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CNN is HYSTERICAL About Secretary of War Hegseth’s Announced T Screenings for the Military
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CNN is HYSTERICAL About Secretary of War Hegseth’s Announced T Screenings for the Military

Today, the Department of War announced a policy of testosterone screenings for male service members 30 and over.  CNN appears to have gone absolutely mad over the decision.The announcement, per NBC News:“Under the supervision of our world-class medical professionals, warfighters age 30 and older are going to be tested annually as part of their periodic health assessment,” Hegseth said in a video posted to X captioned: “The High-T Department of War.”The test would take place as part of the regular annual health assessment. Service members younger than 30 can voluntarily get their testosterone levels tested as well, Hegseth said.He added that if the medical team recommends treatment for a service member, it would be that individual’s decision whether to receive testosterone replacement therapy.Testosterone is naturally occurring in males, and an essential hormone that regulates many different essential functions. And at a time when the American diet has been ravaged with ultra-processed foods that ravage hormonal functions, it seems like a sound policy to screen and make sure that the troops are OK and able to carry out their critical roles. But this sounded like heresy to CNN prime time. Watch as Erin Burnett trots out a retired general who dismissed the policy with non sequiturs about the Hormuz Strait. CNN prime time has gone hysterical over @SECWar announcement of T screenings for male service members over 30. Watch as Erin Burnett trots out a retired general to dump on the T screenings:ERIN BURNETT: Something else happened today. The Defense Secretary, as he calls himself… pic.twitter.com/LuCaIv3bOj— Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) July 16, 2026 ERIN BURNETT: Something else happened today. The Defense Secretary, as he calls himself the Secretary of War, spoke out today and made an announcement. And I wanted to play it for you today.PETE HEGSETH: Today, I'm authorizing a new screening program for testosterone deficiency for our service members, ensuring you have the right testosterone levels to operate at your absolute best.BURNETT: General, what do you make of that announcement from the Defense Secretary?BEN HODGES: Well, first of all, I don't think it's a testosterone deficiency that causes- causes us to be stuck in the Strait of Hormuz right now while we have not been more successful there. And I think you can see where this is going, this idea of looking or measuring for sufficient testosterone, that is not connected to the reality of the modern battlefield. The women and men of the U.S. Armed Forces that are so effective at their jobs don't need testosterone supplements to be better. I think it’s just not connected to the reality of the battlefield.This was followed by John King, sitting in for Anderson Cooper, running the same drill with Senator Mark Kelly (D-AZ). WATCH: CNN's John King, sitting in for Anderson Cooper, sets Mark Kelly up to bash @SECWar's announced T screeningsJOHN KING: I want to ask you before you go, because of your experience in the military, the Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth, announcing a new policy today. Let's… pic.twitter.com/qJAk4TtezL— Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) July 16, 2026 JOHN KING: I want to ask you before you go, because of your experience in the military, the Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth, announcing a new policy today. Let's play. We'll talk about it on the other side.PETE HEGSETH: I'm authorizing a new screening program for testosterone deficiency for our service members. (VIDEO SWIPE) Under the supervision of our world-class medical professionals, warfighters age 30 and older are going to be tested annually as part of their periodic health assessment. (VIDEO SWIPE) Those under 30 can voluntarily choose to get the test as well. If treatment is recommended. It's entirely your choice to receive testosterone replacement therapy.KING: Is this necessary? Is this a good idea? A bad idea?MARK KELLY: I- you know, it's a weird idea. I mean, what have we seen from this Secretary of Defense so far? We see him run around on a stage talking about lethality and killing people. Now he's talking about testosterone. This isn't what we need. What we need is better leadership. And it starts at the top. It starts with the president. It starts with Pete Hegseth.KING: Senator Kelly, I appreciate your time. I suspect we’ll be checking in with you after the President’s speech tomorrow night. Thank you very much, Sir.KELLY: Thank you. Appreciate it.Finally, Kaitlan Collins had Senator Cory Booker (D-NJ) on, with predictable results. Booker did not approve,either. WATCH: Kaitlan Collins tees Cory Booker up to dunk on @SECWAR's proposed T screeningsKAITLAN COLLINS: In the meantime, we got an announcement from the Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth, today about a new policy to test troops that are 30 years old and older for low testosterone.… pic.twitter.com/h58t734nvh— Jorge Bonilla (@BonillaJL) July 16, 2026 KAITLAN COLLINS: In the meantime, we got an announcement from the Defense Secretary, Pete Hegseth, today about a new policy to test troops that are 30 years old and older for low testosterone. I want you to listen to- to what Secretary Hegseth said about this today.PETE HEGSETH: I'm authorizing a new screening program for testosterone deficiency for our service members, ensuring you have the right testosterone levels to operate at your absolute best. (VIDEO SWIPE) Those under 30 can voluntarily choose to get the test as well. If treatment is recommended, it's entirely your choice to receive testosterone replacement therapy. This initiative, it's not about artificial enhancement. It's about restoring and optimizing your natural capabilities.COLLINS: Your thoughts on this new policy?CORY BOOKER: It just seems sick and like, somebody please wake me up from this dystopian nightmare where we have such unserious people in some of the most important positions, not just in America. One of the most important positions globally. He is not a serious person. He's unfit for that office. He should have never got confirmed. And you see the disastrous reality of his leadership and what he's doing. This is ridiculous. And it should be mocked. And just another reason why we should remove him from office.COLLINS: So you don't see any point in this new policy.BOOKER: I- again, the fact that we, in the midst of a disastrous war, have the Secretary of Defense doing things like this makes us a mockery globally. This is ridiculous. It is unserious. He is not a serious person. He is unqualified to be leading the greatest defense forces on the Planet Earth. And he has led us without strategy, without reason, into a quagmire in the Middle East yet again. And now he’s talking about testosterone treatment. It is ridiculous.The common thread here appears to be a CNN host serving up the T screenings for their guests to dunk on, without any sort of reasoned discussion of the issue. There is only “Orange Man’s War Secretary Bad” ragebait.Reasoned discussion of the issue would have posited that it wasn’t that long ago that the Obama and Biden administrations were championing hormonal treatments for transgender troops, pursuant to “gender affirmation.” This was fine and acceptable to the Elitist Media, but God forbid Pete Hegseth make sure that young male warfighters aren’t atrophied and andropausal before time. I don’t remember the Elitist Media calling that policy out at the time. Like everything else during the Woke Era, conservatives were called every name under the sun for calling out the obvious. And that hypocrisy still endures.P.S: The Chinese are known to be pursuing a Super Soldier program. Has CNN made the time to explore this before exposing it to their viewing audience? Don’t hold your breath. There's no Trump Derangement impulse to be sated there.

MS NOW Wants Congress to Crack Down on Supreme Court's Independence
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MS NOW Wants Congress to Crack Down on Supreme Court's Independence

Snapstream In recent years, Supreme Court Justices have been repeatedly harassed for their rulings and stances, and there have even been attempts on their lives by leftist extremists. This Tuesday’s MS NOW Money, Power, Politics with Stephanie Ruhle covered a Congressional hearing regarding an increase to the Justices’ security budgets. After a cursory overview of the situation, the discussion turned towards Congress’ relationship with the Supreme Court.Somehow, in this hearing about the threats faced by Supreme Court Justices, Slate senior writer Mark Joseph Stern was able to twist the discussion into how Congress could join the fray, suggesting that they too should threaten the Supreme Court:I think they do need that reminder from time to time, when they're sitting in judgment up on their Mount Olympus and their marble palace that, you know, at the end of the day, Congress still holds the cards. Congress could take away their funding. Congress could strip jurisdiction. Congress could abolish every seat except the Chief Justice’s if it wanted to. And so if they forget that, it starts to lead to a place of arrogance, it starts to lead to a lack of humility.  MS NOW arguing that Congress should use its power of the purse to hold the Supreme Court hostage. So much for separation of powers! The left doesn't care about the rule of law, they only care about how they can use the law to further their own political ends. pic.twitter.com/Xj9u9QBxIk— James Waterman (@jwatermaniv) July 14, 2026 Stern suggested that Congress’s authority over the finances and procedures of the Supreme Court should be used as a cudgel against the Court. He even argued that they should consider removing the Justices’ access to the Supreme Court building altogether:It still, as we see today, relies on Congress for funding, relies on Congress for the ability to have security, for the ability to actually continue to exist in its own building, which the Supreme Court didn't have until less than 100 years ago. It used to operate out of the Capitol because it didn't have its own digs. And I actually think it was a little bit healthier for our country when the Supreme Court still had to look over its shoulder and ask Congress for funding for a building, for all of this stuff that reminded it, hey, we need the political branches to exist and survive. And so perhaps we shouldn't run so roughshod over the handiwork of those branches. Essentially, he argued for the subordination of the Supreme Court to Congress. Obviously, this flies directly in the face of the separation of powers established by the Constitution.MS NOW legal analyst Barbara McQuade would later build on Stern’s suggestions, downplaying the issue of the separation of powers and arguing that Congress could enforce a nebulous ‘ethics code’ upon the Supreme Court:Sometimes the Chief Justice has said, “there can't be any ethics code. We can't be beholden to Congress about ethics enforcement because of separation of powers issues. That's absolute nonsense. As will be demonstrated today, the Court is beholden to Congress for funding, for its budget, for its building, for its salaries. Why not for its ethics?Of course, the examples McQuade cites were the purported misconduct reported by the far-left ProPublica, which almost exclusively targeted the conservative justices. She didn’t cite any examples of how liberal justices like Justice Sotomayor sat on a case that directly involved the publisher of her book.The MS NOW cast don’t seem to care much for the separation of powers or Constitutional order, and it provides a lot of insight into what they really believe about the government. They interpret Congress’ power of the purse as a political tool, rather than a responsibility. To them, it’s something they can abuse to force the Court into line.To MS NOW, and the wider leftist media movement as a whole, civil government is little more than a constraint, and they’ll abuse its functions any way they need to if it advances their political causes.The transcript is below. Click "expand" to read.MS NOW’s Money, Power, Politics with Stephanie RuhleJuly 14, 202610:12:03 a.m. EasternSTEPHANIE RUHLE: Does appearing before Congress put this court in the center of more political theater? Because when Ali mentioned, Pete Hegseth testified, Marco Rubio testified, and I can't remember specifically, but I bet a lot of money that the president watched at least some of the soundbites and commented. Those guys are used to it. Amy Coney Barrett has already received so much negativity from factions of the right for not immediately siding with other conservative justices. Does this make them vulnerable?MARK JOSEPH STERN: So it absolutely does. But there's no way to avoid that in a representative democracy where the Court is still ultimately, to some degree, supposed to be accountable to the people, right? You know, it acts as though it's this completely unaccountable and independent third branch.It still, as we see today, relies on Congress for funding, relies on Congress for the ability to have security, for the ability to actually continue to exist in its own building, which the Supreme Court didn't have until less than 100 years ago. It used to operate out of the Capitol because it didn't have its own digs. And I actually think it was a little bit healthier for our country when the Supreme Court still had to look over its shoulder and ask Congress for funding for a building, for all of this stuff that reminded it, hey, we need the political branches to exist and survive. And so perhaps we shouldn't run so roughshod over the handiwork of those branches. I think it's extremely healthy for the justices to be brought before Congress, as much as it might be a circus, as much as they might be asked some ridiculous questions. I think they do need that reminder from time to time, when they're sitting in judgment up on their Mount Olympus and their marble palace that, you know, at the end of the day, Congress still holds the cards. Congress could take away their funding. Congress could strip jurisdiction. Congress could abolish every seat except the Chief Justice’s if it wanted to. And so if they forget that, it starts to lead to a place of arrogance, it starts to lead to a lack of humility. It's good for Congress to remind them, even if it ends up being a little bit of a political farce in the end.(...)10:22:45 a.m. EasternBARBARA MCQUADE: Well, one of the things I think where Congress does have some ability to legislate is overseeing the Court with regard to ethics. So, you know, sometimes the Chief Justice has said, “there can't be any ethics code. We can't be beholden to Congress about ethics enforcement because of separation of powers issues.” That's absolute nonsense. As will be demonstrated today, the Court is beholden to Congress for funding, for its budget, for its building, for its salaries. Why not for its ethics? They went so far in recent years as to enact an ethics code. But it's toothless. It doesn't have any remedies. How about if Congress passes a law with an inspector general that works at the Supreme Court to examine those ethics violations and make referrals to Congress when they find ethical lapses, like justices riding around on super yachts that belong to people who have cases before the Court or flying on planes, private planes, to fishing lodges because the seat would have otherwise gone unused. I would like to see them put some teeth there, and that is a place where Congress has the power to legislate in a way that would provide a meaningful check on ethical lapses of the Court. They are in a legitimacy crisis right now, and I think having a meaningful ethics code with remedies and compliance mechanisms would help put it on firmer standing in the public regard.(...)

Sunny Hostin, Joy Behar RAGE at Lindsey Graham's Sister for Senate Appointment
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Sunny Hostin, Joy Behar RAGE at Lindsey Graham's Sister for Senate Appointment

ABC via SnapStream Proving they were truly just miserable crones, on Wednesday, ABC News co-hosts Sunny Hostin and Joy Behar raged at Darline Graham after she was pointed to fill her brother Lindsey Graham’s South Carolina Senate seat. Ignoring the fact that it’s fairly common for close relatives to be appointed to their loved one’s seat following their death, those cast members of The View suggested there was something seriously wrong with South Carolina, suggested a doctor couldn’t be a senator, and called Graham a “DEI” hire.Amid their conversation, and after they played a soundbite of Graham’s emotional acceptance speech, Hostin snapped. “I don't love it. I don't love it,” Hostin declared.Hostin fully supported Vice President Kamala Harris being appointed the Democratic Party’s presidential nominee without an election. Yet, she couldn’t stand for Graham’s temporary appointment ahead of a special election.According to Hostin, there was something “fundamentally wrong” with South Carolina because Graham was the state’s first female senator. Without an explanation, she also asserted that a doctor like Graham couldn’t possibly be a senator:You know, she'll be the first woman to be a U.S. senator in South Carolina in his the history of the state. And I think that that's just -- it's just fundamentally wrong that South Carolina just couldn't elect a woman and this is the only way that it was done.I think the experience does matter. And while she is a certified optician and while she has done great work in that field, I don't think that she should be representing the people of South Carolina in the U.S. Senate. I just don't.Since 1791, there have been 54 senators who either studied and/or practiced medicine (not including Graham). As of publication, there were four other such sitting senators, all of them Republicans: John Barrasso (WY), Rand Paul (KY), Bill Cassidy (LA), Roger Marshall (KS). Sunny Hostin attacks South Carolina for Darline Graham being their first female senator, and says there's something "fundamentally wrong" with the state. She suggests doctors can't be senators.She and Joy Behar call the appointment "the very definition of a DEI [hire]" and an… pic.twitter.com/MxaSry6HAS— Nicholas Fondacaro (@NickFondacaro) July 15, 2026 Behar, who couldn’t cut it as a secretary for the network, thought she was being smart and suggested that Graham was a DEI hire:BEHAR: It's this the very definition of a DEI?HOSTIN: Correct! correct! It's everything that the Republican Party stands against! Everything! Everything! It's DEI. Nepotism. All these things thrown in together.“I agree with you. It's not like taking over your mother's job at McDonald's,” Behar huffed. “You're in government. You have to know what you're doing.”Behar and Hostin even had the nerve to claim President Obama was somehow qualified to be a senator after only being a “community organizer” in Chicago:BEHAR: Obama was a community organizer, like that and they gave him a lot of crap for that.HOSTIN: And he was qualified to be in the Senate.BEHAR: Exactly.They were followed up by co-host Sara Haines who tacitly called them out for being partisan hacks.Haines admitted she felt like they did before doing a bit of research and discovering that appointment of relatives after a lawmaker’s death were common from both parties. She had since warmed up to it:When I first saw this I thought, 'oh, do you just do that?' With the sibling pick. So I had to look for context. At first, my reaction was kind of what Sunny and Joy are saying; like 'oh, this isn't a good thing.' And then I realized it's kind of the normal thing. That this is what happens on both sides of the aisle and then I didn't care as much. Sara Haines calls out Behar and Hostin. Haines notes that relatives being appointed to seats when a lawmakers has passed is a common practice by both sides. She also notes such appointments mean the voters of a state get someone who can represent the in a similar way to who they… pic.twitter.com/V6mUvIBazU— Nicholas Fondacaro (@NickFondacaro) July 15, 2026 She even argued that such appointment were good because it meant the people of South Carolina were getting someone who was a good approximation of the politician they initially voted for:Because I do think if I agreed more with Senator Graham, which I don't, this is going to be the person that understands what he stood for and what they elected in South Carolina and what they wanted out of Lindsey Graham. I can't think of a better legacy than someone who was really close with him.Reading from a talking points card someone handed her, Behar stated the obvious that Graham was different person than her brother and whined about how she could have different positions than him:BEHAR: But we do not know her positions on abortion, foreign policy, or healthcare.FARAH GRIFFIN: I think we do. She campaigned for her brother. She's going to be -BEHAR: Why? Just because she's your sister doesn't mean she agrees with you.FARAH GRIFFIN: She campaigned for him, she appeared in numerous campaign ads, she advocated for -- So, we know she's going to vote very similarly to Lindsay Graham.Essentially, in not so many words, Behar was arguing against governors appointing temporary senators, which was constitutional.The only reasons she would make such an argument such an argument would be out of braindead ignorance or, more likely, it was because the Republican majority would be further strained with one less vote.Neither Behar nor Hostin cared that South Carolina would be without full representation for months before a special election could be held. They were craven political opportunists and far-left extremists.The transcript is below. Click "expand" to read:ABC’s The ViewJuly 15, 202611:05:02 a.m. Eastern(…)SUNNY HOSTIN: I don't love it. I don't love it. You know, she'll be the first woman to be a U.S. senator in South Carolina in his the history of the state. And I think that that's just -- it's just fundamentally wrong that South Carolina just couldn't elect a woman and this is the only way that it was done.I think the experience does matter. And while she is a certified optician and while she has done great work in that field, I don't think that she should be representing the people of South Carolina in the U.S. Senate. I just don't.BEHAR: It's this the very definition of a DEI?HOSTIN: Correct! correct! It's everything that the Republican Party stands against! Everything! Everything![Applause]It's DEI. Nepotism. All these things thrown in together.And, you know, at this very same time Pete Hegseth blocked more promotions for women in particular for women of color to become admirals. And so this is happening. I feel like our government is fundamentally broken and I just -- I disagree -- I disagree with this.BEHAR: I agree with you. It's not like taking over your mother's job at McDonald's.HOSTIN: Yeah, it's not.BEHAR: You're running --HOSTIN: It's the U.S. Senate.BEHAR: You're in government. You have to know what you're doing.ALYSSA FARAH GRIFFIN: You guys are putting too much stock in who's currently in Congress.WHOOPI GOLDBERG: Yeah, you got a point.SARA HAINES: When I first saw this I thought, 'oh, do you just do that?' With the sibling pick. So I had to look for context. At first, my reaction was kind of what Sunny and Joy are saying; like 'oh, this isn't a good thing.' And then I realized it's kind of the normal thing. That this is what happens on both sides of the aisle and then I didn't care as much.Because I do think if I agreed more with Senator Graham, which I don't, this is going to be the person that understands what he stood for and what they elected in South Carolina and what they wanted out of Lindsey Graham. I can't think of a better legacy than someone who was really close with him.BEHAR: But we don't know --HAINES: To push back on Sunny, experience has not served us well, because you could argue her brother was, you know, a man of a long-term of service and I wouldn't argue he was killin' in there. Like, so, I don't think necessarily experience in our government any longer -- like prereq -BEHAR: Sara, we do not know --HOSTIN: Well, it should matter.BEHAR (reading from a talking points card): But we do not know her positions on abortion, foreign policy, or healthcare.FARAH GRIFFIN: I think we do. She campaigned for her brother. She's going to be -BEHAR: Why? Just because she's your sister doesn't mean she agrees with you.FARAH GRIFFIN: She campaigned for him, she appeared in numerous campaign ads, she advocated for -- So, we know she's going to vote very similarly to Lindsay Graham.But I would note. So, Tim Scott became the first black man appointed to the Senate from South Carolina when he was appointed by then-Governor Nikki Haley. But then he went on to win and carry on that legacy. So, sometimes it's a way to get a foot in the door for representation even though it's not the ideal way.[Crosstalk]HAINES: Just real quickly, button. One thing I liked is that she had worked on the commission in South Carolina for the blind. And the reason I like that is when you're representing groups and you see a group that needs advocates, that needs allies, that needs to be - She's going to look at the population a little different. That's been her life service.BEHAR: Obama was a community organizer, like that and they gave him a lot of crap for that.GOLDBERG: Listen, you know what --HOSTIN: And he was qualified to be in the Senate.BEHAR: Exactly.(…)

Bozell Exposes Apple and Google's Suppressed Coverage of Candidate Graham Platner
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Bozell Exposes Apple and Google's Suppressed Coverage of Candidate Graham Platner

Media Research Center (MRC) President David Bozell joined Scott Jennings on The Scott Jennings Show Wednesday afternoon to discuss how Apple News and Google News suppressed negative stories about Graham Platner, former Democratic nominee for the U.S. Senate in Maine. MRC reviewed the top twenty morning headlines on Apple News and Google News every day from November 1, 2025, to May 30, 2026, and found that neither news app posted a single story about Platner's numerous personal scandals.  No stories about his Nazi tattoo, his abusive track record with women, his past racist comments, or his controversial Reddit posts. Nothing. Zero. As Bozell stated: “There was nothing about this man and this man’s candidacy that could be considered even remotely negative or concerning if you were a viewer of Apple News and Google News… It was a total blockade.”Apple and Google News showed 0 negative stories about Graham Platner for months — nothing about the Nazi tattoo, the Reddit posts, the racism from his keyboard, his abuse towards women. It was a total blockade. @DavidBozell @ScottJenningsKY @JenningsShow pic.twitter.com/PmmQiu8ScC— Media Research Center (@theMRC) July 15, 2026Bozell concluded with his predictions on how Apple News and Google News might continue to game the system and use their monopoly over smartphone news apps to influence elections. Bozell recommended: “Understand that rapid response is the name of the game. You’ve got to get your message out quickly. You cannot give the Left a free day.”.@DavidBozell predicts what's next for Apple and Google News as the 2028 elections approach, and how conservatives can shift their strategy to fish where the fish are@ScottJenningsKY @JenningsShow pic.twitter.com/39xIaj6uHB— Media Research Center (@theMRC) July 15, 2026 Watch the full segment here:  

UC San Fran Chancellor Refuses to Say if Men Can Have Babies
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UC San Fran Chancellor Refuses to Say if Men Can Have Babies

The chancellor of a top California medical college refused to acknowledge that biological males cannot give birth to babies, when questioned at House Congressional hearing on Tuesday.In a House hearing on DEI in medical schools, Representative Mary Miller (R-IL) and others pressed University of California chancellors on transgender ideology and other such DEI themes.One of these, UC San Francisco (UCSF) Chancellor Sam Hawgood avoided direct answers to many of Rep. Miller’s questions, including when he was asked if a non-biological woman had ever had a baby. To that question he responded, “A transgender person can.” When asked again, Hawgood responded “I would reiterate, we take care of transgender patients.”Hawgood’s comment that “the vast majorities of pregnancies are in women” prompted Rep. Miller’s question.UCSF certainly does tend to transgender patients; its website advertises many different transgender surgeries performed by the medical staff at the college as part of its “Gender affirming Health Program.” According to its website, the program “adheres to the guidelines for surgical assessment as described in the World Professional Association for Transgender Health (WPATH) Standards of care.” WPATH is currently being sued by the State of Florida for unfair trade practices and racketeering, according to reporting by CNSNews.UCSF received a total of more than $800 million from the National Institutes of health last year, according to a UCSF article. It is unclear to what extent this went to supporting the surgeries.Miller also asked Hawgood about the university’s policy to use the gender a child self-identifies as, even when it conflicts with the child’s parents’ wishes:“Say a seven-year-old boy comes into your doctor's office and reveals he believes he's a girl. Is UCSF advising physicians to explicitly violate parents’ moral values and have the doctors address this boy as a girl?”In answering, Hawgood avoids a direct answer, stating instead that “the programs are consistent with federal and state law” and that “we undertake comprehensive psychological mental health evaluations and work with the parents on these issues.”In one instance, Chancellor Hawgood does give a direct answer, this time to a question leveled by Representative Robert Onder (R-MO) after an exchange about UCFS’s transgender medical program. Hawgood denied that UCSF provides transgender surgery to children, though when Onder asked, “your transgender clinic does continue to give puberty blockers and wrong sex hormones to children?” Hawgood responded simply with “correct.”Rep. Mary Miller: "Can someone have a uterus but not be a woman?" ... "Just say yes or no."UCLA med school dean: [buffering]Miller: "And you do teach biology?"Dean: "Yes, we do." pic.twitter.com/rrCtg31Pun— Sean Hannity