The Daily Signal - Matt Walsh Reveals How Gender Ideology Mutilates Kids

Episode Date: June 7, 2022

What is a woman? Seems like a pretty simple question. But in today’s America, the left thinks females aren't the only ones who count as women anymore. Stories abound of biological males not only inv...ading women's private spaces such as bathrooms and locker rooms, but dominating in women's sports. All of this comes with the support of radical leftists and activists in medicine. Worse, those medical doctors aren't just focused on treating adults. Transgender ideologues have targeted children. Matt Walsh, author, podcast host, and filmmaker with The Daily Wire, has released a documentary film titled "What Is a Woman?" that he hopes will expose the worst aspects of gender ideology. "You feel like you're staring into the pit of hell, honestly. I mean, you're looking at pure evil when you consider what they're doing to these kids, and they know what they're doing," Walsh says. "They have to know what they're doing, because they're the doctors and they know what it entails. They know that this stuff is obviously irreversible and they also know that kids can't actually consent to any of this stuff." Walsh adds: Kids don't know what they're doing. They're not looking five, 10 years into the future. I mean, even before you get to surgery and that's horrific enough, you've got the drugs, the hormone drugs, the so-called puberty blockers, and those drugs among other consequences, they also have the effect of sterilizing kids.Walsh joins "The Daily Signal Podcast" to discuss his film and what gender activists are doing to kids, and offer solutions on how to escape this post-truth environment. We also cover these stories: Tesla CEO Elon Musk accuses Twitter of refusing to provide information on the number of bots and fake accounts populating the platform. The national average price of a gallon of gas hits a new record high of $4.86. Several players for the Tampa Bay Rays, citing religious reasons, refuse to wear "pride" logos on their uniforms during a baseball game against the Chicago White Sox. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

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Starting point is 00:00:00 You feel like you're staring into the pit of hell, honestly. I mean, you're looking at pure evil when you consider what they're doing to these kids. And they know, they know what they're doing. This is the Daily Signal podcast for Tuesday, June 7th. I'm Virginia Allen. And I'm Doug Blair. What is a woman? It seems like a pretty simple question.
Starting point is 00:00:25 But in today's America, the left thinks that it's not just females that count as women anymore. You just heard from Matt Walsh, an author, podcast host, and film director, with The Daily Wire, who just made a movie titled What is a Woman, to try and expose the radical gender ideology from the left and how they specifically target kids. He joins the show today to discuss that film and offer solutions on how we can escape the current post-truth environment. But before we get to Doug's conversation with Matt Walsh, let's hit our top news stories of the day. Elon Musk is not happy with Twitter. The Tesla CEO accused Twitter on Monday of refusing to provide information on the number of bots and fake accounts populating the platform.
Starting point is 00:01:18 Musk says the fact that they won't share this info means that the company is breaching its side of the deal to purchase it. Musk claimed that Twitter is actively resisting and thwarting his information rights and a filing with the Securities and Exchanges Commission. The filing continues, if Twitter is confident in its publicized spam estimates, Mr. Musk does not understand the company's reluctance to allow Mr. Musk to independently evaluate those estimates. Musk threatened last month to pause the buyout deal unless Twitter could prove that bots constituted less than 5% of users on the site. Americans are all feeling the effects of
Starting point is 00:01:54 inflation at the gas pump. The average price of a gallon of gas just hit $4.86. That's more expensive than the going price of a movie ticket in 1998. And in nine states across the country, drivers are paying over $5 a gallon on average. California's average is the highest at $6.34. But Nevada, Hawaii, Oregon, Washington, Illinois, Alaska, Michigan, and Washington, D.C., all have gas prices over $5 a gallon. So far, it doesn't look like the rising gas prices have affected Americans' travel habits. Andrew Gross, a AAA spokesperson, says people are still fueling up despite these high prices at so. some point, drivers may change their daily driving habits or lifestyle due to these high prices,
Starting point is 00:02:44 but we are not there yet. With the gas average at $4.86 cents, that's 59 cents more than a month ago and $1.81 more than last year. LGBT pride hit a foul ball in Tampa on Saturday night. Several players for the Tampa Bay Reyes refused to wear Pride logos on their uniforms during a game against the Chicago White Sox, citing religious reasons. Jason Adam, a pitcher for the Tampa Bay raise, spoke for himself and his teammates who chose not to wear the pride symbols.
Starting point is 00:03:17 He said, a lot of it comes down to a faith decision. I think a lot of guys decided that it's just a lifestyle that maybe we don't want to encourage if we believe in Jesus, who encouraged us to live a lifestyle that would abstain from that behavior. The players faced criticism online. The Washington Times reported that former Major League Baseball player Preston Wilson tweeted, acceptance is not the same as tolerance.
Starting point is 00:03:40 If you truly accept, you will support them, and you would stand up for them to be treated fairly like everyone else. But some people were more supportive of the player's decisions. Conservative commentator Clay Travis tweeted, regardless of your personal beliefs, refusing to wear these uniforms and being willing to take the inevitable sports media crushing they will get, is far braver than meekly acquiescing. Now stay tuned for my conversation with Matt Walsh,
Starting point is 00:04:05 as we discuss his new movie, What is a woman? Voting is one of our most important civic duties. Because its impact reaches far and wide, it is important to have trust in our electoral system. That's why the Heritage Foundation created the Election Integrity Scorecard. The scorecard compares each state's voting rules and regulations and gives each state a ranking on their transparency and overall potential for interference and corruption. If you want to understand the nature of the election system in your state, make sure you check
Starting point is 00:04:38 out the Election Integrity Scorecard at HECD. heritage.org slash election scorecard. My guest today is Matt Walsh, author, podcast host, and now filmmaker with the DailyWire. His new documentary, What Is a Woman, is available now on dailywire.com. Matt, welcome to the show. Hey, thanks for having me. Of course. So I watched the movie, and like I was saying, it was incredible.
Starting point is 00:05:02 I think one of the first things, though, that comes to mind about this documentary is that it was so frustrating to watch it and to see these people as they kind of avoided the questions. Many of the people had so many contradictory opinions about gender identity and women that it was tough not just getting really pissed off. How did you feel as you were talking to these people? I felt probably much the way you did watching it. It was a very frustrating experience in a lot of ways. And there were plenty of times, and for a couple interviews in particular, where I wanted it to, you know, you want to start arguing with them and shouting and screaming and doing all that. But But we kind of knew going into this that, you know, that's one way to approach it is just to go out and yell at everybody and get into arguments.
Starting point is 00:05:44 But that's like what I do in podcast every day, right? That's kind of, what we thought would be more effective is just to let them talk, just to ask some basic questions, let them talk. And if gender ideology sort of hang itself in the process, because the theory that kind of persimizedated the film is that gender ideology is this kind of house of car. that cannot withstand even the slightest scrutiny. And all it takes is really basic questions to reveal the fundamental absurdity underlying the entire thing. And I think that was kind of borne out throughout the course of the film.
Starting point is 00:06:22 That does bring to mind one of the college professors that you spoke to in Tennessee who kept basically going back to like, why are you asking me this question? Or like he had this circular definition of what a woman was. Does that seem to be relatively common where they either can't answer the question
Starting point is 00:06:37 so they try to deflect back on you, or they try to reflexively just say, oh, a woman is a woman. Did that crop up a lot? Yeah, both of those things. There's the kind of suspicion and defensiveness that really made its way to these interviews pretty early on. And going into the interviews, I had some questions I wanted to ask, basic questions and obviously knowing there would be follow-ups. And there were certain questions I planned to ask that I thought would, okay, this might be a
Starting point is 00:07:04 little bit of a tough one. Maybe things will get a little tense here. What I found is that the interviews got tense way earlier than I thought they would because really any question that you ask, I mean, any question you ask these people, if you ask it with real skepticism, like you actually want to know, it's not just a setup for them to get into a talking point. Any question all like that makes them defensive, but also makes them suspicious because they live in a world where, well, nobody ever actually really questions this stuff. And so if you're answering, if you're asking any actual questions, then it makes them suspicious that, oh, you,
Starting point is 00:07:36 you must not be on our side. So a lot of that. And also, as far as a circular definition, that if there was, if there is an answer to the question from the gender ideology proponents, it's the one that the professor gave, which is that a woman is anyone who identifies as a woman. I got that same thing, a version of it so many times.
Starting point is 00:07:56 And of course, it's kind of disturbing to get it from a college professor of all people because he should know that it's just, it's a logically invalid definition. It's not a, it's a definition that doesn't tell anything at all about what you're defining. And yet, this is what, you know, this is, this is the best they could do, basically. Right. Another thing that kind of cropped up a lot is that anybody who asked these types of questions was, I think the quote was a dinosaur or a bigot, that seemed
Starting point is 00:08:22 to be a pretty common refrain amongst these leftists that anybody who questioned the ideology had a bad motive. Yeah, that was first said by Marcy Bowers, a quote-unquote sex change surgeon, or as they call now a gender affirmation surgery, big scare quotes around that. And what was, what I was told there was that, well, actually nobody opposes this at all. Like, everybody's on my side. And then when I said, well, there are a few people that, oh, yeah, those are the dinosaurs. But you get that because for these, these people, like in the world that they live in, and in the circles where they spend most of their time, it's true that nobody, everybody agrees.
Starting point is 00:09:05 there is no alternative perspective, which is one of the reasons why I say that I'm not, I'm not usually a very optimistic person, but I have some optimism when it comes to gender ideology because I think it's very beatable because it's so logically absurd. And also because the people who are the proponents of this stuff, they're very weak because they haven't been tested. They've been insulated from criticism, from skepticism. and so it doesn't take much to bring it all down, I think. One of the things, too, that really struck me about this conversation was when the conversations you were having is that children became involved very, very quickly. You spoke with Michelle Forcier, who is a pediatrician.
Starting point is 00:09:49 You spoke specifically about puberty blockers and a lot of these other drugs. And then the other doctor you spoke to as well was talking about giving vaginalplasties, which is creating a fake vagina out of tissue at 16. How did that make you feel when you were discussing with doctors what they were doing to children? You feel like you're staring into the pit of hell, honestly. I mean, you're looking at pure evil when you consider what they're doing to these kids. And they know, they know what they're doing. They have to know what they're doing because they're the doctors. And they know what it entails.
Starting point is 00:10:24 They know that this stuff is obviously irreversible. And they also know that kids can't actually consent. any of this stuff. Kids don't know what they're doing. They're not looking, you know, five, 10 years in the future. I mean, even before you get to surgery, and that's, that's horrific enough, but even before you get to that, you've got the drugs, the hormone drugs, the so-called puberty blockers. And those drugs, among other consequences, they also have the effect of sterilizing kids. And so how could a, you know, how could a kid actually consent to being sterile for the rest of the lives, you know, to never had never, never, never reproducing.
Starting point is 00:11:01 They don't even understand what that is. They are making decisions for their future self, for their adult self, that their adult self is going to have to live with, but who did not actually consent to this, because these decisions are made when you're so young and your brain is underdeveloped. And so all those things are going through my head. And all the people that are behind this, they know all of this,
Starting point is 00:11:20 but that's nothing we get into the film is there's so much money involved. It's not only a monetary kind of motivation behind it, but that's certainly part of it. There's billions of dollars involved in this. And so they've got a real incentive to keep the train moving. That does bring up the question. When I was watching, you talked to these people, it seemed like most of them were sort of true believers.
Starting point is 00:11:43 You had that female therapist at the beginning who seemed very engaged with the ideology. Do you think that this is more a true believer syndrome, or do you believe that there is a large financial motivation behind a lot of what these people do? I think it's both. you know, it probably is more of a case-by-case basis. There certainly are true believers, but I think even for the true believers, I wonder, you know, deep down in their hearts
Starting point is 00:12:10 if they really believe what they're saying. I think that there's one thing that we find with gender ideology, it's kind of interesting, is that there's this, you know, they're trying to trick the world, but also they have to fool themselves in a way. That's one of the reasons why the gender ideology proponents, you know, they're really into this, affirmation, you have to affirm, constantly affirm. And if you fail to affirm someone in the way that
Starting point is 00:12:34 they want to be affirmed, it's like it's about to murder. It's the worst thing you could possibly do. And why is that? Because I, you know, as a man myself, even though I, when talking to the therapist, I was wondering if I was a woman, in reality, I, you know, I know that I'm a man. So if somebody were to walk up to me and call me a her or call me a woman, it wouldn't, it wouldn't cause any, I would just think that they were crazy. It wouldn't cause any kind of crisis for me whatsoever because I'm fully situated in my maleness and I'm totally confident in it. But when you need affirmation constantly from the world, I think that tells us that's underneath everything, underneath all the pretensions, there's a deep question down there.
Starting point is 00:13:11 So I think that's true, even of the true believers. And then the monetary motivation, I think, is more on like when you expand to the kind of institutional level, that's where you find the monetary motivations, I think. One of the things that really struck me, too, was when you spoke, with Dr. Forcier, you mentioned Luzprom, the drug that is used to, in your words, chemically castrate pedophiles and rapists. Do they seem to have any concerns about how those drugs were used both on children and on people we kind of want to keep sexually away from society? No, there are no concerns at all. That's the thing about the puberty blockers. This is just
Starting point is 00:13:49 doctrinal now on the left that you're not allowed to question it. They're wonderful. They're great. They have no consequences. You know, as Forsyade told me, I think the way she put it was, it's like putting a pause on music. And then you get pick it up, turn the music back on and pick up where the last note left off. That's not true, by the way, of any drug at all.
Starting point is 00:14:11 I mean, every drug you take, there are side effects, there are consequences, there's a little bit of a bargain involved in any drug that you take whatsoever. And the idea that blocking puberty would be the one exception, where everything is fine, there are no side of... But this is what they say, because they cannot...
Starting point is 00:14:29 If they were to admit that, hey, you know, there can be some complications, there are some side effects, there will be some long-term effects. If they admit that, then that just starts a whole conversation that they don't want to have. So instead they have this total fanciful version of it. But, you know, I said that Lupron's a chemical castration. I also presented the dictionary definition of chemical castration
Starting point is 00:14:51 to Dr. Fourciate to show that, like, by definition, puberty blockers are chemical castration. That's what they are. And that's why, as you alluded to, I mean, they are actually used in that way to chemical class straight sex offenders. Right. I mean, there are consequences to this.
Starting point is 00:15:09 And I think there was no person that kind of made more sense with than Kelly or Scott Nugent, who is a biological woman who had gone through. It seemed like endless amounts of surgeries to transition to be a man. How did that story resonate with you? And how do you think that kind of represents the greater story of transgenderism
Starting point is 00:15:27 that the left doesn't want to talk about. Yeah, that was, I think, the most powerful interview that we did, certainly sitting in the room was quite affecting. And also, it was also refreshing talking to her in a certain way. The story is quite tragic, but refreshing just in the sense of, well, here's someone who will actually talk
Starting point is 00:15:48 and be honest and answer questions. Because up to that point, I got nothing but talking to the so-called experts. And even a lot of a lot of the people the regular joke on the street. You get a lot of evasiveness, a lot of ambiguity and everything. And then you sit down with Nugent and it's just straight to the point, let's talk about it. Here's what happened. We're all open, honest. And so, which takes a lot of courage, of course, especially someone in that world. I mean, I mean, I don't want to speak for her, but Nugent's not,
Starting point is 00:16:16 I don't think it would identify as a, you know, right-wing conservative or anything like that. So a lot of social consequences at all as well. And yeah, the story is just like, here's what happened to me, here's what's involved in it. And I thought it was very powerful when she said that a couple of times, that this is, this is experimental surgery. Right. Nobody, we don't really know what's involved with the drugs, the surgery. We've never done this to people, certainly on this scale, and at such young ages before ever in history. So it is all, it's like a generation of lab rats that we have.
Starting point is 00:16:53 Right. This seems to be more of an American phenomenon. You obviously traveled to Africa and spoke with some Maasai tribespeople, and they seemed completely lost that we were even having this type of discussion. Did that seem like a thing that was more like it's America only or maybe America and the West? Where did you find that this was sort of most pronounced this type of gender ideology? Yeah, I think it's definitely the West.
Starting point is 00:17:16 It's certainly up in Canada. We went up to Canada too. We talked to people up there. I mean, in Canada, it's actually, it's even, worse than it is in the United States. And I think that's the case in a lot of Europe also. But once you get out of the kind of western, the modern Western liberal bubble and you go out to the rest of the world, you find that it's not just that they disagree with these ideas. It's like it's it's in every sense, literally in every other sense, you're speaking of another
Starting point is 00:17:42 language. They don't even have the concepts. And so when we talk to the Maasai tribe, one of the things that we thought going there would be, that would be interesting is just even, even the trying to communicate these ideas through a translator to somebody else. And we found that also, that they just don't even have the words to describe this. So you've got to kind of describe it. And yeah, I think they were quite horrified to hear what's happening in the West. They also happened to think that I was, you know, they thought that I was an actual proponent of these. I was actually confused. So they were patient about it, but they kind of, they kind of thought I was sort of a confused child.
Starting point is 00:18:18 And they proceeded to, you know, educate me. But it was also really, it was interesting to hear their kind of basic insights into the nature of reality. And also for me to be put in the position of having to explain these ideas to a group of people who don't have the same shared sort of frame of reference that we do. And I think that's if you want to reveal the fundamental absurdity of any belief system, one way you could do that is by trying to explain it to somebody who's never heard of it before. and so we certainly noticed that. It fell apart. One of the things that kind of horrified me in this was when you talked about Dr. Kinsey and Dr. Money, this idea that these scientists who, I mean, committed horrible crimes against
Starting point is 00:19:05 children. It seems like they don't have a lot of press on them, though. It doesn't really seem like there's that much attention to what they did. You kind of briefly attacked it in the film, like maybe why they're not as well-known, But why do you think specifically, like, these two characters were so essential to the modern gender ideology and transgender debate are just such an unknown, an unknown property? I think it's because some of it is just the basic fact that, unfortunately, in this country, we don't talk a lot about history. I think that there's a kind of shallowness and people's understandings of a lot of things where pretty much anything comes from. And, you know, it goes into, we spend all our time just like watching Netflix and on the internet and everything.
Starting point is 00:19:47 But deeper than that, it's just that these two guys are so, I mean, they're monstrous. Their stories are so horrifying. And in particular, the way that they were both focused on children, they were very, Albert Kinsey, especially, very explicit about wanting to sexualize children and John Money as well. And so that's very inconvenient for the left, especially when they're spending all this time. saying that the whole groomer thing is a right-wing conspiracy theory. Well, I mean, the godfathers of this movement were, died-in-the-wall groomers.
Starting point is 00:20:23 This is what they did to children in particular. So there's just no incentive to get into the details. I mean, where are you going to hear it? The school system obviously isn't going to talk about. The school system, you know, they have gender ideology, which is from John Money, comprehensive sex ed, which is from Alfred Kinsey. So they're teaching those things.
Starting point is 00:20:43 They don't want to get into the details of where this stuff came from because that's going to shock and horrify everybody. Right. As we're going to wrap, I kind of want to talk about two things, which is where do we go from here and then is it even possible to come back from the edge? So first of all, one of the recurring themes of the movie is that people just deny biological reality. They just deny that it exists. Is there a possibility to get back to an idea where we have shared truth and shared reality or are we stuck in this, your truth, my truth world? I have to believe that it's possible. I mean, if it wasn't possible, then there would be no, if it was impossible to make any progress at all on any of those issues, then there's no point even talking about it.
Starting point is 00:21:23 There's no point making films about it. I do think that it's possible. But one thing, we have to start by letting everyone see how bad it's gotten, like what the actual situation is. And that's one thing we want to achieve. That's not the only thing we want to achieve with the film, but that's one of the things for people to watch it and see. Now, this stuff is ubiquitous. It's pervasive. It's everywhere.
Starting point is 00:21:45 It's toxic. It's dangerous and all of that. So you gotta start with that kind of confrontation if you want to make any progress. I do think that ultimately, you know, gender ideology broadly, it's beatable. It's not something that we're gonna, it's not a victory that we're going to achieve in the next few days or even a few years. But it is, it's such a flimsy hollow thing that's, and cannot withstand any scrutiny whatsoever, which means that we can beat it,
Starting point is 00:22:16 but that requires us to actually kind of like stand up, look it in the face, ask some basic questions of it, and you watch it all fall apart. What I found talking to people on the street especially is I didn't find as much confusion or some of that, but it was less confusion and more fear. People are just terrified to talk about this, which the fact that they're terrified tells you
Starting point is 00:22:37 that they know the truth, that's why they're afraid. Right. So we got to get people over. that, I think. And so the more of us who talk about this and getting out in the open, I think it creates a kind of strength in numbers, I suppose. And then I guess the final question would be, do you hope that, I guess, what do you hope that viewers will take away from this movie? The first thing is, like I said, that that's just to see, to see the situation as it is, because I think that we've been, and this is especially going back, this goes back years,
Starting point is 00:23:05 we've been kind of as conservatives bearing our heads of the sand a little bit and telling ourselves that, oh, this is all out on the fringes, it's a fad. It's a, this is just crazy weird, TikTok people. No, this is absolutely everywhere. So I hope that's the first thing to take away is like, this is real, this is the world we live in now. But then also to take away the fact that this is a battle that can be won if we ask some questions, and here are some questions we can ask,
Starting point is 00:23:36 and maybe take that with you when the next time you're in a conversation about this with someone, Rather than trying to get into an argument where you're making competing assertions, just get them talking about it a little bit. Try to actually understand what they're saying because if you ask these questions, then maybe they'll start to understand that, oh, what they're saying doesn't really make any sense at all. Well, that was Matt Walsh, author, podcast host, and now filmmaker with The Daily Wire. His new documentary, What Is a Woman?
Starting point is 00:24:07 It's available now on DailyWire.com. Matt, very much appreciate your time. Love the movie. Thank you so much for coming. Appreciate it. Thank you. And that'll do it for today's episode. Thanks so much for listening to The Daily Signal podcast.
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Starting point is 00:24:49 Producers are Virginia Allen and Doug Blair. Sound designed by Lauren Evans, Mark Geinney, and John Pop. For more information, please visit DailySignal.com.

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