Why would anyone want to live there?
Every person views women's sports differently.
Some people believe women's sports are for anyone that identifies as a woman.
Others believe that a person has to meet certain biological criteria to compete in female sports.
Others believe women have to meet certain hormonal criteria (so when the East German women were banned for using testosterone, it was not because anyone questioned whether they were female, but simply that testosterone injections created unfair advantages).
These issues have nothing to do with equal rights for LGBTQ+ people. In fact, the opposite is true.
Women sports were created to discriminate against men. It was an intentional decision in order to allow people whose bodies did not benefit from testosterone to compete on a more level playing field. In other words, the justification for gender discrimination against men was half the planet would not be able to compete in sports if society did not discriminate against humans, whose bodies benefited from testosterone.
Women should never have been banned from competing in "open sports", like the PGA, NBA, NFL, etc. There is no rational for excluding them, if they can compete.
So, it becomes pretty simply. So, human whose body has not been altered by higher-than-normal testosterone levels found in males, should be eligible to compete in "women's sports" or in one prefers a "testosterone limited sports" and everyone else should compete in the "open category".
Instead of viewing the division in sports as a male female division, it should be viewed as intentional discrimination between those that need people whose bodies have benefited from testosterone excluded in order to provide a level playing field for half the population of the planet. Since, the trans society has already argued that gender can be fluid, it seems silly to use it in sports. Instead, the non-open category exists simply to attract people to sports knowing they will not have to use testosterone to compete.