(Molly Bruns, Headline USA) An exchange between a pro-abortion activist and Missouri Republican Josh Hawley went viral, after the senator asked the activist what should have been a simple question.
Khiara Bridges, a law professor at University of California Berkeley, appeared at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing that was called to examine legal concerns around the recent overturn of Roe v. Wade, the Daily Wire reported.
After a brief back-and-fourth where Hawley asked several basic questions, Bridges accused him of denying the existence of transgender people.
“I’m denying that trans people exist by asking you if you’re talking about women having pregnancies?” Hawley repeated in disbelief.
“Are you? Are you? Are you? Do you believe that men can get pregnant?” Bridges demanded.
“No, I don’t think men can get pregnant,” Hawley said simply.
Smirking, Bridges began, “So you’re denying that trans people exist —”
Bridges continued, insisting that believing only women can get pregnant leads to violence against transgender people.
The radical leftists helming the World Health Organization apparently agreed with the activist mantra that anyone could get pregnant and Hawley was a trans-hater for refusing to comply with that basic dogma.
The WHO updated its “gender mainstreaming manual” to include new wording, which stated that “sex is not limited to male or female,” reported the Daily Wire.
The organization released a statement claiming that the updates focus on “going beyond non-binary approaches to gender and health to recognize gender and sexual diversity, or the concepts that gender identity exists on a continuum and that sex is not limited to male or female.”
The WHO updated the manual “in light of the new scientific evidence and conceptual advances on gender, health and development that should inform WHO leadership.”
Despite the fact that the WHO claims to have consulted with experts, there are some in the medical field that believe the denial of biological sex is a mistake.
Coventry University professor Jenny Gamble referred to the updates as a “dismissal of basic biology—and a mistake.”