Pints With Aquinas - The Legal Battle Against DEI and Gender Ideology Has Begun (Marcella Burke Esq.)
Episode Date: March 6, 2025Marcella Burke of Houston, Texas, is the founder and partner of Burke Law Group PLLC. Marcella began her legal career as an energy attorney in AmLaw 100 law firms, where she earned an equity partnersh...ip. She was appointed in the Trump Administration to serve in the Environmental Protection Agency as Deputy General Counsel. In addition to her extensive energy and environmental law background, Marcella Burke is at the forefront of legal advocacy for detransitioners and DEI abuse whistleblowers. She defends individuals who have experienced medical malpractice or discrimination in the context of "gender transition," and represents them in lawsuits against employers and medical professionals. Her work ensures that the rights of detransitioners are vigorously protected in the legal system, challenging wrongful practices and advocating for accountability.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
I think we're winning on this.
We're winning on the transgender thing.
I think in 10 years it will be an anathema.
President Trump has said in his campaign,
he's going to make this illegal.
There's very few lawyers in America taking these cases,
and it's like, are you gonna rise to the occasion?
You know, are you gonna defend this whistleblower
and do whatever you can?
Tucker had him on the show.
God bless Tucker Carlson.
Dr. Phil had him on the show.
Jordan Peterson.
Tucker said, you know, how did you find a lawyer
to take this case? You know, how did you find a lawyer to take this case?
You know, how did you find this person? And he said, oh Marcella, she's this really serious Catholic lady
with a rosary in one hand and a middle finger in the other.
And that's how he described me. And there have been sleepless nights.
You know, we've had to hire security at our home.
We've had, you know, threats and all this type of stuff. But really, it's nothing compared to what these kids are going
through.
All right, so we first have to acknowledge, well, this isn't new for you, but this is
not my studio. We're building a brand new studio in Florida, and Dr. Hahn has kindly
allowed me to use it. This is way more professional than what you would have gotten if the heat hadn't
died in my building. Well it's a pleasure to be here. It's lovely to meet you. Yeah
it's great. Thank you Dr. Hahn. Yeah and Jason Everett. So I had Jason on the show
and he was saying you have to have Marcella on. So give us a real quick who
is Marcella Burke for those who don't know. Sure. I'm a lawyer in Houston. I have my own law firm
We're in Houston, Austin, Washington, Lafayette, Louisiana and LA and growing mother of four boys
and I've taken a couple of cases that have
flared up and become of national import and
Those are on sort of hot topics of culture
like DEI and transgender.
So thanks for having me to just catch up.
It's great to have you on.
So tell me about the,
so when you started your own law firm,
you weren't thinking I wanna go, or maybe you were,
I wanna go to bat for those who are being persecuted
wrongly in the sense of the DEI transgender stuff?
Or did that just suddenly kind of accidentally appear on your radar and that became what
you're known for?
Yeah, that was not the plan.
That was the opposite of the plan, actually.
There's a number of us who were lawyers in these big global law firms and we have sort
of commercial practices.
So I'm an environmental lawyer by trade, I do crisis management, fires, floods, blowouts,
mostly for construction, oil and gas,
trucking, incident response, and if the government
or sort of these environmental groups
are at your factory gates, you call me,
and we manage that.
Lots of litigation, and then we have commercial corporate,
mergers and acquisitions, real estate,
commercial agreements. So just commercial, corporate, mergers and acquisitions, real estate, commercial agreements.
So just commercial, corporate, and litigation work.
And that was the plan.
And in some of these big firms,
even those topics are too controversial.
The climate change movement has taken over
some of these firms, and even being able to take cases
defending clients against claims about climate change
and those types of things became controversial
and started really affecting my practice
and my ability to represent clients.
Also had clients who had been negatively affected by DE&I,
being told things like I got demoted or fired
because I'm white or because I'm Christian
and we're looking for this or that.
Those are just flagrantly illegal things
and started representing some clients
in the bigger firms on those matters
and that became very controversial.
And then the pronoun movement
in some of these firms happened
and having to have pronouns on your bio
or on your signature became an issue
or we have a call after the Dobbs decision came out,
which is the decision that overturned Roe versus Wade,
and I was the only female equity partner in Texas
at my firm at the time, and HR's calling,
why aren't you on the group calls
about what we're gonna do about Dobbs?
It's like, well, I would be happy to join the call
and tell the group what I think about Dobbs.
And so it just became, I'm a big
believer in freedom of association. And so it wasn't personal, like, oh, Marcella, you know,
we don't like you as a person. But at some point it became not a good fit. And it was obvious that
it wasn't going to be a good fit. And I was interviewing at other firms and I had six other offers to continue having this practice
in these firms that in a lot of ways it just isn't a good fit
and I came home one day from interviewing,
I almost accepted another offer to be the managing partner
of a Houston office of another global firm
and my husband said, actually, I incorporated Burke Law Group
at the Texas Secretary of State
and you're gonna start your own law firm.
And people will join you, and your clients will follow you.
I'm sure of it.
And so I called some of my clients and some of the guys on my team and at other firms.
We've been talking about this for years.
And sure enough, seven people started the firm with me.
That was about two years ago.
And we have 16 lawyers now now and we're growing.
And so we'll have a group starting in January in the new year and we'll continue to grow.
So it's very exciting.
These particular cases, we had decided we weren't going to take on big cultural cases,
that the brand of our firm wasn't going to be that we're going to be these fire brands.
It was going to be just good lawyers with great credentials that are zealous advocates
for your commercial interests.
And lawyers being lawyers.
And there's a demand in the market,
a lot of companies are just looking for lawyers
that don't have an agenda.
And there's a demand in the legal services market
where lawyers just want to be lawyers.
And so let's just fill that space and start this boutique
and see if it can grow.
And it was really only a few weeks into the firm
starting where I'm on and I'm onboarding all my clients
and we're really hustling to launch
and to get my lawyers onboarded
and all the paperwork and all these things.
And I got a phone call from a man named Christopher Ruffo.
And he is an investigative journalist.
And he says, Marcella, this is Chris Ruffo.
And I'd never heard of Chris Ruffo.
And so I'm like, yes, you know, who are you?
And he's like, well, I'm a journalist
and I'm working with a whistleblower and he needs a lawyer.
Have you heard of Dr. Eytan Haim? And I you heard of Dr. Aton Heim? And I had
heard of Dr. Heim because I'm in Houston and he was a surgeon at Texas Children's Hospital,
the largest children's hospital in the world, headquartered in Houston. And he had, the
hospital had said that they were not performing transgender intervention surgeries or procedures
on minors. And he was a doctor there and he knew that wasn't true and so he had
blown the whistle and instead of the government investigating the hospital he
had the FBI at his front door. Wow how did he blow the whistle? How did he get
that information out? So he spoke to, he went to different journalists and this
is all on the public record,
and Christopher Ruffo is who got back to him.
And then he went to the Texas Attorney General,
and he told the Attorney General what was going on.
And so, those are the sort of process that he followed,
and the information he gave was fully redacted,
didn't have any personal information of the patients,
but just proved that these things
were happening at the hospital.
And so what the government came back to him with
was an indictment to threaten to put him in jail
for 10 years under a novel theory of HIPAA,
which is a law that protects patient information.
And so we've been defending him now
for almost those two years.
But at the time when I got the call from Chris Rufo, I thought, well, I can't take this case.
And so-
Why did you think that?
Well, first it was just, I don't know if I have the bandwidth.
We're still onboarding our clients.
We're doing all this other stuff.
It's a criminal case.
I didn't have a white collar lawyer.
We'd have to find a white collar person to help us co-counsel
and
It just seemed like it was just way too big and way way out of my area of expertise now
I do crisis management so I could help dr. Heim put a team together
but I didn't think that I could be the firm that actually did it and
I called one of my partners and he had been at Department of Justice and he had worked in the Medicaid fraud division.
And part of what's come out from these cases with these whistleblowers is that not only
the hospital is doing these procedures, but they are using fraudulent coding to get around
the state law.
So if they cannot bill under Medicaid or TRICARE, the government, you know, the military insurance for, say,
gender dysphoria and then giving hormones
or puberty blockers, well, they'll diagnose the child
with something they don't have,
but that would require the same prescriptions.
And then, so it's a fraudulent billing scheme.
And so one of my partners does have a lot of experience
in fraud and this type of fraud.
And I called him and he said, Marcella, we can take these cases.
We need to find a white-collar guy to defend against the indictment, but we definitely
can take the substance of the merits of the case.
It's like, okay.
So I started calling around trying to find lawyers to help take the criminal defense
piece and I just one after the other couldn't find anyone to take it.
My law firm will never let me take it.
My law firm will never let me take it.
So confronting those same issues we see in law firms all the time.
And so the whole culture of the law being, well, lawyers can just be zealous advocates
for their clients even in controversial unpopular opinions is sort of gone from some of these
big firms.
And so we sure enough found a lawyer called Mark Lytle who's a former prosecutor and then Ryan Patrick
Who's the former US attorney for the Southern District of Texas?
Where this took place and they both said that they would take the case. So that was a huge
I mean a miracle really and so we had suddenly a team And so there's no excuse at that point to not take it.
Were you nervous about it?
Not just because you didn't have a lawyer on staff
and that you already had a lot of clients,
but were you nervous about this becoming too controversial
and the blowback that you get from it?
I wasn't nervous about that.
That did seem inevitable, of course.
It was more, can I do a good job representing him
and actually get him out of this conundrum?
I interrupted you earlier, but I was surprised to hear
you said he blew the whistle and rather than the FBI
or whoever going to the hospital, the FBI showed up
at his front door, what happened there?
Yeah, it was actually on his graduation day.
He was out of medical school in his residency.
He'd already accepted a job at a hospital in North Dallas,
so he's on his way out.
And he had blown the whistle while he was still there. And it was on, he got a loud knock at the
door and he was preparing for the big graduation ceremony. His family's all in town and he opens
the door and his wife is in the back getting ready and he lets these two officers
in and they have cameras and they're setting up cameras and they're saying, you know, we
want to interview you and talk to you.
And his wife comes out and he said he knew what it was about, but he had nothing to hide.
So he's like, well, yeah, I'll tell you everything I know.
And his wife is an attorney and she is actually a US, an assistant US attorney and so she's very familiar with
this process and she says, oh no, we need to talk to a lawyer and you guys need to give
us your business cards and thank you so much. We're happy to cooperate, but you can leave.
Good thing she was there. And so they leave and they called Chris because at this point
he just whistle blown, but the idea would be,
well, the government's gonna cooperate with us
and we'll be witnesses.
And when they came, they gave him
what's called a target letter.
They left him with a letter saying,
you're under investigation.
And he didn't know what it meant.
And so it's like, well, you need a lawyer.
And that's at the point when they finally called me
and all of this is on the on the public record and
so so yeah it was a real shock for him to metabolize that he was actually the
target of an investigation and what does that mean and what did they try to
accuse him of for violating HIPAA for giving patient information when he blew
the whistle but he didn't you said he cut no he did not
Yeah, no, he did not and you said you've been representing him for two years. It's been almost two years
So is this just been a nightmare for him for two years? He's having to deal with this. He has been very brave
Yeah, very difficult there and he was just newlywed. He had to cancel his honeymoon
God bless him and what's amazing about them he and his wife
He had to cancel his honeymoon. God bless him.
And what's amazing about them, he and his wife, Andrea, who's another unsung hero here,
is they decided to go ahead with their life, build their family.
They got pregnant. They just had their first baby. And he had, we've been litigating this case,
the first indictment, our legal team was able to summarily just disprove basically the entire
premise of the indictment.
And so they reindicted him a second time
and he had to get rearranged,
which means he had to go back to the court
and present himself to the judge.
And the rearrangement was the day after his baby was born.
So his baby was born in an emergency C-section,
he holds the baby and he has to
leave the hospital to drive to Houston for his arraignment and then go back to the hospital
right after the arraignment. I mean, that's been what it's like for him this entire time.
So this might be a stupid question, but why did they go after him? If it wasn't actually
for disclosing the information of patients, which he didn't do, what's the motivating
factor or is there someone at the top driving this? for disclosing the information of patients, which he didn't do. What's the motivating factor,
or is there someone at the top driving this?
Well, the prosecutor who led the initial investigation,
who's since been removed from the case,
she told us on the phone when we first called
and said, what is this about?
That she said, you know, the true victims are the hospitals
and the doctors who are unable to perform these procedures. And if you look at
the indictments, they as, and we're now on the third indictment. So we've disproved the second
version of what they tried to accuse them of and now we're on a third indictment. So they're just
relentlessly trying to find something. She told us in the beginning, I'll get him on a technicality
if I have to. And so our law firm has been very public about this. We wrote a letter to Congress.
There's a committee on the weaponization
of the Department of Justice
under the Biden administration.
And we wrote a public letter as attorneys,
two of whom had been formerly,
all three of us had been in senior executive service
in the government.
Two of them have been at Department of Justice themselves
and said, no, this is what's happening
is a total violation of protocol and convention
at Department of Justice. And you know, the prosecutors admitted that this is prosecutorial
indiscretion and a malicious prosecution, essentially of a political dissenter of this
transgender ideology, that they want to punish our client and that they really what they
want to do is the law instructs and they want to send a client, and that they really, what they want to do is the law instructs, and they want to send a message
to other whistleblowers, that if you blow the whistle,
this is what's gonna happen to you,
we'll be at your doorstep.
But what happened is the opposite effect.
Dr. Heim went public, he was anonymous at first,
in his first, when he first blew the whistle,
he came out publicly and said who he was,
and he really challenged the government to say come after me
I'm an innocent person. I'm just a
Citizen of the United States. I work now in a small country county hospital
And I blew the whistle on a horrible thing that was happening very illegally
And I have lawyers and so sort of come at me was his
his temperament
and so we we And so sort of come at me was his temperament.
And so we've been working with him and his what's become a very public case. And it's actually really backfired on the government.
Whistleblowers across the country now have come out.
They've learned about his story.
And our law firm now represents whistleblowers in major hospital systems across the country
for the exact same thing happening.
And these are other hospital workers or doctors from different hospitals?
Clinic directors, nurses, doctors.
And so it's been this whole movement now of doctors and medical professionals blowing
the whistle in their hospital systems to expose not only the procedures, but really the fraudulent
billing, the way they're getting around it, which is totally illegal.
And so it's had the opposite effect.
So it's not just that he's a political dissenter. It's also because you could sue these hospitals
and doctors to high heaven, presumably, and this is them trying to protect themselves
financially as well or no?
Or I suppose protect the hospitals from that type of risk.
Yeah. Wow.
Which the prosecutor said. She said, you know, this is the true victims of the hospitals
and the doctors.
It's insane. Yeah. How many, what kind of surgery is it? Is it simply giving hormone
therapy to kids or is it also butchering them? It's really important we use the right language,
isn't it? Well, I think butchering is a good word, actually. Or disfiguring, mutilating.
Mutilating, absolutely.
It's important.
And so what they do is there's a number of things.
It's a sliding scale.
They'll put children on hormones.
So they'll give girls testosterone,
and they'll give boys estrogen.
And this will feminize the secondary sex traits,
the physical aesthetic of the person.
So the girls might start growing facial hair,
their voices will get deeper, that type of thing.
But more nefarious is putting them
on hormone puberty blockers.
And there's a myth that this is gonna quote pause puberty.
And it's when you get into details about this with them,
and a lot of these doctors have now been sued
for malpractice and other
Lack of informed consent because really what they meant was it's a metaphysical pause
Okay, so define that right?
But with the puberty blockers, it usually is a surgical implant
so you under anesthesia they put that put it in your arm and
They what it does is it interferes with the hypothalamus in your brain.
And it stops all of the hormonal development in your body.
So your body, if it's an 11 to a 13 year old boy, for example, when they're put on the
puberty blockers, they will maintain the physical anatomy of an 11 to 13 year old boy their
entire life.
So if they choose to de-transition when they're 20, they'll have the same growth they had when they were 11?
Is that what you're saying?
Yeah, they will have the male anatomy of an 11 year old.
And then the doctors say, well, it's metaphysical.
What do they mean by that?
You can choose to be an adult male.
It's like, yes, but I'm an adult male who can not procreate,
who cannot have an adult relationship.
What do they mean by metaphysical?
I think it's that it's an idea.
That you can determine your own person.
And this is where it really becomes very diabolical because, you know, it's no longer you, I think
of Galatians 2.20.
You know, Christians would say it's no longer when you accept Jesus into your life, it's
no longer I who lives, but Christ who lives in me.
And the life I live in the flesh, I now live by faith and Son of God,
or something like that is what it says.
But what they'll say is, you know,
it's no longer you who lives,
but this other person that lives within you is coming out,
and now you're living that life, and that's who you are.
And so it's a real perversion of what identity is.
And when you're coming of age,
and you're figuring out who you are,
what does it mean to be a person,
why am I here, who am I?
It's very important to then learn that you're a man
or you're a woman and you're gonna be growing into this.
And not only do you learn who you are
under the terms of your own sex,
but also in relationship to the other.
So men learn who they are in relation to women
and women in relation to men.
And that's the whole coming of age of puberty
And it's very difficult and it's very confusing and so there's an overlay in our culture as well
Where sex is fluid and gender is fluid and you may have been raised thinking that there was two sexes
But now we all know because we learned in college that those are sort of these archaic ideas and the new wave
Is that all of this is relative.
And so that's an overlay too that we're encountering, of course, in the culture.
And so kids don't, they don't know who they are.
And they're not learning in sex ed the basics.
And they're not learning about what does it mean to be a man or a woman.
Instead they're getting this gender ideology from the youngest ages in schools.
Parents, a lot of these happen in families
with broken homes, single moms, and they trust the schools.
And the kids could be going through this for years
before they come home one day and say,
listen, I'm in the wrong body, and it's suicide or surgery.
And they go to the doctor.
The doctors reinforce all of this,
and they say, why don't we quote pause?
Why don't we put them in these interventions
and let the time take care of it?
And doctors are very powerful.
And that's one thing we have to remember.
Doctors are very powerful.
Think about what happened in COVID.
Think about the mask mandates.
You put a white robe on somebody,
and the average person is going to listen to them.
And so parents will go down that road.
And in some of the cases we've seen,
they'll put their kids on the hormones
and then the puberty blockers.
And then later on it'll be surgeries,
different types of the surgeries we can talk about.
And they'll say they'll wanna get the kids off.
And we have cases where the doctors will say,
no, I will not take your kids off. I will not remove the implant. And so you'd have to go out of state.
Why what justification do they have for saying that?
Well, they say it's in the best medical interest of their patient. And so it's these it's then it's the parents versus the doctors. And sometimes the parents kind of successfully escape this, but sometimes they can't. And so then their children are condemned to this body. And it's very tragic. And then there's the next layer,
which is surgeries. You see a topside surgeries and you see all these different, there's one
surgery in particular, they call it the nullification, where they basically take from your neck all the
way down to your groin and it's just like a mannequin. It's just one
flesh. But of course nullification is the same root word of nihilism. Nothing. You're now nothing. But from nothing you can create yourself. That is despicable. You know, I don't know if you
remember the new atheist days. Christopher Hitchens used to speak as if we could just do away with
Christianity there would be an ascendance of rationality and good sense. And it seems to me that by killing God, this is what's happened. Somewhere
in the Second Vatican Council documents, it says when God is forgotten, the human creature
becomes unintelligible. That seems to be where we are right now. I had Chloe Cole, I'm sure
you're familiar with her story, the transition on my show. And it was, people asked me what's
been the most beautiful interview you've done or the most memorable that would be in the top five. Uh, what a beautiful young girl who
through social, you know, felt like an alien in her own body, felt awkward about the way she was
developing, found it easier to relate to males and females goes on Tik TOK finds this transgender
community, quote unquote. And, uh, uh, yeah, yeah ends up getting top surgery, top
mutilation, has her breast mutilated, but God bless her, had the courage to then de-transition.
How difficult that must be, eh?
Because once you've made a decision like that, it seems to be you've got two options, right?
You can either keep going along and keep being praised by the culture for just how brave you are, or you can be a sort of mutilated realist, like acknowledge
the tragedy that's happened to you, acknowledge that you're a victim, which isn't or shouldn't
be fun, and then live your life as the sex that you are, but as one who is mutilated.
That must be so difficult.
Very difficult. And I work with a number of detransitioners as witnesses in our cases,
also as co-counsel to people who are taking cases,
representing them.
And it's really amazing when you meet
a lot of the detransitioners,
they are going to be who blazes the trail to end this.
They remind me of the beautiful, brave women
who say, I regret my abortion.
And they stand up and they can speak
as someone who's had an abortion to other women.
Absolutely, and the difference between abortion,
there's a lot of differences,
but one fundamental is that,
abortion doesn't have survivors.
The women, the moms might survive.
Sometimes you'll hear a story of a child who survived,
maybe a chemical abortion.
But with the transgender movement,
they'll say it's surgery or suicide.
But truly it's surgery then suicide.
Tell me about that.
Well, so many of these children, it's proven now, do take their lives after they go through this.
And so there are a lot of these doctors who are relying on studies out of Europe that gave this
message of surgery then suicide. And what's happened is all those studies have been debunked.
Really?
And this is relevant legally,
because then in the courts,
we can say all of this research has been debunked.
What's really interesting is in one of our cases,
one of the doctors who promotes this surgery and says,
you know, it's a pause,
he had also at the same time contemporaneously
applied for funding at the National Institute of Health.
And to continue to do these procedures in America.
And in that application, he admits it's experimental,
we don't know, that's why we need the funding.
So he perjured himself.
So of course we're going after him for that.
But thank goodness in Europe, they've already seen
that a lot of this was debunked
and so we're getting caught up here in America.
And just to comment on what the day transitioners
are facing
when they have to come out of this whole lifestyle,
is one thing that the transgender movement offers
is this air quotes community,
and it's an imposter of a true community of course,
but it provides things that are now out of our culture.
Church attendance is down, but they have their own rituals.
They have their own meetings.
They have basically rights of initiation. They have steps that you go through to transition and become the new you. And these
are things that a church would offer. We have our own rights of initiation, we have our baptisms,
we have our way, are the things that we do to take on the message of Christ. We as Christians know that we're not meant for this place, that we're
in exile here on earth. And that the reason why we feel discomfort, and one thing you
will tell your kids when they're growing up, is that this restlessness you feel is natural
because you weren't born for this place. You were born for heaven. And so the transgender ideology offers, tries to offer that imposter of this truth on
earth. That you can escape this natural restlessness by changing your body. But it's just all a bunch
of lies. But like every lie, it's just there's a modicum of truth that's been twisted, you know.
And so when you, when people get out of this ideology, they're having to give up their church,
their community, their church, their
community, their rituals, their everything, and then look for something else.
And that's the question we have to ask ourselves as a church.
What is the church doing?
What are we offering people who are going through this and coming out of it?
There's one woman, and she's given me permission to talk about her situation today, but she's
an amazing woman, but she also was a
She also went through the gender ideology. She also got the topside surgery
and
She woke up after the surgery and there was horrible complications and like many of these children she almost died
I mean it was a horrible botched job and it woke her up and she wanted to get out of it. And she's been a very brave
witness to the transgender ideology. But she got canceled at work when she testified in
Texas on the House bill that was going to further criminalize these procedures against
doctors. She works as a barista and they said they fired her because they didn't like her quote politics. She didn't have a job and she called me and she wanted to she
was like can you help me find a job and I said I can help you find a job you can come
work for me and so she's a research assistant at my law firm and she's she's amazing she's
a genius she's a true prodigy she went to college I think when she was like 15 or something
and she too had parents get divorced at a young age.
She too got seduced online.
She too found this community of people.
And I told her, you know, when I started getting to know her
that, you know, your parents are a symbol.
And this echoes, and we can talk about that,
but I personally as a child was told by a priest,
Father Bill, who we have to bring up later
because he's amazing.
But along the lines of what can the church do,
is I was a bit of a troubled youth,
and if I had been a teenager at this time,
I can guarantee I would have been sucked into this.
Anybody who wanted to spend time with me
and give me answers to my questions,
I think I would have done anything.
And I met, thank God, a priest called Father Bill. thank God a priest called Father Bill Monsignor
Bill young Monsignor Bill young and
Just so people know he means a lot to me and you when we've discovered this this morning
he is the priest who married my wife and I and
My son is named after him and your son is named after him, which is amazing. Yeah. Shout out to Monsignor Bill young
I mean, yeah with all the bad stories out there. It's so nice just to be able to go, what a good priest.
He's a good priest. How grateful we are. He's a good priest and a good man. And he saw me. I was
at a retreat for confirmation as a high schooler, and they had exposed the Blessed Sacrament in
Eucharistic adoration.
And I had never seen anything like that.
And I said, what's that?
They said, it's really Jesus.
And they had some speaker and it was all emotive
and emotional and I was like, these people are in a cult.
This is insane.
First of all.
Obviously this is not real.
And so I was leaving to go smoke a cigarette.
And I had little short pixie hair
and I had my little raver clothes on.
And as I was leaving to find my cigarettes
I looked up and above the door there was a quotation from
St. Augustine our hearts are restless. Oh Lord until they rest in you and I'm reading it and I can still see like this image and
I get this priest walks up to me. It's father Bill. He's like, well, who are you?
I'm like, well, who are you? And so we get to talking and he heard my confession. And I...
How did that happen? You asked him or?
No, he asked me. We had a conversation just about some things and he said, I think that
you need one of the last time you went to confession. I said, Oh, I don't know. Since
I was a kid, you know, I don't know. Long time ago. And he's like, well, You don't have to, you don't have, I don't have to hear a confession, but let's talk.
So we went to the confessional, we're talking and he just invited me. He said, why don't you just
try it? And I had this amazing experience in the confessional of feeling the Father's love. And he
said, why don't you stick around for this adoration? Because tonight we're going to have a procession.
for this adoration because tonight we're gonna have a procession. And so I stuck around for adoration.
And oh Matt you're so sweet. Yeah it's emotional when I think about it.
And what's emotional about it is Christ is who we hunger for. And when that's taken away we're just left with lies and smoke and that's what so many young people are trying
to cling to for sanity and they're falling into hell.
Thank God for good men like Father Bill, thank God for the church, thank God for the Eucharist,
you know.
And the Rosary.
Yeah.
My youth minister was a woman named Darla Hickman.
Love her.
And she, she, she, I stuck around after this
and they were doing a rosary
and I had never really prayed the rosary.
And she said, well, you lead a decade of the rosary.
And I was like, oh, Ms. Hickman,
I don't know, I don't know how to do it.
And she's like, well, no, here's the words.
And I said, Darla, I can't pray a rosary, I'm not holy.
And she said, Marcella, you are a holy woman of God. And she wrote that on a little sheet of paper and she
handed it to me and I still have it like in my Bible. God bless 90s youth
minister mums who crushed it for so many taints. Yes, absolutely. And so I got this
identity and Father Bill had just finished telling me, you know, Marcella,
you know, to whom do you belong?
Like, where do you belong?
You know?
And I said, I don't belong anywhere.
And I had a bunch of friends at the time,
we did drugs and we were just in a lot of trouble.
Runaways and that kind of thing.
And I was getting ready to run away.
Probably with my drug dealer and his girlfriend,
who was my new best friend.
And I said, I don't know.
He said, you belong to God and he created you for him.
And to the extent your parents are symbols of his love,
and to the extent they have not taught you who you are
and to whom you belong, they have failed you.
But the good news is they're just symbols.
And so they can get out of the way and you can go straight to the source
Your father in heaven who you were made for and your mother Mary
Hmm, and so stick around and just ask God in adoration
Who am I and who are you and that was father Bill's ask you can leave but if you stay that's all you should ask
mmm, and so I'm waiting for the adoration. I pray the
decade of the Rosary with Darla. And we have this procession. And in the procession, you know,
Father Bill had the monstrance he's holding in his hand, and they're reading scriptures,
and it's the scripture about the woman, the hemorrhaging woman. And it makes me so emotional
because it's like, you know, it's the part of the reading
where she just wanted to touch Jesus' tassel.
And so I reached out when Father Bill passed with the monstrance and I touched his tassel.
And I could, I changed.
I truly believe I was healed in that moment.
There was a profound healing and I knew exactly believe I was healed in that moment. There was a profound healing
and I knew exactly who I was and it was just like an infusion and I came home
after that and you know I wanted to read the Bible and I wanted to learn and I
was sort of it wasn't a it wasn't an environment at home where that was
welcome and I wanted to start going to youth group and I'd been expelled from private school, claim to fame, expelled from all-girl Catholic
school by this point.
And so, and I wasn't sort of, I was nervous about even going to youth group because these
were the good kids in school, and I was like one of the bad kids in school.
And that it was Darla who invited me and Father Bill who said, Marcella, let's start meeting.
Meet me in my office and we'll start talking.
And so I said, okay, and I went to my first meeting
and I would have to pay like 80 bucks to take a cab
because my parents wouldn't let me drive.
They were very suspicious of youth groups,
didn't want me to have anything to do with it.
And I had a couple jobs at the time and I used my tip money
and I took a cab before Uber, before cell phones cell phones well I had a pager which is a little
sketchy and I met with Father Bill and we just continued this conversations
over months months and months and the first meeting I remember he handed me a
book by Tres of Avila and I had a I've had a great priest tell me since we don't choose the Saints,
the Saints choose us. And he handed me this book by Thomas de May, I think, Fire Within.
Oh, Dubay.
Dubay. And he has John of the Cross and Tres of Avila's letters and all these things. He's
like, read this book and come back next week. So I read the book and I come back and I'm
like, Father Bill, this is like Chinese.
Well, it's a hard book to give to someone. I mean, that's some deep mystical theology
that's contained within that book, The Fire Within, which I would encourage everybody
to get. It's insanely beautiful and wonderful. And that's a heavy book to give to someone
who's-
Well, I have the same copy and I'll remind Father Bill, Virgil said, only your friends
steal your books because I never gave that book back. But my marginalia, teenage marginalia
is still in the margins, you know,
my thoughts were when I read it even back then.
So I went back to him and I said, this makes no sense.
He says, exactly.
He's like, you know what, Marcella, you don't know shit.
Okay, thanks father.
And I was like, you know, welcome to reality.
Fatherville just cussed, you know, but he was trying to get through this thick skull of mine.
And he said, yeah, you got a lot to learn.
There's a whole world out there.
There's a whole world out there.
And I remember Darla called me again, followed up, good woman, trying to get me to go to
youth group, which I thought it was lame and didn't want to go.
And we had a call and she had said, you know, Marcella, do you want to pray together? And I remember laying in my bed saying sure and praying on this phone connected to the
wall with like a long cord, you know. And when she prayed and then I prayed and I remember I prayed
for Jesus. I said something like, oh, and I pray for Jesus. And Darla's like, you know, Marcella,
we're praying to Jesus. But I'd like never prayed with anybody before, and I didn't know, like how to pray.
And so she taught me how to pray.
And she was like, you know, we don't pray for Jesus,
we pray that we can-
Yeah, he's good.
Yeah, like he's there.
And so, you know, just the whole awkwardness
of learning like how to be a Christian.
So going back to, you know, these children
caught up in this ideology. What's the
message we tell them? Well it's the same message. It's to whom do you belong and
what were you made for and what does it mean to be a man and a woman and who are
your parents and I told this young woman the same thing Father Bill told me. To
the extent that your parents are a symbol, it's not working. So just go. Look up adoration. Here's a chapel.
Gave her a rosary. And she went. And she called me like a week later. And she's like...
Sorry, who is this girl? She's this woman who got the topside surgery. It was botched.
This is the one who now is your research assistant?
She's now a research assistant, yeah.
And she says, Marcella, I've never felt the love of a father.
Before that, has she come out of the transgender illusion at this point, or is she still wondering
what to do?
No, she's out.
Prior to adoration, was she still searching, is what I'm asking?
No, she had thought now she had been testifying against the legislation.
Oh, I see, I see, I see.
She identified at the time as gay, had a girlfriend.
So was she raised Catholic?
No.
And you give her a rosary and tell her to go to Adoration?
Yeah.
Okay, then what happens?
Yeah.
Good for you.
Why drink Diet Coke when you could have Dr. Pepper?
I think wine would be more appropriate or a good bourbon, but sure.
Well, you know, we're giving it PG minus Okay. We're keeping it PG on the pod. So, um, so
yeah, she had a huge transformation and she, um, so what did she say when she after adoration?
She said she never felt the love of a father. I want to say a big thanks to the College
of St. Joseph the Worker based in Steubenville, Ohio. You'll recognize many of their faculty and fellows from the show.
People like Dr. Andrew Jones, Dr. Jacob Imam, Dr. Mark Barnes, Dr. Alex Plato.
Listen to this.
Their program combines the rigor of an elite bachelor's degree with the practicality of
training in the skilled trades.
And their tuition model is structured so that students graduate without crippling debt.
If you're a bright young man thinking about what college to go to, apply to a place where
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Apply to the college of St. Joseph the Worker.
If you're a parent, look into this college for your children.
And if you're not in either category, just consider supporting the mission.
Go to collegeofstjoseph.com slash Matt Fradd
to learn more. That's CollegeofStJoseph.com slash Matt Fradd to learn more. There will
be a link below. Thanks. Can I, this story is just coming to my mind, so I want to share
it. I used to live in Ireland and while I was there, I started my kind of anti-porn
writing and I made contact with a former porn performer in the industry
and my wife and I flew her out from LA and we rented out the jazz club in Dublin and
we just let a porn, we could, you know, I wouldn't refer to them as a porn star, but
we used that language to try to get more of a secular audience coming in, sharing her
story. It was powerful. The point is we we were in this little town called Sligo,
and the missionaries of charity have a house there. Now this woman had converted to Christ,
she was a Protestant. And I said, well, look, we'll go in here, adorations going on. She's like,
what's that? Like, they're just praying, I'll tell you after. But we went in there and we knelt and
we prayed. And then one of the sisters wanted to meet with us. And so we came
out and she just like grabbed me and she's like, did you feel the love of God in there? And I like,
well, I didn't really, you know what I mean? I was just like wondering how awkward this may have
been for her and what this was like. But that experience of Christ in the Eucharist is so
palpable for so many people. Oh yeah. And I think about when Father Bill asked me to go to confession or Darla asked me to pray
a decade of the Rosary or to stick around for adoration.
For them, they might have had that same awkward, like, you never know, but it's our job to
just invite and to cooperate with God, invite people, and it's up to him to let people have
whatever experience they're going to have.
And this young woman had a profound experience, and she started going to mass. And there's a number of detransitioners that go to this
university campus chapel. And yeah, it's really profound. And a number of them got baptized
and last Easter. And so now she is an RCIA to become Catholic and join the church. And it's just a beautiful, profound thing to watch.
And then she and I talk all the time
about work and other things, but we'll talk about faith.
And I've learned so much from her,
and from her faith and her trust.
And she's got this gorgeous heart,
and she's got this whole life ahead of her.
And she's so young, and she survived this catastrophic
thing, and she's got this whole life ahead of her, and she's so young, and she survived this catastrophic thing, and she's a genius.
And I can just imagine what God's gonna do in her life.
And she's getting to know the saints, and she's getting to know the personalities in
the church, and that when you become who you're meant to be, you become more fully alive,
and you'll become even more
a unique self.
And so instead of becoming a none and a nothing and getting nullified, which is the nihilistic
vert, you know, that actually your personality blossoms.
Absolutely.
And so, you know, she and I are now competing for who's going to be the patron saint of
Texas one day.
And I think that I have-
I think that's Darla Hickman or Monsignor Bill,
but you could be a runner up.
There could be two of you.
I mean, there's a bunch of us that are, you know,
in contention for this, I think.
But she's definitely up there.
She's going to give us- Beautiful,
Cana Hickman, who I love.
Beautiful, Annie Hickman, these good souls.
Yep. Yeah.
Could you tell me a little bit about how this,
to the best of your knowledge, how
this detransitioner movement began and how big it is right now and how it is they're
communicating and what that's like for them?
Well it's women like Chloe Cole and there's a number of people who come out of the ideology
and there's real titans and leaders. There's a man named Corey Cohen who for years has been testifying against Title
IX and men and women's sports. And he was also seduced when he was very young on the
internet, divorced parents, went through hormones and all the surgeries and everything else
and has come out of this ideology as well. But he's now, I believe, in his 50s, late 50s, and another just beautiful human, right?
It's men like that.
And he still, in many ways, because his body has changed
for so many decades of this,
has some feminine secondary features.
But I've told him before that he is one of the manliest men I've ever
met. What do you mean by that? Because what he has done is this young woman, for
example, she was getting ready to testify. Yeah. She's in the beginning of her
D-transitioner. She's scared. She's gonna go testify against what's happened to
her. It's all still very fresh and she had met him and they were hanging out
and it was before and she had met him and they were hanging out
and it was before and she had asked him,
I'm scared and had a conversation and he coached her
and he talked to her about, and he'd been testifying
and he just helped her through it
and someone for her to talk to.
God bless him.
And he was a father figure.
So when we talked about adoration and that warm sense
of knowing there's this man who loves you,
who cares for you, who's your creator.
But she had some aromas of that when she had met with Corey. And that she could, you know, you get
these like these little trails God gives you to help to prepare you for the true encounter. But
this is a man who has also taught her the father's love and a brother's love
and the true true relationships you can have with people who do truly care for you. And so he and so
Corey, that's great. I heard somebody say and I think this is right that you know what's the genius
of masculinity and I think it's something like strength on behalf of others you know for the
sake of others and that's what he's doing. Right? Yeah, beautiful.
Protecting women.
Yeah.
And so what does he do?
He's an activist, he testifies, he shows up at events.
Corey showed up at the Eucharistic Congress, okay?
And he held up a transgender flag,
and he had some message on it, I can't remember.
And he had people come up to him,
saying to talk to him. And he had said, well, what are, you know, to talk to him.
And he had said, well, what are you doing at your church to help these kids?
What are you doing?
And he was at the Eucharistic Congress to hold accountable Catholics going in at this
big, you know, prom for Catholics to say, what are you doing about transgender?
So he continues to show up and be provocative and to get people
Provocative ways and it's very masculine because he's out there defending femininity
He's out there defending children and what is a better more masculine thing?
Than to do what you can to protect women and children
This is gonna be a fascinating Netflix documentary in 20 years from now, once we all realize how demonic
this whole thing was, to see this crazy story of let's mutilate our children and tell them
they are what they aren't. I mean, how psychotic is that? And how unloving is that? When someone
believes lies, you don't love them by reaffirming those lies. You love them by telling them the truth
and walking with them.
And we have to have a mechanism, at least in our church,
not only for these children,
but what about the parents who enabled it and allowed it?
Yeah.
And the horrible shame.
That's what kills me.
Well, that's right.
That was one of the questions I had for Chloe Cole.
Like, what advice do you give to the parents
who permitted this and now realize that they were cowards, that they made terrible choices, evil choices that permitted their
children to be mutilated?
Like how do we reach out to them?
And a lot of the detransitioners have are estranged from their families.
And so they don't have family, they don't have community.
So what happens in your experience when a quote unquote, transition, quote unquote,
detransitions,
what happens to their life?
What happens to their networks, their communities,
their employment?
I mean, it's different for the different people I've met.
A number of them have lost their jobs for sure
and sort of have to start over.
A number of them are become therapists and social workers.
And they are, I represent a number of detransitioners who are now therapists and social workers and they are, I represent a number of D-transitioners
who are now therapists and social workers
and they get their medical licenses challenged,
they get slandered all over the press,
they get lawsuits against them
and if they happen to live in a state
that might have a law that says
that conversion quote conversion therapy is illegal,
trying to accuse them of conversion therapy.
I mean, they're attacked, their livelihoods are attacked.
And so they can't afford to represent themselves.
They're slandered and libeled,
but there's a whole world of people that are fighting this.
And one thing that Dr. Heim, the surgeon whistleblower,
that he's been able to really do
is be a part of this movement and connect a lot
of people. And so a lot of these people are now connected to one another
through what Chloe is doing, through what Dr. Heim is doing, through what Cory has
been doing. And so there is a community, a true community of real people, and
there's been coalescing around them. I have a number of clients who are
just oil and gas clients, but they have donated to
a legal defense fund to represent these guys, the little guy against the big industrial
complex that's the transgender industrial complex.
And so there are, you know, God always gives us just enough.
So I wouldn't say that we have this huge infrastructure and we have everything we ever needed, no.
I still get people who call me
where I don't have the resources to represent them
and I have to call and say, we have these people
and can someone donate?
I mean, we're really trying to continue to build.
I think Dr. Haim is very interested
in starting a nonprofit where he can be someone
who helps fundraise and then create a legal,
turn his legal defense fund into one for others
that speak out as whistleblowers, as doctors,
as de-transitioners, as therapists,
and to create that infrastructure,
and that's something that I'm hoping to help him do.
We're getting him through his ordeal,
but we're already looking into the future
to help provide that.
And then what little things as an individual can I do to really try to help
people is to continue to invite them to what is it that they're truly missing and what
was that fundamental lie and what are you made for.
And so in my little way, I try to do that with the individuals I encounter.
And then that's all I'm called to do too, is the little things.
And that's Trez of Avila, and Trez of Lesue
named herself after Trez of Avila,
and then Mother Teresa named herself after Trez of Lesue,
and all of them have number of things in common
with sort of their theology,
but one of them is this little way
that the Trez of Lesue, of course, encapsulated,
and then Mother Teresa, small things with great love,
and small things with a smile.
And so, just remembering that we have these huge,
huge problems in the church and in the world,
but what can we do is a smile, a kind word,
and little things with great love?
That's actually what moves mountains.
It's so true.
I've been thinking about that a lot lately
as I go through airports and things.
Just the hell that people go through, behind their face. You have no idea what's going
on and just, it feels like a prickly time right now. Everybody just seems a little agitated
and a little angsty. Like on YouTube and comment sections where people are just waiting to
be offended and waiting to rip each other apart. I'm getting that sense more and more
out in public. And so I'm really trying just to smile at people and to pray for them as I encounter
them.
Yep.
I try to smile more too.
I think smiling is very powerful.
And that's a big part of my daily life is trying to smile more.
I have small kids and my job and all the work we're doing and just remembering to smile
and just trying to remember to smile while I'm talking
and just try to remember to do the little things
that we can do.
And that's Darla asking me to pray a decade.
It's a little thing, it changed my life.
Marcella, you're a holy woman of God.
And the power of a small little thing and how it grows.
I know that the Blessed Virgin Mary
is going to put some beautiful transgender people in
front of this interview who are watching right now.
And you can let us know who you are in the comments below.
I'd love to hear from you.
Suppose they've been administered hormone blockers or have been mutilated.
What does the process look like?
How do they reach out to you and how could you possibly help them?
Yeah, I mean, they can reach out on the website.
Which is?
Burke group.law.
Yeah, remind me, I'm gonna put the link in the description.
Sure, sure.
But when I forget, you will remind me
and then I'll put it up immediately.
Sure, absolutely.
And you know, we take people all the time
and we take an intake call and interview them.
And if my law firm can't represent them,
there's a network of lawyers I'm a part of
that'll take these cases.
And it depends on what state they're in
and what's the state law
and really assessing what's going on
and is there legal recourse.
Sometimes there's not, there's statute of limitations,
which means you only have so much time to challenge a doctor
so has that run or not.
So you do a little bit of legal analysis
and it's a state by state thing
and you tell them what their recourse is
and if they have any to pursue it
And so some of these D transitioners have pursued legal recourse
And they've been very successful. I hope they are making bank
And I'll use that money to help overcome this insanity. Yeah. Yeah
Is that happening are people who've been abused by doctors?
Not that any amount of financial compensation
ever makes up for the abuse they've experienced,
but are they receiving?
Some people are, yeah.
A lot of the cases my law firm takes
are these big Medicaid fraud against the hospitals.
We do some stuff with the people,
but my practice isn't really,
although we do have people that do it,
the medical malpractice is what you're talking about.
And yes, you can take those cases and there are people who do get damages.
And so that's the damages back from all they spent, but also the damages of being sterile
or any type of fraud and the inducement and lack of informed consent.
Is there a tsunami of lawsuits about to break?
Is that what's about to happen?
I hope so.
Do you get the sense that that's happening? Do you get the sense that hospitals and doctors
are more careful about abusing children?
I think they're very nervous.
Good.
One of our cases is very interesting because the whistleblower had recorded a training
where it was a bunch of hospitals from a number of different states that were in a training and at the training they were saying
Here's the code to doctors and nurses and here's all the codes under trans, you know gender transition
I think it's like the f64 codes
But if it's illegal in your state, here's what you should bill instead and they're teaching people how to do fraud
This is a violation of Rico. It's racketeering
And so we have this recorded and all those
hospitals that were in attendance. And so what we do is we go to the state's attorney
generals in the states where there were doctors there and we say, you guys should investigate
this. And so we have state's attorney generals investigating all this stuff. And when you
go after these hospitals, it's under what's called the false claims act. And so what that
means is, or the damage is there is the hospital has to pay back to
the government.
So Medicaid is a government funding.
So they have to pay back dollar for dollar, but there's treble damages.
So they have to pay times three.
So these kids that get sucked in, you know, you break your arm, you get one doctor, maybe
two, click on your insurance, have a follow-up visit.
They only make so much money.
The average kid in these gender transitions
with hormones and puberty blockers
be 25 to 30 doctors a month clicking on their file.
I mean the amount or weeks,
and now they have therapists and psychiatrists
through these hospitals,
and everything's through the system,
and they're making a ton of money.
So the average kid could be about a million dollars each.
So three million that the hospital has to pay back per kid.
And so it's a lot of money.
And so sometimes the only way to make people wake up
and listen is to know there's gonna be consequences.
And these are criminal.
I mean, people go to jail for this.
The doctors can go to jail,
depending on the role of the CEO of the hospital.
I mean, these are jail time offenses.
They're very serious offenses.
And there's a lot of precedent.
You know, there's lots of doctors who've gotten in trouble
for Medicaid fraud on all kinds of different types
of surgeries.
It could be hip replacements and they're over billing
or they're doing this or that.
And so it's a very clear legal precedent.
We take a lot of those cases and we have those big cases.
We are working with state's attorney generals
and we are investigating.
And so those are the big cases
that are gonna be a really big deal
when it comes to making the hospitals stop.
And then having this culture within the medicine,
at least for people who are whistleblowers,
to know that there is infrastructure to help them,
law firms like mine.
And we have different whistleblowers.
We have Dr. Heim, who's basically a secular Jew.
We have a woman who's a nurse called Vanessa Sivage,
and she's an evangelical Christian,
very compelled by what she had,
she'd been reassigned from a cardiac unit
to the gender clinic and blew the whistle.
And then we have Jamie Reed, who is a lesbian,
who was married to a woman who presents as a man, but just
recently publicly wrote an article in the Free Press that her partner is now detransitioning
out of it.
But Jamie is a force and another whistleblower as a gay woman.
And so we have people from different walks of life all speaking out against what's going on to these kids
and that gives permission to people from different
ideologies, backgrounds, religions, perspectives
to just say this is child abuse.
What we're doing is really horrific.
And so we have these whistleblowers coming out
all across the country.
I mean it is, I think we're winning on this.
We're winning on the transgender thing.
I think in 10 years it will be an anathema.
I think we've had over 14 states already put in new laws against
it and we'll see more in the next session. And there could be federal
legislation. And President Trump has said in his campaign and there what he's
you know he's going to make it this illegal. And we cannot do this to
our children. And so what are different things the executive can do? And can the
Department of Justice take its sights off of the whistleblowers and put them
on the hospitals?
And the president has said that's what he's going to direct his Department of Justice
to do, is to investigate these hospitals.
And so I do think that we are on the so-called right side of history, obviously, but we're
actually winning this.
We're actually winning the transgender issue,
which is great, but you know, it's small things.
I mean, there's very few lawyers in America
taking these cases, and so whenever I got the call
and I didn't wanna take it, and it's like,
are you gonna rise to the occasion?
You know, are you gonna defend this whistleblower
and do whatever you can?
And then once I realized I had the resources
and a partner at my own firm had this background,
I was like, oh gosh, of course I rose to the occasion.
And you said, were you afraid?
Not really, because once I knew
that all the pieces were coming together,
it was just very obvious,
and then it's just a come what may at that point.
And there have been sleepless nights,
we've had to hire security at our home,
we've had, you know, threats and all this type of stuff and, you know, there's things
that we've had to adjust personally, but I think that'll also fade and pass too.
But really it's nothing compared to what these kids are going through.
And someone needs to be the adult in the room who's willing to say no and to stand a thwart the lies
and say no and so doctors need to speak out.
Lawyers need to step up and so yeah, we took the one case,
now we have a bunch of them and it's only a portion
of our docket.
I mean, the majority of what my law firm does
is commercial corporate litigation and commercial,
you know, fund formation and joint ventures
and just commercial.
I mean, it's just bread and butter legal work.
I have lost some clients over this.
I had one of my biggest clients,
someone on her legal team had been transitioning her son
and he'd already been sterilized as a young teenager.
So I lost a really big client over it.
But I've had other people that are just
commercial corporate clients that say,
I saw your case, I read your law firm's background,
and I used to use this law firm,
but I saw that they're defending the ACLU in these cases,
trying to defend the transgender industry,
and I don't wanna hire those lawyers anymore.
So we wanna hire you.
And we've gotten just bread and butter commercial work
from people who just are wanting to support a law firm
and a group of lawyers that are trying
to do something different.
And trying me as just one individual to build a firm
where we can just lawyers be lawyers.
And we can take controversial cases
because that's what lawyers do.
And then this case will end and you move on.
And we're just, you know, boring lawyers again.
But it has been very transformational for me,
I think for the lawyers at our law firm,
our corporate lawyers, like our M&A guys,
are just so proud that they could be part
of a law firm doing this.
And it means the world to me that we continue to recruit
and we find these lawyers across the country
who say, I wanna be a part of your firm.
Come on. You know, I wanna be a part of your firm. Come on.
You know, I want to be a part of what you're building.
And our goal is to be about a hundred lawyers and to just be known as really good, elite
lawyers for elite clients that are willing to take tough cases.
You know, this is a highly traditional goal for a law firm.
It's actually pretty boring.
Tell the people watching what that fella said on Tucker Carlson's show about you,
if you don't mind. Oh, gosh. Because if I were you, that would be in my bio from that one.
So funny. Dr. Heim, he's amazing and he has a way with words. He's very talented.
And Tucker had him on the show. God bless Tucker Carlson. Dr. Phil had him on the show. Jordan
Peterson. I mean, these men have really used their platforms to let Dr. Heim tell his story.
But he said, Tucker said, you know,
how did you find a lawyer to take this case?
You know, how did you find this person?
And he said, oh, Marcella,
she's this really serious Catholic lady
with a rosary in one hand and a middle finger in the other.
And that's how he described me.
And Tucker laughed, the trademark laugh.
And so that's sort of, you know,
I have, you know, that's a bit of a meme at my law firm.
I'm so glad you're doing what you're doing.
I'm pretty ignorant about this.
What is legal where?
You know, are there states where puberty blockers are illegal?
What about mutilating of children?
Is that where?
It's a state law.
So traditionally, regulation of the medical industry is a state's, usually a state rights
issue.
And so each state can decide for itself in the legislature.
So you might have states like California, New York, New York or Washington state where
it's a complete,
everything's open.
Yeah.
And what is that for those who are still kind of ignorant about this insanity?
What is it that they're doing in hospitals in New York?
Well, your child can say they want to be a boy or present as the opposite sex and then
they can...
They'll castrate them.
They will.
Yeah.
Could you talk about those surgeries and what they entail?
I know you're not a doctor, but you've dealt with this.
What are they?
Well, there's the double mastectomies, obviously, for women.
They can do a full castration for boys.
They can do a phalloplasty, which is creating like a, using like the skin of someone's arm
or other parts of their body to create
male anatomy on a woman. And those are really, really horrific.
Horrific, horrific.
Because I presume that if there was a state
that started amputating people's limbs
because they identified as armless,
they wouldn't be able to do that, would they?
Correct, so that's an argument
that's been made across the country in a lot of these states
that if you go to the doctor and you say,
hey, my kid's left arm is bothering him,
or his male anatomy is bothering him,
I'd like you to remove it, it's bugging him.
They'd say, no, I can't do that, it's malpractice.
But you say, he's transgender and he thinks he's a girl. Well, then they suddenly can. These are some of the arguments
that are winning. And so, no, there's no new standard. This is where the suicide or surgery
argument started coming in, or excuse me, surgery or suicide, because then that gave
doctors, well, if we don't do it, he's gonna lose his life, and that creates this medical necessity.
Yeah, what do you want?
What do they say, like a living son or a dead daughter?
Exactly.
Now that's, you've noticed,
we haven't been hearing that so much
in the past year or so.
Now that all those studies have been totally debunked,
and all the European doctors have put an end to it.
And so here, they don't have anything to stand on anymore.
There's actually no research
that shows that that defense stands.
And so now doctors who are doing this
are actually exposing children to the opposite,
surgery then suicide.
And those numbers are starting to come out in the litigation.
But no, you can have states, not only that,
there are some states where if your child says
they wanna change sexes and the parent says no,
they'll take the child away.
And you've seen that across,
there's a big case in Washington, D.C.,
there's a case in Washington State, there's a big case in Washington, D.C.,
there's a case in Washington State,
there's a number of these cases
where they'll take the children away from the families
if the school wants to initiate the transitioning
of the child.
And so, I've had one mom call me from one of these states
and say they're gonna take my kid away.
And I said, you need to move. You need to move and she's like well you
know we have this great view we live on a lake and I'm like lady you know I
can't help you. I cannot help you if you're not willing to move. You can move
and you will have the exact same legal recourse against them and you still have
the same cause of action and we can still fight this but you will have your
children safe and you need to be willing cause of action and we can still fight this, but you will have your children safe.
And you need to be willing to move and do the thing.
And so again, these parents really need to step up
and it's gonna be uncomfortable.
And you're gonna have to do some readjusting.
We had our kids in a school that was a Catholic school
that we learned was teaching gender ideology
as young as three years old and had color books.
And my kid came
home and we're praying before bed and he had said something like mommy where's
daddy's other mommy but I'm like what do you mean?
This is your child? My child and and I said what do you mean and he said well
you know we read a book that there can be two mommies and two daddies and like
where's the other mommy is very confused and so of course we went to the school
and found out about these books on gender ideology. And what do we do? You got to pull your kid out of the school. It's the worst.
You're like, my Catholic school in this diocese? It was a Catholic school? Yeah. Shame. Yeah. And
then we learned that almost every parochial school in our diocese has the same curriculum.
And if you're a quote conservative Catholic, then you can go to this parish, this parish
or this parish, but that's it.
And that we were told we were bigots training our kids to be police.
You were told that by Catholic school.
Yeah.
And I went to the board and we did everything we could to just we thought, you know, people
just if only the parents knew.
But parents want their kids to be in the school in the right neighborhood with the right networks.
For goodness sake. There's a lot of faces that need slapping.
Well, there's just, but what can we do? So what do my husband and I do? We have to rearrange
everything. You know, I'm working, he's working, we got the, what are we going to do? You pull
the kid out. If the state's going to take away your child, you move. You pack the car
and you move. Yeah pack the car and you move.
Yeah, forget the freaking lake.
You know, you just gotta do the tough things.
And you gotta wake up.
And the more people that are willing to sacrifice
for their kids, the more that then, you know,
you're invested in fighting the ideology.
And so, you know, we had made that decision
to pull our kid out of that school,
which is hugely disappointing for us. And it was, you know, sad. You know, we had made that decision to pull our kid out of that school Which is hugely disappointing for us and it was a you know
Sad, you know, we love the church and it was just knowing this is happening within our own house. Yeah
But that was one of those little things where God, you know gives you courage along the way
And I think that that was a real virtue defining moment for us to pull the kids out and know how strongly he felt about it.
And it was later that, you know, pretty soon after I got that call, you know, but I'd had
enough, you know, God gives you little things, little opportunities to have courage and to
do the right thing to then prepare you for the bigger things.
And so that's what we're called to do is we don't tolerate it.
You know, we do not tolerate these lies.
We do not collude in them.
And we don't lie to ourselves and say it won't affect our kids.
No, you pull your kids out of that.
You get them out of the situation.
But it's tough.
I will.
It is tough.
It's a I've had to do it.
Are there any states that have reversed some of these practices because of pressure put
on?
Yeah.
Oh, yeah.
Yeah. There's a lot of state laws that are now out there
saying you can't do these things.
They create criminal liability for the doctors
if it wasn't already there.
And you'll see more and more legislation.
We're working on legislation now.
I've had the privilege of working on executive orders
for the new administration on this issue.
And things like states can do this,
but the federal government can do it as well,
but having a mandatory binary definition of the sexes
in all state federal paperwork.
And so one thing these hospitals can do
is they have everything is about gender.
So on the paperwork, if you're trying to look for the fraud,
they have Billy and Billy wants testosterone
because he's testosterone deficient. But nowhere
on the file does it say Billy's actually Susie and of course an 11 year old Susie is testosterone
deficient. Susie's a girl and so giving that treatment for testosterone deficiency is fraudulent.
Well if you have a law that says the paperwork has to have a mandatory binary definition of the
sexes
Well, then when investigate when the state investigates the hospitals, it's much easier to find the fraud
And so those that's the type of legislation that we're working on statewide, you know across the state governments and also federally
I mean there's things like that that are being that are being worked on and that'll be huge to just say no
Mandatory binary definition of the sexes.
You said these studies that said surgery or suicide had originally come out of
Europe and these are being debunked.
So is it the case that in Europe they're turning the page quicker than we are
then?
Yes.
And what is that looking like over there and what is the legality of it looking
over there and lawsuits and... Children can't of it looking over there? And lawsuits and-
Children can't get the surgeries.
They've just stopped doing it entirely.
Since when?
Or has it just been a gradual thing?
The past couple of years.
Yeah.
Yep.
Yep.
So we're getting caught up.
Wow.
And another thing you do is
you help people who are being sort of persecuted
by the DEI mob.
Oh yeah. We've ended up with some of those.
Yeah, that's another fun one.
DEI, diversity, equity and inclusion
is a movement that's gone through,
I would say corporate America,
and it's this idea that we want to have diversity
in the workplace, and so we're gonna force
the demographics of the workplace.
Now, what that contends with is Title VII
of the Civil Rights Act.
And that's the legislation, famously,
that says you can't discriminate based on race,
based on sex, based on religion, for example.
And so you cannot discriminate
against black people in hiring.
Obviously, if there was something saying,
well, we're not hiring any more black people,
that would be a very natural anathema.
Like, obviously you can't do that.
Well, the law applies equally to white people or Asian people, for example.
And so we've seen cases out of the Supreme Court recently that in university admissions,
you can't discriminate against people in university admissions, and the dicta of that case said
this also applies to corporate America.
So now we're seeing cases come in, and my law firm's taking them, of people who say,
you know, I was denied promotion because I didn't fit a right demographic.
And we also see cases where in their DEI training, so you have annual trainings you have to do,
and your company policy will say, well, if you don't do all of our trainings, then you're
not going to have your employment.
You'll be disciplined. And so then they'll incorporate
into the training the transgender ideology. And so they'll have parts of the training
that say things like, if you have someone that wants you to use their preferred pronouns,
what are you going to do? Yes or no. And they click no, and it's not an option. Wrong answer.
You can't finish the training until you click yes. So you cannot be certified that you've done the training
without bearing false witness.
And so a Christian, a Jew can say,
I can't bear false witness.
And I will not lie.
I will be happy to work in an environment,
be respectful, figure something out,
but I also have rights as a Christian,
as a Muslim, as a religious person,
or even I think as a as a unreligiously affiliated person to just say no you can't just compel
speech. And so those are really interesting cases that we also win where we just write a demand
letter and we say listen the constitution, title seven, these are kind of fun letters to write and say, you
know, you need to find it, you need to give us a reasonable
accommodation to these employees. They can't bear false witness and 100% of the
time they do and in a lot of these cases we've been able to completely
obliterate the DEI regime. Really? Oh yeah. And you see major companies like John
Deere and there's just dozens of them now that have come up. It sound like Walmart is backing out of some of this stuff to it's totally illegal
So all these all these companies are doing it or it's totally illegal
And so all you have to do is get a few people that have had the same type of discrimination
so we are working with a company now that has over a hundred thousand employees and
they have dozens of people from the same company who've called me together and
They've said said you know so where we've interviewed all of them and you have a group of white men you have a group of Christian women you have different
groups and that's called a class action and so then if you can get certified as
a class when they do a title seven civil rights saying you need to defend us what
the the the way that that system works is you represent everybody that's similarly
situated in your company. And so not only do you get damages for yourself, but they
multiply it by how many people in the company that you represent. And so the damages are
like massively multiplied. This is incredibly scary for these companies because suddenly
you go from having to pay out two years of salary to somebody and paying two years of
salary out to a ton of people. And there are types of damages you get that are punitive where
the jury can say, and also just because this is so bad, you got to pay an extra penalty
of how much. So Starbucks had to pay. They wanted to fire a woman because she's white.
And they said, we just want someone of, you know.
And that was unvarnished. That's what they said.
Totally. No, these companies are all unvarnished. Okay. what they said. These companies are all unvarnished,
okay? So this is the beauty of it. It didn't come up with a fake reason. No, this is all, everything
is a smoking gun. We don't take the complicated cases. I'm like, I want to see the email that
says it's because you're white. Great. That's a smoking gun. It's okay. You win. So how did
they fire her? Tell me what they said. They very publicly fired her and it's not my case, but she
got a $25 million judgment against Starbucks that she took home
It's that it's just so illegal. You cannot do that
You cannot discriminate based on race and they say firing you because you're what yeah dear Lord
Yeah, so these are easy cases
Yeah, you know these are easy cases and so now we have a docket that takes on these cases
And I think again what can one person do? Well, just do the little things.
You can't bear false witness.
It's not complicated.
Don't lie.
Don't lie.
I mean, it's easy for me to say that.
I mean, I run a little Catholic podcast
and obviously you've got to be careful
about what you put on YouTube.
This might get us banned.
We'll see what happens.
But I've spoken to people who work in the secular world
and they say, you know,
they're sitting around at these meetings
and they're saying, tell us about how you have yourself been racist or have contributed to
racism. And my friends, like they've got, they've got kids, they got a wife and so.
Oh, just record it. We call that free money at our law firm. And you know what? You still live in
America and there's a lot of companies and there's a lot of jobs out there and it will not ruin your
life. And you settle and you sign a non-disparagement,
and you're not gonna say anything bad about them,
and they're not gonna say anything bad about you.
Now we have some clients who will sign a non-disparagement,
but they won't sign what's called
a confidentiality agreement.
They want to be able to tell their story.
They want to be able to go to guys like Robbie Starbuck,
who are on Twitter that are exposing these woke companies
for what they're doing,
and they want to be able to take the whole thing down. And so we have some clients who choose
that path too. And so there's different paths you can take, but at the end of the day, it's not an
option. You cannot bear false witness. This is very clear. It's a commandment. It's not a request.
And so just do something about it. Don't bear false witness.
And also with these cases, they're called usually contingency, which means the employee
doesn't pay the lawyer.
If it's a good case, then the lawyer takes it and I take on the expense.
And so there's no expense.
And then if and when they win, then I get paid on the back end when they get their settlement.
And so you don't really have a ton to lose. And with a lot of these Title VII cases,
once you file a claim, they can't fire you.
It's called retaliation.
You keep your job.
That must be a fun work environment.
Well, actually, for a lot of these people,
their coworkers are like,
"'Thank God you said something.
"'It's so oppressive.'"
And some of these guys have had people in the C-suite say,
"'Thank God you said something.'
"'We have this general counsel, this head of DE&I,
and they're sitting in all of our executive meetings
and it's crushing our workforce.
And some of these like oil companies, for example,
where they need the meritocracy.
They need people who are engineers.
They need people and they have unqualified people
taking roles because of DE&I.
And they're like, thank God.
They're looking for the little guy, someone,
an analyst, somebody in HR
Someone speak up because then the letter demand letter goes to the board and they have decided what to do and they finally say
This is illegal. We cannot do this and that's how it ends. Okay, what is the
Least amount a company can do for DEI that you consume sue them for. So obviously if they're firing you because you're white,
I get that you can sue them for that. But what's the least amount of kind of DEI they can impose upon you before you can have recourse?
I mean, there's so many things that are illegal. A company can't offer any kind of preference in hiring
to someone based on anything in Title VII. Religion, race,
there's a US Supreme Court case called Bosstock which applies Title VII to if you're gay or not.
And so they can't prefer gay people in hiring.
They can't discriminate against gay people in hiring
but they can't prefer them either.
I have to say, like, I have, I was not sure
that Trump would be elected.
You know, people would say I trust the American people.
I'm like, no, I don't. We're all idiots.
And we've all bought into this BS
that's been pumped down our throat from Hollywood and big tech and universities
For so long. I don't trust Americans at all
I have so much more faith in the American people
Because I feel like what they did is they were like we're sick of it and a lot of what they were sick of is
The DEI the trans stuff and I just feel I don't know about you
But I just feel like I trust people on airplanes more my gosh
Maybe the most of us also realize this is insane.
This is the emperor not wearing any clothes.
And we just went, he doesn't have clothes on.
And everyone was like, oh, good, we can stop pretending.
Yeah, one of the refrain I hear the most
is that people didn't realize that Title VII applied to them.
They thought it actually only applied to, say,
gay people or black people or something.
It's like, no, no, no, no, no.
The laws in
America apply to all people. Yeah. And so absolutely we shouldn't discriminate, but we can't
discriminate against anybody. And so the way the law is actually established is a meritocracy. And
and so all we have to do is speak up the law as written is already enforcing these ideas. And so all
that needs to happen is people to stand up for their rights. We don't even need
new legislation when it comes to DE&I. We just need individuals to speak up, to
rise to the occasion, call a lawyer, and we'll tell you what to collect, what
information, you know, what are the smoking guns. They can't give, you can't
give scholarships to people in hiring, you can't give scholarships
to people in hiring, you can't have meetings
for one group without excluding the others,
you can't have like a diversity happy hour.
Yeah, I think I remember there was a university
that did just a black graduation,
so just the black students were allowed and then-
That is totally illegal, totally illegal, can't do it.
What about like black dorm rooms, things like that, that they have?
I mean, if you're excluding, they are, yeah, then yeah, that would be a problem.
Well, illegal. Just imagine there was just white dorm rooms.
Well, exactly. Yeah. Yeah. Only white people were allowed here. That's racist. Yeah, illegal.
But if you do it to another race, it might be okay. But it's not. Yeah.
And so, yeah.
Yeah.
I'm so glad that you're doing what you're doing.
So I mean, there must be, since money is what drives the market here, there must be just
a ton of lawyers beginning to realize that there is a cash cow here waiting to be had
to talk about it very crassly, no?
This whole DEI, trans stuff, there must be lawyers ready to make hay.
I hope so. I hope so, too.
I hope so. I hope so.
Nothing like a good opportunistic lawyer
to set the record straight.
Absolutely. I hope other people
I hope that this becomes a thing.
Alright, let's take a break
and then we'll take questions from local supporters.
You were saying Twitter did what?
Or is doing what?
Oh, the role of Twitter.
So in this culture with DEI and with transgender, the way that, you know, if
someone speaks up against like a regime, a politically unpopular regime, the, what
the left can do traditionally is they've been able to isolate that person
and shame them and they can get fired or humiliated and you sort of play whack-a-mole and you
can lop off the dissenters.
But thanks to the internet and to X specifically, people can on their X account either through
a pseudonym or an omnipleum or as themselves speak up.
And so on Twitter you see a huge amount of conversation about these issues and people speaking up and connecting.
And people can just send a DM to Robbie Starbuck and say, this is happening at my company.
And they can DM one another and say, you know's what's going on can you help I can DM the Attorney General of a state and say hey
I'm taking these cases and we have a witness in your state do you want to set
up a call and set up a call the next day I mean Twitter has totally enabled the
conversation and not only that it's created this community where you're no
longer isolated since Musk took over. Absolutely.
And so now you have people that can come to your defense
and the left can't play that tactic of isolating
and annihilating doesn't work.
And so it's been really revolutionary.
And in our lawsuit with Dr. Heim, the whistleblower,
recently something that happened was that the government, so Aton, Dr. Heim and the whistleblower. Recently, something that happened was that the government,
so Aton, Dr. Haim and I on our Twitter accounts
will just tweet transcripts from hearings,
excerpts, and transcripts from public court filings.
So it's all public.
And it'll be a little dialogue between the judge
and the government where basically they're being
completely humiliated or decimated,
or something in our filings that we say that just totally takes them down.
And so we will publish Twitter threads about what happened.
So it'll cut out all the legalese but just make all the arguments. The government filed, after they filed their third indictment,
this outrageous indictment against Dr. Heim, they also filed what's called a motion to gag and they argued that I,
Marcella Burke, and Dr. Heim,
we were
bullying the government with our tweets and
that the judge should put a gag on us so we can no longer do this.
I mean the clear First Amendment issues here for the government to come against a criminally accused man who is innocent
100%, innocent till proven guilty you can speak but what you say can be used against you but now they're saying you can't even speak because it makes us
look bad because what is he tweeting about the lead prosecutor on the case
has been taken off the case possibly for very serious complex issues that came up
at one point we discovered she was practicing and prosecuting our client without a law license
that was exposed on Twitter when it wouldn't have otherwise been exposed just through our
public documents.
I mean, all these things started coming out about the government's case.
So what happens?
X intervenes in our lawsuit.
They filed a brief defending my and my client's First Amendment rights and sending this beautiful
magnum opus on the role of X in the free speech and in these sort of issues, and also not the B.
So the Babylon Bee, the satirical website also has not the B, and that sort of news that should be
satire but isn't, and it's a news aggregator, it's actually it's a news. And so they intervened and defended us and our free speech rights. And they, the government also
tried to file, they filed a bunch of stuff under seal it's called. Which means they file it but the
public can't read it and we can't share it with the public. But there's strict rules about what
can be under seal because the public is, the taxpayers are paying for these prosecutions.
And so why are these things under seal and
So not the bee said as a press aggregator. We need to know what's going on
And so they file that motion and so, you know, thanks to groups like X not the bee
Well, how do I connect with these guys? I can DM
Yeah, I can just send a DM and say this is what's going on
and
in that case
there's an amazing lawyer called Harmeet Dhillon that deserves a shout
out.
And I just called her and I said, Harmeet, she's a free speech lawyer in California,
but other types of cases.
And I said, hey, you know, we need help on this.
And so she represented X and not the B when they intervened.
And so again, another brave lawyer.
And there's basically so few lawyers taking these cases
that I could just call her
because I can reach out to her on DM.
And so I think my point is to not underestimate the role
of X and the internet.
And when you're speaking up at these companies
that there is a huge network of people that will come to your defense and
You will not be isolated and the law is set up to protect you and if they retaliate against you all that does is give
you more damages
And it's that that's what's gonna put an end to it
Is that you're not gonna be isolated?
You're gonna have you know all these people coming to your aid and the government can't stop it the government cannot stop X
Exciting yeah, well, thank you. I want to take questions from our local supporters
This is the part of the interview where I look into the camera and make everybody feel awkward and let them know ask you
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Thank you. All right. So here we go.
I haven't read these. So let's see. MR Len says,
Infanticide could hospitals be sued for withholding treatment for baby
born alive? Could they be sued for wrongful death and or malpractice?
Who would have standing to sue in such a case?
Yeah, that's not your lane of expertise, but any idea?
I mean, I think in general, again, healthcare state law,
so it depends on the state law,
who would have standing and wrongful death
is typically the next of kin.
And so if a woman is there to have an abortion,
presumably she wouldn't necessarily then want
to sue if she later finds out that the baby was born alive but then suffocated or there's
different things that they do to euthanize, to murder the baby.
Usually sell them for body parts, of course, as we all know now.
But presumably she would have standing if she fits within that statute of limitations.
And depending on the state, it could be even the next of kin, like grandparents, presumably. But that's just
something where you'd have to have lawyers research each state's law to discover who
has standing and, you know, whether that practice is illegal at all. I mean, in some states,
you just can't do that at all. So if it's happening, then you would absolutely have
her dress. And also you could call the attorney general and the state could investigate too.
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Daniel S asked, is suing these doctors in hospitals
who are performing these transgender surgeries
going to bring about actual change on these fronts and how?
Well, yeah, I think it's gonna end the procedures entirely.
And I think a lot of the doctors performing these surgeries,
they're gonna begin to be exposed as individuals.
It's like abortion and that it's not,
is that the Kermit Gosnell figures will emerge
and who are these individuals that really just
all day every day do this to kids.
There's-
And we learned about it on X too,
because there's a number of patients who've learned
thanks to X that for example,
their doctor will in their top sides
put in a certain shaped scar,
which is like their signature scar,
and so they're realizing that they're sort of being marked
by their doctors, and so that's another-
This is like experiments in Nazi Germany stuff.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And it's getting exposed in real time immediately, as opposed to having to wait for the end of
a three or four year litigation.
So it can be exposed in real time.
And I think thanks, this is again part of the, to the extent people have that courage,
if that's part of what they're being called to expose, is how publicly they want to expose
it.
Yeah, gosh.
Right.
Yeah.
So no, it works. I mean, this is, it's called, gosh. Right. Yeah. So no, it works.
I mean, this is it's called lawfare.
And the left has used it against the right for a really long time.
And what's good for the goose is good for the gander.
And so to the extent people are willing to stand up and make the same claims, the case
precedent is there.
Sam says who should be held liable for sex change surgeries on minors?
I mean, how many doctors, he says, would you say are coerced into the surgery
by their hospitals?
I mean, it's still not a great argument
when you stand before Almighty God
and you say the hospital said they'd fire me
unless I mutilated a child,
but who should be held liable?
Well, under the law, anyone who performs them is liable.
So anybody in the room is liable.
And so they're facing very serious criminal charges
to the extent that they're investigated.
It's up to the state to decide whom they prosecute
so they could choose a doctor
and depending on how high it goes up
and the approvals, the CEO or people within the organization.
And that really is the discretion of the prosecutors.
And so there's gonna be prosecutorial discretion
about whom they go after.
But under the laws written,
it could be anybody who participates.
Sam also asks, should DEI be pursued
under any circumstances?
Not sure what he means there,
but he says, should churches and diocese pursue DEI?
I guess he means by.
Yeah, so first of all, I mean,
are dioceses implementing DE and I?
I mean, I don't know if a diocese has an HR director
or someone who's the head of DEI within a diocese,
then possibly, possibly they are.
You know, I wouldn't know.
I don't have any cases against a diocese
to answer that directly, but it is fairly ubiquitous.
So I wouldn't be surprised to learn if it's happening in diocese.
This person asks, what do you believe the core of DEI is? Can it be used for good or is it like socialism starting out as a good idea, but will never work in practice?
Well, the history of DEI and HR is really interesting.
When the communism fell after the Cold War,
some of the big famous communists made statements like,
we will not be able to spread communism
through bullets and bombs,
but we'll have to infiltrate from within organizations.
And that was actually the beginning of HR.
And so you could have HR that's just there
to process W-2s and 109999s and here's your onboarding paperwork.
But really that could be done easily through like
a CFO function or even just an administrative assistant
that's tasked with those types of things.
To the extent HR is really a tool within your organization
to implement and enforce illegal DEI practices,
that's very problematic.
And that's sort of what I experienced is,
why aren't you attending these calls?
Why don't you have pronouns on your bio?
Why isn't it in your signature?
And I worked somewhere once where they actually took
the ability for you to manipulate your signature
off of your outlook, and so you only had an image,
and so it had to have your pronouns.
And so I would not use it and then I would copy
and paste from old emails.
And then you have someone from HR saying,
well, someone's flagged that you're using,
you're still not using your pronouns.
And so that's all HR within your organization
enforcing illegal conduct.
So it really depends, it's case by case basis,
but your companies can't force you and compel you to bear false witness.
You know, I want to ask, but it might sound a little disparaging,
but when did the insane people start running the asylum? But all of these people are,
it's worse than insane. I mean, you're not culpable for insanity.
You're culpable for lying and perpetuating evil,
but do you have any theories as you, as you think as you think about this, how this took off so quickly
that people would demand that you put your pronouns
in your email?
Well, I think that like every lie,
it's the twisting of the truth,
and everybody wants to work in somewhere
where it's inclusive, and I don't wanna work in a place
that discriminates people based on whatever.
You wanna have the best person for the job.
And so that is the kernel of truth.
But what we're seeing with DEI
is that it's not the best person for the job,
all things being equal,
and making sure that we're getting the right person
for the job that isn't being discriminated against
because of one of these things.
This is actually the best rocket scientist,
and we don't want her to be discriminated against because she's a woman.
That's of course great.
But when it's being used that we actually don't care
about how good of a rocket scientist this person is,
we want her because she's a woman,
and she doesn't have the resumes of everybody else,
that's when it becomes a problem.
And so I think that that's where, that's that lie
where it provokes that justice bone
We all have that no we should not discriminate
We should have the best people for every job and then you get
It becomes very confusing and then on top of that it comes from above and you do feel very scared
There's so many diversity trainings. There's so many things, you know, gay pride month might be you know, really?
You know the the LGBTQ and it's very heavy on the TQ.
You've got a lot of companies with doing drag shows and all these drag story time hour for
kids at their companies.
It's so prevalent and so ubiquitous that they do feel oppressed.
But there's really interesting precedent, I think it's out of the 10th Circuit, that
says that actually Christians could have a hostile work environment claim.
That it's so ubiquitous in the company that they could say working there is such a hostile
work environment that I can't, that you would have a claim for hostile work environment.
And that's like a fact or test that they put through that I think could be very interesting
if adopted in other circuits.
And so anyway, I can't remember the original question.
No, that's good.
Spark Spark Boom says, do you have any advice
for us attorneys who are wanting to get
into the culture of litigation?
Also, can I have a job?
Ha, send a resume.
You know, there's a couple of really good groups
that do a lot of this stuff
that you can sign up for pro bono.
There's a group called Alliance Defending Freedom
and they're a national organization. I think they're the largest first amendment law firm
and they have not only their own bench of lawyers full-time, but they also have what's called allied
attorneys and these are volunteer lawyers who get trained and then when people call Alliance
Defending Freedom saying I'm a Christian or a Jew whomever and I don't and they're discriminating against me in
DEI or whatever
Well, then if you're signed up as an allied attorney, you're on the mailing list. And so you get email saying hey
Texas attorneys we have a nurse in Fort Worth. This is happening
Can anybody represent her and so any lawyer in America can go to the ADF website
Go to their training and then join the allied network
And then these cases are being taken across the country through the Alliance spending freedom and the Alliance spending freedom has been a huge ally
In our case, they've given dr. Heim
You know some grants for his litigation. They've had him present at their annual events and
Really endorsed him and come to his aid. And so the Alliance Fending Freedom
is a really an amazing organization,
not only to defend conscience rights,
but also taking on DEI.
And so that would be an organization that I would commend.
Reminisce Logic says,
"'What advice can be given for leaving a state like California,
which continues to take parents right away
regarding children mutilation?
I mean, I have high hopes for California.
I think I do, I do.
I think that California will flip eventually back.
I just do.
And I think I have friends that are holdouts there
that live there and won't move.
And I think that's great and that's worthy.
I would say though, if you live in a state
where they're literally, you are already engaged with CPS
that is already threatening to take away your child,
you move, you move.
And so that's an easy question.
Nice thing about moving from California
is you can usually get a much bigger plot of land
and a much bigger, nicer house.
You sure could.
You sure could.
Liz Anderson says, with the recent election,
do you think DEI is on its way out
or is it too entrenched at this point?
I think it's on the way out.
It's illegal.
And so you're already seeing major corporations
put a stop to it.
So I do think it's on the way
out. It's definitely been curbed and we have a lot of really good precedent. You see a lot of these
companies wanting to settle and just get rid of DEI because they don't, I think they don't want
the lawsuit. So we have that case in the Supreme Court saying that it's illegal to discriminate
in university admissions and then the dicta, which is the judge's opinion,
that also says it would apply to corporate America.
You're seeing a lot of these companies wanting to settle
because they don't want to go all the way back to the Supreme Court
to be that case, to prove that theory.
And so we're winning a lot of this through people complaining and settling.
And we're seeing a domino effect already.
Michael asks, is there criminal liability as well as civil on the doctors that perform the procedures?
Is there an argument for reconvening the Nuremberg courts for crimes against humanity?
Yes. Yes. They should be held to task. We absolutely could hold them accountable.
Congress can do hearings.
There's nothing stopping Congress right now
from holding a hearing and whatever committees
are responsible for Medicaid fraud
and responsible for regulating hospitals to say,
well, let's have the CEO of Texas Children's Hospital
come and answer some questions.
And let's have these doctors come and answer some questions. You've already said in court this one thing about this not being experimental, but you've applied
to the NIH. There's nothing stopping Congress from saying subpoenaing him and demanding he
come and testify. So you could have absolutely accountability in the public square through
litigation, but also Congress can act. Ralph Raymond says, how can the new presidential administration
help have an impact on reducing the mutilation of children?
How can which have a help?
The new presidential administration, so.
I mean, on the transgender piece,
through executive orders,
things like the mandatory binary definition of the sexes,
by presidential directive,
he could say federal buildings can only fly
the American flag, which means the transgender flags
come down from all the embassies across the country
where they're currently flying.
The EEOC, the Employment Commission,
Equal Opportunity Office, they could change
what they're enforcing, and they could start enforcing
and taking these cases.
There's just a lot that the president can do. So the president
controls the agencies that administer all these laws and so the president can
then direct their executive order, you know, how we want these laws to be
administered and just turn the tables. So absolutely if that's what he chooses to do.
Matt Fabiano says, what would you say to someone who's thoroughly catechized
into woke-ism about the evils about trans ideology?
I try to explain some of this stuff to my sister,
but she'll have none of it.
Have you had that experience, having to try to?
I mean-
I think it was Rogan who first used the term
ideologically captured, but I think that's a good term.
Yeah, I think Elon calls it the woke mind virus.
It's tough, it's really tough.
And I think that you can try to do the little things
with great love.
You don't wanna be probably the insufferable scold.
And so at some point you just have to,
you can do all that you can do and then you pray.
I mean you go to adoration, you pray a rosary and you believe that it's all happening for
a reason and that hopefully the person can get out of it.
But I mean there's really only so much that you can do but I will say I think prayer is
very powerful, obviously.
And then when you have that opportunity just to say those little things and say them with
great love, you know, things and say them with great love
You know try to say them with a smile and then that's all you can do
There's that cliche but it's true that people don't care how much you know until they know how much you care
My wife and I have someone who's quite close to us. I'll leave it at that who
presents as the sex that she isn't and
You know this person is aware of our stance, eh?
So my wife beautifully realizes that she doesn't need to bring this up. She just needs to keep the communication open and just loving her and, you know, supporting her. And so I guess trying to
keep communication open, but it is difficult when you get to a conversation where you feel like, I don't, it's interesting that the side who for so long told us about
being open to new ideas and not being closed minded seem to be very uninterested in having
an open minded discussion.
It's tough.
Deborah says, I find it implausible that the doctors are ignorant of the horrific lives
of mental and emotional torment to which they are condemning their
Patients, please comment on the psychological profile of the doctors imposing lifetimes of suffering
Um
I think that some of these guys and women are
Really?
deranged
There's really no other way to say it and you listen to their testimony and some of them have ticktocks are really deranged.
There's really no other way to say it.
And you listen to their testimony
and some of them have TikToks
and it's very troubling what you see.
And so just being willing to call a spade a spade
that this is sick and it's twisted
and you're experimenting on children.
But I'm not a psychologist
and I don't know criminal profiles.
But a lot of these doctors are on the record saying things
like that they are creating new life,
and that they're on the vanguard.
And so they have this true God complex.
And you hear that about doctors, like,
oh, doctors, they've got God complexes.
Some of these guys really do, and gals,
and they brag about it,
and they're so proud of what they're doing,
and these new creations that they're creating.
And so, um,
Wow, so I don't know but I do think books will be written about some of these,
the Gosnells, the Kermit Gosnells of the transgender movement and what is the psychological profile of these people?
What's crazy is that that can come out about Gosnell and about Planned Parenthood selling baby parts
and no one seemed to care.
Like that didn't seem to make much of a dent in the left's public opinion about abortion.
I think that that was before Twitter really took off with Elon. I think that there's of course a huge amount of public outcry but there was no way for people to express it. And that the legacy media has really been complicit in suppressing just the average
Americans' perception of these things.
And so now you are seeing, and if that were to have happened, you know, if the Kermit
Gosnell would have been discovered today and not, I think it was maybe 13 years ago or
something.
But even with the body part selling, I mean, that's happened during social media days.
And I'm like, where is the big lefties?
Where's people like Whoopi Goldberg
and these others condemning this practice?
They are on the, they are sucked into the ideology.
It's wild, it's so insane.
They have their marching orders and they know the assignment.
You know, there's a lot of accusations these days
about people lying, hey?
You know, like they're lying.
I'm more increasingly of the opinion that believing our lies is the fruit of lying.
And so I wonder, you know, not to pick on Whoopi, but I wonder if she just really thinks
that she's doing the good thing here and isn't aware of how wrong it is to kill children
in the world.
I don't know.
How blind must you be? Yeah. I mean some of it with abortion, I don't sympathize
with it, but in some ways you can understand it because the message is so
clear that if you have a pregnancy, a surprise pregnancy, that this baby is a
threat. Yeah. A threat to your success.
No, 100%.
We have to be as sympathetic as we can.
I mean, just like I was sitting before Chloe Cole,
and yeah, like I get it.
Like I get it, I'm so sorry.
Like you felt ostracized.
I can understand that you felt welcome
by this apparent community.
I get it.
It's harder to, I think, understand
the transgender ideology and getting sucked into that because,
again, it's what is the threat of your current body exactly?
What exactly is your child being facing if they just get through puberty and decide later,
for example?
It is hard for me to understand.
That's suicide. That's the threat, right?
That's the threat that was given to them. That's the threat, but they don't have that
anymore, praise God. And so I think we are going to see, it's part of why I feel so strongly
that I think we're going to see a decline in it because the truth, the truth bats last
and the truth will prevail. And so as long as we have the platforms from which to tell
the truth, the truth will prevail.
And I think that's what we're seeing on this.
I think we're going to see it more with abortion.
And of course, we've already seen a decline in surgical abortion.
Really the abortion we see now is the pills that they take, the morning after pill.
I mean, that's really the ubiquitous abortion now.
And I think that we're going to start seeing side effects from that and how much that harms
women's bodies and we're gonna start seeing lawsuits against
the manufacturers of those pills.
And so it just takes time for the truth to come out and for people to speak up and tell
their stories how this harmed me, how when I took this pill this harmed me.
I mean one interesting thing about the morning after pill is you start seeing some of these
states, the blue states, there's an intervention you
can do.
So you take the first pill and I believe what that does is it stops your progesterone, it
like starves the child to death.
And then the second pill is what extracts that baby.
But after you take the first pill, you can intervene and women will Google like, how
do I stop it?
And so you can, I think it's progesterone, but don't quote me on that.
But you can have a huge it's progesterone, but don't quote me on that, but you can have
a huge intervention and save the baby.
And so what states are doing is they're making it illegal, there's legislation to make it
illegal to intervene on an abortion where doctors are not allowed to prescribe that
progesterone for that use.
You can't change your mind having begun to kill your child.
That's right.
So it's supposed to be your choice, but then there's states saying no.
And so, you know, the emperor has no clothes. Again, the goal is not women's choice.
The goal is eugenics. The goal is to end the life of that child.
And so that's all that's all coming out and being exposed.
Luke Renwick says, what can the American legal system borrow or use as a framework from the
successful litigation in the EU causing widespread reversal of so-called trans medicine treatment
and surgery on minors?
That's what we're already seeing is that we can now say all those studies that this was
based on have been debunked.
And so now these doctors have nothing to stand on.
And so we're actually already
It's what we're already doing is we're just making those arguments in these cases and winning other people like you in Europe
Crushing it for victims of actually know a lot of the European litigation. They have such a different legal system over there
It's entirely different from our our whole legal structure and form of government. I don't think that in Europe
They're winning based on lawsuits.
I think that they're winning because they,
their entire system is premised on experts
in a way that ours isn't so much.
And so once those reports are pulled,
that like is an automatic,
it almost serves the same function of changing the law
by pulling those studies.
Here, we have this whole legal system
and the expert reports are submitted.
And so it's just a little bit more of a process here
to get it undone.
Yeah.
Okay.
Cody Schoenle says,
is this just an unprecedented phase?
As a young business owner with a team of 60 people
in deep blue Colorado,
I sometimes have a hard time sleeping at night
with labor and DEI liabilities.
Is there any light at the end of this DEI tunnel
or are we in for it for decades to come?
I think that's similar to the previous question, you know,
is this a permanent thing?
I think it's gonna end.
I think that we're gonna see lawsuits
and you'll have some belligerent holdover corporation
that says, no, we are
going to take this lawsuit and maybe at some point there will be a case in front of the
Supreme Court and that would just put a nail in the coffin.
The left tends to overreach and so I think we may see a case like that.
I don't know.
We have a couple cases right now where we're still negotiating with companies and if they
decide you know what, no.
And we have one legal team, a general counsel
of a major corporation sent me an email saying that,
no, Boz stock, this opinion by Neil Gorsuch,
saying that Title VII applies to gay, transgender,
all of that, that no, we actually can force you
to do this DEI training
because your rights conflict with theirs.
And so we were able to say, you know, no, that's not a proper understanding of boss
talk.
In that case, there was no actual transgender employee with rights to be enforced against
our Christian employees' rights.
And so we were able to say that that's an idea of a person.
It's not a true person.
We don't actually have a true boss talk case whose rights prevail.
The transgender person who wants their pronouns or the Christian who says, I can't bear false
witness.
But that specific case could turn into a real litigation if they do hire a transgender person
who then does work with our employee who is still there, by the way.
And then that would be a case I think she would be very interested in taking up.
And if the company fights it, maybe my law firm does take that case.
I don't know.
But right now we don't have a case that actually has the rights under the two different groups
within Title VII sort of clashing.
Sel Rack, by the way, we just need to pause and say how amazing are my supporters?
I mean, these questions are fantastic.
Like how clued in and intellectually engaged with these people. Selrack says, have parents sometimes been criminally involved as well?
Or will this happen eventually? It would be interesting. Sorry to ask such a horrifying
question. Not that there's anything new about terrible parents. It's just it's a whole new
form of it. I do think there's categories sort of parents. I hate to, I don't want to over categorize.
Categories sort of parents. I hate to I don't want to over categorize
there are parents who are duped into it and they really trust doctors and they really trust teachers and
They do believe it's suicide or surgery
You then have categories of parents where this is sort of like the nouveau thing that they learned in college and it's these luxury beliefs about you know gender is a thing of
Sex is a thing of the past and now it's gender fluidity.
And there's a social cache that certain demographics of women out of college and their social circles
all have kids that are transitioning.
And so there's some culpability there, like a vanity project of the parents.
And then I do think there's a category of parents that really are sort of maliciously
involved with the doctors on the experimentation piece and that's the smallest probably category.
Regardless under the law, I think that prosecutors would have a discretion of whom that they
would want to prosecute and I would like to imagine that to the extent a parent could
ever be prosecuted that they would use their discretion to only go after the worst of the
worst and that would be the prudent form of using the prosecutorial worst of the worst. And that would be the prudent form
of using the prosecutorial powers of the government.
But in these cases, it's like abortion.
They don't go after the women.
They go after the hospitals and the doctors.
And so typically, you will never see parents
brought into this.
That parents are also the victims here, I would say.
And so we have to see the parents as the victims too,
and wanna reach out to them because what they've done
and what they've colluded in is very serious,
and it's very difficult emotionally for the parents
to admit what they've done, it's very hard.
That was actually gonna be my next question.
I know we have people who watch this show
whose children have transitioned,
and presumably for the most part, they were against it,
but what kind of advice or encouragement do you have to a mother or father who did go
along with this or even encourage it?
Yeah, I mean repent and be saved, right?
And pray and that's what you can do.
And you want to try to keep those paths of conversation open.
I know parents, there's a great network of parents
that I know of across the country that are connected
and they have Zoom calls and they have new parents
reach out to them and join the calls
and have a community of parents that advise one another.
Dr. Heim has been invited to speak to them before,
I've been invited to talk to them
and just try to provide some hope and encouragement and consolation and introduce them to one
another so they can give each other advice on that.
I think books will be written by some of these parents that will come out and then serve
as definitive resources.
We're still so on the front end of it, but I do know some parents right now where their
son, for example, is in the movement
and they just can't talk about it.
You know, the son knows the parent's position,
the position, the parents know the son's position,
and they want to remain in a relationship.
And so they don't condone any of it
and the son will push boundaries.
And the parents have to, parents have to enforce their boundaries.
But I think it's always healthy when it comes to boundaries
is when you set a boundary,
a boundary doesn't control the other person.
We can't control other people.
And so boundaries for us is how do you control yourself?
And so we in our house,
we don't indulge this ideology.
So when you come here, let's talk about other things.
That's what we talk about in our house.
And so you enforce your boundaries
for yourself and your home,
but you can't force other people.
And that's something that's just,
that's a difficult lesson for every parent to learn.
Yeah.
So glad that you're doing what you're doing.
Final question from Cigar and Roses.
It was recently reported that the pro-trans Dr. Johanna Olson Kennedy finished her study
in which the results casted a negative light on transgender ideology, so she refused to
publish them.
Are there other studies being done that have been done in addition to hers by less politically
motivated actors?
Oh, there's a lot of studies out there.
And there's a really interesting case out of Alabama where there was a ton of discovery
on what's called WPATH, and it's an organization that's done a lot of this research.
And the research has been proven to be wrong.
And so the head of the NIH, what's his name?
The transgender, why is his name is giving me?
I forget his name.
Anyway, Biden's guy has emails between WPATH and NIH
and different hospitals and saying
that you need to change these results.
And all of those documents have been,
those emails are in discovery, open to the public,
and the Alabama Attorney General has hyperlinked all of them. So open for the world to see and to
challenge those studies and to challenge what the government did and to challenge what the NIH did.
And so there are studies out there that are being suppressed, but again,
internet, it's there for lawyers to peruse. And I know a number of law firms that are thinking about how can we
take this on. And then of course there are studies being conducted now
by doctors and researchers, social workers
who are compiling data on truly the result of this on children
and then those studies will be published. And again it's only a matter of time.
And could the federal government, instead of, of you know choose to fund that research?
Absolutely it could. And so we might see the government, the state and federal
government fund that type of research. You know if I had
all the money in the world I would personally fund it.
And so there are doctors and researchers who stand ready applying for funding
and who are already doing this work. So you know we're on the we're still in the
beginning of a lot of this litigation and I think over the
years we'll start seeing a lot more of that research for sure. I used to work
for Catholic Answers and back in 2012 or 2013 I spoke at the Catholic Answers
conference and I gave a talk on transgender ideology. What's wild is I
think I've got the talk written somewhere, it was unbelievable.
People actually didn't realize that there were people
raising their sons as daughters.
It was a novel idea.
To think of how quickly this has moved is mind boggling.
I spoke to a priest at the time as I was writing this talk
and he had the wisdom to say,
I think this transgender thing's gonna eat its own head. Like it's not, it can't last. So it's
been really, yeah, I mean, it's heartbreaking to hear of the victims of transgender ideology,
but it's also heartening to realize that there are good people like yourself and these other
wonderful people who've been through this awful ordeal and who are now speaking out
about it and who are supporting
Supporting people and the truth is coming to light. So thank you so much for the work that you're doing
Where do people learn more about you find out more about you anything else you want to say?
I mean we have a website for a group dot law
You know hire us to do your average day-to-day legal work, people,
we don't only do this, trying to build a law firm,
taking these cases.
But it's just been an honor.
I would say that it really has been a huge honor
to represent Dr. Heim, Vanessa Sivage, Jamie Reed,
work with a lot of these whistleblowers
and to play a small part.
And it really is just one
little decision at a time. I think that's, you know, how do you eat an elephant? One bite at a time.
And so you do the little that you can do. And, you know, I can pull my kids out of school. I can
write an email to the board. I can call my HR director and say, listen, you know, I need an
accommodation. And if I'm a lawyer and someone calls me,
I can evaluate whether I can take the case.
And there's a lot of lawyers out there listening
who are afraid for their job
and there's a lot of law firms out there.
You don't have to work at that law firm.
You don't have to work for a law firm that hates you.
And you don't have to hire a law firm that hates you
and your values.
There are alternatives.
And I think we're seeing a lot of that more too,
is that we do not have to continue to collude
in all of these lies, there are alternatives.
If people contact you and you can't take them on,
presumably you have a network of people
you might be able to point them to.
Oh yeah, absolutely.
Yeah, awesome.
Well, God bless you and thanks for being on the show.
Thanks for having me.